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Slashback: Little Red Hoax, Firefly, Google

Slashback tonight brings some corrections, clarifications, and updates to previous Slashdot stories, including the "Little Red Hoax", a follow up on the Firefly post-mortem, another episode in the Intelligent Design battle, the EU's Galileo project gets off the ground, deconstructing AOL's decision to go with Google over Microsoft, endgame for the Blackberry patent case and more. Read on for details.

A little red hoax. MyNameIsFred writes "In an earlier Slashdot story, it was reported that a student was investigated for requesting Mao's Little Red Book on inter-library loan. It appears that the story was a hoax."

Firefly franchise death greatly exaggerated. Kazzahdrane writes "Joss Whedon has spoken out against the Entertainment Weekly that claimed he has turned his back on the Firefly/Serenity franchise. From his post at Whedonesque: 'All right, now I have to jump in and set the record straight. EW is a fine rag, but they do take things out of context. Obviously when I said I had "closure", what I meant was "I hate Serenity, I hated Firefly, I think my fans are stupid and Nathan Fillion smells like turnips." But EW's always got to put some weird negative spin on it.'"

Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching religion. rcs1000 writes "After much deliberation Judge John Jones has ruled that teaching Intelligent Design is tantamount to teaching religion. The judge was pretty forthright, arguing that 'it is unconstitutional to teach Intelligent Design as an alternative to evolution in a public school science classroom.'"

EU launches first Galileo navigation satellite. Xserv writes "The EU launched the first in the series of Galileo Navigation Satellites signifying the start of a lessening of dependency on US Military GPS Systems in Europe. The new Galileo system is touted to be much more accurate and will also be more accessible on higher latitude zones where the US GPS system is known to be less than ideal."

Why AOL chose Google over Microsoft. gambit3 writes to tell us that the Wall Street Journal has a nice article deconstructing AOL's decision to go with Google instead of Microsoft. From the article: "Two weeks ago, when Time Warner Inc. was on the cusp of signing a sweeping online deal with Microsoft Corp., a team of executives from the media company's AOL unit traveled to Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Wash., to make sure everything was in order. When the executives returned, they reported back to Time Warner's top deal negotiator, Olaf Olafsson, with some less-than-satisfactory findings. They had found some of Microsoft's technology to be clunky, while the contemplated joint venture with the software king contained what they thought were financial pitfalls."

Endgame in Blackberry patent case. waynegoode writes "The New York Times is reporting that a recent decision could spell the end of the NTP vs. RIM Blackberry case. The US Patent Office apparently took the unusual step of telling NTP & RIM it will likely reject all 5 of NTP's patents, meaning the basis for NTP's lawsuit and it's billion dollar claim will most likely disappear. This puts pressure on the judge to not issue an injunction against RIM but to instead delay until the USPTO gets around to actually rejecting the patents."

Katrina aftermath still making waves. An anonymous reader writes "Approximately 50 people have been indicted in relation to a scheme that drained almost $200,000 from a Red Cross fund designed to put money into the hands of Hurricane Katrina victims. From the article: 'Seventeen of the accused worked at the Red Cross claim center in Bakersfield, Calif., which handled calls from storm victims across the country and authorized cash payments to them. The others were the workers' relatives and friends, prosecutors said last week.'"

More cloning doubts emerge. LukePieStalker writes "The Boston Globe is reporting that the South Korean cloning team whose troubles have recently been chronicled here on Slashdot used "borrowed" photos in their Science journal article that "appear in the journal Molecules and Cells, in a research article by another Korean team, submitted before the Science paper". In the earlier article, the cells in the photo are described as having been created without cloning."

508 comments

  1. Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching religion by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am sure that some Religious fundaments will call this ruling of some crazy liberal judge. I am conservative myself and I personally do believe in inelegant design but I do not believe that it should be tough in schools as science. Intelligent Design is not science it is faith-based assumption. I believed in Inelegant Designed when I was taught Darwinism. I just replaced Random with God. It was not an eureka moment, just about anyone can make the connection without any hoaxing, just an understanding based on my faith that nothing is truly random but work of God, as Einstein said God doesn't roll dice. But that being said teaching science that there is a force that we cannot measure or prove or disprove is not science. Science is not guaranteed to be absolute truth, science is a process of observations and finding a theory that best fits the observation, if a pattern cannot be found it is called random. If God is behind random that is fine but because God cannot be proven or disproved scientifically, it shouldn't be placed in science. Just saying God did it is a shortcut that ends further investigation, but by leaving God out of the equation then it shows that you have more to examine thus growth in understanding.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  2. As I peer into my crystal ball... by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Predicted comment breakdown for this Slashback

    "Little Red Hoax" -- 2 comments
    Firefly post-mortem -- 8 comments
    EU's Galileo project -- 7 comments
    Google/AOL 2purchase -- 9 comments
    Blackberry patent case -- 8 comments
    Intelligent Design -- 1436 comments
    I love the ID stories, those are where I can tell rational people from kooks by my "Fans/Foes" changes that day.
    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by hackstraw · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I love the ID stories, those are where I can tell rational people from kooks by my "Fans/Foes" changes that day.

      Lets see how well I fare.

      ID is done for now until it gets renamed and reincarnated :)

      My position to the ID people has been "What would even the undeniable proof of ID give you?" And even in my best devil's advocate (heh!) mind cannot come up with an answer. Evolution gives us genetics, selective breeding, hybridization, and things that we benefit from on a daily basis. Even if we didn't fall from the trees and become Homo Erectus or Homo Sapians (sp??) the theory of evolution does give us some basis in our daily lives.

      I would say that ID is done, and for good reason, or at least some reason.

      Thank the FSM!

    2. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I say just let the ID people have a bone. Append to the end of evolution "may or may not have been due to a higher power" and move on. Saying it wasn't a higher power is religion, saying there was a higher power is religion.

    3. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Television+Viewer · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Predicted comment breakdown for this Slashback

      "Little Red Hoax" -- 2 comments
      Firefly post-mortem -- 8 comments
      EU's Galileo project -- 7 comments
      Google/AOL 2purchase -- 9 comments
      Blackberry patent case -- 8 comments
      Intelligent Design -- 1436 comments

      I need lotto numbers. Lotto!!!

      But seriously. Why is Intelligent Design such a big deal? I don't get it. Is it possible that God did make everything, and that science is our way of understanding how and what? Do scientists need to say a prayer before measuring how many millilitres is in the graduated cylinder- "Oh dead God, give me the wisdom to tell where the meniscus rests"?

      I like to think God made gravity, and he gave use the eyes, ears, hands, and ability to figure out his gigantic crossword puzzle.

      --
      I learned my ABC's watching television! I learned science watching Voltron.
    4. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by dkf · · Score: 1
      Do scientists need to say a prayer before measuring how many millilitres is in the graduated cylinder- "Oh dead God, give me the wisdom to tell where the meniscus rests"?
      Just for your information, most people normally say "Oh dear God, ..."

      Well, unless they happen to be worshippers of Osiris or Cthulhu or something else unusual. If that's a description of you, I sincerely apologize.

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    5. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're testing my Fans/Foes observation?

    6. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If God created Man in His image then that must mean God has man-nipples too.

    7. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by The_Sock · · Score: 1


      I like to think God made gravity, and he gave use the eyes, ears, hands, and ability to figure out his gigantic crossword puzzle.


      The big deal is that some people want that line taught in science class, as a scientific theory on par with evolution.

      Honestly, I couldn't care less if you or any one else believes that God made them out of dirt, or Allah started the ball rolling and created evolution.. or that everything is just one possibility that was bound to happen, given enough time.. that's fine if that's what you want think. Any could be correct, sure, and millions more possibilities. But lets keep science, like evolution, in the science class and keep the rest out.

      --
      For a good time call www.sawkie.com
    8. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      If you want to mention a higher power at all, the only sensible thing to say is 'according to our current knowledge no higher power is needed to explain all this'. But it would be a waste of time... its like saying that a higher power might be involved when 1 + 1 equals 2 in a math class.

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    9. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by grub · · Score: 1

      Does god's cock shrink when it's near something cold like, say, Neptune or Pluto?

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    10. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      Who the hell are you?! Get off my porch!

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    11. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by eclectro · · Score: 1

      Append to the end of evolution "may or may not have been due to a higher power" and move on. Saying it wasn't a higher power is religion

      No, saying it in that context would make it string theory.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    12. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by The_Sock · · Score: 1

      How about we teach evolution, and don't say one way or the other if a higher power was involved, because science cannot tell either way. That's how it is currently taught, at least in my neck of the woods.

      The only peoples religion this steps on is people who believe that we were created by a god in our existing form. The only way to appease them would be to ignore the mountains of evidence and not teach evolution at all. This leads to ignorance.

      --
      For a good time call www.sawkie.com
    13. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      "Little Red Hoax"
      This will get the least press because it disproves slashdot Liberal majority that the Bush Administration is out to get them all.

      EU's Galileo project
      This is a Good for you. For Europe Space Travel. But sending satellites is common practice around the world and although a better GPS system is good it is not that needed for common people.

      Firefly post-mortem
      Well being I don't get Firefly with my ell-cheapo $7.50 basic cable I can't say much about it.

      Blackberry patent case
      This is one technology that most techs don't care much for. If slashdot was targeted to PHB then there may be more discussion about it. And basically the ruling continues the status quo.

      Google/AOL 2purchase
      We all Hate Microsoft, we don't use AOL. We see google as the best that we currently have. It just seems logical.

      Intelligent Design
      This is something that causes all sides to boil. It is just an easy topic to rant at because it is something that all scientific people have a position on, thus the massive response.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    14. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by B3ryllium · · Score: 4, Funny

      Allah started the ball rolling?

      Allah is the Prince?

      Islamatari Damacy!

    15. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Photon+Ghoul · · Score: 1

      "Little Red Hoax"
      This will get the least press because it disproves slashdot Liberal majority that the Bush Administration is out to get them all.


      Well actually, it proves nothing about the Bush administration because it had nothing to do with the Bush administration. It only had to do with a student pulling a hoax and some people taking it on face value that someone wouldn't do such a thing.

      It could have easily have happened with Clinton in respect to conservatives. Some would say it did happen.

    16. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And does it get bigger when it gets around uranus? You know you love the heavenly cock.

    17. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Too bad a higher power IS needed to explain this- the only question is whether that higher power is intelligent (God) or uninteligent (quantum random). Both are basically theological concepts that absolutely require faith to believe in.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    18. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by EnderWiggnz · · Score: 1

      that is one of the funniest non-sequitors that i've ever read.

      (grumble grumble... non-sequitors)

      --
      ... hi bingo ...
    19. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by superchkn · · Score: 2, Funny

      In my religion, God's a hermaphrodite. Of course God's also on fire, so God needn't be concerned with planets such as Neptune or Pluto. God's also everywhere which, though it may seem to conflict with my assertion that God is on fire, does not because this is a religious statement which needn't pass any scientific tests. Which is odd, since I still cannot understand why Christians (are there any other religions pushing ID?) want this taught in a science class.

      Of course, as I'm merely a newly converted hermaphrodite worshipper who created this religion mere seconds ago, I cannot begin to imagine what thoughts may race through my mind after faith permeates my psyche to the point that I can no longer differentiate science from religious belief.

      No really, I'm a true believer and strong supporter of religion. There isn't a cynical bone in my body...honest!

    20. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by StikyPad · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree, and to start the ball rolling:

      I don't believe in ID. That said, I don't at all agree that it's unconstitutional, or even improper. Perhaps it *should* be (although I don't think so), but I don't see anything to substantiate the argument that such prohibitions currently exist. The two arguments in favor of separation are as follows: 1) The constitution prevents the establishment of religion in the First Amendment, and 2) Congress has no power except that which is explicitly granted to it, therefore it can neither support nor discourage religion.

      However, in order to say that teaching ID is unconstitutional, the following criteria must be met:

      1) ID is religion
      2) Teaching religion as theory is supporting religion
      3) The classroom is a federal matter

      On the first point, ID might be a pillar of some religions, but I do not believe that it is paramount to religion. A religion is a construct (or divine law, if that's what you believe) which usually centers around a higher power, but not always. It is, at the heart of it, a set of principles, values, and beliefs about how one should live one's life, and possibly why. The theory of ID on its own makes no claim as to whom this being might be, what its motives were, or how we should regard it. It is the dichotomic (is that a word?) opposition of life arising by chance mingling of molecules. Either it happened by chance, or it didn't. Acknowledging an opposing viewpoint is not anti-science; rather it is the very foundation of science. To blindly follow any hypothesis or theory without regard to alternatives is the definition of bad science.

      On the second point, sociology is science, and religion is part of sociology. Sociology is not hard science like chemistry or physics, but it's science nonetheless. Further, no science is an island, regardless of how much each branch may wish it were so. I do believe it's a slippery slope, but sheltering children from various ideas is the opposite of education. Acknowledging that religion exists is not at all the same as supporting it. Teaching politics is as much of a slippery slope, and maintaining an unbiased presentation (inasmuch as that is humanly possible) is obviously important. Because it is difficult does not mean it shouldn't be attempted.

      On the third point, Congress only has powers which are granted to it by the Constitution. All other powers are granted to the state, or the individual. As far as I know, States are in charge of their own curriculum. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Congress is expressly prohibited from making any laws regarding religion, which would mean that such powers are relegated to the states by default. While it's not (to my knowledge) legal for any state to promote or discourage religion, such restrictions would logically be enacted on a state-by-state basis in their own constitutions. That, however, does not make it unconstitutional.

      Anyway, that's my take on it. I don't particularly like the idea of teaching ID, but when I try to think about it objectively, I just can't reconcile its prohibition.

    21. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean noodle theory?

    22. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to think that Congress is restricted on what it can do because of the 'Constitution'.

      Not at all true.

      Congress can, and does, do anything it damn well pleases.

      When it does something stupid the issue ends up going to the Courts, to determine whether it is 'Constitutional' or not.

      People like you who think that Congress is simply unable to do anything 'Unconstitutional' are total idiots.

      You should spend a little time thinking about how the process actually works.

    23. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by belmolis · · Score: 1

      Since Gitlow v. New York 268 U.S. 652 (1925) the Bill of Rights, including the First Amendment, has been considered to have been extended to the states by the second sentence of Section 1 of the 14th Amendment:

      No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
    24. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by IllForgetMyNickSoonA · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I don't believe in ID. That said, I don't at all agree that it's unconstitutional, or even improper

      Neither does the judge, as far as I understood him. The whole thing was not about whether ID is constitutional or proper, it was about whether ID should be thaught in science classes or not.
    25. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by svtdragon · · Score: 1

      ...I love you. You just made my day.

    26. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by HoboMaster · · Score: 1

      Wow... You're an ass.

      --
      Remember kids, tin foil doesn't work, so use LeadHat.
    27. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by ttfkam · · Score: 1

      Not only is dichotomic not a word, you're using it and paramount (I think you meant tantamount) incorrectly.

      Regarding the issue of classrooms being federal or local, the question is whether they receive federal funds or not. Schools may chose not to and therefore not be subject to the whims of the federal government. Those that take the money are -- and that basically means every public school in the country.

      Further, acknowledging an opposing viewpoint is not anti-science, but science is not a Romper Room sharing session with warm fuzzies. Science is brutal. Science dictates that you make an argument that is bulletproof because your colleagues won't be firing blanks. Science is a bunch of toddlers playing with your toy, not caring if it breaks.

      The short version here is that ID is most certainly not bulletproof. In fact, it has so many holes, it makes swiss cheese seem solid. In science to be a valid opposing viewpoint, you have to do more than show up at the party; you must bring a toy that won't get broken.

      It must present a workable hypothesis.
      That hypothesis must fit your observations, must make predictions based upon that data, must be independently repeatable, and must be falsifiable.

      ID fails this metric on multiple counts and therefore has no business even being mentioned in the same sentence as "scientific theory" unless also accompanied by judicious use of the words "not," "isn't," and/or the phrases "fails miserably" or "horribly flawed."

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    28. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by HoboMaster · · Score: 1

      The amendments concerning equal rights and suffrage have also been applied to the states. While the Bill of Rights is applied to states on an amendment-by-amendment basis, it's clearly moving toward all of them applying.

      --
      Remember kids, tin foil doesn't work, so use LeadHat.
    29. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is a really neat trick considering the only "privilege or immunity of citizens" mentioned in the First Amendment is the right of the people to peaceably assemble, so you have to wonder how the whole speech and religion thing falls under it. Oh, and you also have to figure out just how the hell the courts were able to justify incorporating the entire First Amendment under the Fourteenth while at the same time still keeping Gitlow in jail. Talk about a ruling that needs to be overturned, it's not even internally coherent.

      But of course, that's how incorporation works. You stretch a part of an amendment to cover something it was never intended to, but then the system doesn't work anymore. So, you have to poke holes in the amendment, thus allowing things that the amendment was originally designed to prevent (cough)McCain-Feingold(cough). Before you know it, the concept of "Constitutional Guarantees" is relegated to the same realm as the Tooth Fairy and Santa Claus.

    30. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Well, ID is a religion - it is a belief about a supernatural being who has an omnipotent effect upon the world. For a government in the United States to teach a religious doctrine as fact violates the establishment clause. And ANY government in the US is subject to the restrictions of the Bill of Rights; that was determined way back in the Reconstruction.

    31. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atually all have, save the bit about quartering soldiers and (believe it or not) troublesome amendment #2. So saith this anonymous attorney.

    32. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Not only is dichotomic not a word, you're using it and paramount (I think you meant tantamount) incorrectly.

      Given that dichotomic is not a word, we're all without any authority to say whether the GP used it correctly or not...

    33. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      "Little Red Hoax"
      This will get the least press because it disproves slashdot Liberal majority that the Bush Administration is out to get them all.


      Actually, we don't need that story to prove the Bushiviks are out to get us all anymore. The NSA Data Mining Much Larger Than Reported, remember.

    34. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Correct. Too many scientists and hackers forget that randomness and free will are indistinguishable solely by observation. The higher power might be as dumb as a fruit fly, but there would still be an irreconcilable dichotomy between the "It's chance" crowd and the "Cosmic Fly did it" group.

    35. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by carlislematthew · · Score: 1
      The theory of ID on its own makes no claim as to whom this being might be, what its motives were, or how we should regard it.

      Phew, because if ID were to say "God did it" then it would be unconstitutional to teach it in public school science classrooms. It's so FORTUNATE that the controversial ID book "Of Pandas and People" doesn't mention Creationism at all! Then we can call it a science, and put it in the science classroom. (sigh) This is what has happened so far in this whole mess.

      The judge in the Dover school board case was shown evidence that showed that "Of Pandas and People" was Creationism, rebadged. Please read the following link.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Of_pandas_and_people

      "According to documents released in a 2005 court case in Pennsylvania, the outcome of the case prompted major editorial changes to the book. It was initially focused entirely on creationism but was extensively edited to refer to "intelligent design" instead. The first draft was called Creation Biology (1983); the next was Biology and Creation (1986); the third, Biology and Origin (1987); and later in 1987, the authors settled on the final title, Of Pandas and People. [3] They also deleted more than 250 references to "creationism" and the "creator" and replaced them in the final version with "intelligent design" and "intelligent designer.""

      This is also very good reading:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedge_strategy

    36. Re: As I peer into my crystal ball... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > I don't at all agree that it's unconstitutional, or even improper. [...] However, in order to say that teaching ID is unconstitutional, the following criteria must be met:

      Believe it or not, in some circles a Federal judge's opinion about these things carries more weight than yours do.

      > The theory of ID on its own makes no claim as to whom this being might be, what its motives were, or how we should regard it.

      But a couple of clowns on the Dover school board did make some very specific claims.

      > Either it happened by chance, or it didn't.

      FYI, the theory of evolution isn't a simple matter of "it happened by chance". Like the formation of stars and planets, lots of randomness is involved, but that's hardly all there is to it.

      > Acknowledging an opposing viewpoint is not anti-science

      It is if the viewpoint is mere propaganda, and is pushed on schoolkiddies for political reasons.

      > To blindly follow any hypothesis or theory without regard to alternatives is the definition of bad science.

      ID doesn't offer any hypotheses. It's nothing more than a collection of bad arguments against evolution.

      > I do believe it's a slippery slope, but sheltering children from various ideas is the opposite of education.

      So is teaching them religious propaganda.

      > [...] That, however, does not make it unconstitutional.

      The judge applied a long-established body of precedent on how the Establishment Clause applies to teaching creationism in public schools.

      > I don't particularly like the idea of teaching ID, but when I try to think about it objectively, I just can't reconcile its prohibition.

      Have you read the judge's written opinion?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    37. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 5, Funny

      [...]its like saying that a higher power might be involved when 1 + 1 equals 2 in a math class.


      1^3 + 1^5 = 2
              ^
              |
      higher power.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    38. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 14th amendment extends all the amendments in the federal constitution to the state level. Basically, this makes it so that a state can't pass a law or an amendment that says "women may not vote" or "the official religion of Nebrska is Shinto".

      So as far as constitutional issues are concerned, point 3 is invalid. If the amendments in the federal constitution say something is unconstitutional, it's automatically unconstitutional for the states too.

    39. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      I agree, and to start the ball rolling:

      So it wasn't enough for you that every other fucking thread on the page was about creationism, you had to hijack this one too. And some like-minded assholes modded you insightful.

      Slashdot needs a religious crusades sction so those of us who don't want to replay the same arguments over and over and over and over can avoid them.

    40. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by John+Meacham · · Score: 1

      Actually, the other choice is not that it is quantum random, it is that _it doesn't matter_. Science is only concerned with things that are testable and observable. Science is agnostic (or even apatheist), but not inherently athiest. (though scientists themselves come in those and many othen varieties.)

      Also, there are many TOEs that don't involve randomness FYI. Randomness is an observed characteristic of quantum mechanics, the book is still out as to whether it is a defining one.

      --
      http://notanumber.net/
    41. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by belmolis · · Score: 1

      Gitlow is not internally incoherent. The court held that the first amendment applied to the states, so that states may not arbitrarily infringe on freedom of speech, but that the particular sort of speech with which Gitlow was charged was legitimately subject to regulation. One can agree or disagree with exactly where the court drew the line, but it is well settled that the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech is not absolute - there are kinds of speech that may be banned (e.g. revelation of classified information, incitement of a crime) or regulated (commercial speech such as advertising).

    42. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by king-manic · · Score: 1

      i I agree, and to start the ball rolling:

      I don't believe in ID. That said, I don't at all agree that it's unconstitutional, or even improper. Perhaps it *should* be (although I don't think so), but I don't see anything to substantiate the argument that such prohibitions currently exist. The two arguments in favor of separation are as follows: 1) The constitution prevents the establishment of religion in the First Amendment, and 2) Congress has no power except that which is explicitly granted to it, therefore it can neither support nor discourage religion.

      However, in order to say that teaching ID is unconstitutional, the following criteria must be met:

      1) ID is religion
      2) Teaching religion as theory is supporting religion
      3) The classroom is a federal matter

      On the first point, ID might be a pillar of some religions, but I do not believe that it is paramount to religion. A religion is a construct (or divine law, if that's what you believe) which usually centers around a higher power, but not always. It is, at the heart of it, a set of principles, values, and beliefs about how one should live one's life, and possibly why. The theory of ID on its own makes no claim as to whom this being might be, what its motives were, or how we should regard it. It is the dichotomic (is that a word?) opposition of life arising by chance mingling of molecules. Either it happened by chance, or it didn't. Acknowledging an opposing viewpoint is not anti-science; rather it is the very foundation of science. To blindly follow any hypothesis or theory without regard to alternatives is the definition of bad science.

      On the second point, sociology is science, and religion is part of sociology. Sociology is not hard science like chemistry or physics, but it's science nonetheless. Further, no science is an island, regardless of how much each branch may wish it were so. I do believe it's a slippery slope, but sheltering children from various ideas is the opposite of education. Acknowledging that religion exists is not at all the same as supporting it. Teaching politics is as much of a slippery slope, and maintaining an unbiased presentation (inasmuch as that is humanly possible) is obviously important. Because it is difficult does not mean it shouldn't be attempted.

      On the third point, Congress only has powers which are granted to it by the Constitution. All other powers are granted to the state, or the individual. As far as I know, States are in charge of their own curriculum. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Congress is expressly prohibited from making any laws regarding religion, which would mean that such powers are relegated to the states by default. While it's not (to my knowledge) legal for any state to promote or discourage religion, such restrictions would logically be enacted on a state-by-state basis in their own constitutions. That, however, does not make it unconstitutional.

      Anyway, that's my take on it. I don't particularly like the idea of teaching ID, but when I try to think about it objectively, I just can't reconcile its prohibition.

      1- ID is in support of a particular religion namely abrahamic ones as it is not very compatable with any others.

      2- Teaching ID woudl undermine biology without any tangable benifit except to make teaching a certain set of religions easier and thus is supportign religion.

      3- I have no idea about this since I am canadian and our schools are provincial.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    43. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Alioth · · Score: 1

      The biggest point is that ID is _not_ science and should not be taught in a science class. I personally couldn't care less if it's taught about in a philosophy class or a religious studies class, because that's where it fits. To teach it as science is to do a gross dis-service to the people you're supposedly teaching science to. If it's to even be mentioned in a science class, it should only be mentioned in the context of WHY it is not a scientific theory and WHY it is not science.

    44. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Sr.+Zezinho · · Score: 1

      > On the second point, sociology is science, and religion is part of sociology.

      No, it isn't. You second point is "Teaching religion as theory". Religious ideas such as ID are the subject of Theology. Religion as a social phenomenon can be studied by sociology, but that is not what you are talking about.

      I think you are too confusing to be a good troll.

      --
      os trabalhos e os dias: http://zmoreira.net
    45. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the other choice is not that it is quantum random, it is that _it doesn't matter_.

      No, that's the cop-out that gets you out of caring. It's no more than an excuse for appealing to a higher athority.

      Science is only concerned with things that are testable and observable.

      Not always- just since people started giving the excuse "it doesn't matter" for not doing their jobs.

      Science is agnostic (or even apatheist), but not inherently athiest. (though scientists themselves come in those and many othen varieties.)

      Everybody brings their bias to the table; ignoring the bias doesn't help.

      Also, there are many TOEs that don't involve randomness FYI. Randomness is an observed characteristic of quantum mechanics, the book is still out as to whether it is a defining one.

      True enough- but all theories of evolution require variance within species and mutation to kick off the ability of a species to adapt. Species that don't have enough variance and mutation go extinct when their climate changes. This leads us to two untestible and unobservable conclusions: Something or someone set up the physical laws that lead to climate change, and something or someone is creating the pattern we view as random. Atheists say that something or someone is nothing- but that's just a belief as well, and thus religious. At this level of the explaination behind TOE, there's no escaping the religion, so might as well teach as many different religious theories as you can.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    46. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by berbo · · Score: 1

      You're saying there is no hiring power in mathematics? That must be why I can't get a job!

    47. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by michael_cain · · Score: 1
      However, in order to say that teaching ID is unconstitutional, the following criteria must be met: 1) ID is religion...

      Under current Supreme Court doctrine, the criterion is whether the action advances a religious purpose. The motivations of the parties that added ID to the curriculum are important in determining whether that addition served such a purpose, which would make it unconstitutional under the Establishment Clause. The evidence showed that the members of the school board that pushed ID had repeatedly made the following public claims: (1) it was important to teach Bible-based religion in the Dover public schools, and (2) ID was Biblical creationism in a scientific guise. In court, their statements were to the effect of "We're only interested in having the students see a more complete picture of speciation theory." The judge stated explicitly that, on the basis of the large body of their previous public statements, he believed they were lying in court. Whether ID was religion or not, its addition to the curriculum was intended to serve a religious purpose.

      There's some evidence that the Discovery Institute did not want the Dover case to go to court for precisely this reason. The school board had clearly used ID to further a religious purpose, everyone knew they had done it to further a religious purpose, and the almost-certain loss in court would reflect badly on the Institute. My reading of the judge's decision is that he said "ID is not science" rather than "ID is religion". The Discovery Institute didn't do themselves any good on this point when one of their people testified, under oath, that a definition of science that included ID would also include astrology.

    48. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by dangitman · · Score: 1
      The theory of ID on its own makes no claim as to whom this being might be, what its motives were, or how we should regard it.

      That's not at all true. It is implied by Intelligent Design proponents that life is basically too "amazing" or "mind-blowing," so it must be some awesome super-higher-power that does it. Although they don't say it publically, that higher power is also a Christian god, and the Intelligent Design theory was designed as a trojan horse to get him into schools. There is no secular support for the theory, and it was shown in the court case that ID is just revamped Christian creationism and an unfounded attack on Darwin.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    49. Re:As I peer into my crystal ball... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And to an outside observer- both have an equal amount of proof- or lack thereof. Both are mere faith.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  3. The cloning was real! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Turns out the researchers really meant to say they had used the Photoshop clone tool to copy the pictures of the cells. The next step would be to clone the actual cells instead of just the pictures. Small misunderstanding.

    1. Re:The cloning was real! by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Funny
      Turns out the researchers really meant to say they had used the Photoshop clone tool to copy the pictures of the cells. The next step would be to clone the actual cells instead of just the pictures. Small misunderstanding.

      Actually, Cloning was determined to be Intelligent Design and tossed out by the courts.

      Didn't you get the memo?

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  4. Yeah by Idimmu+Xul · · Score: 4, Funny

    n an earlier Slashdot story, it was reported that a student was investigated for requesting Mao's Little Red Book on inter-library loan. It appears that the story was a hoax.

    But that's exactly what they want you to believe!

    --
    The problem with slashdot is that most of its users were bullied and stuffed into lockers as kids!
    1. Re:Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By they, which do you mean:
      a) The Man
      b) Mass Media
      c) The Government
      d) Aliens
      e) CowboyNeal and his fanboys
      f) All of the above

    2. Re:Yeah by Amouth · · Score: 1

      if you RTA it doesn't say anything it has soem one high up saying it is unlikely because it would have been in violation of the law.. humm bush.. violating the law.. nahh that is right he is above the law.. yea that is it..

      it is one thing to come out and say he is lieing and another to say it is unlikely

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    3. Re:Yeah by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1
      Hoax? Maybe so. But as long as we're throwing around conspiracy theories, just consider how quickly Amazon.com sold out of copies of the Little Red Book after this story was released.

      A conspiracy by the booksellers, I tell you!!! :)

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
  5. Can there be anything worse? by Television+Viewer · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "Approximately 50 people have been indicted in relation to a scheme that drained almost $200,000 from a Red Cross fund designed to put money into the hands of Hurricane Katrina victims. From the article: 'Seventeen of the accused worked at the Red Cross claim center in Bakersfield, Calif., which handled calls from storm victims across the country and authorized cash payments to them. The others were the workers' relatives and friends, prosecutors said last week.'"

    News stories like this make me sad. I am sad for the people of New Orleans who are suffering. They have lost so much, many have lost loved ones. Many have lost homes. But I am also sad that there is a small number of people who could take advantage of others and steal funds which should have helped the people of New Orleans. What kind of deprived life can a person have where they think it is okay to steal from the less fortunate?

    And what is worse is these kinds of actions will make people less likely to donate. They will be wondering "Is my gift really going to help people, or will it be sucked up by greedy people taking advantage of a situation". What can a person do? Give and hope for the best??

    --
    I learned my ABC's watching television! I learned science watching Voltron.
    1. Re:Can there be anything worse? by Chmarr · · Score: 1, Funny

      Well, if your stress comes from not knowing if its going to be used properly, or sqandered, why not give to United Way and remove all doubt that it'll be squandered ??

  6. Ah, but... by susano_otter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That particular story ("the Little Red Hoax") may have been fake, but it does illustrate, in a very compelling and inspiring way, the very real civil rights abuses going on every day in this country.

    Abuses that are so thoroughly not in evidence that the people who believe in them are forced to manufacture them.

    --

    Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    1. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're kidding, right?

    2. Re:Ah, but... by rbochan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yep, the fact that it was a hoax is, of course, one main aspect.

      However, the fact that so many people were neither surprised nor outraged that the original story might have happened in the US... just indifferent... was rather depressing.

      --
      ...Rob
      The American Dream isn't an SUV and a house in the suburbs; it's Don't Tread On Me.
    3. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're kidding right?

    4. Re:Ah, but... by jordang · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It does quite the opposite. Any piece of untruthful paranoid rhetoric like this does nothing but dilute the real abuses going on. It adds a level of suspicion and disbelief to anyone with a legimate claim. Really hope you are being facetious with the forced manufacturing claim

      See Wolf, Boy who Cried

    5. Re:Ah, but... by Suit_N_Tie · · Score: 0

      Ah, the Fake but Accurate defense...

    6. Re:Ah, but... by superchkn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, it could have been the government testing the public's reaction to yet more erosion of our civil liberties, right?

      Hey, I'm just kidding...
      * superchkn quietly assembles a tinfoil hat out of his holiday Hershey's Kisses...

    7. Re:Ah, but... by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but it does illustrate, in a very compelling and inspiring way, the very real civil rights abuses going on every day in this country.

      You have got to be kidding.

      No, it would seem to prove there are so few cases regarding civil rights abuses that someone had to make one up. Or at least it would lead a logical person to conclude this. I mean, if there are 10s of thousands of real stories, and no one hears about them, and we only hear about this one, and it is fake? Do the math.

      There ARE problems with civil rights in limited circumstances in the US, and these fake stories do nothing but HURT those who really have a legitimate bitch. So, rather than prove your point, it counters it.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    8. Re:Ah, but... by eclectro · · Score: 1

      Abuses that are so thoroughly not in evidence that the people who believe in them are forced to manufacture them.

      Please contact the Dept. of Homeland Security in order to report to the nearest reeducation center so you can be reprogrammed.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    9. Re:Ah, but... by snilloc · · Score: 1
      To tell the truth, the strangest part of the story was that the kid didn't get the Little Red Book at the end. I guess I believed the story, but it didn't feel right.

      Oh, and how does a fake story illustrate real abuses? wtf?

      How about the fact that prior to 2001 the FISA court "modified" only 2 warrants, where after 2001 it has been 179? Now, if you're the Prez, and you have the choice between letting these cases drop or exercising executive authority (that may, contrary to popular opinion, be perfectly legal) to find terrorists in-country? Even if you come down on the side of sticking w/ FISA, at least admit that it's not exactly a no-brainer to do so when you've been shut down by them so many times.

      And since I know not many /.ers read conservative news sources, a recent editorial in The Weekly Standard included this....

      On Monday, December 19, General Michael Hayden, former director of the National Security Agency and now deputy director of national intelligence, briefed journalists. The back--and--forth included this exchange:

      Reporter: Have you identified armed enemy combatants, through this program, in the United States?

      Gen. Hayden: This program has been successful in detecting and preventing attacks inside the United States.

      Reporter: General Hayden, I know you're not going to talk about specifics about that, and you say it's been successful. But would it have been as successful-can you unequivocally say that something has been stopped or there was an imminent attack or you got information through this that you could not have gotten through going to the court?

      Gen. Hayden: I can say unequivocally, all right, that we have got information through this program that would not otherwise have been available.

    10. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean, if there are 10s of thousands of real stories, and no one hears about them, and we only hear about this one, and it is fake? Do the math.

      Too bad we can't get the religious nuts to apply this same sort of reasoning to the existence of their "god".

    11. Re:Ah, but... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      sorry, I don't care what he says, I will consider it a lie unless proof or examples are put forward.
      We're talking about people who lies are getting are citizens killed, and there civil rights abused.
      No more trust, now we need proof.

      By they way, I have used my home intelligence to keep tigers away from my home. I can't tell you how it works, what it is, but since I haven't been attacked by tigers, clearly Iave used it to gather information to prevent attacks from tigers.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    12. Re:Ah, but... by Belseth · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There ARE problems with civil rights in limited circumstances in the US, and these fake stories do nothing but HURT those who really have a legitimate bitch. So, rather than prove your point, it counters it.

      Got to differ with you are the rariety of civil rights abuses. They are getting out of control in this country. In some cities people are getting shot for disorderly conduct and other crimes that wouldn't nessaccarily involve jail time. Ignoring an officers orders shouldn't be grounds for execution in this country. Can't happen? Hate to break it to you but it's a daily occurance in this country. Just before I left LA a man was shot for disorderly conduct because both officers were under 130lbs and felt they couldn't handle the man. Since when have we gone to the Judge Dred system? Unless there's a serious risk of life there should be no excuse for beating or executing a suspect. I've seen hand cuffed suspects beaten on video tape that weren't even resisting arrest. We used to call it innocent until proven guilty. Add to that the government constantly ignoring the constitution and we have a serious problem. I just read an article about the NSA using visiting the website an excuse to install a thirty year cookie onto your computer to monitor where you browsed. Do we control the government or are they here to control us? The constitution says one thing but the government seems to feel the opposite is true.

    13. Re:Ah, but... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I don't understand how the quote helps your case. When pressed for clarification, the general simply states: we have got information through this program that would not otherwise have been available.

      He said nothing about whether that information was actually useful. It doesn't contradict his initial statement, but it's really more of an obfuscation rather than a clarification.

      I also don't see how the fact that after 2001, 179 FISA requests have been modified illustrates that abuse has lessened. If anything, it tells me that Bush tried to push the envelope on who they're monitoring, and FISA told him "no". After which, in classic fashion, Bush decides to just ignore the FISA.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    14. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gen. Hayden: "I can say unequivocally, all right, that we have got information through this program that would not otherwise have been available".

      ..... so... the general says that they used the non_FISA wiretaps to get information that would not otherwise be available. He did not "unequivocally say that something has been stopped or there was an imminent attack". Just saying they got information is rather meaningless, when the issue is how they avoided checks and balances in geting that information.

      There's a reason that Bush's credibility and that of the entire United states has been dragged through the gutter (Abu Graihb, Guantanamo Bay, suspending rights of citizens, ignoring habeus corpus, Extradition, Black sites in europe and afghanistan, made up category of "enemy combatant", ignoring geneva conventions, midnight rush for Schiavo vote but days of silence during tsunami and New Orleans Flood, Project for a New American Century, ... it never ends.)

      The fact that the FISA court only modified warrant requests 2 before 2001 and never denied a single one until denying 6 in 2003, suggests to me that the warrants they are seeking are without any probable cause what-so-ever. The FISA court has an extremely low barrier to meet when granting a warrant, and if they can't meet that barrier then they are just fishng.

      Further, even if they did get information that allowed them to stop an *immenent attack*, it means they need to reform FISA not ignore it.

      If their arguments regarding extended Domestic Constitutional Authority during times of war are true, then we are living in a Dictatorship with no checks and balances on the Presidential Powers. Especially convenient during an "unending war".

    15. Re:Ah, but... by technos · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Gen. Hayden: I can say unequivocally, all right, that we have got information through this program that would not otherwise have been available.

      So he got information he didn't already have. So what. It could have been anything from the bust size of a 1930's pinup girl to the fact the wiretap recipient likes to say "unh hun, and then what?" every five seconds while his mother in law is on the phone to piss her off.

      The fact they obtained information doesn't mean it was useful, or legally, or morally correct to collect it.

      Did they get real, actionable information they acted upon to save the United States from another 9/11 disaster? Nope. Or else they'd have trumpeted it all day long.

      --
      .sig: Now legally binding!
    16. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're missing the whole point of religion. You have to believe because you don't have proof. If you had proof it wouldn't be religion, it would be fact. So people aren't going to stop believing, because faith doesn't require proof (in fact it requires lack of evidence). That's also what makes religion so dangerous, a believer doesn't need to understand why "God" says something is so, he just needs to obey. Why can't you murder, lie, cheat, steal, etc? Not because it will hurt someone else, but because it is "God"'s will. That's why if you don't read some religious text, it is obvious to all that you can't possibly have any moral guidance and will clearly become a thug. Clearly.

    17. Re:Ah, but... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      Just before I left LA a man was shot for disorderly conduct because both officers were under 130lbs and felt they couldn't handle the man.

      You mean the guy yesterday brandishing a knife? That's a little more than "disorderly conduct". Waving a knife at cops is kinda asking to die. I just read an article about the NSA using visiting the website an excuse to install a thirty year cookie onto your computer to monitor where you browsed.

      How does their cookie, which is no more than a mere inactive variable, do anything other than tell them that you've visited their site before?

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    18. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well put. I'm off to go murder a few more babies before I go to bed.

    19. Re:Ah, but... by snilloc · · Score: 1

      Your tiger deterrent might be more impressive if you had previously been attacked by a tiger.

    20. Re:Ah, but... by Kamel+Jockey · · Score: 1

      However, the fact that so many people were neither surprised nor outraged that the original story might have happened in the US... just indifferent... was rather depressing.

      I remember as soon as I heard this story the first thing that came to my mind was it was just another college prank. However, the student clearly knew that someone would believe his story which is probably the reason he told it. It's no different than when Susan Smith killed her 2 children and then blamed the crime on black men. People believed her because she knew that story would be more plausible than if a more politically correct group of people had victimized her.

      --
      In case of fire, do not use elevator. Use water!
    21. Re:Ah, but... by jordang · · Score: 1

      I'd like to think, though perhaps I am being overgenerous and idealistic, that the majority of readers saw this from the start as the hoax that is was.

      This story was a perfect example of bad urban legends

      Unnamed student tries to get a book from the library (Little Red Book, old, wide circulation, Mao's Communist regime no longer much of a threat)

      Is visited by 2 members of DHS (thought they handled ingress / outgress issues mostly - this would be a job of the FBI) who show up with a copy of the book (so they're deciding on the spot whether or not to release a book?) after readng through library records (Bork Bork Bork, and no, that's not the Sweedish Chef)

      This is then blaimed on a poly-sci course, which is supposed to teach all of these topics, with no specifics, etc

      I've got a bridge to sell you. And a nice Nigerian official to help with the downpayment

      These BS statements are ripe for snopes. I'm more worried by the extreme reactions than to the indifference on an obviously bogus claim

    22. Re:Ah, but... by patternjuggler · · Score: 1

      However, the fact that so many people were neither surprised nor outraged that the original story might have happened in the US... just indifferent... was rather depressing.

      I think the earliest boingboing article on the topic pointed out inconsistencies with the whole story, suggesting it was a hoax- a lot of people probably got that feeling. I never really quite believe in outrageous things until there is a little settling time to allow facts to be checked and people to be interviewed etc. If you wait longer for the politics and so on to die down, the FOIA requests to be processed, files to be declassified, people to be more candid in their interviews, you'll get a much more accurate picture (if anyone cares enough to do all that work that is).

    23. Re: Ah, but... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > > but it does illustrate, in a very compelling and inspiring way, the very real civil rights abuses going on every day in this country.

      > You have got to be kidding. No, it would seem to prove there are so few cases regarding civil rights abuses that someone had to make one up. Or at least it would lead a logical person to conclude this.

      No, a logical person would conclude no such thing. If I make up a fake claim that "X happened", it has absolutely no bearing on whether similar things are happening.

      Examples (both false) -

      "The police beat me up."

      "The police gave a banquet in my honor."

      Can you conclude anything about the frequency of police doing those things, on the basis of my two false statements?

      > I mean, if there are 10s of thousands of real stories, and no one hears about them, and we only hear about this one, and it is fake? Do the math.

      I'm sure millions of people are having sex, even though the stories I hear around the water cooler are fake.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    24. Re:Ah, but... by patternjuggler · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, it would seem to prove there are so few cases regarding civil rights abuses that someone had to make one up. Or at least it would lead a logical person to conclude this. I mean, if there are 10s of thousands of real stories, and no one hears about them, and we only hear about this one, and it is fake? Do the math.

      Well, it is completely theoretically possible that the government is violating the amendment about unwarranted search and seizure for thousands or millions of people without any of them knowing about it. Not hearing any complaints doesn't mean that rights aren't being violated, not hearing any complaints doesn't mean the abuse is marginal and therefore harmless. Sure, the worst way to violate someone's right is to do it in a way that specifically and immediately hurts them - typically when a crime is committed the victim can show harm, but it is possible to have widespread and secret or subtle violations.

      Not hearing about abuses is no excuse, especially if all you do is read slashdot. There are websites being taken down and censored right now because the our good old nanny government has decided it wants a registry with names and phone numbers every adult entertainer, and plenty of other stuff going on I probably don't know about because I don't pay that much attention to the news (mainly because it's all bad and getting worse, I'd trade creationism-free textbooks for all the erosion of liberty we're seeing right now).

    25. Re:Ah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (that may, contrary to popular opinion, be perfectly legal)

      OK, how about this. You find which article and section or amendment of the constitution contains the words "... except for the President", and I'll agree that violating the constitution is perfectly legal.

      Otherwise, the president is a citizen of the United States and is bound by the laws of the country just like the rest of us, and doubly so by the limited powers listed by the Constitution.

    26. Re:Ah, but... by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      However, the fact that so many people were neither surprised nor outraged that the original story might have happened in the US... just indifferent... was rather depressing.

      Another way of looking at it is that all the people who did get outraged completely totally swallowed the lie without much critical thought. There was no "How could this be?" reaction. That is, in and of itself, depressing in multiple ways -- the lack of critical thinking from Bush opponents and the utter lack of credibility about respecting the Constitution that this administration has built for itself. While the apathy of those who believed and didn't care was worse in my opinion, the knee-jerk ranting of others who believed was also pretty shameful.

      I think this hoax showed both how divided the country is on values of freedom of thought and expression and how much damage this administration has done to its own reputation.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    27. Re:Ah, but... by dangitman · · Score: 1
      You mean the guy yesterday brandishing a knife? That's a little more than "disorderly conduct". Waving a knife at cops is kinda asking to die.

      How do you explain the atrocious behavior of the police in New Orleans? Believe me, it is not just violent people who get shot by the police. Police corruption is extremely commmon.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    28. Re:Ah, but... by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      How do you explain the atrocious behavior of the police in New Orleans? Believe me, it is not just violent people who get shot by the police. Police corruption is extremely commmon.

      Oh, surely, the NO police are rat scum bastards indeed. I was merely making a snide observation about how the story conveniently left out the "minor" detail that the dumbass was waving a knife and made it sound like he was shot for merely being disorderly.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    29. Re:Ah, but... by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Well, it is completely theoretically possible that the government is violating the amendment about unwarranted search and seizure for thousands or millions of people without any of them knowing about it.

      Thoery. UFOs are theory. This is the stuff paranoia is made from, and it serves no purpose.

      There ARE problems that are being ignored because people are too worried about "theoretical" problems. This makes no sense. Lets focus on the real problems, and I am all ears if you have a real instance to quote.

      This is akin to the lady who neglects her own children because she is too busy volunteering, to make herself feel good about "caring".

      It is amazing how many people here will talk about how the government "might" be doing all these things, and have not a single clue as to the real limitations and capabilities of the police. I mean shit, if they are capable of secretly spying on millions of us, you would think they would be smart enough to make sure that no camera was rolling while they violate someone's civil rights, ie: Rodney King, New Orleans, etc.

      Its just mindless "theory" that makes people feel good because they can say they care, simply by the fact that they don't trust the government. Nothing is accomplished, nothing is proven, nothing has changed.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    30. Re:Ah, but... by patternjuggler · · Score: 1

      it is amazing how many people here will talk about how the government "might" be doing all these things, and have not a single clue as to the real limitations and capabilities of the police. I mean shit, if they are capable of secretly spying on millions of us...

      Sorry, I was making a joke there. Nobody really knew about the massive unwarranted domestic spying until a couple of weeks ago, so I was posting as if I hadn't learned about it yet.

      you would think they would be smart enough to make sure that no camera was rolling while they violate someone's civil rights, ie: Rodney King, New Orleans, etc.

      I'm sure the equivalent of the 'broadcast flag' for video cameras is just around the corner, but right now the ability to tap the internet and phone system is extremely trivial compared to remotely turning off self-contained recording devices. Extremely bright flashes or lasers that destroy CCDs (and probably eyeballs too) or EMP devices come to mind as a mechanism. There was something about a led/laser being able to disable still cameras, but I suspect it only works under very controlled conditions.

      The fact that it is so easy to speculate on what the government may be doing in secret is a testament to the huge expansion in government secrecy and powers (congress and court approved or not) that seems to be accelerating recently. The more of our taxpayer money that disappears into black pits whose budgets themselves are secret the more the potential for the government to be intruding on our rights and freedoms and even doing things abroad that most moral Americans would not support.

  7. Firefly translation please... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Can someone tell what the heck Joss Whedon's comment is supposed to be? What I read was too weird to be understandable on Slashdot. Either way, sounds like Firefly/Serenity is history and/or J.W. had a massive brain fart without knowing it.

    1. Re:Firefly translation please... by thephotoman · · Score: 1

      What I think he means to say that he's gotten to a point in the story, where, if he cannot find another way of continuing it, he's fine with where it's been left off.

      At least, that's how I read things. Your milage may vary.

      --
      Haec merda tauri est. Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.
    2. Re:Firefly translation please... by The+Tyrant · · Score: 1

      Its called sarcasm, you might want to look it up some time.

    3. Re:Firefly translation please... by Kazzahdrane · · Score: 5, Informative

      In my defense, when I submitted the story I included a link direct to Joss Whedon's comment, but it seems it wasn't included when the story was posted (thanks for accepting my submission though, mighty /. Overlords!).
      Linky: http://whedonesque.com/comments/9027

      In case you can't be bothered with the link:

      "All right, now I have to jump in and set the record straight. EW is a fine rag, but they do take things out of context. Obviously when I said I had 'closure', what I meant was "I hate Serenity, I hated Firefly, I think my fans are stupid and Nathan Fillion smells like turnips." But EW's always got to put some weird negative spin on it. But so we're clear once and for all: If you read a quote saying "I'd love to do more in this 'verse with these actors in any medium" all I'm saying is that Nathan has a turnipy odor. It's not his fault, he doesn't eat a lot of them but everyone else in the cast noticed it and tht's not really something I'm prepared to deal with any more. And Jewel said outright she wouldn't do scenes with him except stuff like the SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER funeral scene which was outside in a high SPOILER wind. So if I do manage to find another incarnation for my beloved creation, it will have been totally against my will.

      I hope that clears everything up. Oh, and when I say I want to do a Spike movie, it means I have a bunion on my toe.

      -joss (by which I mean Tim)

      (no, actually me.)


      If that still doesn't make any sense, Joss is basically saying that EW took what he said and claimed he meant something different. He still wants to make Firefly/Serenity stories if he can.

    4. Re:Firefly translation please... by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Funny
      > Can someone tell what the heck Joss Whedon's comment is supposed to be? What I read was too weird to be understandable on Slashdot. Either way, sounds like Firefly/Serenity is history and/or J.W. had a massive brain fart without knowing it.

      Firefly was a leaf on the wind. *CRUNCH!*

    5. Re:Firefly translation please... by Androclese · · Score: 1

      He is being funny. He is taking a shot at EW by saying exactly opposite of what he truely thinks, which is an oppsite exaggeration of what EW printed.

      Rest assured, he does *not* hate us Browncoats.

    6. Re:Firefly translation please... by Asakusa · · Score: 1

      Except that he does have a bunion. Don't make less of that. They suck. I know. I have a cousin who does that shit for a living.

      --
      The prisoner of hope is sustained and encouraged by his hope, even as he is confined by it.
    7. Re:Firefly translation please... by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      Well that certainly explains.....er....no.....seriously, wtf is he talking about!

    8. Re:Firefly translation please... by flynns · · Score: 1

      You, sir, are an evil bastard.

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    9. Re:Firefly translation please... by rusty0101 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Basicly what Joss is saying is that about the only thing that EW got right on their report is that he is comfortable with the prospect that there will be no more Firefly adventures. That is not to say that he does not love the show. It is not to say that there is anything about the show that he does not feel could be continued. It is not to say that he has any issues with any of the actors or actresses in the show or the movie.

      The quote that he provided in his rebutal is to say that EW took statements of his as far out of context as these quotes are out of context with the EW story. In other words EW's reporting is just about as wrong as you can get.

      When Joss says he is comfortable with closure for the project, he is saying that if he can not get funding for another movie, or if no-one picks up the ball and starts a radio show, or a book series, or a continues the comic books, or extends them into graphic novels, well, that's OK. The story is good as it stands. He would much rather see ongoing media work related to the Firefly universe, but it does not have to happen.

      -Rusty

      --
      You never know...
    10. Re:Firefly translation please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has bunions for a living?

    11. Re:Firefly translation please... by skeptictank · · Score: 1
      He thanks you are a smelly geek that fell for a formulistic western straight out of the old 1950 serials.

      The truly sad thing is that serenity was one of the best scifi pictures to come out in the last 2 decades, even considering that it was formulistic and predicable.

    12. Re:Firefly translation please... by BuddyJesus · · Score: 1

      The comment's supposed to be sarcasm. It's basically mocking the fact that Entertainment Weekly translated "closure" into "this is the end, and I'd hate to continue" with Firefly.

    13. Re:Firefly translation please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank god. I was really hoping that Nathan Fillion does not, in fact, smell like turnips.

    14. Re:Firefly translation please... by rusty0101 · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't know about that. I presume we will have to take the word of Joss on that, unless Jewel Stait wants to pipe up on the situation. Note that I did not say that Nathan was not all of what Joss said in his report, only that it had as much to do with the EW article as the EW article had to do with the Joss interview that generated it.

      -Rusty

      --
      You never know...
  8. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by gkuz · · Score: 4, Funny
    and I personally do believe in inelegant design

    I also believe in inelegant design. How else do you explain the Edsel?

    But there's still no reason for the "blink" tag.

  9. About Firefly by thephotoman · · Score: 1

    Well, at least that makes things a little more clear. I want to know how Jewel felt in the pilot of Firefly (by which I mean "Serenity", not "The Train Job") when she had to kiss Nathan on the cheek, given the fact that he smelled so bad.

    Though, honestly, I hope he does find another way to tell the story.

    --
    Haec merda tauri est. Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.
    1. Re:About Firefly by Jarnin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have a feeling that the Serenity dvds will sell like hotcakes. I mean, I got a copy for Christmas, and I didn't even ask for it; my parents knew I liked sci-fi, so they picked it up.

      If the dvd does well, then I could see Universal being interested in a direct-to-video sequel, which would be fine by me.

    2. Re:About Firefly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I haven't even bought it yet!

    3. Re:About Firefly by Udo+Schmitz · · Score: 1
      "Well, at least that makes things a little more clear."

      Mod parent +5 funny.

  10. Moof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Katrina aftermath still making waves.

    Score -1 Bad Joke

  11. A little red hoax by jellomizer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This hoax has gotten to NPR and other (More liberal) news agencies as well. Which is really sad, I do want to hear both sides of an argument but when both sides jumps to find a story that proves that other side is bad just makes me sick. Ok you don't care of the of Many of Bushes Anti-Terroism laws but making up stories that show how bad it could be will only smear your side when they find out that it was only a hoax.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:A little red hoax by geekoid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      These orginization did not make up the story, they reported what the person said happened.
      Of course they jumped on it, they should have, no matter who is in office.
      The person who failed here is the liar.

      I am so sick of hearing the media called 'liberal'. There is no liberal media, and looking at how they lambasted Clinton over his lie ought to prove that. But then, who would people have to blame for the failings of there party?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:A little red hoax by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What is interesting is how the retraction itself has made front page news. Yet when retractions that would be favorable to "liberals" or whatever always get buried on the back page. The Democrats really need to get their PR machine into the frickin game if they ever want to regain their influence.

    3. Re:A little red hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When was it on NPR? I listen all the time and never heard it. Do you have a link?

    4. Re:A little red hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I also hate it when the "liberal" media jumps on hoax stories. Like WMDs and terrorist connections in Iraq. Like mobile biological weapons labs, uranium from Niger and stockpiles of anthrax. Like Rumsfeld saying, "We know where the weapons are, they're north, south, east and west of Baghdad." Like the UK's 45 minute claim. Like babies hurled out of incubators in Kuwait.

      Conversely, I love it when they totally ignore a story because it just might be a hoax ... like, say, the Downing Street Memo.

      http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-15936 07,00.html

    5. Re:A little red hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm perhaps but first they need something more substantial than "Bush Is Bad!" to do PR on.

      No... "Republicans Are Bad!" won't do either.

    6. Re:A little red hoax by n54 · · Score: 1

      "There is no liberal media, and looking at how they lambasted Clinton over his lie ought to prove that."

      Are you saying liberals can't hate adultery as much as anyone else? If so that's silly, of course they can.

      Conclusion: media is sensationalist, which is actually much worse than being slanted politically.

      --
      this comment is provided "as is" and without any express or implied legibility or congruity [...]
    7. Re:A little red hoax by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      Hmm perhaps but first they need something more substantial than "Bush Is Bad!" to do PR on.

      No kidding, everybody already knows it so it just isn't that exciting.

      I kid, I kid. Hell, I am a Malthusian, I like Bush!

      (insert generic "mods will probably..." statement here to notify everyone that this is a joke)

    8. Re:A little red hoax by El+Royo · · Score: 1

      I had a much better article that pointed to an article that says the student admitted to making up the story. Here's a link: Student admits hoax

      Here's a link to an OpinionJournal article on it.

      --
      Author of Enyo: Up and Running from O'Reilly Media
    9. Re:A little red hoax by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "More liberal" than NPR? What would that be, The New York Times or Pravda?

      The mainstream media is liberal and proud of it. They won't admit it for the most part, but they do let their guard down from time to time.

      Journalism is a "Liberal Art", after all.

      I am a registered Republican, but I don't agree with the party a lot of the time. I just disagree with the Democratic party even more often.

      Frankly, there is not much difference between the parties anymore. I prefer Libertarian, but the two parties pretty much have them shut out.

    10. Re:A little red hoax by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Google:

      "Little Red Book" Darmouth hoax = 20,800

      "Little Red Book" Darmouth -hoax = 105,000

      Do you have an example of a periodical that made the hoax "front page news" but buried the actual original news story?

            - AJ

    11. Re:A little red hoax by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      You don't know any reporters, do you?

          - AJ

    12. Re:A little red hoax by freeweed · · Score: 1

      I am so sick of hearing the media called 'liberal'.

      I'm not. I'd love it if all media was exceedingly liberal. Openness, freedom and respect are all very good things to have in a society.

      What I *am* sick of is the use of the word 'liberal' as an insult. It makes no sense. It's just a cheap way to avoid saying 'people who do things that I disagree with, even though it doesn't hurt me, but BY GOD THEY SHOULD STOP IN THE NAME OF DECENCY' anyway.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    13. Re:A little red hoax by bhirsch · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the damn Conservative media! Is there such a thing as an Underdog Complex?

    14. Re:A little red hoax by mckyj57 · · Score: 1

      These orginization did not make up the story, they reported what the person said happened.

      I said the world is flat -- should NPR report that?

      News organizations with their own agenda, like NPR, report unsubstantiated eyewitness accounts. They did it in the supposed "Jenin Massacre", and in many other cases.

      That is why I have stopped my formerly substantial contributions to Public television and radio. Their leaders have a political agenda and don't follow proper standards when it comes to reporting.

    15. Re:A little red hoax by dangitman · · Score: 1
      News organizations with their own agenda, like NPR, report unsubstantiated eyewitness accounts.

      I guess that explains why NPR is so goddamn right-wing.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    16. Re:A little red hoax by The+Wooden+Badger · · Score: 1

      So a news organization should report what anyone says is fact without, how do they call it, fact checking? I believe that is what got Dan Rather in all the trouble. He saw a story that he wanted to be true, so he reported it without checking the facts.

      The stories they should jump on are the ones that I wish they would lay off jumping on so hard. There are times I don't want 24/7 coverage of some breaking story just so I can here yet another eye witness account that doesn't tell me one new iota of information. Like the time I stayed up late to watch olympic volleyball only to see nonstop coverage of the olympic park bombing. Or that other time I wanted to watch a NBA playoff game only to see OJ Simpson drive his car down the freeway at a whopping 25 mph.

      --
      Heroscape, it's like legos combined with anachronistic wargames.
  12. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ZombieWomble · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Einstein said God doesn't roll dice

    You know he was pretty much wrong when he said that, right? Hidden variable theories of quantum mechanics have been pretty thoroughly disproven.

  13. The parent in not a troll by kermyt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just because someone expresses an unpopular viewpoint (in this case that they believe in god perhaps?) does not make them automagically troll. the parent is a well thought out statement of position. NOT A TROLL!

    1. Re:The parent in not a troll by CitizenJohnJohn · · Score: 1, Funny

      Agreed it's not a troll, but "well-thought out"? It's barely coherent.

    2. Re:The parent in not a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Saying "Darwinism" makes it lean toward trolling, in my opinion. You don't hear people referring to Newtonism, Einsteinism, or Hawkingism; it's an attempt to implicitly place science on the same level as religion, which tends to get on the nerves of people who have an understanding of the difference between the two.

    3. Re:The parent in not a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed.
      Hell. I had to read it word by word to figure out what he was talking about.
      I can see a careless moderator locking onto a few key words and making a (wrong) snap decision.

    4. Re:The parent in not a troll by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Merely using the word Darwinism is trolling? Do Slashdot posters these days even know what a troll is? Just because you disagree with someone does not make them a troll.

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    5. Re:The parent in not a troll by puddpunk · · Score: 1

      Do you have to be so Overly Critical all the time?

  14. Editors - do some editing! by Frequency+Domain · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do we really have to rehash the ID thing yet again? The link is to an article dated December 20, there's nothing new here.

    1. Re:Editors - do some editing! by grub · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Intelligent Design stories (no pun intended) get /. a lot more page views and ad hits.
      CmdrTaco: Damn, I need to fill the car.
      ScuttleMonkey: No problem, Chief, I'll run another ID rehash!
      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:Editors - do some editing! by eclectro · · Score: 2, Funny

      Do we really have to rehash the ID thing yet again? The link is to an article dated December 20, there's nothing new here.

      Yes, but it is a dead horse. And as you know, dead horses need punishing.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    3. Re:Editors - do some editing! by jZnat · · Score: 1

      Judging by the way CmdrTaco and Zonk seem to ignore each other's articles, they probably don't even know how many times we've talked about ID...

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    4. Re:Editors - do some editing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw Intelligent Design, when are we going to teach Serenity in schools?

  15. Joss Whedon's quote in Entertainment Weekly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...was just entertainment, weakly.

  16. Of course they faked the cloning... by ackthpt · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    When the doctor took his cells to the Xerox at Kwik Kopy, he found he didn't have the right change for the machine so he lied.

    In other news Endgame for Bush and Rove?

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  17. Slightly evil by hey · · Score: 3, Funny

    Should read:

    "Two weeks ago, when Time Warner Inc. was on the cusp of signing a sweeping
    online deal with Microsoft Corp., a team of executives from the media company's AOL unit traveled to the beast's lair in Redmond, Wash., to make sure everything was in order. ... They had found some of Microsoft's morals to be evil, while the contemplated joint venture with the satanic king contained what they thought were hellish pitfalls."

  18. Link to article about the hoax by jtorkbob · · Score: 5, Informative

    Seems the editor forgot to post any link to any article about the discovery of the Little Red Book hoax. Here's one.

    http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/12-05/12-24-0 5/a01lo719.htm

    --
    AC: Only on slashdot... could the sentence "My hovercraft is full of eels." be moderated "+4, Insightful
    1. Re:Link to article about the hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it just me, or is the article linked in the write-up completely different than the article linked by the parent, which appears to be exactly what the write-up says?

      What the hell is going on?

    2. Re:Link to article about the hoax by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      One thing about "The Littel Red Hoax" is that there is no legal reason it couldn't be true. I think it was very irresponsible of the student to report something false, but it's interesting that I can't think of a legal reason that couldn't happen.

    3. Re:Link to article about the hoax by tringstad · · Score: 1
      One thing about "The Littel Red Hoax" is that there is no legal reason it couldn't be true. I think it was very irresponsible of the student to report something false, but it's interesting that I can't think of a legal reason that couldn't happen.

      Because legislation of intent is a very slippery slope, and without intent there is no difference between saying the dog ate your homework because you didn't bother to do it, and actually believing your dog ate your homework but being mistaken and having it turn up later.

      And really, this was just a very creative case of "the dog ate my homework".

      -Tommy

      --
      "I got a half gallon of Jack, and 2 dozen Ant Traps. I'm about to get wild." -me
    4. Re:Link to article about the hoax by Kymermosst · · Score: 1

      Seems the editor forgot to post any link to any article about the discovery of the Little Red Book hoax.

      We'll it's not like nobody gave them the link.

      Oh, and to reiterate: I told you so!

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    5. Re:Link to article about the hoax by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand me. I mean that I can't think of a reason the falsely reported events couldn't have happened in actuality. I can't think of a reason some government agency couldn't now decide to secretly mass trawl records at libraries looking for people who've read a certain book and investigating them.

      Legislating against hoaxes is pointless unless you can prove some attempt to defraud or something.

    6. Re:Link to article about the hoax by jtorkbob · · Score: 1

      > I can't think of a reason
      How about because of public outrage, as demonstrated by this whole debacle? That's the ironic side benefit of our over-politicized system: the backlash of something like that getting out is a real deterrent.

      > Legislating against hoaxes is pointless unless you can prove some attempt to defraud or something.
      This is more like 'shouting fire...' as the saying goes. Maybe I was only doing it to get out of watching 'Gigli', but it's still my fault if someone dies.

      --
      AC: Only on slashdot... could the sentence "My hovercraft is full of eels." be moderated "+4, Insightful
    7. Re:Link to article about the hoax by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      If public outrage were a sufficient deterrent for anything, we would likely have never gone to war in Iraq.

    8. Re:Link to article about the hoax by jtorkbob · · Score: 1

      If Saddam had responded to public outrage, we wouldn't have had to invade. He converted outrage to fear, by torturing and murdering anyone who opposed him. Personally, I'm outraged that we didn't throw the bastard in jail back in '91.

      --
      AC: Only on slashdot... could the sentence "My hovercraft is full of eels." be moderated "+4, Insightful
    9. Re:Link to article about the hoax by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Saddam isn't our leader. If he wouldn't respond to the desires of his own people, it's their responsibility to oust him, not ours. So your response is a complete non-sequitor as Saddam's response to public outrage has nothing whatsoever to do with Americans and our government.

  19. the link doesnt say it was a hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it says several people claim it was 'unlikely'

  20. AOL - Google - Microsoft by gooman · · Score: 3, Funny

    They had found some of Microsoft's technology to be clunky

    Let me guess, they were running Windows, right?

    --
    "Kittens give Morbo gas!"
  21. With regards to the hoax... by Sheetrock · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It'd be best for liberals to just step away from this one.

    I remember after the CBS memo thing a number of people yielded to the temptation to say "Well, maybe the memos were fake, but the information in them must be true."

    Occasionally you need to concede that the news gets it wrong instead of trying to bail out a leaky story. It reeks of desperation when instead of simply admitting you've been had on this one you cling to something that is rapidly being proven false. Isn't this the mentality you're trying to fight against?

    --

    Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
    -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




    1. Re:With regards to the hoax... by LaMuk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      'Effect' is used as a noun. 'Affect' is used as a verb.
      -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.

      Except when it is not. Here is what my Dad says:

      The word affect can be both a noun and a verb. The
      word effect can be both a noun and a verb. The word affect has a
      specialized meaning in psychiatry.

      The usual problem is much simpler. To affect something is to
      change it. You affect something and cause an effect. In this case,
      affect is a verb and effect is a noun. You are usually speaking of a
      cause that is related to an immediate and obvious effect.

      There are many minor meanings of the two words. Many of the
      meanings are obsolete or archaic.

      Affect, as a psychiatric noun, means the emotional make up of a
      person.

      Effect as a verb means to bring something to pass. Example: I
      will try to effect a compromise.

      As I said above, in most discourse affect is a verb and effect is a
      noun.

      I hope that I have not affected your interest in words. I hope that
      the effect of this message is to enable you to differentiate the
      meaning of the two words.

    2. Re:With regards to the hoax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It'd be best for liberals to just step away from this one.

      Why did you have to turn this into a partisan issue? Was it such a stretch to think that ALL defenders of American liberties - liberals, democrats, conservatives, republicans, libertarians - could be equally concerned over a (thankfully false) report that the government was investigating people who read Mao's book? Did you honestly think only liberals would raise a stink over such an issue?

      Because if that is what you're saying, then you are tacitly admitting that only liberals are defenders of American liberties.

    3. Re:With regards to the hoax... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No, the liberals will jump all over this and say it was a hoax. It's what they do.

      OTOH, I can't see in the story where anyone confirms that it is a hoax.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:With regards to the hoax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe he's just saying that liberals should step away as to not hurt their cause. It's just ambiguous, unfortunately, and now you've gone and made it a partisan discussion. It really reflects badly on you to take an obviously non-partisan comment clearly meant to enable liberals to avoid the pitfall of backing a story that would hurt their credibility and twist it into a liberal slam. Certainly it could be argued that liberals need all the help that they can get as they are clearly not in power. So this was just a comment meant to aid the underdog, and now you've gotten up on your pedestal and hurt the liberal cause yourself by attacking a supporter. How terribly tragic...so terribly tragic.

    5. Re:With regards to the hoax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can understand how it might be so hard for you to use a web browser to hit more than one website.
      Here, let me help you:

      http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/12-05/12-24-0 5/a01lo719.htm

      See? It's a hoax. The kid made it up. It never happened.

    6. Re:With regards to the hoax... by n54 · · Score: 1

      Some of them will but the vocal ones will simply dig up absolutely everything they can to prove they were right in principle, much of which will be of an even more dubious nature than the little red book hoax was. The majority will probably continue unaware that it was admitted to be a hoax anyway.

      Seen it before, expecting to see it again.

      --
      this comment is provided "as is" and without any express or implied legibility or congruity [...]
    7. Re:With regards to the hoax... by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      The mods have effected off-topic ratings on your post. I hope that this effect will not affect your affect.

    8. Re:With regards to the hoax... by Petrushka · · Score: 1

      'Effect' is used as a noun. 'Affect' is used as a verb.
      -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.

      But when I bring about an emotive state, what I am doing is effecting an affect. Hah! Chew on that, Spock.

    9. Re:With regards to the hoax... by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

      Effect can also be used as a verb.

      -Mr DeadDrunk Earth date 29/12/2005

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    10. Re:With regards to the hoax... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      There's no more need for the "Little Red Book" story. We already have another that's even worse for Bush.

    11. Re:With regards to the hoax... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      number of people yielded to the temptation to say "Well, maybe the memos were fake, but the information in them must be true."

      Conservatives were all saying "the memos are fake, so the information in them must be false".

    12. Re:With regards to the hoax... by utuk99 · · Score: 1

      Where is the list of defenders of American liberties? All you listed was groups trying to take away different liberties. How's this for non-partisan? They are all out to screw you in one way or another get used to it. The best you can do is find politicians that vote closest to your main views. Of course, none of them qualify for me so I just vote against the most heinous.

      Just so you know my bias, I am a slightly conservative anarchist (1.5,-5). You can find out your bias at politicalcompass.org. I think it should be a requirement when posting on politics.

  22. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by tgibbs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just read the decision. Many have expressed concern over judges deciding scientific issues. But the judge in this case has done a truly admirable job of identifying the key scientific issues, and identifying the flaws in ID doctrine.

  23. Dartmouth, little red book hoax? by FlopEJoe · · Score: 2, Interesting
    How about the Little Red Book Draws Government Attention hoax? Where slashdot and Ted Kennedy believed:

    "An unnamed Dartmouth student was visited by Homeland Security for requesting a copy of Mao Zedong's Little Red Book for a class project." From the article: "The student, who was completing a research paper on Communism for Professor Pontbriand's class on fascism and totalitarianism, filled out a form for the request, leaving his name, address, phone number and Social Security number. He was later visited at his parents' home in New Bedford by two agents of the Department of Homeland Security, the professors said."

    when, it turns out,

    "The University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth student who claimed he had been visited by agents of the Department of Homeland Security for requesting a book written by Mao Zedung through interlibrary loan has confessed to making up the story. The unnamed senior tearfully admitted to the hoax after UMD history professor Brian Glyn Williams confronted him with inconsistencies in his story at his parents' home December 23, the New Bedford Standard-Times reported December 24."

    1. Re:Dartmouth, little red book hoax? by dkf · · Score: 1
      The unnamed senior tearfully admitted to the hoax after UMD history professor Brian Glyn Williams confronted him with inconsistencies in his story at his parents' home...
      The confrontation was at the home of Professor Brian Glyn Williams?
      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    2. Re:Dartmouth, little red book hoax? by superchkn · · Score: 1

      Sure, the pronoun usage is a bit ambiguous, but don't you mean:
      The confrontation was at the home of Professor Brian Glyn Williams' parents?

    3. Re:Dartmouth, little red book hoax? by ender- · · Score: 1


              The unnamed senior tearfully admitted to the hoax after UMD history professor Brian Glyn Williams confronted him with inconsistencies in his story at his parents' home...

      The confrontation was at the home of Professor Brian Glyn Williams?


      No, it was at the home of Professor Brian Glyn Williams' parents. :)

    4. Re:Dartmouth, little red book hoax? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      I'm all for fixing vaguely anteceded pronouns, but this is a bad example. Otherwise you'd have to say that it means, "...Williams confronted Williams with inconsistencies in Williams' story at Williams' parents' home."

      The "him" in "confronted him" already establishes that "he" and variants refer to the student ('cause it doesn't say "himself").

  24. Hoax? by Stalus · · Score: 1

    I'm a little confused. Nowhere in TFA does it say that the Dartmouth student's claim is a hoax. It says an earlier claim of a similar incident at UC Santa Cruz was false, but does not directly address the Dartmouth claim, which is what the previous Slashdot story is about. They got some random official to say that he doubts it happened, and would be surprised, but no quote in that article says it didn't happen. They admit that the student requested the book, but by a means other than was originally reported.

    Sure, the original story should be looked at with skepticism, but keep looking for better evidence that it really was a hoax before reporting it as such.

    1. Re:Hoax? by Russ+Steffen · · Score: 1

      It reason the article say anything about the student's claim being a hoax is becuase the submitter picked just about the worst possible story to link to. Here a better link, taken randomly from a Google search for "Little Red Hoax".

    2. Re:Hoax? by Swift+Kick · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, it was a hoax.

      The kid made it all up.
      You can go read it here: http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/12-05/12-24-0 5/a01lo719.htm

      Or you can stay confused, if you do so wish.

      --
      "We'll need 2000 crickets, 4 cans of Easy Cheese, and the fluid from 18 glowsticks for this plan to work...." - ph0n1c
    3. Re:Hoax? by Theatetus · · Score: 1
      Yes, it was a hoax.

      You now are certain it's a hoax because the same paper that reported it as fact now has retracted?

      The important thing, Mr. Bishop, is that I was never here...

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
  25. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am sure that some Religious fundaments will call this ruling of some crazy liberal judge.

    That would be delusional. The judge is a rather conservative Bush appointee.

    I am conservative myself and I personally do believe in inelegant design but I do not believe that it should be tough in schools as science.

    Believe whatever you want according to the dictates of your own conscience. So long as you don't try to put it in public school science curricula, that is fine with me.

    Science is not guaranteed to be absolute truth, science is a process of observations and finding a theory that best fits the observation, if a pattern cannot be found it is called random

    Science is a bit more than you give it credit for. There is a pretty well defined set of philisophical principals that extend it well beyond pure empiricism.

    As far as 'random', this is whare I disagree. Self-organization is easy to show on many scales and doesn't require any faith to accept. This argument is an approach used to try obfuscate the fact that there are real ways of dealing with the question of self organization. Unfortunately they require some pretty careful thinking to undersand and are not as easily presented to the general public as Darwinism is.

    Just saying God did it is a shortcut that ends further investigation

    And that is the problem. Progress ends when you stop looking for alternative explanations.

  26. RIM is getting special treatment by bodrell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    And I'd be willing to bet it has something to do with the 10% of Blackberry users who work for the federal government. Don't get me wrong--I'm also sure NTP's patents are bogus, but that hasn't stopped the millions of other bogus patents (such as Myriad Genetics' downright immoral patent of breast cancer genes), or any of the many software patents that keep popping up in /. articles. Why the special treatment for RIM? If I were less cynical, I'd think this was the dawn of an age of rejecting bogus patents, but let's be realistic.

    --
    Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    1. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by rewt66 · · Score: 1

      Crushing the small guy? When "the small guy" is a patent vampire, I'm all for it!

    2. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by jZnat · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing that it's because they two companies actually went to court over this instead of just settling. Patents don't really prove to be legally useful until you can prove that your patent is valid in court when suing someone over infringement.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    3. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by elysian1 · · Score: 1

      NTP should have taken the first settlement offer. I don't remember the amount, but wasn't it in the hundreds of millions? Now it stands to get nothing.

    4. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by bodrell · · Score: 1
      People should review RIM's behavior during this long struggle before being so glib as to equate NTP's patents to patents for a breast cancer gene.

      Don't get me wrong--I'm not defending RIM; I'm sure there's some shenanigans going on, such as bribery, but that doesn't mean NTP's patents are anything less than bogus. Not a spec of novelty to them. Wireless email? That's just sticking together two popular technologies, and I'm sure the idea is as old as email itself. But now it can be implemented. This site pretty well reflects my opinion on the subject. Granted, patenting a gene is even less novel (since the sequence itself has generations-worth of "prior art"), but only by a hair. I do think that novel genetic sequences (i.e., not pre-existing in nature) ought to have some IP protection, but it should be copyright, not patent. A process for expressing the gene should be patentable, but not the sequence itself.

      They are crushing the small guy, pure and simple.

      If the small guy doesn't have a non-obvious invention, I don't have much sympathy. Seems like both sides are bad guys.

      --
      Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    5. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by Analogworm · · Score: 1

      I'd like the issue to be that easy where we could just apply a label to it and condemn it, but unfortunately it's not. The technology was invented in the US by an engineer who wasn't attached to big money. His patent is a threat to RIM and I feel they may win because they simply have a huge amount of money behind them. They are not simply beating out competition with better technology because they have duplicated a prior art. They are using previously invented technology with more funding to get around the inventor.

    6. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by Analogworm · · Score: 1
      I agree about the settling. Keep that in mind though, when this whole thing ends. I'm sure we'll find out more details on early negotiations once one of the sides loses.

      By the way, NTP did prove that RIM infringed on its patents, so they fulfilled your second thought. Somehow, they've decided to "revisit" the decision and raise it to possible supreme court candidacy. Very interesting. I'm sure there's room in here for some great investigative reporting.

    7. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may be that RIM is getting special treatment, but that is a necessary step along the path of getting some relaxation of the patent structure in information technology. It takes concrete examples of very useful creativity being squashed by lawyering to get some movement in the government on this issue.

    8. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by Analogworm · · Score: 1
      We should wait for the end to discover why that was turned down. There's good dirt here. I'll bet something lies under the surface statements of both companies and recent events.

      http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNe ws/TPStory/LAC/20051221/RRIM21/TPBusiness/Canadian

      The final ruling may have important consequences for the future of engineering in the US.

    9. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by espressojim · · Score: 1

      You can't patent a gene. That patent would not hold up in court. Myriad Genetics probably patented the mutation on a gene, with a patent on using that mutation for detection of increased risk of breast cancer, or to develop a theraputic agent.

      I work in acedemia (Broad institute), and work on association study work. People follow up linkage results all the time. There's nothing immoral about that, or about the work that is needed to gather a large cohort of patients to do an association study properly. Labs follow up other labs work all the time.

      I suggest you get a different example for your bogus patents...

    10. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The federal government was going to get to use their Blackberries anyway, citing the case of Trojan v. Shat-R-Shield as precedent. Patent office reexamination took off recently, I guess in the past three or four years as a cheaper alternative to litigation. Not that it helps NTP or RIM at this point. Heh, heh.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    11. Re:RIM is getting special treatment by ralphclark · · Score: 1

      You know, I was thinking exactly the same thing - somebody whispered "make this go away" into the ear of some senior Washington official.

      It's worth noting that the banks are pretty heavy blackberry users, where these devices are ubiquitous right down to the very lowest level of management. They would be inconvenienced by any extended Blackberry outage. So draw your own conclusions. You know what they say - "follow the money".

  27. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  28. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    I also believe in inelegant design. How else do you explain the Edsel?

    Not to mention the prostate and appendix. Also it seemed to be a factor in the Google story as well.

    But there's still no reason for the "blink" tag.

    I thought most browsers had evolved away from that.

  29. A Hoax? by jmcharry · · Score: 1

    About the only thing I got from the article was that there was an error in how the book was reported to have been ordered, and there was a similar story from another college that turned out to be false. That gives some credence to the notion it is a UL, but doesn't prove anything. After all, there appear to be mis-statements or mistakes in most news articles. Also, the article didn't claim it was a hoax, just that there was an error in the original reporting.

    1. Re:A Hoax? by Swift+Kick · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Yes, it was a hoax, as in "It never happened, the kid made it up"

      Go read, please: http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/12-05/12-24-0 5/a01lo719.htm

      The error in the original reporting is that it was all fake. The kid made it up. The parents had no clue. No Homeland Security agents, or any government agents ever spoke to him about any book requests.

      Please, please, please just do a google news search if you don't believe it.

      --
      "We'll need 2000 crickets, 4 cans of Easy Cheese, and the fluid from 18 glowsticks for this plan to work...." - ph0n1c
  30. I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by Nova+Express · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    ..for rushing to make such hasty and ill-informed comments in the original Little Red Book thread such as quoting Goering or the usual Orwell reference.

    Then again, this is the Bush-hating crowd, on Slashdot, so perhaps I shouldn't hold my breath.

    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

    1. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by nitemayr · · Score: 1

      Yes, because there have never been any documented cases of the US government (any one)overstepping it's bounds and goose-stepping over the rights or freedoms of the citizenry. Never happens, nuh uh. Never ever.

      If I even have to, y'know, illustrate that, you are so going to fail History class next fall.

      --
      Hello Kettle,
      You, my friend are as black as pitch.
      With love, Pot.
    2. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember one such particular incident during WWII, where a Democrat (Roosevelt) sent every Japanese-American person (citizen or not) to 'confinement camps'.

      How's that for 'overstepping the rights or freedoms of the citizenry?

    3. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This begs the question, why did so many people believe the story?

      Granted, a certain number of people will believe almost any foolishness... but doesn't it bother you that so many people thought this could be real?

    4. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by chris_eineke · · Score: 1

      We aren't the Bush-hating crowd... we:

      Groupthink Bush doubleplusungood

      --
      "All you have to do is be fragile and grateful. So stay the underdog." Chuck Palahniuk, Choke
    5. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by superchkn · · Score: 1

      Let me test a theory on why people would believe something like this.

      OK, poll time:
      Whoever trusts the government, reply to this post.

    6. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      So, can you give me a reason the scenario couldn't happen? Like, would it be possible for the student to sue, or do anything about it if it did? I think it's blatantly unconstitutional, but it seems to me that the Patriot Act specifically allows this kind of thing. Power that can be abused will be. If not by Bush, by some later president that you don't agree with.

    7. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      Precisely the grandparents point? The price of democracy is eternal vigilance and that includes democrats, republicans, corporate leaders anybody?

    8. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by ChadN · · Score: 2, Funny

      As an official and unrepentant Bush (all male family members, including Barbara) hater, I apologize for rushing to the conclusion that a Bush-crony run government department could have a crack squad of Communist anti-infiltration investigators watching over inter-library loans with any sort of competence. Most likely the "crack squad" are really George W's dealers, and the Communist anti-infiltration unit is apparently investigating all the "Red" Cross workers in the "blue" states.

      --
      "It's overkill, of course. But you can never have too much overkill." - Anonymous Slashdot Coward
    9. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Retractions may be in order... but I hardly think any Americans that actually work for a living owe Mr. Bush anything resembling an apology. It's not like it's been discovered that he didn't -- after all -- personally order wiretaps on US citizens without warrants. His name is on all sorts of legislation that violate Constitutional rights.

      You may think a police state is what America needs, and -- though I may take issue with you on that -- you're perfectly entitled to think that way... though it's another matter entirely to pretend that the Bush administration haven't paved the way about as much as one administration reasonably could without (a coup) for an Orwelian story to spring to life.

    10. Re:I Look Forward to Thread Posters Apologizing by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

      It looks like another martyr has just thrown himself to the geeks. I hope he's covered in Cheetos, or else this could take a while.

  31. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by jellomizer · · Score: 0

    It is pretty good for a first post.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  32. RIM is getting special treatment by Analogworm · · Score: 1
    People should review RIM's behavior during this long struggle before being so glib as to equate NTP's patents to patents for a breast cancer gene. They came to crush a competitor because they duplicated technology in a US company's patent. They didn't do a prior art search before starting manufacturing. It's been a political, not technological battle for them all along. The reason that the money involved has balloned has been due to their blatent disregard for previous judgements. Previously judges wanted to penalize them for flouting US Patent law.

    Many techies view Microsoft with contempt because of its monopolistic anti-competitive behavior. Why give RIM the pass to satisfy the argument that there are bogus patents out there? They are crushing the small guy, pure and simple.

    I agree, it seems like special treatment to review these patents again. Seems like someone said, "Make this go away." Now, "who said it?", is the question.

  33. Obligatory Office Space... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, uh, so cloning was shown to be intelligent design, so we're going to be using evolution now. Yeah, uh, I'll be sure to send you another copy of the memo...

  34. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    too bad evolution doesn't equal random.
    And god can be scientifically disproven. In fact, I have ran tests, and in each and every one of them this god fellow failed to show up, deliver lottery numbers, or cure children inflicted with AIDS.
    God doesn't exist, QED.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  35. Desperation in the patent office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The patent office is starting to attract some serious attention of an official kind. We will likely see legislation that will cause the bureaucrats a world of hurt.

    Prior to this, they had pretty much said they would patent anything including business methods. Undoubtedly someone high up in the patent office got a call from someone in a senator's office describing graphically what would happen if the patent office showed itself unable to deal effectively with this problem. It won't help them. Legislation is already in the works.

  36. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know he was pretty much wrong when he said that, right? Hidden variable theories of quantum mechanics have been pretty thoroughly disproven.

    How do you prove a negative? Proving that there isn't an underlying pattern to the apparent pseudorandom behavior on a quantum level is like proving there is no God. And in fact, being a firm believer in the "God of the Gaps" theory- that's exactly what you're attempting when you claim there are no possible hidden variable theories of quantum mechanics. At best, you can only say there are no proven hidden variable theories- yet.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  37. Actually EW by geekoid · · Score: 1

    paraphr5ased that very quote:
    "Joss loves firefly, and in fact, feels the no one has a turnipy smell at all."

    You got to know this grape vine.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  38. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "That would be delusional. ..."

    Yes, fundies aren't known for having delusions at all....

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  39. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that there are real ways of dealing with the question of self organization. Unfortunately they require some pretty careful thinking to undersand and are not as easily presented to the general public as Darwinism is.
    Such as?

  40. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Myself I am a strong believer in evolution (belief not being the best word) , I consider myself a very observant Jew(and a Tanakh minimalist )
    I find it ridicules that some people can not combine faith and science , the two things do not mix normally (unless science can define the view in question) .

    Science is there to help us understand the world and how things work , faith is there to help us accept the things we can not understand , till the time comes that we may understand those things .

    Science and faith should never be opposed and have no reason to be .

    I like to think of it like this , if g-d is all mighty then surely it would have the power to architect a world an existence than can construct itself and follow its own rules , such as the laws of physics . Much as I do as a systems admin to automate my tasks . Science helps me to understand the way things works . Perhaps my views are naive and cowardly and there to help me cope with a short term life , but they do not affect my scientific views as I hope they would not any person who is religious .
    sadly they do as they are too blind sighted to accept anything.

    To them I say this , if g-d is all mighty then perhaps g-d would do as us sysmins do and automate the creation process . Why would the divine waste time on something which us mere mortals would have found a simple solution for .

    These things need not be a dividing line , they are only made so by hatred and fear . Fear to know truth and to understand the workings of the world and if you choose the workings of g-d

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
  41. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or, perhaps he's just really, really backlogged and hasn't been able to get back to you yet. Can you imagine the number of tickets in his queue after several thousand years of prayers by billions of users?

  42. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by jZnat · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    text-decoration: blink; is in the CSS specs (forget which), so it's still here. marquee, however, is not, so it is done via an XBL binding in Firefox at least.

    --
    'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  43. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by KingPrad · · Score: 3, Funny

    You are letting the facts get in the way of a good argument!

    --
    Stop the Slashdot Effect! Don't read the articles!
  44. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by The_Sock · · Score: 1

    God requires faith... He's a faith monster. If he was to show up for your tests, deliver lotto numbers, cure children, or anything like that, he would not exist. Or at least he wouldn't be God... He'd just be Bob, that guy that swung by and gave you lotto numbers and cured some kids, but hasn't done anything since. Stupid one trick pony Bob... And God doesn't want to be Bob.

    --
    For a good time call www.sawkie.com
  45. ID in Science Class by Anti_Climax · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I really think my Freshman biology book got the creationism vs. evolution thing right. In the first chapter, probably within the first few pages, as it was introducing students to biology at large, it mentioned how most, if not all, of modern biology is built on the theory of evolution.
     
    It went on to say that there are groups which believe that the earth and the creatures as we know them, were created by a higher power. And while this could be possible, it was beyond the scope of a science class as it was not a scientifically testable hypothesis. It finished with suggesting that, should you wish to learn more about the idea of creationism, you should contact the clergy of your church of choice.

    Simple, Factual, not more than a parapgrah. Now if only I could remember who published that text book.

    --
    Even people that believe in pre-destiny look both ways before crossing the street.
    1. Re:ID in Science Class by deblau · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think it was Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Press.

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    2. Re:ID in Science Class by sir_montag · · Score: 1

      Such sanity in a modern textbook - it must be a hoax! It is quite clear that you are making a complete fabrication in regards to this!

  46. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try this one:

    Pray:

    God, if you are real, make yourself so real to me that I cannot deny you. Wait and see what happens.

  47. EU launches first Galileo navigation satellite. by smoker2 · · Score: 1

    and no, they are not "geostationary" orbits. Just so ya know ;-)

    1. Re:EU launches first Galileo navigation satellite. by Xserv · · Score: 1

      This is a hacked up version of the article I submitted up there. I put in some important links that were chopped off on the editorial above by mistake it seems.

      See these links for more information:
      1. EU Space Agency Galileo Project
      2. Galileo Nav WIKI Page

      --
      "I love lamp."
  48. Talking about Serenity/Firefly and Windows... by atari2600 · · Score: 2, Funny

    In "Trash", while Kaylee and Jayne are working on the dumpster's control panel right before Jayne gets electrocuted, you can plainly see that the screen on the control panel is a screen shot of a Windows 2000 Desktop, complete with Start bar. The window that is up appears to be the Add New Hardware window.

    I am serious - the scene appears at around 21:39 :)

    1. Re:Talking about Serenity/Firefly and Windows... by thomasa · · Score: 1

      That is probably Vista.

    2. Re:Talking about Serenity/Firefly and Windows... by rebill · · Score: 1

      "Backward Compatibility" - it's a bitch. Once the user interface becomes an established standard, changing it might never happen . . . even after mankind uses up the Earth and settles new ones.

      --

      Chivalry is not dead, it's just frequently misspelt. - M. Langley

    3. Re:Talking about Serenity/Firefly and Windows... by Crudely_Indecent · · Score: 1

      HAHAHAAHA.....

      Perhaps that's a good thing. If we're lucky, the only part of Windows to survive that far into the future is the "Recycle Bin"

      Confirmation post to follow.....loading up the DVD to verify.....

      --


      "Lame" - Galaxar
    4. Re:Talking about Serenity/Firefly and Windows... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true. I was watching that episode today, in fact, and I had to pause the thing because it shocked me so.

      Why, have a screenshot...http://img368.imageshack.us/my.php?im age=snapshot200512282338348tq.jpg

    5. Re:Talking about Serenity/Firefly and Windows... by sir_montag · · Score: 1

      Thank you for that - you made my day.

  49. Hoax Hoax? by lousyd · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Just for the record, if you believed so readily in the "fact" that Homeland Security was visiting this guy for requesting the Little Red Book, then what makes you think you're not doing it again with the "fact" that it's a hoax? Is there any more evidence or proof that it's a hoax than that it was true in the first place? If an article on the Internet can deceive you in the first place, what makes you think it's set you straight now?

    Just food for thought. I believe there is a reality, and that there's a truth in this situation. But I'm not sure I have the evidence for what it is. "It's a hoax!" just means that we have to start thinking rationally and not be so ready to accept everything we read. Let's start right here.

    --
    If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
    1. Re:Hoax Hoax? by mark_hill97 · · Score: 1

      nothing at all, except the website belived it to be true when the published it, and so did the professor. but once it got press some inconsistancies started popping up. he questioned him and he admitted to lying, most likely to get an extension on his paper.

    2. Re:Hoax Hoax? by lousyd · · Score: 1
      nothing at all, except the website belived it to be true when the published it, and so did the professor. but once it got press some inconsistancies started popping up. he questioned him and he admitted to lying, most likely to get an extension on his paper.

      ...says the article.

      --
      If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
    3. Re:Hoax Hoax? by mark_hill97 · · Score: 1

      Oh, you're right... ;)

    4. Re:Hoax Hoax? by dcapel · · Score: 1

      Oh, your right about that.

      --
      DYWYPI?
    5. Re:Hoax Hoax? by Antaeus+Feldspar · · Score: 1
      That's a good point. Millions of people believe that Native Americans never scalped a single European until after Europeans had introduced them to the practice by scalping Native Americans. They believe this because they believe it's the debunking of a false myth spread by Westerns that portraying the Native Americans as scalping their enemies.

      There's only one problem. Most of the evidence we have for what tribal life was like before Europeans started settling the North American continent comes from the tribes' oral traditions: songs that celebrated their rituals, their traditions, and their ways of life. These include songs about scalping. They don't include songs about other practices that the Native Americans adopted from the European settlers. So, at the very least, the "Native Americans only learned scalping from the Europeans" story is severely implausible.

      Ironically, the "corrected" belief is now steadily growing. I remember a few years back watching the premiere of a much-ballyhooed new Saturday morning cartoon, a Western with a female hero. It turned out to be atrocious in many respects, not least of which was that when "Jane" (yes, it was a revisionist Calamity Jane) rode into a new town and heard reports from the townsfolks of settlers being scalped by the "Injuns", Jane decided then and there that it was a lie -- because, she announced, "Indians don't scalp people... Only white men do that."

      --
      If people are to respect the law, perhaps the law should begin by respecting the people.
    6. Re:Hoax Hoax? by lousyd · · Score: 1

      I hear that all the time.

      --
      If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
  50. Katamari HIV by tepples · · Score: 1

    Allah is the Prince? Islamatari Damacy!

    Allah (meaning "the God") is the King of All Cosmos. The prophet Muhammad is the Prince, and Jesus and the other prophets are the cousins. (But didn't you know that a katamari can give you AIDS?)

    1. Re:Katamari HIV by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      lol where'd u get the genealogical tree of all the prophets and where (Quran,Bible etc etc) exactly was any of them appointed a prince? :)

    2. Re:Katamari HIV by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      Much like a DNS server run by a 14 year old, he is not authoritative. He's mapping the people he named to characters in the game based on how they appear to us.

  51. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Wait and see what happens."

    Cue 'Final Jeopardy' music...

  52. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by wooferhound · · Score: 0, Redundant

    So , You are saying that
    God Created Evolution . . .

    --
    We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
  53. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by sigloiv · · Score: 2, Insightful
    That would be delusional. The judge is a rather conservative Bush appointee.

    Technically, judges don't belong to a party. Therefore, he's neutral. Just because Bush appointed him doesn't make him a conservative "nut".

    --
    Software is like sex. It's better when it's free. -Linus Torvalds
  54. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by dartarrow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "And that is the problem. Progress ends when you stop looking for alternative explanations."

    Even with evolution we are starting to stop to look for anything alternative. I am not for nor agaisnt the theary of evolution. But it remains just that - a theory. Being a better theory does not make it true. Remember the time when the most acclaimed minds in the world thought that the world was flat? Or how the best minds once thought the molecule was the smallest unit before they discovered atoms and electrons and those became the smallest. Then they they spilt THOSE up too. Remember the period table 50 years ago had less elements than they do now.

    Intelligent Design may not be the answer. But that does not mean evolution is. Scientists are supposed to have an open mind. Accept your believes and accept that they may be wrong.

    --
    I love humanity, it is people I hate
  55. If we are really lucky.. by beldraen · · Score: 1

    ..the judge will ignore the patent office. The judge's ruling so far has been intelligent. The patents were granted and until officially rejected they are empowered by law. If we are lucky, the judge will rule against Blackberry, it will have close. Only then will corporate America and its subjects realize that (most, if not all) software patents are NOT in their best interest.

    I do not like the idea of Blackberry losing on behalf of those individuals who will be harmed, but America has always needed a dramatic failure of the system before it is corrected. Having the patents that tanked a company declared invalid would clearly demonstrate the idiocy of our system that allowed them to be granted in the first place.

    --
    Bel, the mostly sane.. "Of course I can't see anything! I'm standing on the shoulders of idiots." -- Me
    1. Re:If we are really lucky.. by Xenophon+Fenderson, · · Score: 1

      Harm? Blackberry's are fricking leashes! RIM going out of business would be like the Great Emancipation. I suppose the obsessive types would be pretty stressed, but I say fuck 'em. I really, really don't need to be THAT easily accessible.

      --
      I'm proud of my Northern Tibetian Heritage
  56. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by shobadobs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How do you prove a negative?

    MEEP! BEEP! The bullshit-o-meter just burst!

    Any statement of fact can be written in positive or negative form, so your statement simply says you can't prove anything at all. Positive: "I am going to the park today." Negative: "I am not going to remain outside the boundaries of the park today." Or more simply, "It is not true that it is not true that I am going to the park today."

    And in case you really believe the statement, "You can't prove a negative.": I'd like to see you try to prove it. Oh, I'm sorry, did I ask you to prove a negative?

  57. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Kelson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Remember the time when the most acclaimed minds in the world thought that the world was flat?

    So you're saying that we should continue looking for alternatives to the current understanding that the world is round?

  58. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2

    Any statement of fact can be written in positive or negative form, so your statement simply says you can't prove anything at all. Positive: "I am going to the park today." Negative: "I am not going to remain outside the boundaries of the park today." Or more simply, "It is not true that it is not true that I am going to the park today."

    Double negatives are not true negatives. So sorry, you lose on that one. Please try again.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  59. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  60. Separation of church and state by Lxy · · Score: 1

    I have a poblem with this statement from the judge:

    The separation of church and state is enshrined in the US constitution

    Anyone care to pint out WHERE? I have not read the constitution in its entirety, however I have skimmed through it and have not found anything that would suggest seperation. The first amendment prevents the government from interfering with established religion. It does NOT, however, prevent the church from meddling with government (AKA public schools). When Thomas Jefferson enacted seperation of church and state, it was a one-way seperation.. the state cannot mess with the church.

    It amazes me that a judge is ruling this "unconstitional", despite the fact that the constitution has no bearing on religion outside of the church.

    I've done a basic Google search, and all the articles refer to myths and misinformation. I can't find one single article explaining how this is unconstitutional.

    Anyone care to help out? Point out how "religion in schools" is banned by the constitution?

    --

    There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
    :wq
    1. Re:Separation of church and state by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

      This is a correct statement. I have found sources that say it is in the establishment clause of the first amendment, yet I have yet to see text of this. If anyone finds this text, please post a link.

      Separation between church and state gets so perverted. Everyone thinks it means you can't have any religion in any public service, institution or whatever, however all it really means is the government cannot start a Church if the United States....plain and simple. It doesn't mean judges can't have the ten commandments up or anything of that sort. Unfortunately, people on both sides of the debate have completely and utterly screwed it up.

      --

      Gorkman

    2. Re:Separation of church and state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the government cannot start a Church if the United States....plain and simple

      To put it more elegantly, the clause is there not to keep religion out of the government, but to keep the government out of religion. That's how the Founding Fathers explained it. Too bad the idiots in this country understand that clause perfectly while many of the smartest people just can't get their hands around the concept. If you know the history of England, you'll understand the danger of government sponsored churches.


    3. Re:Separation of church and state by Brolly · · Score: 2, Informative

      That actually is somewhat accurate. The establishment clause was intended to keep the United States free of an official religion, with the founders specifically looking at the Church of England as an example. The purpose of the clause was to keep the government from interfering with religion. What's interesting about this is that the French have an even more explicit separate of church and state. However, the purpose of the French separation was to keep religious groups, the Catholic Church in particular from interfering in secular, governmental matters. The American model draws from a fear of government, while the French model draws from a fear of organized religion.

    4. Re:Separation of church and state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The First Ammendment ensures that the government cannot unduely favor or disfavor a particular religion. Since most schools in the US are funded by the state and favor all practiced religions is impractical, it is against the First Ammendment to teach religion in public schools.

      Private schools are another matter.

      And for those Christians out there. Seperation of church and state is also in the Bible. Jesus through the tax collectors out of the temple remember.

    5. Re:Separation of church and state by JonLatane · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The first amendment prevents the government from interfering with established religion. It does NOT, however, prevent the church from meddling with government (AKA public schools).
      Perhaps you should read the first 10 words of the First Amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." It doesn't specifically say that no church can meddle with the government. But if a church meddles with the government, it can pretty much only be through the passage of laws. But hey! Congress can't pass a law respecting an establishment of religion. So, although it doesn't say it explicitly, it does this nicely. And before you say something about the courts being involved in religion, remember that the courts were established by Congress through legislation.

      Now, anything requiring intelligent design to be taught in schools would most certainly be a "law respecting an establishment of religion." And, although the Constitution only specifically mentions Congress, I think it should be agreed that this should apply to the states and municipalities and such as well (because I'm sure we'd be equally upset if these bodies banned free speech).

      I don't think anyone would have a problem with ID being taught in a religious studies class, which most high schools today offer. But that's where it belongs. A science class should teach ideas that have been proven (or at least backed up) through scientific evidence and conceptualized using a scientific method. But hey, religion in a religion class and science in a science class? That's just begging for the wrath of God, isn't it?

    6. Re:Separation of church and state by hypnosoh · · Score: 1

      I don't know if ID is unconstitutional or not, but it should not be allowed in a science textbook. It just isn't science plain and simple. I don't know why people believe that religion is banned in schools. The high school I went to had religious groups after school, and it taught about religion, all the religions in its proper humanities class. Why is necessary to force it into the science class. When religion gets involved with science history has shown there was repression of new ideas and people died. Do we really have to go through all that again? It's a simple equation if religion is taught as science then science is dead because the search for truth ends with faith.

    7. Re:Separation of church and state by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      It is also important to note that in the beginning, the First Amendment read simply that Congress would make no law establishing an official religion. After a number of meetings not on the floor of the Congress, the language of the amendment, "Congress shall make no law regarding the establishment of religion" was chosen. The reason for the more expansive language isn't known, but it is a reasonable argument to say that Madison (you know, the guy who wrote the Bill of Rights with the support of Jefferson, after writing the Constitution itself with the support of Hamilton and others) was concerned that a restrictive interpretation of the amendment would be followed which would allow the government to give any support it wished to the preferred religion, short of declaring it an official religion (as we have done with English, giving it every possible support short of declaring it the official language).

    8. Re: Separation of church and state by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > > The separation of church and state is enshrined in the US constitution

      > Anyone care to pint out WHERE? [...] It amazes me that a judge is ruling this "unconstitional", despite the fact that the constitution has no bearing on religion outside of the church.

      The judge did nothing more (or less) than appeal to long established precedent in interpreting the first amendment.

      Apparently the Thomas Moore Law Center put the school board up to adding ID to their curriculum for the sole purpose of triggering a case that would overturn that precedent. Don't blame the judge if he didn't take the bait.

      Maybe someday there'll be another case where the school board doesn't get voted out before they can appeal, and the Supreme Court will reverse the traditional interpretation. When that happens, we'll find out whether it was a good thing or not.

      As for the letter of the Constitution... Don't kid yourself into thinking that we abide by the letter of it in much of anything. For example, the Constitution (as amended) forbids having the President and Vice President from the same state. In the run-up to the 2000 election somebody noticed that, so Cheney filled out a change of address form as a fig leaf. A couple of guys tried to challenge it in court, but the case was thrown out on the grounds that they didn't have standing to challenge it.

      If you want to revert to the letter of the Constitution - or rather, to somebody's opinion about what the letter of the Constitution means - a lot of stuff would change, and you might find that you didn't like all of it.

      Maybe we should do it anyway, on principle, though we'd probably end up fighting another civil war to see whose "literal interpretation" wins. Meanwhile, for better or worse, the courts operate on the system of precedent, and judge Jones did his job.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    9. Re:Separation of church and state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That means Americans were fucked right from the word go, assuming the inauguration of the American constitution was the word "go".

    10. Re:Separation of church and state by eheldreth · · Score: 1

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

      I think its obvious, by "congress" the founders ment everyone and by "shall make no law" they ment "not even so much as think about religion". Oh, yea and by "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed" they ment the right of the people we choose, to keep and bear the arms we alow, shall not be infrenged.

      --
      The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum. - O'Toole's Corollary
    11. Re:Separation of church and state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "anything requiring intelligent design to be taught in schools would most certainly be a 'law respecting an establishment of religion.'"

      Except that a decision by a school board is not an act of the Federal Congress in any way shape or form. Also decisions by the courts (which are established by Congress) create de facto restrictions on religious freedoms all the time, mostly those relating to religious expression by state employees. The proper way to do this is not to resort to the courts but to let the free market and free elections sort out what is going on.

      Under your logic, when does something stop being a "law"? If I were high school science teacher, could I decide to teach a unit on ID to contrast to evolution? It would be very useful to expose the general crappiness of both ID theory and, quite frankly, evolution. No. That would still be considered a religious imposition and a "law" because I still have civil authority over my students.

      The proper way to deal with something like these ID school board yahoos is to vote the fools out of office with the next election and change things back to the way they should be. Which is exactly what Dover did. It isn't to get the courts involved which actually slower and sets dangerous precedents. So now we have a decision by a judge, with a Master's in Law and probably a poor scientific background, deciding an issue that Doctors of Biology and Biochemistry are arguing about. This isn't a good thing even if you think he got it right. And if you think the judges are going to stop here you are kidding yourself.

      The 14th amendment, while important, broke a heck of a lot of checks and balances on the constitution and the government. Suddenly the federal government is not limited to only cases of federal scope, but can meddle in local school board decisions. There is something wrong with that. The original design for the federal government was very bottom-up. The groups with the most power were the locals, less so for the states, etc. Modern government creep has turned that top-down, so that the locals are restricted by every government entity above them. This is not a good thing. Constitutionally ennumerated rights were not originally designed to be imposed on states and certainly not on municipalities. The lower levels of government were supposed to ennumerate their rights for themselves as they saw fit. Except that slavery showed that this model wouldn't always work.

    12. Re:Separation of church and state by charlieo88 · · Score: 1

      Anyone care to pint out WHERE? I have not read the constitution in its entirety, however I have skimmed through it...

      Are you a citizen of the US? If you are, I remind you of the quote by Bo Franklin (Ben's younger brother) where he said that lazy people deserve neither liberty nor temporary safety. Read it. It isn't that long.

    13. Re:Separation of church and state by Uncle+Kadigan · · Score: 1
      The purpose of the clause was to keep the government from interfering with religion.

      Actually, if you read the writings of the founding fathers, it's quite clear that they included the establishment clause not so much to keep religion safe from government, but to keep government safe from religion. There are abundant quotes to support this. Here are a few samples:

      http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/quotes_found ers.html

      http://monotheism.us/

      http://www.deism.org/foundingfathers.htm

      http://www.infidels.org/news/atheism/extra/found ing-fathers.html

      http://www.aztriad.com/fathers.html

    14. Re:Separation of church and state by Alsee · · Score: 1

      First I would like to note that the rule of Separation of Church and State long predates the Constitution. Perhaps this rings a bell: "Render unto Caesar, the things that are Caesar's and unto God the things that
      are God's."


      The first amendment prevents the government from interfering with established religion.

      You are missreading it. The force of government may not be used to establish anything with respect to religious matters. For example further down my post you'll see James Madison state that hiring congressional Chaplians is a violation of the establishment clause.

      prevent the church from meddling with government (AKA public schools)

      No, that is government meddling with religion. School boards and principals and teachers are are all government employees acting in an official capacity as agents of the government. They cannot abuse their government powers for the purpose of promoting or supressing any religion or religious belief or religious practice.

      For example students have the right to pray in school. However government officals cannot abuse their government powers to promote nor to suppress student prayer. This is why the ACLU wins all of their school prayer court cases... because the ACLU explicitly supports the right of children to pray in school... and every ACLU prayer related case has in fact been a lawsuit targeted at government officials and their use of government powers to promote or suppress prayer by students.

      When Thomas Jefferson enacted seperation of church and state, it was a one-way seperation

      You have been lied to. That is a complete fabrication of religious right author and anti-separationist activist David Barton. Barton's claim is that Jefferson makes the following statement about his "wall" metaphor in his letter to the Danbury Baptists:

      That wall is a one directional wall. It keeps the government from running the church but it makes sure that Christian principles will always stay in government.

      Jefferson made no such statement, either in the Danbury Baptist letter or in any of his other writings. No professional accommodationist scholar gives Barton's claim the slightest credence. Still, the story continues to circulate, and has now become so widely disseminated among religious right activists that it has all but assumed the status of a religious "urban legend."

      Barton has a bad habit of LYING and INVENTING NUMEROUS BOGUS QUOTES. In fact he has been cornered into admitting to many of his fabricated quotes.

      Trying to claim Jefferson as anything but the stanchest of Separationists is comical. Jefferson led the pack on removing religion from of government institutions, and was often attacked as an atheist for it. (He was not an atheist, but then as now, one of the favorite tactics of religious activists trying to hijack government power for their own favor is to smear anyone who opposes them as an atheist. Jefferson was no Christian, but he was no atheist either.)

      The primary authority on the meaning of the First Amendment would indisputably be James Madison. He is known as the Father of the Constitution and the Father of the Bill of Rights, and he directly penned most of it.

      Some of Madison's writings on the subject:
      Strongly guarded as is the separation between Religion & Govt in the Constitution of the United States the danger of encroachment by Ecclesiastical Bodies, may be illustrated by precedents already furnished in their short history

      It was the Universal opinion of the Century preceding the last, that Civil Government could not stand without the prop of a religious establishment; and that the Christian religion itself, would perish if not supported by the legal provision for its clergy. The experience of Virginia conspiciously corroboates the disproof of both opinions. The Civil Government, tho' bereft of everything like an associated hierarchy, pos

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    15. Re:Separation of church and state by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Except that a decision by a school board is not an act of the Federal Congress in any way shape or form.

      Except that the school board power is derived from the state and/or local legislature, and the 14th Amendment fixed the Constitution so that the Bill of Rights applied to all levels of government. What good is a right against unreasonable search and seasures, if search warrants are only required for federal police but not needed by state and local police?

      Also decisions by the courts (which are established by Congress) create de facto restrictions on religious freedoms all the time, mostly those relating to religious expression by state employees.

      Bullshit. Government employees are only prohibited from abusing their governmental powers to promote their favored religion or to suppress/oppress a disfavored religion. You have the right to religious freedom, but you do not have the right to violate other people's rights while acting in an offical capacity as an agent of the government itself.

      For example court employees are perfectly welcome to place a copy of the Ten Commandments amongst the personal knick-knacks on their desk. However that same government employee cannot abuse his government powers to order that a ten foot tall Ten Commandments be carved into the government court building itself. That is not an exercise of religious freedom, that is an abuse of government power.

      School employees must make reasonable accommodations for any non-disruptive prayer by students in school, however they cannot abuse their powers to establish a student election and to grant special powers to that elected student to use the public address broadcast system before every school sporting event for the purpose of MANUFACTURING a bogus "student led prayer" session. That is an unconstitutional use of government power for a religious purpose and an infringment of student's rights not to have the force of government used against them to impose a majority denomination religious service of upon them. Government powers may not be abused to promote nor suppress any religion or prayer by students in school.

      The proper way to do this is not to resort to the courts but to let the free market and free elections sort out what is going on.

      No, not when it comes to the use of governmental power. The constitution explicitly FORBIDS you to violate other people's rights based on a 51% vote. The Right of Free Speech is NOT subject to infringment by democratic majority vote. Religion is NOT subject to democratic majority vote. You cannot abuse a 51% majority to seize the FORCE OF GOVERNMENT to grant government favor for your personal religion and you cannot seize the FORCE OF GOVERNMENT to weild as a weapon to oppress other religions.

      Under your logic, when does something stop being a "law"?

      The issue is use of government power. If you are not an agent of the government wielding government powers then there is no issue. If you are off duty then there is no issue. If you are on duty and we are talking about some incidental personal religious matter... reasonable personal items or reasonable religious prayer during a personal break, then there is no issue so long as you are not abusing government powers for that purpose and so long as it does not unduly interfere with your job.

      Just don't try to hijack your government position or powers to favor your religion or to suppress/oppress others. It's really not not that difficult, damnit.

      If I were high school science teacher, could I decide to teach a unit on ID to contrast to evolution?

      At the moment the rules are slightly different if you happen to be within Judge Jones' Pennsylvania jurisdiction. He imposed an injunction to remedy an actual violation. That injuction is more restrictive than what would ordinarily be acceptable. It's a lot like when you get a restraining order against someone... that is more restrictive than merely saying someone can't punch you. A restrai

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  61. I guess I will take these in order.... by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1) The constitution prevents the establishment of religion in the First Amendment, and 2) Congress has no power except that which is explicitly granted to it, therefore it can neither support nor discourage religion.

    You don't consider teaching one particular sect's creation story in a science class support?

    The theory of ID...

    ID is not a theory, at most it is a hypothesis

    ...on its own makes no claim as to whom this being might be, what its motives were, or how we should regard it.

    Except (by your own words) that it must be a being in the first place. That is a pretty specific claim

    Acknowledging an opposing viewpoint is not anti-science; rather it is the very foundation of science. To blindly follow any hypothesis or theory without regard to alternatives is the definition of bad science.

    All opinions are not equally valid in science. Only those opinions that can be tested in some way count. To blindly posit a hypothesis with no way to verify it and call it a theory is the (literal) definition of bad science in that it does not follow the scientific method.

    On the second point, sociology is science, and religion is part of sociology. Sociology is not hard science like chemistry or physics, but it's science nonetheless.

    Sociology class is not Biology class. People would not be nearly so upset it they were suggesting it for the sociology curriculum.

    On the third point, Congress only has powers which are granted to it by the Constitution.

    And converselty cannot wield powers that are specifically denied it. Of course, we are talking about the judiciary branch re: the article. To get to the heart of the matter (FTA): We find that the secular purposes claimed by the board amount to a pretext for the board's real purpose, which was to promote religion.

    Case closed (thank God).

    1. Re:I guess I will take these in order.... by Tack · · Score: 2, Informative
      ID is not a theory, at most it is a hypothesis

      And ID doesn't even qualify as that. ID is innately untestable and therefore not falsifiable. If we can't even test the validity of a statement, can we call it a hypothesis?

      Jason.

    2. Re:I guess I will take these in order.... by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      You don't consider teaching one particular sect's creation story in a science class support?

      Yes I do. That's why an objective presentation is essential. I guess I should have been more specific: I don't think ID should be taught as an alternative to evolution, but only as a possibility for the genesis of life. It is possible that the existance of life is deliberate, however unlikely. I never suggested we stick the book of Genesis in a biology text and call it a day.

      Except (by your own words) that it must be a being in the first place. That is a pretty specific claim

      That was an oversight on my part. I'm not proposing I write the text. However, for something to be deliberate, it follows that a being or entity or whatever you want to call it, would have to be responsible. Defining "it" would be crossing the line.

      All opinions are not equally valid in science. Only those opinions that can be tested in some way count. To blindly posit a hypothesis with no way to verify it and call it a theory is the (literal) definition of bad science in that it does not follow the scientific method.

      That's incorrect. When presented with two options, eliminating the incorrect option is just as acceptable. We may not be able to prove that ID happened, but we may be able to prove that spontaneous generation did not. Or we could prove that it's possible, but so far (correct me if I'm wrong) that hasn't been done. ID is not the antithesis of evolution, except by the religious.

      Sociology class is not Biology class. People would not be nearly so upset it they were suggesting it for the sociology curriculum.

      I agree that religion does not belong in the Biology classroom. My post, however, was directed toward the constitutionality of teaching religion, and my point was that even if you can construe ID to be a religion, that alone doesn't make it unconstitutional to teach.

      And converselty cannot wield powers that are specifically denied it. Of course, we are talking about the judiciary branch

      Well, we're right about one thing: The judicial branch was involved. But we're talking about judicial review of a school board's action, which was determined to be unconstitutional. However, the only legal basis regarding the constitutionality of separation of church and state is a) the First Amendment, and b) the lack of any mention of religion in the body of the constitution. On the first point, the first amendment applies only to congress, as it says pretty much verbatim: "Congress shall make no law." Likewise the lack of mention of religion in the body of the constitution would indicate that religious matters are relegated to the sovreignty of each state. I don't think anyone disagrees that the desired result is that we have no national religion, nor shall the free excercise of religion be abridged.

      re: the article. To get to the heart of the matter (FTA): We find that the secular purposes claimed by the board amount to a pretext for the board's real purpose, which was to promote religion.

      I agree on that point. I think it's a devious, underhanded effort to sneak religion into the classroom little by little. But being devious and underhanded is not, in and of itself, illegal, let alone unconstitutional. Law enforcement is devious and underhanded all the time. At best ID pushes into a grey area, but that doesn't mean we're going to wake up to find pulpits and hymnals in the classroom.

      Once again, I'm not advocating ID as an alternative to the fairly well established theory of evolution. In fact, I'm not advocating it at all; I don't think it happened. At best it's a weak explanation for the appearance of life millions of years ago, and it still begs the question of the origins of the designer. I just don't think it's unconstitutional to acknolwedge that it may have happened, and I think the worst thing to come of it would be that someone grows up determined to find out what really happened.

    3. Re:I guess I will take these in order.... by Stomper_Stoddard · · Score: 1

      I beleive ID must be held to the same standard as the theory of evolution. We can discuss the theory of evolution for days without ever bringing up ID. If ID is to be taken seriously, it must stand on its own, advocates of ID must be able make thier arguments without any discussion of the theory of evolution.

    4. Re:I guess I will take these in order.... by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Once again, I'm not advocating ID as an alternative to the fairly well established theory of evolution. In fact, I'm not advocating it at all; I don't think it happened. At best it's a weak explanation for the appearance of life millions of years ago, and it still begs the question of the origins of the designer. I just don't think it's unconstitutional to acknolwedge that it may have happened, and I think the worst thing to come of it would be that someone grows up determined to find out what really happened.

      It actually appears as you are trying to advocate ID but are too sheepish to do so out right, none of yrou arguements hold water. ID has no place except in religion and perhaps sociology, there onyl as part of the study of why people will hold ideas when logic denies them any ground to hold it.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    5. Re:I guess I will take these in order.... by arevos · · Score: 1
      Once again, I'm not advocating ID as an alternative to the fairly well established theory of evolution. In fact, I'm not advocating it at all; I don't think it happened. At best it's a weak explanation for the appearance of life millions of years ago, and it still begs the question of the origins of the designer.

      It's not that at all. ID does not meet the definition of a scientific theory. Therefore, it's not science. Therefore it should not be taught in a science classroom. That's all there is to it.

    6. Re:I guess I will take these in order.... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      On the first point, the first amendment applies only to congress

      That was rectified by the 14th Amendment.

      And in my oppinion it's pretty appalling that we had to wait through the 11th, 12, and 12th amendments to fix that absurdity.

      Seriously, what good is a requirment for search warrants if it doesn't apply to state and local police? What good are any of the rights in the Bill of Rights if state and local governments are free to trample or revoke them?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  62. evil summary by j14ast · · Score: 1

    Putting the word "firefly" and the words "another episode" near each other before the second coming of the messiah is cruel.
    its like telling children that santa is coming tomarrow on the 24th of november.

    --
    Damn the man!
  63. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

    There in lies the rub. If you accept evolution as a scientific law, then you would be just as guilty as those who say intelligent design is the only answer. Until proven, noone knows the answer. No one can prove that mutations that happen in evolution are caused by god or by natural means. Radiation is naturally occuring and who's to say that god didn't cause the radiation to increase at the right time in the development of say a tadpole to change it to a lizard (or whatever). Some people will say that evolution has been proven and I say that alot of evidence and data has been captured, but not enough to concretely say that it's a fact. Again, you must present BOTH Intelligent Design and Evolution because those qare the two prevailing theories. One can teach intelligent design without bringing the Chrisitian God, Buddha, Allah or whoever's teachings into it. You can just use the term supreme being or a generic god or hell even aliens. I do not understand why the Intelligent Design theory is being dismissed as the Chrisitian right's agenda only. Almost every other religion on the planet believe in a god and that that god influences and controls things on Earth. Intelligent Design is not only a religious teaching.

    --

    Gorkman

  64. AOL finds MS 'clunky'? by fbg111 · · Score: 1

    When the executives returned, they reported back to Time Warner's top deal negotiator, Olaf Olafsson, with some less-than-satisfactory findings. They had found some of Microsoft's technology to be clunky,

    Pot. Kettle. Black... Heh. Should have been a match made in heaven. Or, erm, in that other place...

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  65. Quantum God states by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    God exists, just not in any of the quantum states that collapsed when you made your observations.

  66. Little Red Hoax Details by jerel · · Score: 1

    There is a lengthy article in The Standard Times here with great detail about the whole thing and how it came down. As usual, the kid got attention, started embellishing the story, and the whole thing came crashing down.

    --
    Some days it's just not worth chewing through the restraints.
  67. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by marct22 · · Score: 1

    It just makes it highly likely he's a conservative nut!

  68. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by deblau · · Score: 1
    I am conservative myself and I personally do believe in inelegant design

    Me too. That's why I comment my code, and never trust my arguments. And I always punt refactoring to some lackey.

    --
    This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
  69. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by DeadBeef · · Score: 1

    In this vein I propose an alternate theory, that in fact the world is spherical. No need to thank me. Just tell everyone that you heard it first on slashdot.

    --
    I am a lawyer and this constitutes legal advice and I shall indemnify you against any losses arising from taking it.
  70. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

    By "round" I suppose you meant spherical?

  71. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by marct22 · · Score: 1

    What about snowflakes? Why do snowflakes have a regular pattern and don't fall as chunks of ice (hail)? The water molecules, under certain conditions, self-organize into regular patterns? Why do iron filings form loopy patterns around a magnet? Other patterns which may seem random aren't, like bird/bug flight (each bird/bug self-organizes in continually changing relationship with its fellow neighbors to flock/swarm. There are rules that exist that cause an individual something to behave in a non-random way. It may be difficult to fully understand things (bonds between atoms, ElectroMagnetic theory, etc.), but to kinda understand in a layman's way shouldn't be too hard. Swarming? If i fall behind, speed up. If I get too close, slow down. Avoid hitting something. There might be another rule or two I'm missing, but you get the general idea. There are several books written for the laymen (rather than that college level text) that are out there, stuff on chaos and complexity.

  72. Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Everyone knows "God is dead" and Jesus is a myth just like all the Greek and Roman gods we quickly brush aside as fairy tales. With that in mind, "Intelligent Design" has no place in science class, you can shove it in philosophy or comparative religion though and learn about all the other creation stories the world has to offer.

    Intelligent Design = Creationsim is sheep's clothing.

    1. Re:Bah by TropicalCoder · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't put "God" and Jesus into the same box as "all the Greek and Roman gods". Whether real, myth or fairy tale, Jesus left a behind pretty profound body of teachings when he split the scene. These teachings have had a very significant influence on Western culture for the past 2000 years, and whether you care to admit it or not, may even have had an influence in very formation of your personal value system. I don't think Zeus or any of his colleagues left us anything of much more than entertainment value and insight into the culture from whence they came. I haven't taken the time to "learn about all the other creation stories the world has to offer", but from what I have read, they don't - have much to offer. What I am really trying to say here, I'm not too sure. To paraphrase your point though, I too agree that, with that in mind, "Intelligent Design" has no place in science class.

  73. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by carlislematthew · · Score: 1
    I am sure that some Religious fundaments will call this ruling of some crazy liberal judge.

    This "liberal" judge was appointed to the bench by someone you might have heard of - George W. Bush - in 2002. You're correct that some are calling him an activist judge, but I imagine that will be limited in scope given that he's a Bush appointee.

    Science is not guaranteed to be absolute truth, science is a process of observations and finding a theory that best fits the observation, if a pattern cannot be found it is called random.

    No it isn't. Some simply say "we have not yet found a pattern - more study is required". When you assign "random" occurrences to God instead of just accepting your lack of understanding, then I believe that you're looking for validation of your belief. It's easier to believe in something when you can assign events or circumstances to it. "I don't understand lightning and therefore it must be that God is angry at us". But wait - it's just something to do with clouds n' ice n' stuff. Man I feel silly...

    I'm not religious myself, but am very glad that others have found a faith that makes them happy. All that I ask is that thoey leave me alone, stop trying to "save" me, and also leave science alone.

  74. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by svallarian · · Score: 1

    The fundies can call the judge whatever they want but their man in the white house appointed him.

    --wikipedia--
    John Edward Jones III (born June 13, 1955) is an American lawyer, political figure, and jurist from the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. A Republican, Jones was appointed by President George W. Bush as federal judge on the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania in February 2002 and was unanimously confirmed by the Senate on July 30, 2002.

    --
    I patented screwing your mom. But it got revoked for "prior art."
  75. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

    Please read this. Theory means something a little different when we're talking about science and I'm a bit tired of religious nutcases pretending that it means the same as the dictionary definition.

    --
    Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  76. Oblig. Simpsons by Bloomy · · Score: 1
    Marge: Homey, I -- Homer: Can't talk, praying. Dear Lord, the gods have been good to me and I am thankful. For the first time in my life, everything is absolutely perfect just the way it is. Marge: Mmm. Homer: So here's the deal: you freeze everything as it is, and I won't ask for anything more. If that is OK, please give me absolutely no sign. [brief pause] OK, deal. In gratitude, I present you this offering of cookies and milk. If you want me to eat them for you, please give me no sign. [brief pause] Thy will be done! [mows down]

    From And Maggie Makes Three.

  77. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by juliuspc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Careful - rightnext to the bsometer is the wasnt-paying-attention-in-junior-high-ometer.

    The g.p. is refering to the scientific principle that you cannot prove an absolute negative. In general, it is a warning not to infer too much from one's own limited perspective of the universe.

    For example, "I can see no stars in the sky at this time" is much more easily supported than the statement "There are no stars in the sky." The statement, "I found no fish in this pond" is sensible, but the statement, "This pond has no fish" is close to nonsense.

    Per your example, "I do not intend to go to the park today" is a statement you can support. "I will not go to the park today" is not provable. Of course, that is because it is future-tellings, not because it is negative.

    Which brings us back to...

    Hidden variable theories of quantum mechanics have been pretty thoroughly disproven.

    This is misleading. The theories have not been disproven. They have simply not been proven. The fact that they have not, to date, been proven, does not imply that they are disproven. Actually, the theory of some pattern existing behind pseudorandom quantum phenomena may very well be not-provable and yet still true. (In order to emphatically prove such a theory, one have to discover the pattern... rendering the point moot!)

    Ask any metaphysicist.

  78. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by carlislematthew · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Scientists are supposed to have an open mind.

    Most of them *do* have an open mind. But they require decent scientific theories do actually consider. Intelligent Design is the weakest theory around, and it's not science. You can't pitch a scientific theory against something that is not a scientific theory.

    ID is better explored in philosophy or theology (where is used to be before it was rebadged as ID).

    Remember the period table 50 years ago had less elements than they do now

    They may be true but it doesn't matter! Good scientists would have assumed that more elements may be found, given that they kept finding them! Intelligent design says, "I don't understand that - it looks way too tricky and complicated - God must have done it! Hooray for God, I was just *looking* for something to credit Him with".

  79. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by carlislematthew · · Score: 1
    It's not "round" and it's not "spherical" - it's a fucking ELLIPSOID!!!

    JESUS CHRIST people - get with the times!!!!!!!

  80. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    Being a better theory does not make it true.

    There is no way to judge what is truth is this context. Talking about truth here is a waste of time and is fuzzy thinking. It is not decidable.

    Science gives you the answer that evolution is a principle that you use until something better comes along, 'better' being defined by a set of philisophical principles we call the scientific method. It is the same thing as any other scientific theory. If people stop investigating alternatives it's because they think there are better things to work on, not because there is a big red sign 'TRUTH' on the front of the evolution book. That is very different than in the case of a faith based belief where somebody just says THIS IS THE TRUTH, END OF DISCUSSION.

    Intelligent design is a faith based belief that some people accept. A faith based belief is not science - and there is no way to test whether or not it is truth in any way other than somebody believes it to be so. So long as you don't try to say intelligent design is science, and teach children that it is acceptable as a scientific alternative in public schools you can believe it or not according to your particular view and that is fine by me. Personally I have found science to work better but that is just me.

    Also, your examples are very bad. The Greeks (from the time of Pliny the Elder) knew enough geometry to realize the Earth was round and actually computed its circumferance. Flat Earth Theory was actually based on Christian religious dogma, a faith-based belief based on some Biblical interpetations of how the Earth had to be shaped. Nobody with any training in mathematics believed it. As far as molecules being the smallest unit of matter, again that was never the case. The definition of molecule includes that it composed of two or more atoms.

  81. So what is religion, anyway? by juliuspc · · Score: 0, Troll

    If macroevolution and intelligent design are two different theories addressing the same question (the origin of the universe), then how can one be religion and the other not?

    Let's keep this objective... can anyone justify the classification of one theory as religion and another as science, when they both address the same thing?

    Are there any examples of similar situations?

    1. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Macroevolution' is a nonsense word. Evolution does not address the origins of the universe. Astronomy handles that very well.
      Your question is based on false assumptions.

    2. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > If macroevolution and intelligent design are two different theories addressing the same question (the origin of the universe), then how can one be religion and the other not?

      > Let's keep this objective... can anyone justify the classification of one theory as religion and another as science, when they both address the same thing?

      Ignoring the fact that ID isn't a theory...

      It's not what they address, it's how they address it.

      ID clearly isn't science. It doesn't use the scientific method, its "researchers" don't do any research, they report their "results" at religious gatherings rather than scientific conferences, etc. Anyone who says they can't distinguish it from science is ill informed about what goes on in one or both camps, or hasn't stopped to think about it, or is being disingenuous.

      As for why it's considered religion, you can think out its implications (where did the first generation of designers come from?), or you can look at what its leading proponents say when they're not pretending to be scientists.

      If your questions is honest rather than rhetorical, you would do well to read the judge's written opinion, which you can find with Google and download.

      > Are there any examples of similar situations?

      Diet.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by juliuspc · · Score: 1
      Ignoring the fact that ID isn't a theory...

      Good job at staying objective :P

      You're only going half as far as I'm asking you to. You propose that intelligent design is clearly religion... supposing I allowed your argument, couldn't we use the same criteria to establish evolution as a religion?

      If you think that sounds ridiculous, try it out:

      Evolution clearly isn't science. It doesn't use the scientific method, its "researchers" don't do any research, they report their "results" through evolution-friendly media rather than scientific conferences, etc. Anyone who says they can't distinguish it from science is ill informed about what goes on in one or both camps, or hasn't stopped to think about it, or is being disingenuous.

      As for why it's considered religion, you can think out its implications (where did the matter come from for the Big Bang?), or you can look at what its leading proponents say when they're not pretending to be scientists.

      Scary, huh?

      I'm looking not for a reason why the intelligent design theory is religion (other than "It's clearly not science, and anyone who thinks it is is dumb"); I'm looking for a justification for calling intelligent design religion without calling evolution religion.

      The scientific method is moot. Those little steps "observation" and "repetition" are a little finicky when it comes to the origin of the universe.

    4. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by juliuspc · · Score: 1

      The assumption you refer to is that "macroevolution" refers to the evolutionary theories about the origin of the universe.

      Upon some quick investigation (google wikipedia), I realise that is indeed a false assumption.

      That being said, my question is about comparing two theories regarding the origin of the universe.

    5. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by narcc · · Score: 3, Informative
      A quick point...
      If macroevolution and intelligent design are two different theories addressing the same question (the origin of the universe), then how can one be religion and the other not?


      "Macroevolution" does not address the origin of the universe. That said, "macroevolution" and ID do not address the same issue.

      How is ID religious? ID states that life is too ordered to have come about naturally and therefore must have been designed. e.g. ID says that God Did It. This is obviously religion. (Doesn't have to be god could be Space aliens, blah, blah blah, who created the aliens?, blah, blah, God, blah. God always was so no need to create him blah, blah, blah. Tired old obvious arguments.)

      We cannot test ID. ID is not falsifiable. ID is NOT science.

      Evolution, on the otherhand, is a theory that was created to explain certain observations. That is to say, evolution is a theory that explains the data. The new data that we've found fits the theory well. Predictions made using the theory have further reinforced the theory rather than detract from it. We've been able to observe evolution and even identify some of the mechanisms of evolution. Also, when evolution no longer explains the data (a possibility) evolution will be thrown out in favor of a theory that explains the data. Evolution is observable, testable, and falsifiable. That is, evolution is science.

      On a related note, I've yet to see any pro-ID material that does anything other than try to show evolution to be wrong (which none of it actually has). Why do proponents of ID attack evolution and not simply try to show that ID can stand on its own merits?

      In addition, proponents of ID have been making the argument that evolution is religious (although it's not) and that if evolution is religious and taught in schools, then ID should also be taught in schools. The flaw here is that if evolution is religious then it shouldn't be taught in schools -- lest it open a door for other religious materials-- And no, evolution is not religious. The statement you make above (replacing ID in the grandparent posters comments with evolution) may look pretty, but it's obviously invalid.
    6. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Russellkhan · · Score: 0, Redundant

      "The scientific method is moot."

      Well if that's an essential element to "staying objective," then you're absolutely right - There is no justification at all for calling ID religion that doesn't also apply to any branch of science.

      However (and I may be risking losing my objectivity here, but) to most people, when trying to determine whether something is science or not, the scientific method is not moot. That "finickiness" is the very thing that means we don't have to take believe it just because some guy with a tall pointy hat says so.

      ...And while I'm here, let me be the brazilianth person to point out to you that evolution is not about the origin of the universe.

      --
      Information doesn't want to be anthropomorphized anymore.
    7. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by Russellkhan · · Score: 1

      "Are there any examples of similar situations?"

      Galileo comes to mind.

      --
      Information doesn't want to be anthropomorphized anymore.
    8. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by julesh · · Score: 1

      Let's keep this objective... can anyone justify the classification of one theory as religion and another as science, when they both address the same thing?

      A scientific theory is something that contains an assertion that can be experimentally tested.

      A religious theory contains an assertion that one must accept on faith as it is impossible to test.

      This is the basic difference between the Theory of Evolution (a scientific theory by the above definition) and that of Intelligent Design (a religious theory by the above definition).

      It's a very simple concept, really.

    9. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by juliuspc · · Score: 1

      Throwing out the word "evolution" (since it seems I'm misusing it)... the original story is about teaching origins in school.

      We can teach "stuff just got here..." or we can teach "stuff was designed..."

      In neither case can we observe or reproduce the beginning of the universe... So it's religion.

      In both cases, we make deductions from this theory (eg. the age of planet earth) and conduct scientific experiments on those deductions to find out if they can be supported by evidence... So it's science.

      Moving away from the origin of the universe; we can teach "stuff gets better over time through natural selection", or we can teach "stuff was created perfect and disintegrates over time."

      Still, since the amount of time in question is greater than a lifetime, we cannot truly observe or repeat these phenomena. So it's religion.

      Or, we can make deductions and test those deductions... so it's science.

      We must make sure that theories which "one must accept as faith" are not taught as fact. But can they not be taught as speculation? Or better yet, can not the implications of such a theory be scientifically tested and *that science* be taught in school?

    10. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by juliuspc · · Score: 1
      "Macroevolution" does not address the origin of the universe. That said, "macroevolution" and ID do not address the same issue.

      You're absolutely right. While I'm still recovering from the gaps in my education... can someone point me to the theory that does address the origin of the universe without intelligent design?

      By specifically saying the "origin of the universe" I was trying to avoid confusion from the many intelligent-design-through-evolution theories that won't let the two be separate theories.

      Yet, whether we compare evolutionary-origin-of-the-universe with intelligent design; or evolution (origin of species) with intelligent design... I still don't see how we came to dismiss one as religion and accept the other as science.

    11. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by juliuspc · · Score: 1
      Evolution is observable, testable, and falsifiable.

      Evolution is observable? Who has observed the spontaneous mutation of one species into another through the process of natural selection?

      Yes, that was a serious question!

      Or have I got the word "evolution" wrong again?

    12. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

      >A scientific theory is something that contains an assertion that can be
      >experimentally tested.

      So where's the spare planet where you tested the evolution of hominids from single cell organisms?

    13. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by julesh · · Score: 1

      So where's the spare planet where you tested the evolution of hominids from single cell organisms?

      That isn't necessary; the assertions that we need to test are, essentially, that environmental pressures cause selection within groups of creatures that increases the chance of subsequent generations having particular characteristics that help deal with those pressures. This is frequently observed in cases of (e.g.) antibiotic resistant bacteria. Another assertion is that when this is carried on over large periods of time (probably connected with small isolated populations and rapid environmental change) new species can develop. This is also a testable assertion, although I don't believe it has been tested yet, as it is a very long term project.

    14. Re:So what is religion, anyway? by julesh · · Score: 1

      Throwing out the word "evolution" (since it seems I'm misusing it)... the original story is about teaching origins in school.

      No it isn't. It's about teaching biology, which is a science that is not usually concerned with the issues of "origins" -- in fact, that is one of the largest gaps in current biological knowledge, as nobody knows how the first life was formed. There are theories of ways that life could have formed, but as far as I know nobody has thus far been able to come up with a way of choosing between them (or even proving them all wrong).

    15. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1
      > > Ignoring the fact that ID isn't a theory...

      > Good job at staying objective :P

      Don't shoot the messenger.

      If you can't digest the message, maybe you should review your notion of what a theory is.

      > Evolution clearly isn't science. It doesn't use the scientific method, its "researchers" don't do any research

      Demonstrably false, just as my claims about ID are demonstrably true.

      > they report their "results" through evolution-friendly media

      The scientific media is evolution-friendly because evolution won the field in a fair fight. (Over 100 years ago.)

      ID, OTOH, wants a free pass. And failing to get the free pass, they have preferred to skip the scientific forums altogether, and publish their claims in gradeschool textbooks instead.

      > As for why it's considered religion, you can think out its implications (where did the matter come from for the Big Bang?)

      The theory of evolution doesn't address the origin of matter. Nor the origin of life, for that matter. Evolution is simply what happens to biological systems, whether created by God, Space Aliens, or natural processes.

      > Scary, huh?
      s/Scary/Silly/
      > I'm looking for a justification for calling intelligent design religion without calling evolution religion.

      And you won't accept a straight answer.

      > The scientific method is moot.

      Now it's time for you to tell us what you think science is.

      > Those little steps "observation" and "repetition" are a little finicky when it comes to the origin of the universe.

      No science requires direct observations. No science requires repeatable experiments.

      It appears that your inability to distinguish ID from science is a result of you not understanding the most basic concepts of what science is and how it works.

      Which, BTW, is exactly the audience the Discovery Institute is targeting. They know darn well that putting on a lab coat and mumbling technobabble isn't going to convince scientists.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    16. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by pkphilip · · Score: 1
      We cannot test ID. ID is not falsifiable. ID is NOT science.

      Evolution, on the otherhand, is a theory that was created to explain certain observations. That is to say, evolution is a theory that explains the data. The new data that we've found fits the theory well.


      Can you quote instances where macro-evolution has been observed and tested? What data are you referring to that fits the macro-evolution theory well?

      I am not trying to start a flamewar here, but some of these claims that you are making aren't quite true. Truth be told - macro-evolution has NEVER either been observed or tested because these are not expected to happen in anything less than a few millions of years. What we have seen so far are instances of evolution happening at a micro-scale. As for macro-evolution, all we have at the moment are assumptions as to what may have occurred in terms of evolutionary changes between two species where one is seen as older than the other.

      Also, if one were to consider evolution as a process which a species will inevitably have to go through, how is that we have the so-called living fossils (eg: Chacoan peccary, Okapi, Coelacanth) which haven't evolved for millions of years?

      Some references:
      Coelacanth http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coelacanth/
      Okapi http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okapi/
      Chacoan Peccary http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chacoan_peccary/

      The Coelacanth (a species considered about 400 million years old) was initially thought to have gone extinct 70 million years ago! (compare this against dinosaurs which are thought to have gone extinct 65 million years ago). Fact is, the Coelcanth was used as an index fossil - so if fossil findings were found along with the remains of a Coelcanth, these other fossils were also dated to be atleast 70 million years old! That was until a live specimen of the Coelcanth was found in 1938. Coelacanth is considered not to have evolved in 400 million years which is difficult to explain in evolutionary terms.

      As for the Okapi - it was considered to be a parent in the evolutionary tree of the horse.. until a live specimen was found in 1901.

      So this opens up the possibility that the scientists may be wrong about other evolutionary trees as well - it also opens up the possibility that many of these species may have been alive at the same time; that is, one may not have evolved from the other at all.

      Scientists are, at the moment, trying to piece together the evolutionary tree of animals based on a whole range of criteria - and a generous dose of their own assumptions. Many of these assumptions have NEVER been proven to be true and many of these are difficult to prove false as well (irrefutable) because of the timelines involved.
    17. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      While I'm still recovering from the gaps in my education... can someone point me to the theory that does address the origin of the universe

      The closest well established theory to fitting that bill would be the Big Bang. However the Big Bang noes not attempt to address anything earlier than a moment after the bang itself. (There are a few other theories that try to go back before that, but none of them has gone much beyond the "wild speculation" stage thus far, and are obviously unfit for highschool science class.)

      There's nothing wrong with science shruging it's shoulders and saying "we don't know that yet, good question, lets keep looking into it". At one point we had an excellent theory of chemistry and absolutely no theory of nuclear fusion and no idea where the elements came from. Not knowing the origin of the elements is in no way a legitimate criticism of the theory of chemistry. And in exactly the same way, not explaining the origin of the universe is CERTAINLY not a legitimate criticism of evolution. You might as well be attacking the Theory of Gravity for not explaining the origin of the universe.

      I still don't see how we came to dismiss one as religion and accept the other as science.

      Evolution is a falsifiable scientific theory that has made many predictions, and those predictions have been exhaustively tested and conclusively confirmed. It is solidly and overwhelmingly supported science with virtually universal acceptance by professionals in the field. It make no religious claims for or against God. Evolution says no more about religion than a sun-centered solar system says anything about God or religion.

      ID is inherently unfalsifiable and makes no predictions and cannot be tested and has never been tested and has never been supported. It is not science.

      And the ID movement we are discussing was, as the judge noted, EXPLICITLY developed by a pair of fundamenlatist religious organisations in DIRECT response to to a Supreme Court Ruling that Biblical Creationism cannot be taught in government highshools and as admitted in their own publications was EXPLICITLY created as a sham to subvert that Supreme Court Ruling and to slip their stripped down version of Biblical Creationism back into the schools. The terms ID and Intelligent Design and body of work DID NOT EXIST prior to that Supreme Court ruling. Try Googling up the "Wedge Strategy" paper. The people who created ID admit in their own fundraising literarure that ID is nothing but a wedge to get their religion into the classroom, and... believe it or not... they state that it is part of their TWENTY YEAR PLAN to conqure the schools and legislature and to ultimately RESHAPE SOCIETY ITSELF in their own religio-moral image. Ahhh.... here's the Google link. The first stage of their twenty year plan was supposed to be to do real science to support the whole thing. However they have not done one damn bit of science or funded one single experiment or anything. Every single cent of their millions of dollars in fundraising goes to nothing but PR campaigns and political lobbying.

      And just in case you had any other missunderstandings... there is absolutely nothin in the biological theory of evolution, or anywhere else in science for that matter, that says God does not exist. Evolution, and the rest of science, are perfectly compatible with God. In fact the majority of Christians in the world both belive in God and accept evolution. Even multiple Popes have recognized the legitimacy of the scientific field of science and that it in no way conflicts with God.

      Anyone on either side saying that evolution disproves or denies God is an idiot.

      Science does not, and cannot, say anything about God either way.

      The entire problem is people trying to single out one random field of science for attack, and with rediculous claims that it is anti-God. It's just as bad as when the Church had Galileo imprisoned for life for saythign t

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    18. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Evolution is observable? Who has observed the spontaneous mutation of one species into another through the process of natural selection?

      Yes, that was a serious question!


      And the serious answer is of course! You'll see quite a few examples described there. As for who, you'll find over a hundred scientists listed at the bottom by name, and that is just a sampling on the scientific literature on the subject. Evolution really is solid extensively supported science.

      Or have I got the word "evolution" wrong again?

      Well you didn't write much that post, but as far as I can see everything was A-OK! :)

      -

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    19. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      macro-evolution

      First of all there is no definition of "macroevolution" other than a whole lot of "microevolutions" piled on top of each other for a Long Time.

      Can you quote instances where macro-evolution has been observed []?

      Can you quote an instance of a sun-class star aging and turning into a red giant?

      Some things obviously take too long to directly observe. However that doesn't prevent a theory from being TESTABLE...

      Can you quote instances where macro-evolution has been [] tested?

      Sure. Probably the most powerful and staggering MOUNTAIN of test evidence has come with the development of genetic analysis.

      Macroevolution is an inherent component of Common Decent. Any test of common decent is a test of macroevolution. Common decent predicts that life on earth will fall into a VERY STRICT tree pattern, and moreover that that tree pattern will line up with the tree pattern we built up from fossils and morphological studies.

      To illustrate just one aspect of this, every once in a while viral DNA will accidentally get inserted into a random spot in the host DNA, becoming inert but easily trackable DNA. This DNA then gets passed down to all decendants in the sub-tree, and that exact viral DNA will not appear at that exact spot in any species other than a decendant, won't appear in any species outside that subtree.

      For example at least one such insertion happened in the common human-chip ancestor. There is a specific bit of viral DNA at a specific location in both humans and chips, and has neven been seen in any other species. We share that DNA at that location because we both inherited it from the same parent.

      Going back a bit further back in time, going backwards one "tree branch level" there was that sort of viral DNA insertion in the common human-chip-ape common ancestor. It is identical in these three species and appears in no other primate nor in any other species.

      According to the tree pattern of common decent, you can't have such a DNA maker in apes and humans but not in chimps.... if it was inserted back on the common human-ape line, it couldn't reach humans without passing through the common human-chimp ancestor, and it would have to be in chimps as well.

      Going further back to the common primate ansestor, there is another unique viral DNA insertion that exists in all primates and not in any other species.

      Going back even further you can find such examples that appear in all mammals, from humans to whales to cats, but not in any other species. In fact this sort of a genetic analysis very precisely pins down whales to a specific point on the land mammal line, as a decendant of a grazing-type animal.

      Birds are decended from dinosaurs - themselves a branch of reptiles - which means that we should never find such a marker at the same spot in all birds and in some mammal unless it appears in all reptiles.

      This strict tree pattern is a powerful prediction and test of common decent - and thus a test of macroevolution - and in the last several years we have done a TREMENDOUS number of genetic analyses across almost every kind of species, and all of the tests powerfully confirm common decent and thus macroevolution.

      And then of course we also have detailed sequences of fossil intermediate forms, for example on the dinosaur-to-brid line, where the fossils line up in perfect date order and in each step we see just a couple of structural microevolutions appear or dissapear in each step. It starts off a little sparse, then gets better. First your basic bird-like dinosaurs. Then dinosaurs with feathers. Then feathered dinosaurs with crude gliding wings and dinosaur claws at the tips of the wings. After that it gets more detailed, though I don't remember the exact order. The hands dissapear from the tips of the wings. The wings get better developed. Then one of the toes reverses to point backwards (all bird feet have one backwards toe), the better for grabbing branches to perch in trees. The bones b

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    20. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Which, BTW, is exactly the audience the Discovery Institute is targeting. They know darn well that putting on a lab coat and mumbling technobabble isn't going to convince scientists.

      They bought lab coats?

      White ones?

      Wow! They really are getting serious about the science of ID! ;)

      -

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      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    21. Re: So what is religion, anyway? by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I appreciate your taking the time to write this detailed explanation and more importantly I greatly appreciate the fact that you are not calling me any names or just trashing my comment. I state this because I have been modded down (unfairly) for comments like the one I made here by people who absolutely don't seem to grasp either evolutionary theory or ID or any other theory for that matter.

      Thanks again. This is food for thought.

  82. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by carlislematthew · · Score: 1
    One can teach intelligent design without bringing the Chrisitian God, Buddha, Allah or whoever's teachings into it.

    Good idea! By doing that we could bring it back into the classroom as a "science" and that would get around some pesky Constitutional Amendment that doesn't allow us to teach religion (or creationism) in public school science classrooms. Maybe we could modify an old book about Creationism, change every instance of "creationism" with "Intelligent Design", call the book "of pandas and people" and lobby school boards to get it into the science classroom!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Of_pandas_and_people

    Rant aside, please read the link and research the history of Intelligent Design. It is rebadged Creationism-lite Pseudoscience. As a theory, it's entirely valid in Theology or in private schools far away from my tax dollars.

  83. Re:Smart people will by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Smart people will see how those that reported the Little-Red-Book story do retractions. They should have to report past errors and do so in an open way (not burried somewhere in the back hidden in the advertizing.)
    Do you see Fox retract much of anything?
    I bet if we required retractions, Fox would setup the Fox Retraction Channel -between 2 music channels, all text with no sound, and written by lawyers. At least they'd document their own misinformation.

  84. You sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they're not lilo fanatics?

  85. oh sweet crack. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

    crackberries for everyone! it's good to see the US Patent Office appears to be getting their act a bit more together.

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    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  86. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by HardCase · · Score: 1

    ...as Einstein said God doesn't roll dice.

    But Einstein was referring to quantum mechanics, not evolution. I'm not sure if he ever expressed an opinion on natural selection.

    -h-

  87. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    If you accept evolution as a scientific law

    There is no such thing as scientific law or proven fact in a scientifc context. Science doesn't work that way.

    Radiation is naturally occuring and who's to say that god didn't cause the radiation to increase at the right time in the development of say a tadpole to change it to a lizard (or whatever).


    Why bother - just create the lizard, and the fossil record too while you are at it POOF!. There is no way to tell what happened, so obviously evolution theroy doesn't mean anything.

    The problem - if you are going to accept the existance of an actively interfereing all-powerful diety than absoultely anything is possible. For all we know the universe and all its contents is created one millisecond to the next by this diety, and there is no future or past and there no way of determining if this is going on. Done, finisned. Well, guess what. This is not useful in any way - it doesn't lead to stuff like genetic biology, the understanding of evolution of diseases and medical treatments based on that knowledge. It is utterly stupid. You can have it, I'll take a different approach.

    I do not understand why the Intelligent Design theory is being dismissed as the Chrisitian right's agenda only.

    Read the court decision in the recent PA trial. This was investigated in court and it was found that "Intelligent Design" is just weasel words for creationism established in order to try an end run around existing court decisions regarding the teaching of creationism in schools. In fact the judge stated that some of the witnesses who tried to claim otherwise probably commited perjury.

    What is sad now is that Dover PA has to pay legal costs for this farce. This is going to hurt the education of the children in this small town for years to come. These idiots should be run out of town on a rail.

  88. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ZombieWomble · · Score: 2, Interesting
    How do you prove a negative?

    Ah, my apologies for the semantical mis-step. I should not have implied that we had disproven every single possible 'hidden variable' theory, as it is possible that there is some underlying truth which gives the appearance of breaking all these rules while still, in fact, retaining them at some deeper level (much like how His Noodly Appendage is being obfuscated by this "evolution" business).

    Although I would note that, as far as I've seen, since the EPR 'paradox' was shown to in fact represent how the world works, hidden variable theories are not faring well - they involve giving up significant numbers of other aspects of our classical universe to retain the deterministic effects, and often introduce large amounts of additional cruft that doesn't lead to any useful predictions.

  89. Appears to be a hoax? by Sin+Nombre · · Score: 1

    According to TFA:
    "An earlier report that the incident occurred at the University of California at Santa Cruz has proven false."
    The article includes that, and a quote from a DHS representative saying that it "seemed unlikely." How has it proven false? Did the professor make it up? Did a reporter make it up? What happened?

    --
    "Im such a nonconformist I'm going to not conform to the rest of you!"
    "Dude I think we just got goth-served"
    1. Re:Appears to be a hoax? by grikdog · · Score: 1

      The kid lied, and cracked under pressure when his prof started asking pointed questions about inconsistencies. The story should have raised red flags (heh) everywhere, since you can find "original, authorized" copies of the Selected Quotations of Chairman Mao Zedong in most languages (including Chinese) near you: Just Google. "Authorized selected quotations," yet. You clowns will swallow anything. The version at http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/work s/red-book/ is pretty official, but the edition at http://art-bin.com/art/omaotoc.html is downright canonical, since it's a verbatim copy of the Foreign Languages Press (Beijing) edition of 1970.

      --
      ``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
  90. lets tie these issues together by fredrated · · Score: 0

    What kind of deprived life can a person have where they think it is okay to steal from the less fortunate?

    By enriching themselves they make it more likely that their offspring will survive, i.e., their genes will be passed on. Thus the desire to steal is actually a result of evolution. We may not like it, but not everything evolution produces passes muster from an ethical perspective.

  91. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

    uh you mean [include scr="www.example.com/media/midi/Jeomain.mid"]

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  92. Inteligent Design Number Generators by cbreaker · · Score: 1

    Time to rename random number generators, since I can't explain why they're random. God must have designed them. It's /dev/god for me from now on.

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  93. Re:Can there be anything worse?...Ahem by Sfing_ter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just go ask the congress and the senate, they have been doing it for years, and they don't seem to have a problem with it. Insurance companies do this too, so you can ask them... Oh yeah, the 30% loan companies... they do it too... (oh well it's actually 30% + prime) so ask them...

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    A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. Emo Philips
  94. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by pi_rules · · Score: 1

    In history we teach kids that people thought the world was once flat, then show evidence that says that idea is wrong.

    In chemistry we teach them that people once practised alchemy, then show evidence that that idea was wrong.

    We teach the old "plum" model for atoms, then show evidence that that idea was wrong.

    I don't see how you can teach biology while omitting the idea that for the longest time almost every culture assumed life came entirely from a super natural being.

  95. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by egarland · · Score: 2, Insightful

    God IS in the gaps. He always has been. The gaps are just perpetually shrinking as science fills the gaps with explanations that prove things behave deterministically. :)

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  96. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

    Just to establish my cred, ID isn't science and shouldn't be taught in school.

    Now, having said that, I want to issue a cautionary note to my liberal friends. Let's take a sober approach toward this, shall we?: Having a federal judge deciding what is and is not science, and thus what should and should not be taught in school, is really a terrible state of affairs.

    If the government didn't have a near-monopoly on education, this wouldn't be an issue, of course. But that's a whole 'nother can o' worms.

          - AJ

  97. AOL/Google article by portscan · · Score: 1

    Half of that AOL article is about the failure ofthe AOL/Time Warner merger, a subject which could fill many libraries.

  98. NTP v. RIM rtfc... by Internet+Ronin · · Score: 3, Informative

    Okay, I am not a lawyer, but I play one on TV...
    (seriously though, I often do legal research)
    and quite frankly people need to RTF case. The judge has explicitly said "I don't tell [the patent office] their job, they don't tell me mine." What that means, and it's listed EXPLICITLY that the judge in the case doesn't give a hoot about the Patent Office ruling, and that he (not will not, implying no decision has been rendered) DID not grant RIM's motion to stay pending patent ruling.

    He also clearly states that part of the main reason for his rejection of this judgement is that he buys COMPLETELY NTP's argument that if the patents are rejected, they will appeal, a process that could drag on for years (RIM contends it would only be a few short months).

    Furthermore RIM is guilty throughout the trial of what is considered 'bad behavior.' There was considerable question that RIM followed all necessary protocols (particularly with an internal investigation of whether the patents were reasonably valid). This is backed up by conflicting evidence from the varies executive party at RIM.

    Okay, so no one seems to get this, but I'll spell it out for you, and link the document: RIM lost. Not will lose, not might lose, HAS lost. Their 45 page appeal proceeding (one needs Lexis Nexis to access it, thus I won't be posting that one here) reads VERY poorly for RIM. In fact the only part that was remanded to a lower court does little to allow them to win. NTP won. RIM is in violation (imho because they a.) engaged in 'bad behavior,' which is to say trial etiquette and b.) during the Markman hearing [a hearing where the judge determines things like definitions and scope of patents, est. 1996, Markman v. Westview Instruments] they did horrible job allowing NTP to fully dominate definitions of email and patent scope, giving them enough broad leeway to technically sue any computer manufacturer that makes a wifi laptop that can check e-mail, but I digress... and c.) their initial arguments (which cannot be dropped in favor of new arguments unless the appeal strikes those specifically, and it didn't) were ridiculously weak, and essentially claimed that the Intel chipset inside was the RF device (the NTP patents specifically call for an RF device), not the Blackberry pager itself, and therefore was not liable for infringement (no judge in the WORLD would buy this argument on common sense alone, but there is numerous precedent in US patent law that clearly says that by possessing this part, RIM infringes)...

    Here's how it's going to end:
    RIM is going to pay NTP a ton of money.
    Everyone's going to keep their Blackberries.
    In 2012 (when the original patents expire, and thus the payments mandated by the court) or whenever RIM migrates every BB customer to a non-infringing system (whichever comes first) NTP stops getting paid.

    Please note, I'm a huge fan of RIM. I think RIM should have won this case hands down, and I passionately pursue research in the area strictly as a hobby, as a fan of both law and technology. I believe that RIM was doomed from the beginning, and a few /. nerds on the defense team would have heavily swung this in the opposite direction (also a little more corporate courtesy on RIM's part). Seriously though, I've heard nothing but nonsense about this case, and I'm happy for a chance to set the record as straight as I have found it.

    Here is the rejection by the honorable James Spencer of RIM's motion for a 'stay of proceedings' pending review of the patents by the USPTO.
    http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/rim/ntprim11300 5opn.pdf
    It's a PDF, and an enlightening read.
    Enjoy.

  99. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by glitch23 · · Score: 0

    But that being said teaching science that there is a force that we cannot measure or prove or disprove is not science.

    That is what a theory is (it can not be proven or disproven for all circumstances and can't be measured) and yet the theory of evolution is taught so when you say it that way the theory of ID should also be taught. The fact that God can't be proven scientifically does not matter.

    --
    this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
  100. Boston Globe on the Hoax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes it is a hoax because the student admitted to making it up......

    http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articl es/2005/12/24/students_tall_tale_revealed/

  101. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2, Informative
    Actually, as I was taught in Graduate Quantum Mechanics, they have effectively disproven hidden variables. From our popular Wikipedia: Bell's Theorem
    Bell's theorem states: No physical theory of local hidden variables can ever reproduce all of the predictions of quantum mechanics. This theorem has even been called "the most profound in science" (Stapp, 1975). Bell's seminal 1965 paper was entitled "On the Einstein Podolsky Rosen paradox". He showed that the assumption of local realism - that particle attributes have definite values independent of the act of observation and that physical effects have a finite propagation speed - leads to a requirement for certain types of phenomena which is not present in quantum mechanics. This requirement is called "Bell's inequality". collectively termed "Bell inequalities", they all make the same assumptions about local realism -- that a quantum-level object has a well defined state which accounts for all its measurable properties and that distant objects do not exchange information faster than the speed of light. These well defined properties are often called hidden variables.
    If one accepts Bell's theorem: either quantum mechanics is wrong, or local realism is wrong.
    Bell test experiments to date overwhelmingly show that the inequalities of Bell's theorem are violated. This provides empirical evidence against local realism and demonstrating that some of the "spooky action at a distance" suggested by the famous Einstein Podolsky Rosen (EPR) thought experiment do in fact occur. They are also taken as positive evidence in favor of QM.
    The idea behind "hidden variables" was that there really is a reality within which these things are happening, and QM is just a mathematical formalism that happens to work. Apparently empirically not so. The contradictions between local reality (in which any hidden variables would be "hiding") and QM, as measured sides with QM. Hence, no local reality.

    ;-) Don't worry, we won't go *poof* right away 'cause the Universe has a certain amount of momentum to it's existence (with respects to Zelazny's Siddhartha). But in terms of "the emperor has no clothes", it is more like, "there is no spoon" at levels that Heisenberg uncertainty principle comes into play.
  102. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by glitch23 · · Score: 0

    Well thank you judge tgibbs for your ruling on the ruling. I'm sure the judge will be sure to appease you the next time he makes a ruling in favor of idiocy. There are flaws in evolution as well (if there wasn't it wouldn't be called a theory) but we won't get into those else you wouldn't have a leg to stand on anymore. We'll just let you think your side won due to evolution being so sensible (just like everyone wins the Special Olympics).

    --
    this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
  103. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Theatetus · · Score: 1
    How do you prove a negative?

    Very easily, actually. In fact, most of the "great" proofs in mathematics are proof of a negative. I offer one as an example:

    Hypothesis: There is no greatest prime number

    Proof: Suppose there were a greatest prime number; let's call it P.
    Then, by using a sieve method we could create a list of all prime numbers.
    Postulate that this has been done, and call the resulting list p1,p2,p3...pn,P
    Consider the product of this list, that is, p1 * p2 * p3 ... * pn * P; call that product Q.
    Consder the number Q+1. Q+1 is relatively prime to every number in the list p1,p2,p3...pn,P because Q+1 differs from a multiple of each number in that list by only 1.
    But p1,p2,p3...pn,P is by hypothesis a complete list of all prime numbers.
    Therefore Q+1 is relatively prime to all prime numbers less than it, and is therefore itself prime.
    But Q+1 is greater than P, because Q = P * some integer and Q+1 > Q
    Therefore the results are in contradiction to the hypothesis, and by reductio the hypothesis is false.

    There, we just proved a negative. Where do people get the ridiculous idea that a negative can't be proven?

    --
    All's true that is mistrusted
  104. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Theatetus · · Score: 2, Informative
    Remember the time when the most acclaimed minds in the world thought that the world was flat?

    No, actually. Throughout recorded history man (the educated ones, at least) has known the world is roughly spherical.

    Columbus didn't have to convince Ferdinand and Isabelle that the world was round; they knew that as well as we do. They just also knew as well as we do how big it was (Thales's measurement of the circumference of the earth was not surpassed in accuracy until the 18th century). And they didn't know if there was a continent between the Iberian peninsula and China (and neither did Columbus unless he heard it from an Icelander when he was there).

    --
    All's true that is mistrusted
  105. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by phritz · · Score: 3, Interesting
    How do you prove a negative?

    Two ways:
    1)if a theory says A is true, find an example where A is not true. I.e., a counter-example = proof of a negative.
    2)Logical deduction, i.e. mathematical proof. Hidden variables are proved not to exist by a mathematical theorem (Bell's Theorem, specifically).

    You can't prove there's no god, because God isn't formulated as a scientific theory. You can prove there are no hidden variables, since quantum mechanics is a scientific theory.

  106. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Guido+von+Guido · · Score: 1

    Hey, all science is provisional. Thing is, you need something more than handwaving and sniping at evolution. I think it'd be really neat if the ID folks could actually come up with something. I just don't see how they can do it. Apparently they can't either.

  107. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by tgibbs · · Score: 2
    There are flaws in evolution as well (if there wasn't it wouldn't be called a theory) but we won't get into those else you wouldn't have a leg to stand on anymore.

    If you are going to comment, you probably should actually take the trouble to RTFD (note: PDF). I think it deals with this argument rather well:

    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.

  108. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    > I don't see how you can teach biology while omitting the
    > idea that for the longest time almost every culture assumed
    > life came entirely from a super natural being.

    You missed the distinction. It's okay to mention that some Christians believe in ID. It's not okay to say that ID is an alternate, valid scientific theory.

    It's just like how you can learn in history class that Jesus/Buddha/Mohammed/etc was/is worshiped by Christians/Buddhists/Muslims/etc, but they won't tell you that it is right to worship Jesus/Buddha/Mohammed/etc.

  109. More than anything else by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    that's my biggest problem with the US legal system - we don't have one.

    If you want to revert to the letter of the Constitution - or rather, to somebody's opinion about what the letter of the Constitution means - a lot of stuff would change, and you might find that you didn't like all of it.

    Right - ever since FDR essentially abrogated the constitution by expanding the "interstate commerce" clause beyond all sense and intent we've been right off the legal deep end. If we *want* the federal government to control social spending instead of the states, that's fine but we should *change* the freaking laws to permit it, not pretend that they say something that they don't or, even more heinous, use federal tax dollars to manipulate the states the way a dealer uses drugs to manipulate hookers.

    "Change your DUI laws or we cut your highway funds."
    "Change your civil rights laws or we cut off your school funds."

    Right. Extortion is exactly what the founding fathers had in mind when they divided the federal and state governments.

    1. Re: More than anything else by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      > Right. Extortion is exactly what the founding fathers had in mind when they divided the federal and state governments.

      Unfortunately, I seriously doubt that it's possible even in principle to write a constitution that covers everything without any loopholes that politicians can exploit.

      I used to play wargames, and I found that whether the rules were lean and mean or exhaustively detailed, there was always some situation that wasn't covered clearly, and always some overly competitive player who would insist on the most outrageous interpretations in order to fit the battlefield needs of the moment.

      Rules, whether games or constitutions, operate in the realm of human behavior, and even the most microscopic of faults will be exploited to the fullest.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  110. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

    However, I guarantee you that molecules, atoms, and subatomic particles will still be talked about by educated people hundreds of years from now. Evolution, too, will still be in the framework of biology. Not because of some ivory tower intellectuals, but because the science has overwhelmingly supported it so far, and the only way that evolution as a whole will be disproven is if the Invisible Pink Unicorn gallops into a science lab and neighs the truth to people in lab coats. There will be changes, yes, and refinements, as with all science, but it probably won't be any worse than something like, oh, the theory of gravity (although who knows, it may just be Intelligent Falling, wait, I'm gonna go write "Of Apples and People")

  111. I wish you were right by bodrell · · Score: 1
    You can't patent a gene. That patent would not hold up in court. Myriad Genetics probably patented the mutation on a gene, with a patent on using that mutation for detection of increased risk of breast cancer, or to develop a theraputic agent.

    You can read the patent yourself if you don't believe me. They claim the rights to do anything with the BRCA1 gene. Legally, you have to send your genetic sample to Myriad Genetics and pay them ~$3000 to even sequence the gene. Here's claim number one, which should demonstrate my point:

    1. A method for detecting a germline alteration in a BRCA1 gene, said alteration selected from the group consisting of the alterations set forth in Tables 12A, 14, 18 or 19 in a human which comprises analyzing a sequence of a BRCA1 gene or BRCA1 RNA from a human sample or analyzing a sequence of BRCA1 cDNA made from mRNA from said human sample with the proviso that said germline alteration is not a deletion of 4 nucleotides corresponding to base numbers 4184-4187 of SEQ ID NO:1.

    How is patenting a mutation of a gene any different from patenting a gene? You're still patenting a genetic sequence. I think it's fair to say that mutations in just about any gene can cause pathogenic effects, but if those mutations occur naturally, why should anyone be able to patent them? The sequence would exist whether Myriad discovered it or not. They don't have any new technology--just a sequence. Instead of coming up with something novel, they claim the rights to use pre-existing technology to detect a common variant (~3% of the population) of the BRCA1 gene. Claim 10 is just one example:

    10. The method of claim 1 wherein a germline alteration is detected by amplifying BRCA1 gene nucleic acids in said sample, hybridizing the amplified nucleic acids to a BRCA1 DNA probe which specifically hybridizes to nucleic acids containing at least one of said alterations and not to wild-type BRCA1 sequences and detecting the presence of a hybridization product, wherein a presence of said product indicates the presence of said germline alteration.
    (They also claim the rights to run gels, PCR, and pretty much all other standard methods of nucleic acid analysis.) I'm not saying they didn't do a lot of work to pinpoint which mutations increase a person's susceptibility for breast cancer, but they should have kept it a trade secret if they didn't want people sequencing the gene themselves. They would have had a few years with a monopoly on testing, then someone else would have duplicated their work and the information would be public domain. What if someone had been able to patent the rights to sequence any of chromosome 17, rather than a specific gene? Craig Venter wanted to patent the entire human genome before the Human Genome Project could publish it. The Myriad patent sets back cancer research, preventing people from even researching BRCA1 without paying a fee. That, as I said earlier, is immoral.
    --
    Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a soportar Si la vida me da palo, yo la voy a espabilar
    1. Re:I wish you were right by espressojim · · Score: 1

      You can patent a mutation with a purpose: to create a treatment, etc (as I said above.)

      Genes haven't been patented since the late 90's. Before the human genome was completed, I worked @ the whitehead (the center that did the largest amount of the sequencing work.) At first, software was written to auto-patent sequence (to essentially copyleft it), but that work was stopped in the late 90's when it was no longer required.

      Maybe this slipped in, as it's a few years before hand. If the courts rule that you can no longer patent something, do existing patents still stand regardless? I'm not an IP lawyer, so I couldn't tell you, but I'd say if someone had money to really pursue the gene, they'd crush that patent in court, right-quick.

      As to trade secrets: they should have just patented the mutation with the purpose of making a theraputic out of the target, or a detection method. Those are reasonable. If you spend that much time finding a single mutation that has a strong enough effect to make a drug target, then go ahead and reap the rewards.

      By the way, work we're currently doing is at the whole genome scale level, so expect papers in the next few years to say: "We looked at 99% of mutations in the human genome, and found polymorphisms that increase risk to disease . See figure one for details.". Many genes generally effect a trait, so patenting one doesn't give you a monopoly on all cures for a disease.

  112. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Chowderbags · · Score: 2, Funny

    So why don't we just pray to Bob?

  113. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by MustardMan · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is misleading. The theories have not been disproven. They have simply not been proven. The fact that they have not, to date, been proven, does not imply that they are disproven.


    This is incorrect. It HAS been proven that hidden variables are mathematically incompatible with quantum mechanics. Try looking into the EPR paradox and bell's inequality. That's not to say there are no hidden variables, but quantum theory works damn well, and it's incompatible with hidden variables - so it's a whole lot more convincing an argument than simply "it hasn't been found yet"

    Ask any metaphysicist.

    Yeah, while you're at it, ask an astrologist, a tarot card reader, a televangelist, and a reporter for a tabloid mag.

  114. Midiclorians are agents of intelligent design by edeity · · Score: 3, Informative

    Intelligent Design is not provable as a theory, because they are yet to admit that Midiclorians prove the truth of Intelligent Design.

    The Force is the manifestation of Intelligent Design. Midiclorians are its agents, shaping and forming all life.

    Light Saber training should be included within the High School Science Curriculumn. This will also be very popular with High School students and renew their interest in Science, and additionally is a mechanism to make sporting oriented students have as much to offer science in the classroom as academically oriented students. In this way Science will also be more supportive of diversity.

    1. Re:Midiclorians are agents of intelligent design by julesh · · Score: 1

      Light Saber training should be included within the High School Science Curriculumn.

      Absolutely. Only by correct training can a large number of rather gruesome light sabre accidents be avoided.

  115. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by i_bill · · Score: 1

    Because I'm too tired to read the other posts in this subject :P...

    Darwinism can be looked upon as a religion of sorts as well. I personally have investigated both sides of this dispute, and have found that the evidence that one side holds up is the next point that the other side was planning to present. Therefore, in my (sleep-deprived) opinion, I think that an argument could be made that the 'facts' that the Darwinists use are as tangible as the 'facts' that the Intelligent Design people use.

    As Darwinism cannot be conclusively proved (nor, at this point, have major parts of many of the theories on which many scientists today base their findings) it should not be presented as the only option. If a family feels that Darwinism is wrong, they can opt to send their children to a private school, or homeschool.

    It is not right for a school to force one point of view on students, unless it is an extreme case, such as the Holocaust. The place of the educator is to educate and enlighten the students, allowing the students to make decisions later on in life. (Unfortunately, this concept is generally ignored throughout the education system.)Therefore, it is the responsiblity of the education system to present both Darwinism (as a scientific theory) as well as Intelligent Design. Intelligent Design is supported by all major religions (I believe) and is therefore the belief that is held by the vast majority of the population.

    Let me know what you think about this. However, if you're a rabid evolutionist or creationist, I don't care to hear from you ;)

    P.S. I wrote this far too late at night, so my apologies for any structure or mechanical errors.

    i_nick at hotmail dot com

  116. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by drDugan · · Score: 1

    I've come to place where talking about "truth" is only meaningful within a restricted context. If one slows downs, thinks, and looks broadly, then it becomes clear there is rarely ever "truth" -- there is instead only consistency with a context. When a fact is consistent within the larger surrounding facts, we call it "true" - when it is inconsistent, it is "false". The right would have us believe that this is the only way to think - to restrict your context and deal in the world or simple dichotomies. True and false, right and wrong, etc. While it is necessary to restrict ones world view to function - to progress with action, such constriction is also very harmful to one's world view.

    If you followed all that , you've now done plenty of acid. it's time to start changing the world.

  117. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Xoder · · Score: 1

    The prostate is important. I have heard from those who have lost them that orgasms are worse than pointless without them. Also, if you happen to like anal sex, chances are you won't without your prostate.

    Both sound like very good reasons for existance to me.

    --
    The previous sig has been removed due to /. protecting your best interests
  118. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

    There are many good points that you have made, however I do not believe that Intelligent Design is weasel words for creationism although they both are essentially the same thing, one can't really point to evolution and say that evolution itself does not have gods hand in it's work. Sure sure, a all powerful god can just poof....get rid of fossil record and change things at will, but it would depend of that's what god wanted to do! Maybe god's just being lazy, or maybe god is leaving this record for a reason?? I don't know. Intelligent Design COULD mean god, but it could mean aliens too. I think all that creationists/intelligent design proponents are asking for is that it also be given class time. One can't point at ID saying that it's non-science because one doesn't have the proof either way. I mean is it possible that everything is the way it is today by random chance? Yes. Is it just as possible a god or other intelligent being influenced how things appear to us today? Possibly. Noone has proof either is true yet. Why not propose both? It IS possible to teach ID with a non religious bent (and likely it would be a very short lecture....).

    --

    Gorkman

  119. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by eheldreth · · Score: 1

    I agree. I think g-d(I am a christian but use this spelling out of respect for you), when he created this universe and this planet created the very mechanics we observe today. In fact I think arguing over evolution is a logical trap we have led ourselfs into, if you want to have any argument at all it should be over AbioGenesis verses Creation but neither is provable and both will always come down to a matter of faith. I also think that there is such a push for total seperation of all things religous in our culture alot of people feel a threat, and alot are trying to fight this on any ground the can find. I know alot of people who are simply tired of being told what they belive is wrong and basicly they should just shut up and go away. They fell like there cornered and there is nothing they can do about it. The funny thing is by not alowing any debate at all we are infact pushing human secularism as the defacto religion in the US.

    --
    The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum. - O'Toole's Corollary
  120. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by AmoHongos · · Score: 1

    Just to clarify, Einstein was an atheist. When he said God doesn't roll dice, he was speaking metaphorically.

  121. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

    By the way, just do a google search.....it's MORE then just religious right people proposing teaching of Intelligent Design. There are many PhD's and non religious people asking it be taught as well...

    http://www.actionbioscience.org/evolution/nhmag.ht ml
    http://skepdic.com/intelligentdesign.html

    Either way you stand, I think a intelligent debate on this should be allowed in a classroom setting and it should be touched upon in a science class. If it's never taugh much less researched, then how can evolution be provded as the defacto truth? Can we prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that evolution is a natural process??? No. Can we prove some intelligent species planned all of this? No. Can it be debated in class? Why not? When ID can be presented in a non religious way, then why the heck not?

    --

    Gorkman

  122. Big Bang Vs Creationism --- no contest. by darkonc · · Score: 1
    God said "Let there be light", and Whoof! there was a universe.

    Simple isn't it?

    Granted, I've never studied this 'formal' Intelligent design stuff, but I don't think that any of them have really answered (by using the bible), the question of just how long god's days were -- especially when the earth didn't exist for the first day.
    No real reason to believe that someone as godlike as, well, God would have a day the same length as ours.

    In any case, I think (like the first poster) that setting an artificial barrier between God and Science -- and then using the descriptions in the bible (which were simplified no end for people who mostly had no understanding of science, or even the general concept) as the basis for an artificial pseudo-science -- are just setting themselves up to get their heads kicked in. (metaphorically speaking).

    Then again, I figure these are the same kinds of people who'd freak out at the project Guttenberg people for listing The Bible's creator as "Anonymous".

    --
    Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
    1. Re:Big Bang Vs Creationism --- no contest. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      God said "Let there be light", and Whoof! there was a universe.

      Simple isn't it?

      Well, simple until you start asking things like: what exactly do you mean by light? and how long did the "whoof!" take? and what form exactly did the universe take? and what are the characteristics of this God person?

      As much as they make my brain hurt, quantum mechanics, relativity & the many metaphysical theories of the cosmos are MUCH simpler than trying to deal with the "simple" scenario that having a god requires :-)

    2. Re:Big Bang Vs Creationism --- no contest. by darkonc · · Score: 1
      None of those questions are addressed in The Bible, other than the 'what are the characteristics of this God person', which really gets only a cursory explanation with no technical details.

      My point (and the point of most people who look at the kind of stuff that 'intelligent design' proponents are trying to push as 'science') is that the details of those questions aren't addressed (or meant to be properly addressed) in the bible. As such, there really is no big conflict between the bible and most science. In those (few) cases where there appears to be a direct conflict, my explanation is that the bible was never meant to be a technical manual, the transcribers were not technical writers and whatever technical details there may have been were probably horribly mangled in the translation from god's language to Hebrew (or whatever language Moses spoke), and then from the stone tablets to the various languages we now read the bible in).

      --
      Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
    3. Re:Big Bang Vs Creationism --- no contest. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      In those (few) cases where there appears to be a direct conflict, my explanation is that the bible was never meant to be a technical manual, the transcribers were not technical writers and whatever technical details there may have been were probably horribly mangled in the translation from god's language to Hebrew (or whatever language Moses spoke), and then from the stone tablets to the various languages we now read the bible in).

      Or the more probable explanation is that it's all a bunch of B.S. (aside from the miscellaneous historical details), and just the result of a bunch of fanatics who were desperately seeking purpose in an uncaring world.

      Either way, no one can absolutely say with any certainty what happens to them after they die - rejoining the Tao has just as much evidence for it as entering a Heaven or Hell, or as much evidence as the possibility that our souls might turn into little purple Gummi Bears secreted from the nose of an aardvark, i.e., none. There's no way to tell, and for those people who are concerned with observing the "real" world (i.e., scientists), it's a useless question to pursue (at least as far as their scientific inquiries are concerned).

  123. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by king-manic · · Score: 1

    Just to establish my cred, ID isn't science and shouldn't be taught in school.

    Now, having said that, I want to issue a cautionary note to my liberal friends. Let's take a sober approach toward this, shall we?: Having a federal judge deciding what is and is not science, and thus what should and should not be taught in school, is really a terrible state of affairs.

    If the government didn't have a near-monopoly on education, this wouldn't be an issue, of course. But that's a whole 'nother can o' worms.

                - AJ


    Having a judge with expert advice say it is not science is better then having a school board full of religious people proclaim it is. I would prefer the former to the later although Ideally I woudl accept the words of an actual scientist. However their words fall on deaf ears.

    --
    "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  124. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Dude, if he wants to go fishing for alternatives, let him. Nowhere did he imply that ID should be taught in schools; he merely pointed out that evolution should still be looked at with a healthy bit of skepticism, rather than dogmatic following.

    From your link: One can sum up all this by saying that the criterion of the scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability, or refutability, or testability."--end quote

    Theories are supposed to be treated with skepticism, and the "religious nutcase" you responded to displayed more of it than you have.

    Sometimes I think you slashbots have a religion unto yourselves.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  125. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    But you side-stepped his request: prove that you cannot prove a negative. If you do, you are proving a negative ("you can't do something"), therefore making your own assertion false. If you don't, then it is just another unproven statement.

    In general, his point was valid: "you can't prove a negative" is a lazy assertion, and almost always used in religious-nutcase-vs-theory-of-evolution type of arguments.

  126. Now I understand the assistant controversy by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Turns out the researchers really meant to say they had used the Photoshop clone tool to copy the pictures of the cells.

    I was unclear on the whole sub-controversy with the female assistant, but now I understand - he must have borrowed her license of Photoshop. For shame!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  127. I guess I've been in a cave by starX · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because I hadn't heard of the "Little Red Hoax" story, but if I had, I wouldn't have believed it. The department of Homeland Security showing up to harass a colege student for requesting a book through ILL that anyone can go to the local Barnes and Noble and buy right off the shelf? That doesn't make any sense. Misguided and draconian as some of the DHS's policies may seem, I have to believe that really they do have the best of intentions, and besides, if the government did ever think to institute a thought police, any right thinking individual would know that the first place they would go would be those darker corners of the net, not books published by trade paperback publishing companies.

    It's got to mean something that prominent people and news organizations picked this up. At face value, it could very well mean that they're just gullible, but I think there is something more legitimate going on. In the wake of the revelation of the Bush administration using the NSA to spy on citizens without getting wiretap warrants (when they are fairly easy to obtain) we have had a range of official responses from "so what?" to "yes we did it, don't you like freedom?" Sadly, this kind of wavering and uncertainty where the truth is concerned is the hallmark of this administr~~~~~ persons with power. This leaves those without power in a position where they don't know what to believe, but always feel safe in assuming the worse. DHS stormtroopers showed up to implant your new baby with a RFID chip? Page one above the fold!

    Unfortunately the natural paranoia that beaten down feel is only exacerbated by a media all too eager to jump on stories like this. Edward R. Murrough turns in his grave at the concept of this talking head journalism, but it sure does sell papers. Rightwing Extremist Nutcase vs. Leftwing Extremist Nutcase generates the sort of polarizing, us or them, emotional reaction quotes that make headlines. For those of you not paying attention, they make headlines because they sell papers.

    So now we have some college student trying to feel good about himself and justify his own existence. With narry a street protest to find to have his head bashed in by the cops (a clear sign that the system has failed when peaceful protests go uninterrupted), and probably not enough initiative to walk downtown to where the proletariat live to participate in one anyway, this anonymous fellow makes up a story that maybe will score him some points with whatever hippy chick in philosophy 101 that he's had his eye on. Really, this kind of story isn't the sort of thing you tell your professor when you're looking for an extension to a paper, nor is it really the sort of thing one admits during an advising session; this is really the sort of thing you say when you're three sheets to the wind drunk and looking to score (score what, exactly, I'll leave to your imagination). So everyone in this thing winds up with egg on their face. The kid who started it, those who believed him, and the journalists who spread the story because it sells papers. Us sane folk who realize we're not living in a police state yet just kind of shake our heads and wonder which is worse, thought police or freedom of stupidity.

    1. Re:I guess I've been in a cave by mikelieman · · Score: 1

      "I have to believe that really they do have the best of intentions"

      Repeat after me:

      "The Purpose of Government is to hire Government Employees."

      "The Mission of the Bureaucracy is to promote the Bureaucracy"

      --
      Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
    2. Re:I guess I've been in a cave by starX · · Score: 1

      That's not necessarily incompatable with havinbg the best intentions, it just reveals the hypocrisy of the anti-big government platform some politicians run under.

  128. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by kodeman · · Score: 2

    But there's still no reason for the "blink" tag.

    Sure there is. Consider the following HTML, carefully:

    <p>
    Schroedinger's cat is <blink>not</blink> in the box.
    </p>

  129. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are many PhD's and non religious people asking it be taught as well...

    Simply not true. And how many of your PhDs are biologists, anyway?

    I think a intelligent debate on this should be allowed in a classroom setting and it should be touched upon in a science class.

    But ID isn't science! Make it say something that can potentially be disproven, then maybe it will at least vaguely resemble something like science.

    If it's never taugh much less researched, then how can evolution be provded as the defacto truth? Can we prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that evolution is a natural process??? No.

    Brush up on your science. Almost nothing can be proven beyond the shadow of a doubt.

    Can we prove some intelligent species planned all of this? No. Can it be debated in class? Why not? When ID can be presented in a non religious way, then why the heck not?

    Because ID isn't science. In fact, the Judge in this case showed it has a Christian Creationist agenda, and people denying it were lying and possibly commiting perjury. Create a scientific theory of design, make sure it doesn't have a Christian agenda behind it, make sure your moral value system won't collapse if it's shown false, and make it actually say somethig *falsifiable*, and then maybe it'll be accepted in science classes.

  130. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ozmanjusri · · Score: 3, Funny

    So what you're saying is that God is being squeezed out of His habitat as humans encroach? That would mean Intelligent Design proponents could be seen as an environmental group desperately trying to preserve a threatened species. How progressive of them!

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  131. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by koreaman · · Score: 1

    Offtopic, but it's something I've wondered:

    Why is it that Orthodox Jews write "g-d", "gd", etc.?

  132. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

    If anyone belongs in the Special Olympics, it is you, "glitch23". I hope you win.

  133. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Kelson · · Score: 1

    Ellipsoids aren't round? Oh, crap, I guess I'd better go back and re-read my old high school geometry text!

  134. Re:Smart people will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fox makes so many mistakes it should have its own retraction channel?

    Can you name ten retractions it should make?

    Five?

    Three?

  135. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by theripper · · Score: 1

    Writing the name of god on anything that is not long lasting such as paper is wrong, some take this further and include god as g-d even though it's not his name.

  136. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by theripper · · Score: 1

    er put a "they think that" in front of that.

  137. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "Science helps me to understand the way things works . Perhaps my views are naive and cowardly and there to help me cope with a short term life "

    Your comment has sparked me to point out one of the reasons that many athiests are so against people who believe in heaven. Now, please do not take this as an insult...its just a personal view that I've known many people to share.

    Many of us see religion as the "opiate of the masses". Faith truly does offer some solace from the void that ultimately lies before us. But those of us who do not believe in heaven often see those that do as weak mentally, since we feel they cannot standup to the ultimate end of their existence. We see it as a cop-out and it has honestly made me look at a person who I once admired for being incredibly strong willed and fearless, and made me realize how timid they really are when it comes down to the wire.

    Again, this post was not meant as a troll or flamebait...I just wanted to express a perhaps not so popular viewpoint on the athiest vs heaven side of things.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  138. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Alioth · · Score: 1

    If you say "...remains just that - a theory", you don't really understand what a scientific theory is. A scientific theory is not a guess or a hunch (which is the non-scientific meaning of the word 'theory'), it is much stronger than that. By contrast, intelligent design doesn't even qualify as a hypothesis - it's merely a conjecture. A scientific theory by contrast makes testable predictions and is falsifiable amongst other things.

    The theory of electromagentism is "just" a theory too, but the lightbulbs in my house all seem to work when I flick the switch.

  139. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Alioth · · Score: 1

    What is this g-d thing? Some kind of incomplete equation where we are supposed to find the what the terms 'g' and 'd' equal?

  140. (OT) Hidden assumptions in Bell's inequalities by GuyWithLag · · Score: 1
    While I'm no physicist, there was a vary interesting article (sorry, no link yet) that stated that Bell's inequalities had three unstated underlying assumptions (from memory, notoriously weak):
    • Logical reasoning is correct
    • Causality exists
    • Locality (that is, FTL is impossible)

    1. Re:(OT) Hidden assumptions in Bell's inequalities by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      Locality is the big stickler - and you're right, to do the proof you need to assume locality. However, locality was fundamental to Einstein's "hidden variables" argument, as well. If you don't have locality, you don't need hidden variable. Bell's inequality proves that, for quantum mechanics to be valid, either there is no locality (scary thought) or there are no hidden variables (slightly less scary thought). Neither is very appetizing from a intuitive point of view.

    2. Re:(OT) Hidden assumptions in Bell's inequalities by GuyWithLag · · Score: 1

      I had the impression that locality was practically done for, what with wavefunctions and their collapse...

    3. Re:(OT) Hidden assumptions in Bell's inequalities by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      Locality, like most things in physics, isn't exactly what it sounds like. The idea of a wavefunction is, in fact, NOT incompatible with locality. A little googling found this quote from Einstein himself, basically stating that locality was a neccesity to do science as we know it.

      The following idea characterises the relative independence of objects far apart in space (A and B): external influence on A has no direct influence on B; this is known as the Principle of Local Action, which is used consistently only in field theory. If this axiom were to be completely abolished, the idea of the existence of quasienclosed systems, and thereby the postulation of laws which can be checked empirically in the accepted sense, would become impossible.


      In other words, locality doesn't mean a particle has a definite position in space - rather it means that its direct interactions are localized. Put another way, a particle is only affected by its immediate surroundings. However, the term "immediate" is intentionally vague, and what's immediate for one particle is not for another.

      If you're wondering how this all works with things like electrostatic attraction, whose range is essentially infinite, these things are handled quite nicely via particle exchange.

    4. Re:(OT) Hidden assumptions in Bell's inequalities by GuyWithLag · · Score: 1

      Ah, thanks for the clarification, it was enlightening.

  141. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by MPolo · · Score: 1

    I always tend to assume that those who are advocating "Intelligent Design" are advocating just that sort of debate, but it seems that I am wrong from reading the statements that most prominent IDers make. If they want to debate about evolution, they need to be arguing about the mechanism of evolution, not about the fact that more complicated organisms have tended to follow the more simple organisms according to the fossil record. I think that there is plenty of room for someone who believes in the Creator to debate the origins of life with atheists and they shouldn't be silenced for being religious.

    Unfortunately, the fact is that most "Intelligent Design" advocates -- though not all (see this article) -- want to teach a literal belief in Genesis, which can in no way be reconciled with today's scientific knowledge, and belongs in a religion class. I suppose that this "theory" could be true nonetheless, but then they need to work out arguments about how plants can grow without sunlight and generally falsify the entire current understanding of how the world works.

    I think that you're right, that the real sticking point is abiogenesis vs. creation. Unfortunately, both of these theories rest entirely on faith (at least until someone follows Julia Child's Primordial Soup video from the 60s through and produces life from non-living elements, which would at least lend some credibility -- if not falsifiability -- to abiogenesis), and so should really be left out of public schools according to this ruling...

  142. In communist China... by netcrusher88 · · Score: 1

    ...books request you!

    --
    There's an old saying that says pretty much whatever you want it to.
  143. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

    No there aren't. Did you even read the second link you posted?

  144. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by koreaman · · Score: 1

    Isn't the original name of the Judeo-Christian god the "tetragrammaton" or whatever?

  145. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Kuros_overkill · · Score: 1

    Which was, IIRC, the ONLY LEGITIMATE use of the "blink" tag.

  146. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by koreaman · · Score: 1

    Something certain Jews say, check in this very thread for someone's response to my question on why they do it.

  147. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is sad now is that Dover PA has to pay legal costs for this farce. This is going to hurt the education of the children in this small town for years to come. These idiots should be run out of town on a rail.

    You wish has been granted, much to the annoyance of the fundamentalists.

  148. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by A1kmm · · Score: 2

    > if a theory says A is true, find an example where A is not true. I.e., a
    > counter-example = proof of a negative.
    A counter-example disproves a positive, which is quite different from proving a negative in general.

    e.g. someone claims that all apples are red.
    I produce a green apple.
    I have proven that not(all apples are red), that is there exists(apple which is not(red)). I have not proven all apples(are not(red)), which is proving a negative, because I only showed you one example.

    However, you are correct that deductive techniques can prove a negative.

    --
    X-Has-Sig: yes
  149. is it really an hoax? by iive · · Score: 1
    Sorry but there is nothing in the article that prooves the story is really hoax.
    It just proves that:

    "UMD Library Dean Ann Montgomery Smith told AL that the student had requested the book by phone from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, not through the UMD interlibrary services as originally reported"

    This doesn't proove that the student lied but that it have been quoted wrongly.
    The other thing that have to proove this is hoax is:

    "The UMass Dartmouth Library has not been visited by agents of any type seeking information about the borrowing patterns or habits of any of its patrons."

    As you can see, it just proves that they haven't gone to library. This is fine because the origibal story say they have gone to the student home. That makes perfect sense if they have spying on american citizens (i guess it is quite easy for echalon type system to catch mao in conversation).
  150. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

    The previous poster seemed to be confusing the dictionary definition of theory, an unproven hypothesis, with the scientific usage, which is something, whilst not established fact, has been tested and is the best current explanation. I do have a religion unto myself it's true, I'm a Catholic, albeit a lapsed one.

    --
    Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  151. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by volpe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Theories are supposed to be treated with skepticism,

    Yes, but for scientific reasons, not religious ones. I wonder if he has the same level of skepticism for the atomic theory of matter, special relativity, and the round-earth theory.

  152. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by arevos · · Score: 1
    As Darwinism cannot be conclusively proved (nor, at this point, have major parts of many of the theories on which many scientists today base their findings)

    No scientific theory can be, or has ever been, proved. Theories are disproved. Those theories that have survived a significant period of time without being disproved are treated as likely to be correct, and these are the theories that are taught in science classrooms.

    ID is not science, because it does not meet the minimum requirements of a scientific theory. It is not disprovable by observation, and makes no experimental predictions. Because it is not science, it makes no more sense to teach it in a science class, than it would be to study Shakespeare in a metalworking class.

  153. Darwinism by sadtrev · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Evolution is a process that is a logical consequence of three observable phenomena :
    1 - random mutation
    2 - suvirval of the fittest
    3 - inheritance of characteristics from parent(s) - including the random mutation
    Darwinism is the theory that all variation in life on Earth has arisen solely as result of this process. Proponents of ID are not the only people that object to Darwinism - there is credible evidence for some mechanisms of non-random mutation.

    Creationists using these subtleties is comparable to a flat-earther (or Velikovsky) using the 46-seconds of arc in the obit of Mercury to deny "Newtonism".

    1. Re:Darwinism by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      For #2, I've always been of the opinion that "removal of the unfit" was more appropriate than "survival of the fittest". Somehow, the latter phrase seems to have been made more popular.

  154. Intelligent Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems to me that most people with opinions on this issue are overlooking the most important aspect, which is that judges are more often making rulings which determine the curriculum our children are being taught. And so we argue over whether the judge made an appropriate ruling, and what public school curriculum should be, but what we've lost sight of is that fact that given the nature of public school, it will result in a certain curriculum being *forced* on a certain number of children. As long as you agree with the curriculum, and the rulings of the lords who sit behind pulpits, everything is fine. But this is America, a place with the premise of being a free country. One might argue that if you don't like public school curriculum, the solution is to send your child to private school. The economic reality is that private school isn't a viable option, it simply isn't affordable for most. In order to be viable, the parent must essentially be able to afford paying for their children's education at least twice, both through property taxes, and private school tuition. So where does this leave us? It leaves us not with a public school system, but with a state run public indoctrination system, with centrally dictated curriculum controlled by none other than US federal district court judges.

    The solution is to abolish public school, and return people their tax dollars so they may be able to send their children to schools of their choice. Let the ideas taught to children compete in the greater marketplace of ideas, that is what freedom is all about. This may seem like an extreme view, but given the disturbing trend in public "education" over the last half-century, I think it is called for. Let me decide what I want to teach my children, lets not attempt to force our worldview upon every child, to be settled in some US district federal court.

    1. Re:Intelligent Design by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      I still see two problems with this approach:

      1. There will be people that still cannot afford to send their children to school, even with that tax break. Families below the poverty line were not paying enough in taxes to send their own children to school. More likely, the burden of schooling their children was shared more by middle- and upper-class households who pay more in taxes.

      2. There will be families who decide to keep the tax break and use the money for things like food, shelter and heat, instead of schooling their child.

      Threaten parents with jail all you want, but either way, the result is that there will be more children without adequate schooling in the US. These children will grow up without the knowledge and skills to succeed, and will consequently have to rely increasingly upon aid programs such as welfare.

      One way to avoid that situation is to guarantee every child a minimum level of education using tax dollars. In other words: public school systems and minimum requirements/standards for those systems to follow.

  155. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the obligatory use when discussing how VCRs display 12:00 AM because their owners can't set the clock

  156. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sometimes I think you slashbots have a religion unto yourselves."

    They call it Linux.

  157. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by juliuspc · · Score: 2, Funny

    No Fair - you used math.

  158. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by EzInKy · · Score: 1


    Not to mention the prostate...


    It is likely that you would not be able to reproduce without a prostate gland because it adds enzymes that nutralize acidic urine residue in the urethra and activate sperm.

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  159. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

    So, if a scientific expert or, say, the pope says that ID is a-ok, it's ok?

    Here, let's spin this in another direction, just for allegorical purposes:

    Which is better at serving web pages, Unix Derivatives or Windows?

    Emacs or Vi?

    My point is (and I think AJ's point is as well) that "experts" disagree with each other just as often as non-experts do, and usually on grounds that are harder to disassociate and argue for the favor of one or another.

    Now, it's highly possible that the judge is well-schooled in the sciences, but a couple of weeks in court isn't the way to solve any educational debate on curriculum - this might be something that's a bit easier to decide on, but IMO it sets a nasty precedent for how our educational system is modeled.

    While this would hardly slip under the radar, it seems that a judge has the power to say, "Modern Calculus cannot be taught anymore in High School" with a similar argument from "experts". Now while both of these topics are pretty high-profile and would be challenged, what about a more obscure, but important topic?

    Really, if anyone should be doing anything about this, it should be the Department of Education. My wife is getting her masters in education currently, and it baffles me how many things she can't even MENTION because of parents who think lawyers are the only way that they can shape their child's development.

  160. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

    Its become a tradition , now admittedly it is not one of the original names of Adonai , but it is there to also show respect to the adopted cultures I believe .
    I will do the same thing for the name Al-ah (which could be confusing )

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
  161. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

    I would say that G-d created the very basics , the laws of physics and the way energy acts, then created the energy . The rest took care of itself .
    The thing that got me thinking about this is , Where did the energy come from in the first place ? is time cyclical ? even if it is how did the cyclical process start . how did the energy appear ?, if it has always been there , then were is here ? how did here come into being ?
    Things can not simply appear out of total nothingness as is my current understanding .Which then gives me a belief in G-d one that I feel does not affect my capability to work with science . OK this does raise the further question as to how G-d came into existence in the first place .. These things are well beyond my current (perhaps even beyond all human understanding right now , but I can not know that one for sure) understandings and hopefully in time we will find answers , I hope these answers confirm the existence of G-d , if they don't then fair be it .

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
  162. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

    I was referring to your assumption that the previous poster was obviously a 'religious nutcase' because of that confusion. But you're right, I think we've all seen this fallacy many times before.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  163. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2, Funny

    Schroedinger's cat was always in the box.

    Whether it was alive or not is another question.

    --
    You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  164. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I disagree on not teaching ID.
    One thing alot of people miss is, what was taught in schools 100 years ago? ID
    What changed? the ACLU (they have been here a long time) said it was unfair to only teach 1
    concept, so they got evolution taught in schools. now its the SAME aclu pushing that its not fair
    for 2 ways to be taught, and ID should be taken out of schools.

    The ACLU IS the root of most evil!

  165. Red Cross cash cards by Whatchamacallit · · Score: 1

    I was concerned about Red Cross cash pay outs long before the call center scandal. Whenever anyone is handing out $2k to just about anyone with few questions asked; there exists a large opportunity for fraud. Reports of receivers spending the money at strip bars and liquor stores instead of clothes and essentials; a Gucci bag is not an essential item! Civilian records should have been used to distribute money. i.e. local N.O. tax records, voter registration, phone book (incl. unlisted numbers), SSN, etc. The cards should not have been debit cards, they should have had more restrictions on how the money could be spent. There are many reports of non-N.O. persons collecting money from the Red Cross, and gaining shelter services in Texas, etc. The same sort of fraud occurred after 9/11 with fake firemen seeking glory, and the hundreds of millions dollars being passed out with no checks or balances being performed. I am not against helping those in need but you can't just pass out money without accounting for it properly and making some basic assertions that the receiver is not committing fraud. Now there are more fraud allegations against other charity groups who collected huge sums of money and that money has not yet been distributed or the charities are unwilling to show their accounting books. This little scam where Red Cross call center workers were given the ability to simply issue payments to just about anyone without any checks and balances was just plain irresponsible of the Red Cross. The Red Cross only caught on to the scam by noticing a lot of payments were being picked up in the same region as the call center a location where few refugees were located.

  166. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Verteiron · · Score: 1

    Einstein's faith lay in the idea that the universe, at its most fundamental level, made sense and could be understood by a human mind. Of course it remains to be seen whether or not he was right about that. Here's hoping...

    --
    End of lesson. You may press the button.
  167. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, you have some problems with your statements. No educated person thought the world was flat since about 100 A.D. When the greeks in Egypt established that it was about 24,000 miles in circumference. Aristotle established it was round over 400 years before that. He just used obvservations of ships sailing over the horizon to do it. (He also appealed to logic, that everything 'must' fall to one point. We've stopped falling, so we must have hit bottom.)

    Columbus difference with other scholars (he was a cartographer by training) wasn't that he would fall off the edge, but that the world was only 14,000 miles in circumference. The scholars believed that there was open ocean all the way to china. Colombus believed that he should hit Indonesia about where he found Hispaniola. If he hadn't discovered the Americas, he wouldn't have had enough food for the return trip, which was the Spanish scholars objection to the project.

    The 'world is flat' argument is just a modern myth, supported only by your own ignorance. Study a little history and philosophy, you'll be beter for it.

    The periodic table statement is similarly flawed. The new elements added after 1950 (and probably after about 1910) are all artifical, meaning man made. Mostly produced in particle accelarators, or nuclear blasts. They generally last less than a second. (Plutonium is one of the longest, it has a half life of around 200,000 years.) You implied that we are still finding new naturally occuring elements, it's simply not true.

    You should also study a little physics.

  168. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by mike77 · · Score: 1
    We see it as a cop-out and it has honestly made me look at a person who I once admired for being incredibly strong willed and fearless, and made me realize how timid they really are when it comes down to the wire. As you say, this is not a troll, just an opinion I have.

    I was an Atheist for about 2/3 of my life, and had similar views. During that period I faced death, came damn close in fact, and stayed an Atheist. Now I find myself a quasi religious person, Not a Christian, but more a cross of Buddhism and Hinduism would be the closest comparison. I used to feel the same way you do about those who use religion as a cop-out so as not to have to think about what does (or does not) come afterwards. But I begin to wonder if those feelings were not simply misplaced fear or anger in an attempt to make ourselves feel better about our own choices, and wonderings of if there is something there that we're missing? Now don't get me wrong, I certainly believe there are people out there like you describe. Met a few of them, but don't let someone's beliefs and religion dissuade you from who they are. See someone for who they are when they show you, not for their beliefs they profess. How we deal with our own end is up to ourselves at that moment, we have no one left to impress.

    Don't see someone's religious views as a negative, or a reason to believe they are weak. Sometimes it can take alot of effort, patience, will, and yes, fearlessness, to accept one's own beliefs and embrace them.

    --

    --Keeping the flame wars alive, one post at a time

  169. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

    Remember the time when the most acclaimed minds in the world thought that the world was flat?

    Actually, generally Christians believed the world to be flat... not all the "most acclaimed minds in the world" were Christian.

    The reason for this is simply that taken at face value, the Bible intimates in a couple of areas that the world is flat (referring to "the four corners of the world", and a passage in (I believe) Mark which mentions a mountain visible across the world; only possible on a flat Earth). Literal interpretation of biblical teachings led to that belief.

    Taken as a whole in history, the Flat Earth theory was only a "blip on the radar" of belief. It was a short-lived belief that was relatively quickly debunked. Yes, in Christian societies it was pretty devoutly believed because (a) the people at the top stated it often, and (b) the average lay person did not have a way to access information that contradicted this statement (few could read, and few that could had access to anything other than the bible at their local church).

    Even the ancient greeks documented their belief that the world was a perfect sphere (it's not, but they didn't have instrumentation to disprove that), though to be honest most societies in history have not really given the shape of the world much thought. Most of them just knew that it was and it never really occurred to most societies to even consider that it might be shaped at all. Between the ancient greeks and the Christian belief of the flat Earth I don't think there were any documented ideas either way, thus it could be said that even making the argument that the Earth had shape and was therefore limited in scope had the benefit of novelty.

  170. Nice to know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are so firmly grounded in fantasy. I wonder, do you have any mind left for reality?

  171. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's scary that this comment was scored as "insightful", rather than "funny".

  172. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Azghoul · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Um, not to be too pedantic, but yes. It's called Geodesy. And the world isn't "round" at all.

  173. A Little Ignorance... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sure goes a long way.

    For the record, 'separation of church and state' was created in the late 1940's by a sitting federal judge. It has continued only through precident. There is no actual Constitutional or legal (Act of Congress) support for the doctrine. you misquoted the Constitution on the subject. It actually says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...". This means that Congress cannot pass laws specifically to either hinder or help a church (as they did in the 1870's to destroy the Mormon church. Didn't quite work.) It does not prohibit public display of religion, as when Congress appoints a minister to begin each session with prayer.

    ( see http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experien ce/charters/constitution_transcript.html and http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experien ce/charters/bill_of_rights_transcript.html)

    In the first 50 years of the nation, this was understood to be a right of the states. Read Thoreau's notes in his Civil Disobedience essay that in 1845 Massachusits had an established state religion. He was opposed to being taxed to support a preacher of a church he didn't belong to. This was legal, and was supported by the supreme court of the time. While there are arguments against such practices, they aren't a part of this. The grandparents point that we have wandered far from the actual meaning of the 1st amendment is factual and accurate.

    Whether that is good or bad is another point.

    1. Re:A Little Ignorance... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      For the record, 'separation of church and state' was created in the late 1940's by a sitting federal judge.

      That's odd, considering that Thomass Jefferson wrote that exact phrase, and that James Madison REPEATEDLY used the phrase "perfect separation" and the like, and he extensively wrote on the suject of what it means, and he even vetoed legislation explicitly explaining how and why it was a violation of separation of church and state, and virtually all of the famous Founding Fathers are on the record in one way or another on the dangers of crossing or blurring the line between religion and government.

      This means that Congress cannot pass laws specifically to either hinder or help a church

      First of all the 14th Amendment extented to the states and local governments as well. (What good is a requirement for search warrants or anything else, if state and local police are exempt?!? What good is any of the Bill of Rights?)

      Seocondly, like all of the Bill Of Rights, it applies broadly to any use of the force of government. A department administrator or a school principal nor anyone else using their governmental powers to establish an unconstitutional rule or policy. Those powers granted to those government officials are derived from legislative powers.

      Third, it is not restricted to Churches. That is a misreading of the word "establishment". It applies to any act of government for the purpose of establishing anything with respect to promoting or suppressing any religion or religious belief or religious practice.

      For example the ACLU wins all of their School Prayer cases because the ACLU supports the right of students to pray in School. The ACLU wins because they only target shool officials acting in an official capacity as agents of the government and attempting to abuse that governmental power to either promote or supress prayer by students.

      It does not prohibit public display of religion

      Correct. In fact the ACLU jumped in to defende a public display of religion on government property. Some idiot town tried to block a group of people who were preforming baptisms at a public lake in a public park. It was public land and it was open to general public use, and their religious performance and display was part of their Right of Religious Freedom. The government could not exclude it from the public park.

      as when Congress appoints a minister to begin each session with prayer.

      I suggest you read when James Madison wrote about it. He explicitly said that it was a violation of the establisment clause, that the federal government had NO BUSINESS forcibly collecting tax monies and having the congressmen vote for their favored religious preachers to be paid to provide such services. He said that if the congressmen wanted to engage in services of THEIR PERSONAL RELIGIONS, that it was up to them to pay for their personal religious expenses out of their own pockets.

      In the first 50 years of the nation, this was understood to be a right of the states... in 1845 Massachusits had an established state religion... This was legal, and was supported by the supreme court of the time.

      Of COURSE it was. As I mentioned above it was the 14th Amendment that extended the Bill of Rights to apply to the state and local governments as well. The 14th Amendment was added in.... 1868. That's 23 years AFTER the case you cited. It was, sadly, a correct Supreme Court ruling at the time based on the then current version of the Constitution.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  174. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    By "round" I suppose you meant spherical?

    Round |round| adjective

    1 Shaped like or approximately like a circle or cylinder : She was seated at a small, round table. having a curved shape like part of the circumference of a circle : round arches.

    2 Shaped like or approximately like a sphere : a round glass ball | The grapes are small and round.

  175. NPR is not "liberal" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. Give it a listen. Its about as middle of the road as it gets.

  176. Obviously. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you or anyone says "the world is round," you obviously think that that the world is shaped like a compact disc, or possibly even a soda can.

    And, as such, you need as many as 5 completely non-nitpicking people to correct you, because you clearly don't know the shape of your home planet.

    And no... I'm not serious.

  177. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Porchroof · · Score: 0

    I am a Christian and my belief in God would mean nothing if I felt that science and religion were two separate philosophies. I believe that God created the universe. How did he create it? That's for science to determine in detail. (The general nature of the creation is told in Genesis. God has left discovering the details to us.)

    I too do not believe that Intelligence Design should be taught in place of evolution. Someday, though, the two will merge in our science books.

    Trying go keep God out of science and science out of God is a joke. God creates, science studies the creation.

    --
    Fata viam invenient.
  178. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    Doesn't fly, because you postulated that you've already got a complete list of prime numbers. If you've already got the list, saying that something isn't ON the list is trivial. So either Q+1 ought to be on the list, for being prime, or Q+1 is not prime, despite the mathematical definition.

    The point of proving a negative is usually used with intention or prediction. For example, it's impossible to prove that some scientist won't come up with the good old Theory of Everything this year, or that any random person won't die in the coming year. Who the hell knows?

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  179. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by dgatwood · · Score: 1
    More accurately stated, by definition, it cannot be proven through -testing- that an event has zero probability.

    Basic statistics teaches that it only takes one contradiction to prove that something has non-zero probability, but that no finite number of failures can prove that something has zero probability. The mere fact that it has never occurred does not necessarily guarantee that it will not occur in the future.

    That said, it can be possible to prove something impossible through means other than testing. However, doing so requires a structure in which to frame the analysis---a set of rules and assumptions about how the universe operates---which, if wrong, potentially invalidate the proof.

    For example, proving that a piece of code will never execute is easy as long as you ignore outside factors (external input, random hardware failures due to thermal instability, and so on). However, if you ignore those outside factors, you really aren't proving that the code will never execute. You are proving that it -should- never execute unless influenced by an outside force. The only way to prove that it will never execute is to remove it entirely, and even that requires the assumption that no one has the ability to revert to the previous version.

    I guess the bottom line is that it is impossible to prove that something has zero probability unless all of the assumptions made in that proof can be proven. In a rigorous system like mathematics, this is possible. In the real world, it almost never is.

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  180. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    Ah, my apologies for the semantical mis-step. I should not have implied that we had disproven every single possible 'hidden variable' theory, as it is possible that there is some underlying truth which gives the appearance of breaking all these rules while still, in fact, retaining them at some deeper level (much like how His Noodly Appendage is being obfuscated by this "evolution" business).

    This is the exact real problem here- most scientific theories fall into the same semantical mis-step. This leads the religious bigots to accuse the scientific bigots of teaching atheism, and that's how we get into the whole mess. The obvious answer is to stop teaching science as fact- and start in middle school or earlier with the philosophical underpinnings of the scientific method and *why* they're assumed to be true, while NEVER actually claiming that they are true. Keep the magic in the system, there's no real need to expunge it.

    Although I would note that, as far as I've seen, since the EPR 'paradox' was shown to in fact represent how the world works, hidden variable theories are not faring well - they involve giving up significant numbers of other aspects of our classical universe to retain the deterministic effects, and often introduce large amounts of additional cruft that doesn't lead to any useful predictions.

    It is entirely possible we're too stupid to include enough variables- I remember when Star Trek tackled this in an episode, the holographic Einstein claimed it would require more than 21 dimensions to make sense of it. That's likely a low estimate. It's important to stay humble about all of this- arrogance is what leads us to the very semantic error you made above; and thus to the very argument we're discussing.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  181. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by TallMatthew · · Score: 1
    I just replaced Random with God. It was not an eureka moment, just about anyone can make the connection without any hoaxing, just an understanding based on my faith that nothing is truly random but work of God, as Einstein said God doesn't roll dice.

    Well, I don't know what faith that would be, but it's not Christianity. The Bible specifically explains the origin of the universe.

    Ever heard of RINOs? Republicans In Name Only? They should make a new designation ... CHINOs ... CHristians In Name Only. I don't know how they expect to be taken seriously when they say the Bible is the Word of God (TM) one day and that yes, it's the word of God, but it shouldn't be taken literally the next. Intelligent design isn't how it was written in the verses. Six days. No more, no less. Or six "Biblical" days, 5000 years or what have you. No evolution. No nothing. He did everything. He does everything. Static universe. If he didn't say it, it's not the truth.

    If you believe your God said those things, then get behind his words, get behind his explanation of how things should be, be a man and stand up for what you believe. The way I see it, you're just making it up as you go along to appear less foolish in face of contrary evidence. Until JC shows up again to settle this, all you have to go by is what's written in the Bible. So stick with that.

  182. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Porchroof · · Score: 0

    Before the Big Bang ("Let there be light"), there was nothing except for one supreme Intelligence. What would you do if nothing but you existed?

    Think about it: what are the odds that when nothing existed God did? At that point in time (time? There was no time then.) I'd put the odds at 50-50. If the flip had turned up tails, we wouldn't now be talking about it.

    --
    Fata viam invenient.
  183. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    God IS in the gaps. He always has been. The gaps are just perpetually shrinking as science fills the gaps with explanations that prove things behave deterministically. :)

    Exactly right. And as long as science limits itself to explainations that prove things behave deterministically, eventually God will no longer be the God of the gaps- but a very well defined something, defined by the very physical laws it/he/she/whatever created AND UNABLE OR UNWILLING TO DEFY THOSE LAWS. The great philosopher of our time, Kevin Smith, put it best in his screenplay Dogma- all of reality hinges on one important concept, that what God says is true. If it turns out that what God says, truly says not what other people say about him/her/it/whatever, is not true, then what we have is an indeterministic universe- at which point it all collapses, and NO physical laws exist.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  184. Are they all made up? by ClioCJS · · Score: 1
    Are they all made up?

    http://www.studentsfororwell.org/

    of course, the secret service actually comes to the door of many kids...

    here are 3 diff examples:
    http://www.progressive.org/mag_mc100405
    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/170992_prosser 28.html
    http://www.warblogging.com/archives/000379.php
    http://shockandblog.com/blog/modules.php?name=News &file=article&sid=16
    http://shockandblog.com/blog/modules.php?name=News &file=article&sid=18

    Let me guess. Everything bad that is happening is made up. All of it. They are all partisan attacks to make George Bush look bad. We are actually living in the freest paradise on the planet and nothing bad happens here.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    1. Re:Are they ALL made up? by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      I'm not exactly chilled by stories of the cops showing up when they're called, investigating, determining nothing is wrong, and leaving.

      It's not great for the people involved, I'll grant you, but in every case it appears that a private citizen called the cops in. This isn't just Big Brother watching everything - it's our police force doing their job.

      Maybe you'd be happier if they didn't show up when called? Move to an inner city ghetto. That's what the black rapstars have taught me happens there.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    2. Re:Are they ALL made up? by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Then do you mind if I call them over to your place? After all, you've been listening to that rap and it seems suspicious. I hope your neighbors treat you the same afterwards. I hope none of them are your coworkers or church members. Especially if you work with children.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    3. Re:Are they ALL made up? by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      You know what? You've just threatened to do to me exactly what happened to all of those people. You're a tool for Bush, aren't you? You can admit it. You'll lose respect on Slashdot, but let's face it - Respect on Slashdot couldn't buy you a messy bowel movement.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    4. Re:Are they ALL made up? by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      You have a very interesting sense of logic. I do not view this as something worth responding to. Ooops, too late.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  185. What happened to priorities? by microcentillion · · Score: 1

    To be totally honest, I think this is one of the last things our government should be worried about, even only in the topic of education! I don't think they should be arguing over this (an easy solution, create a 'philosophy' class in high school), kids in the US have been falling behind their foreign counterparts for several years now (So much so that the sooner a kid gets out of standardized school, the better chance they have in direct competition). Thanks to our wise and loving president, that will increase ten-fold because with 'no child left behind,' the smart kids are given no opportunity to advance! they are held back to the level of the most *cough*retarded*cough* kid in the grade level. After some thought, it almost seems like a conspiracy similar to that in the George Orwell's Novel '1984'...

    Young party members doublethink newspeak doubleplusgood to crimestop in unistatsoc blackwhite doubleplusungood future thoughtcrime.

    Translation: The youth of the united states must accept a lower level of processing thought to allow the United States Government the ability to do whatever they want without a possible upraising. If they accept the lower level of thought processing, they will accept the activities of the government as being in their best interest, and thus feel no need to rebel. Therefore, the path we are taking is a good one! End Translation

    --
    But clearly you have something better to say...
  186. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Angostura · · Score: 1

    That reminds me of a rather nifty science fiction story I read probably 30 years ago. An old bloke sitting at a bar who turns out to be god, but with his power's gradually diminishing as science proves what he can't do. At the start of the story he is wearing a rather splendid jacket that seems to contain shifting lights woven within its fabric. The lights go out about half way through the story.

    Anyone remember the name/author?

  187. Are they ALL made up? by ClioCJS · · Score: 1
    Are they all made up?

    http://www.studentsfororwell.org/

    of course, the secret service actually comes to the door of many kids...

    here are 3 diff examples:
    http://www.progressive.org/mag_mc100405
    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/170992_prosser 28.html
    http://www.warblogging.com/archives/000379.php
    http://shockandblog.com/blog/modules.php?name=News &file=article&sid=16
    http://shockandblog.com/blog/modules.php?name=News &file=article&sid=18

    Let me guess. Everything bad that is happening is made up. All of it. They are all partisan attacks to make George Bush look bad. We are actually living in the freest paradise on the planet and nothing bad happens here. ...

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  188. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by kermyt · · Score: 1

    Absolutely... a great first post... but you forgot to say FIRST POST! anywhere... so it does not count as a first post :). The real first post would go to the guy right behind you loudly proclaiming FIRST POST! with no other message content. unfortunatly with no one providing this thread with a "real" first post, we will have to erase all these messages and start over.

  189. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    A theorem isn't PROOF- it's based on unproven assumptions that haven't been shown not to be true yet.

    PROOF would mean written in stone forever, infallible, something you can count on. I maintain you still can't have that- no human being can, we're simply incapable of it.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  190. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by space_biker · · Score: 1

    As you stated, "Just saying God did it is a shortcut that ends further investigation," is an excuse for lazy scientists. People have this notion that when God does something, that it is some "Miracle" that can't be explained; that it's something magic and beyond the realm of investigation.

    Why can't God create something using natural means? Everyone here understands that a computer is ultimately based on tiny transistors and software instructions to control those, but to most of the population, it's magical and beyond the realm of comprehension. That said, the first reports of the biblical account of the creation would have reported the features of the creation, not the mechanics of it. That part is up to us to find out.

    So, if you don't believe in God, that's up to you to work out. Leave the rest of us alone to discover "how" God did it. If you have something to contribute, then that's fine too. The more we understand His methods, the more we understand Him.

    As believers and unbelievers, we should embrace science as a way to gain knowledge and truth. Both sides are letting their misunderstanding of religion to blind them and distract them from learning the truth about our world.

    Just sayin...get along children and play nice.

  191. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well personally i think the solution is simple just have an elective class called Theology. The judges ruling did said "Sceince class" and if it is elective then you are not forcing it upon the students. It would be just like any other elective, Like home ec. or auto shop. but, you would need to break the studies up into multi-religious teachings, such as this six weeks we study islam and next is blah blah blah so on and so forth. Really its not a bad idea how can you really know a people without studing their belief system. By not teaching religions in the school we are taking away an understanding of the one thing responsible for just about every single war fought on this planet. crippled intellence is the future of our children. By the way i believe in evolution. I have faith in facts, but i do study religions for moral and social enlightenment.

  192. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by lubricated · · Score: 1

    nothing scientific about ID.

    --
    It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
  193. The little red hoax... or was it? by whitroth · · Score: 1

    Sorry, life in the US, here in 1984, is too weird to make sense of the story. I mean, *did* he make it up, or, given (for example) the whole Padilla case (now trying to charge him with *no* terrorist items), how can we know whether they contacted him and his folks, and told them that if he expected to graduate school, and ever get a job, he'd recant?

    Come on, when Bush *admits* to having violated the 1978 law more than 30 times, and expects to be patted on the back over that, what *can* we believe?

            mark

  194. That might work for non-scientists by Medievalist · · Score: 1
    You stated:
    Postulate that this has been done, and call the resulting list p1,p2,p3...pn,P
    Since this is impossible, you can't use it in your proof.

    Let me make an analogy for the non-scientific:

        Hypothesis: No dogs have green, purple and orange spots.

        Proof: Suppose we put all the existing dogs in one place where we could physically inspect them for coloration.
                        Postulate that this has been done, and call the place the Dog Pound.
                        None of the dogs will have green, purple, or orange spots, because dogs don't come in those colors, therefore they cannot have spots of those colors.
                        Therefore, physical inspection will reveal that no green, purple, or orange spotted dogs.

          Therefore, we just proved a negative. Except that obviously this is bogus, especially since I just painted my dog this morning.
    Where do people get the ridiculous idea that a negative can't be proven?
    Because it has so far proved impossible for any one human to be cognizant of all existence, therefore no human can ever be certain that there are not existing things or conditions outside his or her knowledge, therefore no human can provide rigorous proof of the non-existence of anything.

    Consider: What if the earthly laws of physics are local to a specific region of space-time that the solar system happens to be in right now, and most of the universe is not in that region? Can you prove that this is not so?

    You can, of course, prove negatives that can be restated as strictly confined positives. But as a general principle, you cannot prove that something doesn't exist anywhere.
    1. Re:That might work for non-scientists by Theatetus · · Score: 1
      Since this is impossible, you can't use it in your proof.

      Haven't studied much math, have you? That's how a reductio works. You postulate something impossible (but not yet proven impossible), show that it leads to a contradiction, and by that show the posulate is not true. That's how you prove a negative, which is what started this whole thread.

      Heck, about half of Euclid's Elements is proven in that way.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    2. Re:That might work for non-scientists by Medievalist · · Score: 1


      Ah, I see the problem. You are talking math, I am talking philosophy. Logic applies to both, because both must be continuously redefined in light of continuing discovery, but math is a self-contained grammar that explicitly allows irresolveable contradictions (Kurt Godel, remember?) which does not necessarily apply to philosophy.

      If you want to talk math, I am not really qualified (not that kind of scientist) but I think you have to confine yourself to statements that can be expressed entirely in mathematical notations, right? I think you'll have to define "God" as "Infinity" or else do some really ground-breaking work.

      OT, I was taught in college that it was mathematically impossible to put 200 channels on a coaxial cable.

    3. Re:That might work for non-scientists by speaker4thedead · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately your choice of examples shows that you are not arguing what you claim, innocently or not, to be arguing. Instead of arguing about proof, you're arguing about a corner of epistemology (the philosophical study of how we know things) known as empiricism.

      One can indeed offer proof of the non-existence of a thing. What one cannot do is offer evidence of its non-existence. Evidence and proof are not the same. "Proof" is a logical idea and "evidence" is an empirical idea.

      Standard logic is one system, amongst many, for extending knowledge. We seem to have a large measure of faith in logic because one of its consequences is that no group of true statements will ever lead to a contradiction. In other words it is a system born of our cultural uneasiness with contradictions.

      In fact, one way to logically extend our knowledge is to posit (assert) the truth or falsehood of a statement and then show (prove) that the rules of the logical system lead to a contradiction. Since your assumptions lead to a contradiction, logic says that at least one of your assumptions must be false. This is called "proof by contradiction" or, in classical terminology, "reductio ad absurdum."

      Empericism is not a method of extending knowledge, but rather a method of determining the truth value of a statement. One of the central tenets of empiricism is that existance of an object that fits into a category can be shown by producing an object, called evidence, and running a set of tests to determine if the evidence fits into that category. Since you can't produce and inspect the nonexistence of an object without cataloging everything in the universe, no observer with limited knowledge can "prove" the nonexistance of an object fitting a category.

      Logic and empericism together form a very powerful system that is the foundation of scientific philosophy. Empiricism gives us a very appealing method for determining the truth value of many kinds of statements and logic gives us a very appealing method for extending those facts. One deals with what we can see and the other deals with what we cannot.

      Some things you need to google:

      epistemology
      empiricism
      logic (wikipedia this one)
      reductio ad absurdum

      Karl Popper
      critical rationalism
      falsafiability

      Wikipedia has excelent articals on each of these topics.

      BTW... One of the major problems with your argument is that you assert that a negative statement cannot be proven, which is itself a negative statement. If that's true then your statement cannot be proven and should not form the basis for any argument. But that means that we just proved a negative statement, which means that your statement is false! By your logic,

      Google for "Russel's Paradox" for a bit more on that type of logical difficulty. It turns out to be incredibly significant.

      --
      "My religion is to live --and die-- without regret." -- Milarepa
    4. Re:That might work for non-scientists by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Since this is impossible, you can't use it in your proof.

      Oh? Please explain. It seems to me that if there were a largest prime number ("P"), it would be possible to make a list of all prime numbers between 0 and P. It might not be practical in the real world, but in a mathematical thought experiment, we're only limited by the rules of mathematics.

      None of the dogs will have green, purple, or orange spots, because dogs don't come in those colors, therefore they cannot have spots of those colors.

      This is the flaw in your analogy - not the "postulate that this has been done" line. You're begging the question by presuming that none of the dogs will have green, purple, or orange spots, since that's exactly what you're trying to prove.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    5. Re:That might work for non-scientists by Medievalist · · Score: 1
      Oh? Please explain.
      Sure! As pointed out in other posts here, if you want to use the special mathematical meaning of the word prove you have to say so. Otherwise, you are speaking English (typically American English on /., but I digress).

      In English, to "prove" something you must provide evidence that it is so. If you base your argument on something physically impossible or humanly unknowable, you lose - you have proved nothing.

      Science can be seen as composed of equal parts speculation and experimentation. That's a bit of an oversimplification, but without demonstrable, repeatable experiments providing evidence that your speculation corresponds to reality, all you have is a party trick, like Zeno's paradox.

      If you discard empiricism, you are not a scientist, although you may be a philosopher or mathematician.

      PS: It has also been pointed out that my analogy sucked, you are certainly right about that.

    6. Re:That might work for non-scientists by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      As pointed out in other posts here, if you want to use the special mathematical meaning of the word prove you have to say so.

      When we're talking about proving something in the realm of mathematics, that meaning is implied. HTH.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
  195. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by dangitman · · Score: 1
    That would be delusional. The judge is a rather conservative Bush appointee.

    Delusional and Bush go together like two things that go really well together.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  196. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by dangitman · · Score: 1
    There in lies the rub. If you accept evolution as a scientific law, then you would be just as guilty as those who say intelligent design is the only answer.

    No, there's no rub. Because scientific laws aren't considered absolute truth.

    No one can prove that mutations that happen in evolution are caused by god or by natural means. Radiation is naturally occuring and who's to say that god didn't cause the radiation

    Who's to say that a giant bumblebee didn't sting the universe into existence? These are not scientific questions. You need to be able to test a hypothesis for it to be science. Philosophical questions don't really count much in experiments.

    Intelligent Design is not only a religious teaching.

    Absolutely it is. How can it not be? What non-religious/philisophical basis is there for the theory?

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  197. You are making incorrect assumptions. by Medievalist · · Score: 1


    You are making the foolish assumption that everyone believes in the same definition of God.

    Is Earth's Sun the physical body of God? Deus Sol Invictus, all hail the invincible Sun! (I like to say that around this time of year.) I can prove the existence of the sun rather easily.

    Define which God you are talking about (the Bhuddist god? Which flavor of Bhuddism?) before you start blithely asserting nobody can prove God exists.

    1. Re:You are making incorrect assumptions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm ... he said that no one prove that god DOESN'T exist. Jesus, at least read the comment before you start flaming. But, oh wait, this is slashdot - if you read things before opining on them, then you might be forced to think about it before you start spewing diarrhea from your mouth.

    2. Re:You are making incorrect assumptions. by phritz · · Score: 1
      Well, firstly, I said you can't prove that god doesn't exist. Secondly, the one of the very reasons for you can neither prove nor disprove god's existance is that there's no definition whatsoever. Yes, you could claim that God is the sun - that's not proving the existance of god, that's just semantics. I could also claim that butter is, in fact, puppies, and then say to have conclusively proved that butter has a cold wet nose.

      Delicious, spreadable puppies.

      And thanks for calling me "foolish" and raising the level of the debate, when you can't be bothered to read my original post - you must be a blast at parties.

    3. Re:You are making incorrect assumptions. by General+Fault · · Score: 1

      "I could also claim that butter is, in fact, puppies, and then say to have conclusively proved that butter has a cold wet nose.
      Delicious, spreadable puppies."
      I love it! That is my new E-mail sig!

      --
      No man is an island... But I wouldn't mind having a bigger moat.
  198. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There are flaws in evolution as well (if there wasn't it wouldn't be called a theory)"

    You're functionally retarded. Not because there aren't gaps in our current understanding of evolution that will be filled in time, but primarily because of your poor understanding of scientific "theory" past a grade school level and the assumption that an imperfect model is a false one.

  199. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by dangitman · · Score: 1
    however I do not believe that Intelligent Design is weasel words for creationism although they both are essentially the same thing,

    Can you explain why you don't believe this? Every single piece of evidence shows that 'Intelligent Design" is a creation of American evangelical Christians, that is not widely believed, and has been used solely as a means to trick the US legal system into allowing creationism doctrines into schools. Because they can't get their evangelism into schools if they call it creationism.

    In fact, the very definition of "Intelligent Design" is creationism. If life is so complex that it required a "Designer" - then that is irrefutably a creationist philosophy. The whole argument of Intelligent Design is that life could not happen by chance, so it requires a creator.

    one can't really point to evolution and say that evolution itself does not have gods hand in it's work.

    Why not?

    Noone has proof either is true yet.

    But there is zero evidence supporting intelligent Design. there is a lot of evidence supporting Darwin's theories.

    It IS possible to teach ID with a non religious bent

    How? Explain this to me.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  200. MISSISSIPPI IS WORSE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good lord. New Orleans got the WEAK side of the storm. You want to see destruction? Come to the Mississippi Gulf coast. We have devastation from state line to state line.

    I wish people would stop yammering about poor New Orleans. HELLO Mississippi took the brunt of the storm. We had 30ft+ high storm surge in some areas!!!

    1. Re:MISSISSIPPI IS WORSE by dangitman · · Score: 1
      I wish people would stop yammering about poor New Orleans. HELLO Mississippi took the brunt of the storm. We had 30ft+ high storm surge in some areas!!!

      That doesn't mean you were affected worse. New Orleans has a totally different topography, and different social problems. I don't think the police went around looting and beating people in Mississippi. I don't think the white people turned into vigilantes against the blacks. nor were there levees to break.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  201. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by F_Scentura · · Score: 1

    "Even with evolution we are starting to stop to look for anything alternative."

    Because "evolution" involves a fuckton of evidence. We look for different approaches to the same idea because the idea is correct. The questions lie in how the idea is put into place.

    "I am not for nor agaisnt the theary of evolution."

    You obviously are letting your creationist ties show through with nebulous statements like...

    "But it remains just that - a theory."

    Gravity is "just a theory", but its effects are just as visible. "Just a theory" is another creationist argument based off of a childish misunderstanding of how science is supposed to work. Anyone looking for "laws" is not grounded in reality.

    "Being a better theory does not make it true."

    No, being useful and with a stack of evidence makes it useful with a stack of evidence to assist us in our understanding of the world. Creationism has no evidence but wishful thinking in its favor.

    "Remember the time when the most acclaimed minds in the world thought that the world was flat?"

    The most acclaimed minds didn't think the world was flat. That was just the conventional assumption.

    "Or how the best minds once thought the molecule was the smallest unit before they discovered atoms and electrons and those became the smallest. Then they they spilt THOSE up too. Remember the period table 50 years ago had less elements than they do now."

    We thought that until evidence came by to further illuminate the molecule's components. When we understand how EVOLUTION works in a more detailed manner we will then further grow in our knowledge of evolution. That comparison doesn't work in your favor :)

    "Intelligent Design may not be the answer. But that does not mean evolution is. Scientists are supposed to have an open mind. Accept your believes and accept that they may be wrong."

    We do, and when more accurate information comes out, we'll accept the information.

    Until that point, feel free to contribute to the wealth of creationist "science" sure to come out any day now! It's obviously a young movement, perhaps we can give it another couple of thousand years to see if we can get anything other than a halfassed and unscientific "god of the gaps" argument :)

  202. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by i_bill · · Score: 0

    Can Darwinism be conclusively proved?

    No. Evolution spans too great a period for observation. Although it is possible in some circumstances to show evidence of Natural Selection, this does not prove Evolution. It merely proves a fact that is well-known; that is, a fact that is acknowledged by ID theorists and Darwinist theorists both. Natural Selection is merely a reduction of genes, not an expansion of genes in the organism.

    "[Darwinism] is not science, because it does not meet the minimum requirements of a scientific theory. It is not disprovable by observation..."

    It could be argued that Darwinism does not make any experimental predictions. There is a difference between predicting an vague event in the foggy future, and making a scientific hypothesis. The first is known as fortunetelling, and the second is known as science. No darwinist hypotheses have been made that can at all be observable, nor are they definite enough to prove anything

  203. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by WiFiBro · · Score: 1

    "if a pattern cannot be found it is called random. If God is behind random that is fine but because God cannot be proven or disproved scientifically,"

    I don't think you have read the same explanation of the evolution theory as I did. Could it be that you only read summaries in ID books? If so, and if you are open to other ideas at all, read http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/abioprob/abioprob. html ('what's wrong with creationists' "abiogenesis is so improbable" calculations') and if you dare http://atheism.about.com/library/FAQs/evo/blfaq_ev o_science.htm

  204. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by F_Scentura · · Score: 1

    "There are many good points that you have made, however I do not believe that Intelligent Design is weasel words for creationism although they both are essentially the same thing"

    "one can't really point to evolution and say that evolution itself does not have gods hand in it's work. Sure sure, a all powerful god can just poof....get rid of fossil record and change things at will, but it would depend of that's what god wanted to do! Maybe god's just being lazy, or maybe god is leaving this record for a reason??"

    Believing God drove evolution is not ID. It is theistic evolution, which while still not proper for classroom discussion is compatible with what is discussed in the classroom.

    "I think all that creationists/intelligent design proponents are asking for is that it also be given class time. One can't point at ID saying that it's non-science because one doesn't have the proof either way."

    And we say no because there's no science involved. If there's no proof, there's no reason to use it as if there was proof. "Irreducible complexity" is a nonscientific concept and regularly proven to be false.

    "It IS possible to teach ID with a non religious bent (and likely it would be a very short lecture....)."

    It would not be ID without a religious bent, it would be evolution.

  205. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by phritz · · Score: 1
    I have proven that not(all apples are red), that is there exists(apple which is not(red)). I have not proven all apples(are not(red)), which is proving a negative, because I only showed you one example.

    Sorry, your symbolic logic is wrong. "All apples are not red" is the negation of "there exists an apple which is red" - that's different from your first statement.

    As you can see, that's different than "all apples are red", which negated is "there exists an apple which is not red." Remember - the negation of "all" is "there exists not."

  206. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow... an intellegent, elegant, and concice definition of how a person can have faith and scientific thought... and not have them interfere with one another. As well as why we should keep them from interfering in the classroom.

    There's hope yet out there...

  207. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by LeeMeador · · Score: 1

    I see something missing in this discussion. I can't quite put my finger on it but maybe I can hint in that direction.

    Part of this issue relates to what we teach in the schools.

    a) It's different depending on what grade you are talking about. For example, I'm an old guy and I learned in my formative early school years all about dinosaurs. I got what "science" said was known about them. I didn't look at it as current knowledge but as "truth." Now, it seems, the kids are learning a different version of things because we have found more evidence that tells us more about what dinosaurs were like. But, again, these kids are getting the idea that this is "truth." The lower grades learn science as "truth" and not as part of the process of science.

    b) Even high school "science" classes have to deal with the societal context of the students. When they learn biological facts about sexuality there is often information given about how a student's sexual activities might effect their lives. Telling them that they are less likely to end up with an STD if they use condoms isn't truly "science" in the sense this Slashdot discussion seems centered around. But it is taught in science class. How a creator fits into the "origins" picture may be a similar situation in some communities.

    c) There are a lot of people in some communities that have religious or pseudo-religious beliefs about how all this came into existence. Ignoring the close-held beliefs of those people in schools would be a travesty. It seems popular, in the US, to suppose that all education should be the same in all communities. We don't do it that way. Some high schools offer Calculus and some don't mostly based on what the parents and school officials feel is worth teaching. Some high schools offer classes to teach traditional homemaking skills. Some don't. Perhaps some information on how the science in a class relates to people beliefs is similar.

    d) Who are WE to tell the ordinary people in some community what is important for them to teach their kids? I know we are much smarter than they. I know we are more tuned in to the needs of those kids in a global society. But I sure don't want even a benevolent dictatorship telling me how to raise my kids. That includes telling my community what our kids should learn in school. (We'll decide half the stuff we teach them is crap in 50 years anyway.) How arrogant.

    I just think there is more to the issue than I'm seeing here.

  208. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

    More broadly one needs to realize that most of what we accept as truth (and all of science) is actually a set of conclusions reached by inductive logic. Since induction falls apart as soon as a counter example is presented, we are unfortunately subject to attacks by people who propose alternative theories (the world was created complete with fossil record by some deity half an hour ago).

    Contextual truth has turned out to be useful in certain fields - mathematics for example is a set of rules which allows you to determine if something is true based on deductive reasoning. Even that is limited however since Goedel showed any formally consistent system contains undecidable questions.

    Because of this there has to be a set of principles that can be used to choose between competing inductively based theories. We choose to name one set of such principles science. Another set is called religion. Now the big problem is when you start mixing the two. Then you have corrupted your meme basis and the usefulness of the underlying set of principles is dimished if not destroyed.

    This is why religion must not be taught in science class. And yes, ID is most defintely religion.

  209. Here's why : by DrSkwid · · Score: 1


    Darwin's preferred term was Natural Selection. I think survivial of the fittest has become more prevalent because "fittest" has changed in meaning from "most suitable" to "strongest" and appeals to those who think might is right.

    http://www.literature.org/authors/darwin-charles/t he-origin-of-species-6th-edition/chapter-03.html

    "I have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term natural selection, in order to mark its relation to man's power of selection. But the expression often used by Mr. Herbert Spencer, of the Survival of the Fittest, is more accurate, and is sometimes equally convenient."

    http://www.literature.org/authors/darwin-charles/t he-origin-of-species-6th-edition/chapter-04.html

    "This preservation of favourable individual differences and variations, and the destruction of those which are injurious, I have called Natural Selection, or the Survival of the Fittest."

    on a related note I was reading (in New Scientist I think) that the life of the parents between their birth and the birth of their offspring also contributes to the genetic make-up of new individuals, in particular, the effects of malnutrition. I wish I had a URI for that if anyone can help.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  210. Let me ask you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a registered republican, and GW made me vote for a democrat for the first time in the 6 presidential elections I've voted in...

    Let me ask you this. Don't you think he's dumb and he lies? I'm trying to start a war here, but I voted for the guy the first time because he *wasn't gore*. But now its pretty clear that Cheney calls the shots, and has directed billions of dollars into his and his friends pockets, he's pretty dumb, so he invaded Iraq for no good reason. He has turned the other way while oil companies are screwing us hand over foot. He's abridged civil rights in the name of a war that by definition can never end. He does bad things to the rest of us to appease the wacko religious right The country is in bad shape, getting worse, and then you wonder why a lot of people hate bush?

    I personally don't hate him, I just think people who voted for him are either dumb or blinded by some weird ideology. But Bush has been the worst president since, say... Garfield. He's really bad.

  211. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by slycrel · · Score: 1

    I by and large agree, though I sure hope that it's not as incentive/fear (read: heaven/hell) based for most people as you seem to imply. Though I do believe in heaven, I doubt it is the cartoony clouds and angels with harps that gets presented all over. Or pearly gates or what have you.

    In my (christian) religion we believe that we existed before we were born and that we will continue to exist after death, indefinitely. This faith actually helped me a number of times in my life to have a bit of backbone. As a suicidal teenager, for example, knowing that death isn't going to make it all go away can actually help.

    I think it's funny though, our whole existence is based on faith. Whether you believe in God or not doesn't particulary change that. It just changes what you have faith in. It could be argued that all of it is about perspective and what perspective we choose to make our reality around. I say this more as a musing than anything -- I'm certainly not trying to change your views. Thanks for the thought.

  212. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by mspohr · · Score: 1

    Actually, the judge in this case is a certified conservative... appointed by George Bush... so definitely not a "liberal activist" judge.

    --
    I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  213. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    The modern periodic table was first presented by Mendeleïev in 1869.

    It had 63 elements and some gaps which Mendeleïev predicted would be filled with new elements. Between 1875 and 1886, three elements (gallium, scandium and germanium) were discovered, the properties of which fitted the theory that Mendeleïev proposed in his table.

    Apart from rotating it 90 degrees and being able to record the atomic weights accurately, it has proved to be a sustainable representation of the elements, ergo a bad example to choose for your assertions.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  214. You still don't understand, peabrain. by Medievalist · · Score: 1


    Your post is hilariously recursive and ironic, though.

    If you define "God" as "a little red demon made of paste that only lives in George Bush's nose" you can prove that such a thing DOESN'T exist. If you define "God" as Spinoza did, you can prove such a thing DOES exist. There is NO UNIVERSALLY ACCEPTED DEFINITION OF GOD so you must specify WHICH god.

    And incidentally, my prior post wasn't a flame. THIS is a flame.

    Do you understand yet, or am I using words that are too big for you?

  215. Semantics War Part 666 by Catbeller · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing as "Darwinism" outside the minds of fundamentalists.

    There also is no such belief system as "Newtonism", "Galileoism", or "Einsteinism".

    Words have power. Suffixing Darwin's name with an "-ism" clamps the scientist's name to a belief system, a religion. Fundies think of the world in terms of belief and absolutism, so it's natural for them to consider people who don't think as they do to be members of an opposing religion -- by definition evil and wrong, since only they are correct and righteous.

    Science isn't a belief system, and doesn't do "-isms". It's a methodology and a collection of theories that describe known data. It is ultimately self-correcting, which religion IS NOT. Creationism is an -ism. It is predicated on the always-correct Bible, and cannot correct itself. It is not a science.

  216. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by king-manic · · Score: 1

    So, if a scientific expert or, say, the pope says that ID is a-ok, it's ok?

    What the pope says is irrelevant. What a scientific expert says is irrelevant, if the scientific communities says one ideas holds some merit then I might aquiece but you won't be able to convince that many people such a retarded idea could be valid. It defies even cursory review.

    Emacs or Vi?

    Experts don't disagree ont his one topic just as either Pro-emacs or pro-Vi sides will agree notepad is garbage. What biologists will disagree on in theories with near equal validity, ID isnt' one of them.


    Now, it's highly possible that the judge is well-schooled in the sciences, but a couple of weeks in court isn't the way to solve any educational debate on curriculum - this might be something that's a bit easier to decide on, but IMO it sets a nasty precedent for how our educational system is modeled.

    While this would hardly slip under the radar, it seems that a judge has the power to say, "Modern Calculus cannot be taught anymore in High School" with a similar argument from "experts". Now while both of these topics are pretty high-profile and would be challenged, what about a more obscure, but important topic?


    Unfortunately and fortunately we live in a legalist state and many many such things already occur. In this one case it is right. It sets no precedent, the ciriculum is already aprtially set by the state (general term, like France not idaho) because the state controls the education system. This only sets the precedent that local authorities cannot alter the ciriculum to be counter to the federal consensus of what is science. You'll note that many US text books calls vietnam and the war of 1612 a draw when everybody else in the world saw both as a loss for the US. The state already uses primary public education as a propaganda tool. Your arguement simply is pointless because all of the worst things this ruling implies already has happened.

    --
    "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  217. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Theatetus · · Score: 1
    Doesn't fly, because you postulated that you've already got a complete list of prime numbers. If you've already got the list, saying that something isn't ON the list is trivial. So either Q+1 ought to be on the list, for being prime, or Q+1 is not prime, despite the mathematical definition.

    Sigh... this is Euclid's proof; I didn't make it up. The claim is that there is no greatest prime number (a negative statement). You create a reductio proof by assuming the opposite and showing it leads to a contradiction. The contradiction is as follows:

    • If there were a greatest prime number, we could create a list of all prime numbers, since there must be a finite number of them in that case, and we have a sieve method for getting all prime numbers less than a given number.
    • Since that list would be a complete list of all prime numbers (by the hypothesis, there would be no prime numbers greater than P, and we have listed all prime numbers less than or equal to P), no numbers greater than P can be prime.
    • But, Q+1 is shown to be prime, and greater than P
    • So, since our supposition that there is a greatest prime number has yielded a contradiction, the supposition must be false.
    That is how Euclid proved a negative, namely that there is no greatest prime number.
    --
    All's true that is mistrusted
  218. No, I'm a total dud at parties. by Medievalist · · Score: 1

    One can do foolish things, and make foolish assumptions, without being a fool. I was attacking the idea that God's existence is not logically falseable, but I didn't intend to attack you personally; I apologize for the miscommunication.

    On the other hand, I could easily construe your post as a direct attack on my religious beliefs, so don't think I'm not excercising some restraint here.

    "Delicious, spreadable puppies" actually sounds much tastier than butter, BTW, but then I'm mostly carnivorous and I've never cared much for dogs as pets.

  219. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by arevos · · Score: 1
    Can Darwinism be conclusively proved?
    No.

    Er... Did you read my post? Specifically, the bit where I point out that no scientific theory can be proved? Evolution is no less valid than theories on relativity, quantum entanglment, gravity or electromagnetism, none of which can be proven, either.

    Evolution spans too great a period for observation.

    One can observe it through the fossil record. This is no less valid than astronomy, where scientists observe the radiation from events that occurred in the far distant past.

    Although it is possible in some circumstances to show evidence of Natural Selection, this does not prove Evolution. It merely proves a fact that is well-known; that is, a fact that is acknowledged by ID theorists and Darwinist theorists both. Natural Selection is merely a reduction of genes, not an expansion of genes in the organism.

    I'm sorry, you've lost me. Natural selection a reduction of genes? Why would less genes result in animals more adept at surviving?

    It could be argued that Darwinism does not make any experimental predictions.

    Er, with respect, what the hell are you talking about? Evolution has been predicting things ever since Darwin proposed that humans evolved from apes. This led scientists to propose that, according to the theory of evolution, there should be fossils of our ape-like ancestors lying around. Years later, this prediction was borne out by the discovery of Lucy and similar fossil hominids.

  220. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    But you side-stepped his request: prove that you cannot prove a negative.

    His request was invalid based on an incomplete understanding of a negative. A negative is an event with zero probabilility. You can prove that a negative has never happened so far, but you can never prove that probability is exactly zero.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  221. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by pkphilip · · Score: 0

    Are you suggesting that the theory of evolution is anywhere near as well proven as the round earth theory, atomic theory and special relativity?

    Hint: You can see the earth is round if you just get into a plane, see a photograph taken from a space shuttle, watch other planets through the telescope etc. Contrast this with evolution - have you personally observed anything even remotely resembling macro-evolution? Well, you can't because it takes millions of years.. Scientists arrive at a "hypothesis" which is another name for a guess as to how different species may have evolved, but NO ONE has observed macro-evolution happening.

    It is entirely possible that the theory of evolution is right, but frankly, there isn't enough evidence to say for sure.

  222. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by MadJo · · Score: 1

    I think the whole point was that this isn't supposed to be taught at a _public_ school.. public as in religion-less, open for everyone regardless of religion.
    You don't want your public school to teach your kid about Allah being the one and only god, now do you?

    Intelligent Design has no place on a public school... now if it were a catholic school or something, this would be a whole different matter.

  223. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ZombieWomble · · Score: 1
    Your Graduate QM class was falling into the same mistake I made in my original posting then. Bell's theorem is a valid counter-example to the hidden variable method suggested in the EPR paper, which retained all aspects of our 'classical' universe, most significantly locality, realism, and causality, which together lead to an entirely deterministic universe. QM gets around this by fudging the definite 'reality' part (apart from during interactions) to avoid a purely deterministic evolution of the universe, and that works extremely well as far as we've seen.

    However, hidden variable theories can be created which do accurately describe all quantum mechanical observations, but it requires that several of the other things which implicitly make up our classical picture have to be sacrificed, most typically locality (as in all particles can exchange information with all other particles at all times) or causality (which is comprable to sacrificing locality, but in different terms).

    These hacks are, in general, not very appealing because the tend to feel very 'fudged'. Of course the typical counterpoint is that many aspects of modern physics are a fudge until enough information is available to correctly describe all of these interactions, which is a fair point, but once again feels somewhat like the religious position where 'God' is responsible for the things we don't understand, and is gradually pushed back into more obscure corners as new evidence is accumulated. That's not to say he's not there, but right now there's little to suggest that it should be beyond a feeling that that's how the world should work.

  224. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ZombieWomble · · Score: 1
    It is entirely possible we're too stupid to include enough variables- I remember when Star Trek tackled this in an episode, the holographic Einstein claimed it would require more than 21 dimensions to make sense of it. That's likely a low estimate.

    Well, there do exist QM hidden variable theories which sacrifice locality and suggest that all particles can interact with all other particles instantaneously, which would be comprable to a system with coupling variables between every pair of particles for every interaction they can have. That's pretty much the upper limit of non-redundant information the universe could possibly hold. The problem is many of these theories are set up so that they reduce exactly to 'normal' QM predictions for any observable system. Meaning they don't really offer us much new predictive power.

    The obvious answer is to stop teaching science as fact- and start in middle school or earlier with the philosophical underpinnings of the scientific method and *why* they're assumed to be true, while NEVER actually claiming that they are true.

    I do agree here, to a point. I have argued in favour of getting some more rigorous background teaching put into physics modules at my uni (both mathematical and philisophical). The problem is that at this point, courses are heavily dominated by people who are not there for the love of physics, but to get a degree because that's the done thing. Only about one in ten of us has gone on to do masters/phd work, and probably even fewer of them will actually pursue it as a career. These people are going to be somewhat put off by extremely heavy mathematics which is not particularly necessary to understand the basic concepts, or by philisophical musings which they are not likely to pursue on their own time. And the department can't risk that, since they're having enough trouble keeping some courses open as it stands.

    This problem is even more pronounced at lower levels in schools - a small minority of people really enjoy their subjects and would welcome detailed background, but most will simply be put off by it. And if they can get easier courses without these unappealing aspects, they're going to take them. As an example, in the UK the A-level physics syllabus has been changed to no longer include any calculus, since this was taken as offputting to people who wanted to do physics without maths. Of course, the idea of physics without maths is pretty laughable to begin with, but since numbers are low to start, no course director is going to want to risk losing that number of people. So the syllabus gets thinned out, and quite often the unviersity courses have to be modified to take that into account.

    It would be nice to expand the level of detail in these courses, but since it is likely to damage the number of people in already weak courses, I doubt it will happen any time soon.

  225. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    Well, there do exist QM hidden variable theories which sacrifice locality and suggest that all particles can interact with all other particles instantaneously, which would be comprable to a system with coupling variables between every pair of particles for every interaction they can have. That's pretty much the upper limit of non-redundant information the universe could possibly hold. The problem is many of these theories are set up so that they reduce exactly to 'normal' QM predictions for any observable system. Meaning they don't really offer us much new predictive power.

    Neither is my theory that places the mistakes on the observer's side of things, at first glance. But that's the philosophical hole in Occam's razor- it can cause us to reject theories and models without testing them merely because they seem to be more complex on the surface.

    I do agree here, to a point. I have argued in favour of getting some more rigorous background teaching put into physics modules at my uni (both mathematical and philisophical). The problem is that at this point, courses are heavily dominated by people who are not there for the love of physics, but to get a degree because that's the done thing. Only about one in ten of us has gone on to do masters/phd work, and probably even fewer of them will actually pursue it as a career. These people are going to be somewhat put off by extremely heavy mathematics which is not particularly necessary to understand the basic concepts, or by philisophical musings which they are not likely to pursue on their own time. And the department can't risk that, since they're having enough trouble keeping some courses open as it stands.

    That's precisely why you need to do it at a lower level. Right now, for most of the public, science may as well be done by witch doctors- it's got just about the same philosophical connection to real life (only results count) as the shaman in a primative tribe. It's taught strictly out of textbooks, any thought or dissent from that standard is swiftly punished, sometimes even in court. This yeilds the sorry state of science in the United States today- despite the fact that we've recently created a new method of peer review that is much more efficient than the old journal system, for many scientists if it wasn't published in a peer reviewed journal it didn't happen, and for most of the public what is real depends upon what somebody with an arbitrary and subjective set of letters behind their name chooses to tell the general media, or worse yet, testify to in advertising for money.

    This problem is even more pronounced at lower levels in schools - a small minority of people really enjoy their subjects and would welcome detailed background, but most will simply be put off by it. And if they can get easier courses without these unappealing aspects, they're going to take them. As an example, in the UK the A-level physics syllabus has been changed to no longer include any calculus, since this was taken as offputting to people who wanted to do physics without maths. Of course, the idea of physics without maths is pretty laughable to begin with, but since numbers are low to start, no course director is going to want to risk losing that number of people. So the syllabus gets thinned out, and quite often the unviersity courses have to be modified to take that into account.

    So go even lower- and don't give them a choice whether to take it or not. Philosophy and history should be the begining of any level of science- even primary school kids and kindergarteners.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  226. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by ZombieWomble · · Score: 1
    Neither is my theory that places the mistakes on the observer's side of things, at first glance. But that's the philosophical hole in Occam's razor- it can cause us to reject theories and models without testing them merely because they seem to be more complex on the surface.

    There is no hole there, it's in the misinterpretation of Occam's razor which is common. If the two theories offer identical predictions (as is the case with many of these hidden variable theories, by design) there is no way to perform a test which will distinguish between them. Therefore there is no possible test which enables us to distinguish between them. Thus we either have to say 'maybe' or pick one to use, and it is simply sensible to pick the one with fewest levels of complexity. Of course there may be future results which enable us to distinguish between them, but as it stands they have simply been fitted to match everything we have, so we have nothing to go on at the moment.

    That's precisely why you need to do it at a lower level...

    Unfortuantely, I do not think this is exclusively a result of the teaching of science. The fact is, most people just don't care enough about it. Society doesn't respect critical thought and research. The syllabi are designed to try and teach the material without being offputting to the potential students. Making scientific education more extensive and detailled may help with how people look at science, but the problem is probably more a function of people not really wanting to learn as of them not having the opportunity. And if you consider most schoolkids, forcing it onto them is simply not going to ignite any sort of a passion for it, and may off kids who otherwise would be. The change would probably have to come in how society views science before any changes in education are really going to make any traction.

  227. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    There is no hole there, it's in the misinterpretation of Occam's razor which is common. If the two theories offer identical predictions (as is the case with many of these hidden variable theories, by design) there is no way to perform a test which will distinguish between them. Therefore there is no possible test which enables us to distinguish between them. Thus we either have to say 'maybe' or pick one to use, and it is simply sensible to pick the one with fewest levels of complexity. Of course there may be future results which enable us to distinguish between them, but as it stands they have simply been fitted to match everything we have, so we have nothing to go on at the moment.

    Complexity is a completely arbitrary and subjective line in the sand, is what I'm saying. And yet we pretend otherwise for no apparent reason. Saying maybe is more accurate than picking one to use in this case.

    Unfortuantely, I do not think this is exclusively a result of the teaching of science. The fact is, most people just don't care enough about it. Society doesn't respect critical thought and research. The syllabi are designed to try and teach the material without being offputting to the potential students. Making scientific education more extensive and detailled may help with how people look at science, but the problem is probably more a function of people not really wanting to learn as of them not having the opportunity. And if you consider most schoolkids, forcing it onto them is simply not going to ignite any sort of a passion for it, and may off kids who otherwise would be. The change would probably have to come in how society views science before any changes in education are really going to make any traction.

    Possibly true- but you're not going to change how society views science by destroying science with censorship laws. It's only by encouraging a more open discussion, a more open foundation for science to begin with, that we can eventually change this three or four generations from now.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  228. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by awa · · Score: 1

    > Many of us see religion as the "opiate of the masses". Faith
    > truly does offer some solace from the void that ultimately lies
    > before us. But those of us who do not believe in heaven often see
    > those that do as weak mentally, since we feel they cannot standup
    > to the ultimate end of their existence.

    Funny thing is, being a Roman Catholic in a Catholic country (Costa Rica), I've seen the opposite - sort of.

    Many of the atheists I know seem to choose not to believe in God, because our religion burdens us with guilt and chores. Also, many people have converted to "lighter" forms of christianism, apparently for the same reasons.

    This, of course, is just what I've seen in my small corner of humanity. YMMV.

    --
    --Moo
  229. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    I don't think this was a scientific decision. The question is whether non-science is taught in science classrooms. Who gets to decide what science and non-science is? Well, *scientists*. If you want to learn fantasy be my guest and attend (at your own expense, on your own time) a parochial school. But it doesn't belong in the nation's classroom. School is for education not indoctrination.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  230. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by deaddrunk · · Score: 1

    I think I over-reacted to be fair. I don't like my religion being hijacked, especially given the history of the Catholic church.

    --
    Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
  231. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by glitch23 · · Score: 0

    Sounds like the response I'd get from a 10 year old.

    --
    this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
  232. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by The+Wooden+Badger · · Score: 1
    Again, you must present BOTH Intelligent Design and Evolution because those qare the two prevailing theories.

    Since when has ID become a theory? The thing that really bugs me about all the Creationism/ID people is the use of the word theory. We've got two different people using the same term with different meanings based on perspective. Scientists use the word theory for a hypothesis that has been tested pretty strenuously and it has held up. The hypothesis then becomes a theory when it is pretty widely accepted. Is the testing over? Is the theory complete with no future amendment or correction? Of course not, but a theory is considered the way things happen as far as we understand it. The Creationism/ID crowd, and most other people for that matter, use the term theory to mean what scientists call a hypothesis. To them a theory is any kind of idea that someone comes up with, read ID. To a scientist ID is a hypothesis, an untestable one at that. To the other side ID is a theory. To the ID crowd they think evolution is a hypothesis because of the jargon scientists use. The simple fact that ID is untestable and unproven, and will be until the Intelligence behind it loudly proclaims the fact, makes the teaching of ID a horrible move. Philosophy is a completely different story, but science class absolutely not. And that from a guy that isn't too crazy about evolution and kind of likes ID.

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  233. Wow, nice post. Thanks. by Medievalist · · Score: 1
    I will study the topics you've recommended. Might take a year or two to work through Popper, but he's already on the list anyway. :)

    I have to warn you, though; I don't have much truck with non-empirical arguments or representational systems that are totally divorced from subjective reality. "I seen a cow, I seen a horse, but I ain't seen none of that thar bovinity nor horsiness neither" was Edward Abby's reply to Plato, and I have a similar reaction to Wittgenstein and his ilk. My mind doesn't work that way, I guess.

    Unfortunately your choice of examples shows that you are not arguing what you claim, innocently or not, to be arguing. Instead of arguing about proof, you're arguing about a corner of epistemology (the philosophical study of how we know things) known as empiricism.

    Yes; this has become apparent in retrospect; thanks for your help. The other posters were talking about the syntactical rules of a representational grammar (that is, today's version of math) whereas I'm talking about physical reality.

    Have you read Spinoza's Ethics? I'm working on it at the moment, because I'm trying to understand why so many pantheists (which he was and I am) have come to the conclusion that God has no personality. Spinoza states both the ideas he believes and those he disbelieves in the form of a "geometrickal proof" - not because he thought that mathematical proof was canonical proof, but because he wanted to restrict the incidence of misinterpretation of what he was saying by forcing the arguments into a very rigid, well known format. This apparently worked for a century or so but makes the work more difficult to comprehend for most modern readers. It also freaks out mathematicians because he essentially provides "geometrickal proof" of concepts he then states are false. Lots of interesting discussion of this here.

    One can indeed offer proof of the non-existence of a thing. What one cannot do is offer evidence of its non-existence. Evidence and proof are not the same. "Proof" is a logical idea and "evidence" is an empirical idea.

    If you want to prove something to me, you must provide independently verifiable evidence or describe a means of finding same. This, to me, is the meaning of the english word proof. It's also the number one definition on dictionary.com, incidentally, and you are only the second poster to state that you are using the special mathematical meaning for the words "proof" and "prove" and not the common english meaning. Again, my thanks to both of you.

    Standard logic is one system, amongst many, for extending knowledge. We seem to have a large measure of faith in logic because one of its consequences is that no group of true statements will ever lead to a contradiction. In other words it is a system born of our cultural uneasiness with contradictions.

    I'm not sure it's true that "no group of true statements will ever lead to a contradiction". I know that's the target, but I need to think on that a little more. Are you saying that all paradoxes are the result of erroneous axioms, or that our logic is imperfect because the syntactica of human communication permit paradoxical statements, or some combination of both?

    In fact, one way to logically extend our knowledge is to posit (assert) the truth or falsehood of a statement and then show (prove) that the rules of the logical system lead to a contradiction. Since your assumptions lead to a contradiction, logic says that at least one of your assumptions must be false. This is called "proof by contradiction" or, in classical terminology, "reductio ad absurdum."

    I understand. But without empiricism, the only thing that method is useful for is creating very abstract methods, and

  234. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Alsee · · Score: 1

    Actually the Kochen-Specker theorm is even more powerful than Bell's inequality. It even rules out locality issues.

    It proves that in many cases there is no POSSIBLE set of consistant values that could have been assigned prior to the measurment. It relies on a very powerful and broad mathematical non-existance proof.

    Experiments can be easily arranged to demonstrate it. I'll give a simplified example of the issue. Lets say you have entangled particles with random +1 and -1 spin values on the X Y and Z axes. It is impossible to do experiments exactly revealing all of the values involved. However if you do the right combination measurements, you can get one result proving that there are and even number of -1's and you can get a second measurement proving that there are an off number of -1's. It is therefore impossible to assign ANY consistant set of +1 or -1 spins to all of the axes of both particles.

    (A*B) * (C*D) * (E*F) = 1; and
    (A*C) * (B*D) * (E*F) =-1

    With those letters being the X Y and Z spins of particles 1 and 2.

    The only "loophole" that remains to save realism hidden values would be to violate noncontexturality. What noncontexturality means is that the universe isn't spying on how and why you are testing a real value and then deliberately returning different experimental results for the same value.

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  235. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Alsee · · Score: 1

    How do you prove a negative?

    Pretty easy, just demonstrate a contradiction.

    In fact we have proven that there is no possible set of consistant hidden variable values that could produced the observed results. For any professional physicists or mathemticians out there, or anyone who wants to bend their brain on some hardcore physics and math, I am referring to the Kochen-Specker theorem. It is more powerful than the Bell inequalities at refuting any possible Hidden Value theory.

    Proving that there isn't an underlying pattern to the apparent pseudorandom behavior on a quantum level is like proving there is no God.

    Gahh! Leave God out of it. God is neither proven nor disproven by anything. So lets try that again...

    Proving that there isn't an underlying pattern to the apparent pseudorandom behavior on a quantum level

    Proving the impossibility of any and all hidden variable theories does NOT prove there's no underlying pattern.

    You were mistaken in dragging "random" into this at all. Hidden variable or no hidden variable, it has no connection to random or nonrandom. You can have hidden variables and randomness, and you can have no hidden variables and complete determinism.

    For example the "many worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics does not use hidden variables, and it can be perfectly deterministic.

    Under the "many worlds" model, each option that can happen does happen. When you look inside Schrodinger's box at his cat, the cat *is* both alive and dead... it's just that those two options split off in two different directions of a higher-order multiverse, and that there is a separate copy of you looking at each outcome. Subjectively the outcome appears completely random, but that is only because you cannot perceive the other copy of you looking at the opposite outcome. The appearance of randomness would be an illusion due to the single subjective vantage point.

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  236. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    In fact we have proven that there is no possible set of consistant hidden variable values that could produced the observed results.

    Even a set larger than any previously tested? How can you possibly say that there is *no possible set* until you've tried the infinity of *all possible sets*? There simply hasn't been enough time.

    For any professional physicists or mathemticians out there, or anyone who wants to bend their brain on some hardcore physics and math, I am referring to the Kochen-Specker theorem. It is more powerful than the Bell inequalities at refuting any possible Hidden Value theory.

    And fails from the same lack of imagination, unfortuneately. After all, it doesn't cover that perhaps the complexity comes from variables that don't follow mathematical axioms and assumptions. All this proves is that there is no set of variables that are consistent with mathematical axioms and assumptions.

    Gahh! Leave God out of it. God is neither proven nor disproven by anything. So lets try that again...

    It's the same thing, unfortuneately- the reason you can't prove or disprove God is because He/she/it is outside of the scope of the investigation. Same with the pattern that you're interpreting as random.

    Proving the impossibility of any and all hidden variable theories does NOT prove there's no underlying pattern.

    Then why bring it into a discussion on the existance of randomness?

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  237. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by EvilSuggestions · · Score: 1
    It is entirely possible that the theory of evolution is right, but frankly, there isn't enough evidence to say for sure.

    One more time kids: no scientific theory is ever proven "right". Theories get to be called theories when they meet two criteria:

    • They are stated such that they can be potentially falsifiable.
    • They then need to have withstood numerous scientific attempts to falsify them.
    Notice that "right" never enters into it. Theories just have to be explanations that still seem to fit the evidence, even after you look really, really closely at them.

    The part of Darwinism that seems to trouble people the most, that of common descent, fits both criteria. All you would have to do to falsify it is simply find an organism that does not appear to be related to the other organisms on the planet. However, despite a century and a half of looking (post-Darwin) and, more recently, decades of research doing genetic sequencing on every organism we can get our hands on, we have yet to find any critter, no matter how strange, that is not somehow related to everything else. Maybe you need more evidence than the 100 Gigabases sampled from over 165,000 organisms, but in my book, that's withstanding a pretty rigorous challenge.

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  238. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

    No one can prove that mutations that happen in evolution are caused by god or by natural means.

    It actually can be "proven" (i.e. a model or a theory completely explaining the process in a manner that is entirely consistent with all other aspects of our understanding of the universe) how a radiation-induced mutation occurs. "Radiation" as a whole is fairly well understood, and the mechanism where radiation damages DNA to cause a mutation is well understood as well. We don't necessarily have a camera capable of watching a single event where a single quanta of radiation causes a single DNA mutation that causes a demonstrable instance of speciation, but you don't need to build an MRI machine the size of the earth to tell that there's molten rock inside.

    Those things we can fit into our models. We can come up with theories explaining it, and we can test them and see that our models do a great job of explaining what's going on.

    However, we can't, through this process, prove or disprove that some God-like entity is working "behind the scenes" to orchestrate all of this in a manner that also just happens to fit our models. The goal of science is to explain the observed universe. Since most definitions of God insist that God isn't bound by the same natural laws that govern our universe (and consequently our theories for how the universe works), it's a bit difficult to work God into the equation.

    I say that alot of evidence and data has been captured, but not enough to concretely say that it's a fact

    Why not? Do you have experimental data that invalidates the theory? Or are you just aware of cases where you just can't imagine how it happened? There's plenty of evidence and data to support the theory, and zero evidence disproving it. A bunch of "wow, I just can't believe it!" cases isn't a reason to disprove a scientific theory. If you have some sort of experimental data that could not be explained by evolutionary theory (we're not talking about belief here--again, this is science, not faith), then that needs to be investigated. Science regularly deals in situations that are non-obvious to the layperson. Scientists themselves are frequently surprised by what their theories ultimately predict, but when those theories are tested and the non-obvious situations experimentally verified, at some point you just have to accept the data sitting in front of you.

    you must present BOTH Intelligent Design and Evolution because those qare the two prevailing theories.

    The former is not a scientific theory and consequently it has no place in a science class. If you want to present information that casts doubt on a scientific theory in a science classroom, you need to do it in a way that's consistent with scientific principles and methodology. You can't go through the fossil record in a biology class, point out significant climate changes and the ways that the various species seemed to adapt to those changes (or go extinct), and then wrap it all up with, "Or maybe some magical God being waved His hands and just made it happen because he didn't like the way they smelled." If you want to present an alternative to a scientific theory, you either need to attack it from a scientific angle, or present it outside of a scientific context. I have no problem if someone wants to start up a philosophy class in public schools and make this one of their points of study.

    I do not understand why the Intelligent Design theory is being dismissed as the Chrisitian right's agenda only.

    It is the Christian Right that is pushing for Intelligent Design in public schools. You're right though: the concept of ID isn't Christian-specific. It is, however, rooted in religion. You can't have governments sponsoring (without scientific evidence) the existence of a supernatural force (God or otherwise) in science classes without sound scientific basis. The judge here found that there was no scientific basis, and that

  239. Re:Intelligent Design tantamount to teaching relig by volpe · · Score: 1

    Are you suggesting that the theory of evolution is anywhere near as well proven as the round earth theory, atomic theory and special relativity?

    As well proven? No. Anywhere NEAR as well proven? Actually, yes.

    Hint: You can see the earth is round if you just get into a plane

    Actually, I can't. I can see a horizon, which is not inconsistent with a flat earth. And besides, The Great Illusionist can bend light and provide all kinds of false evidence for a round earth, just as He created 6000 year old fossils that appear by carbon dating to be millions of years old. And by the way, he can also grab the occasional alpha particle and toss them back when they're being shot at a sheet of gold foil.

    [...]see a photograph taken from a space shuttle, watch other planets through the telescope etc. Contrast this with evolution - have you personally observed anything even remotely resembling macro-evolution?

    Um, I haven't personally taken a photograph from a space shuttle. I assume you haven't either. I also haven't seen my twin take off on a space ship at near c and return practically un-aged either. I assume you haven't either. But since you seem ready to accept the evidence observed and reported by others, it's unclear to me why the extremely well confirmed notion of evolution by natural selection doesn't deserve the same.