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Kansas Adopts New Science Standards

porcupine8 writes "The Kansas State Board of Education has changed the state science standards once again, this time to take out language questioning evolution. This turnaround comes fast on the heels of the ouster given this past election to the ultra-conservative Board members who originally introduced the language. 'Science' has also been re-redefined as 'a human activity of systematically seeking natural explanations' (the word 'natural' had been previously stricken from the definition). If you'd like to see the new standards, a version showing all additions and deletions is available from the KS DOE's website (PDF)."

868 comments

  1. Eternal Vigilance by RumGunner · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I suspect that this probably wouldn't have happened in the first place if people in that area had bothered to participate in their local elections before being humiliated on an international scale.

    1. Re:Eternal Vigilance by eviloverlordx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I suspect that this probably wouldn't have happened in the first place if people in that area had bothered to participate in their local elections before being humiliated on an international scale.

      That's a problem when most people are scientifically illiterate. In this age of 2 second sound bites, saying 'goddidit' is easier than learning the facts.

      --
      'Loose' is when your pants are three sizes too big. 'Lose' is when you misuse 'loose'.
    2. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      Experience builds judgment. Poor judgment builds experience.

      rj

    3. Re:Eternal Vigilance by BendingSpoons · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, all's well that ends well. A group of fools sought to impose their foolish views on others, they were thrown out of office, and their handiwork was undone. I'm happy with the result and not really too concerned that the initial unrest was caused by *gasp* inattention to school board elections.

      --
      For all we know the moon may be as conscious as a poet or a realtor, and extremely weary of its monotonous round. - HLM
    4. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That sounds so easy, but as impossible as it is to know the will of the president of our country ahead of time, you can at least look at his history and try to read the tea leaves. It's a million times more impossible to know what some local yahoo you've never heard of is going to do. All you can really do is vote them out when they do something totally braindead that makes it into the news. Such as redefining science. Or using your tax dollars to build a $500k skateboard park. etc.

    5. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Teresita · · Score: 3, Funny

      You have to watch these local governments. In 1897 in the Indiana state house there was a War on Pi which almost made it equal to 3.20

    6. Re:Eternal Vigilance by misleb · · Score: 1

      You can catch more flies with sugar than with vinegar.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    7. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      saying 'goddidit' is easier than learning the facts.

      So what you're saying it that you're the retarded offspring of five monkeys that had butt sex with a retarded fish-squirrel?

    8. Re:Eternal Vigilance by foniksonik · · Score: 3, Funny

      and I would've gotten away with it TOO! If it hadn't been for you meddling kids!!!!!

      that's right, in full audio

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    9. Re:Eternal Vigilance by CmdrGravy · · Score: 5, Informative

      Scientific illiteracy is something a lot of people in the US seem to be putting a lot of effort into.

      This video is really disturbing: http://www.truthdig.com/avbooth/item/20070206_evan gelicals_make_war_on_evolution/

      Especially the poster which says "God Says it. I believe it. That settles it."

    10. Re:Eternal Vigilance by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      re: in full audio: hmmm foiled again... should check my links before posting ;-p

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    11. Re:Eternal Vigilance by 93,000 · · Score: 3, Funny

      He who laughs last is just a hand in the bush.

    12. Re:Eternal Vigilance by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Who says it's ended? The far-right wingnuts who brought the anti-evolution standards in may be down for the round, but you can be sure that they're planning their next move. The only thing, in the end, which is going to win it is for the majority of the population to learn a little reality, so that these guy can be consigned along with the flat earthers to a laughable fringe. These guy didn't get where they are purely out of voter apathy. There's a lot of people out there who don't understand science at all, and biological evolution in particular, who can be swayed by slick con artists.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    13. Re:Eternal Vigilance by RailGunner · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      He who laughs last is just a hand in the bush.

      Ozzy rules. \m/ \m/

    14. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She who has hand in bush should not be taken loosely.

    15. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe that government should be involved in education at all. I believe it is a violation of my natural human right to self-owership.

      There is the root of the issue -- you are fighting over power, not truth. You are fighting over the ability to employ coercion as your means (to use tax money to fund your idea of education) -- evolution is merely the scapegoat du jour.

      In fact, I don't believe in government, period. (I am a peaceful anarchist, not that you would have any respect for that.) Of what use exactly are elections to me? I lose no matter who wins -- when you vote, you vote for power (there is no option for "voluntary association" or "eliminate this position of power", let alone "I refuse to participate in your scam").

    16. Re:Eternal Vigilance by maxume · · Score: 1

      The reversal demonstrates that a good portion of even dumb ol' Kansas has an ok relationship with reality.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    17. Re:Eternal Vigilance by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I'm confused as to why this is moderated as a Troll ? If it's the reference to the US then that's only there because the video I link to is filmed in the US. Religious fundamentalism isn't a strictly US thing and I actually do appreciate that !

    18. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 4, Funny

      It is easier for a pillar of salt to pass through the eye of a camel than to be out on a limb without a paddle.

      --
      Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    19. Re:Eternal Vigilance by catbutt · · Score: 1

      I don't see your logic. What makes you think that if more people voted, the percentage of pro-evolution voters would go up?

      Most likely, the change is not in the number of voters, but in the fact that those who did vote had seen the international ridicule.

    20. Re:Eternal Vigilance by AlHunt · · Score: 1
      From TFA:

      The latest science standards are the fifth for the state in eight years

      Politics in education. 5 different "standards" in 8 years. Maybe the next standard should jettison government from education. No, I don't know how it would work - but it already doesn't work anyway.
      --
      1 in 4 Maine children in struggle with hunger.
    21. Re:Eternal Vigilance by inviolet · · Score: 5, Funny

      So what you're saying it that you're the retarded offspring of five monkeys that had butt sex with a retarded fish-squirrel?

      No. he is saying that he is the retarded offspring of five monkeys that had regular sex with a retarded fish-squirrel.

      Apparently, our next task in Kansas is to amend the sex education textbooks.

      --
      FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    22. Re:Eternal Vigilance by caseydk · · Score: 1

      What about the entire concept of forming a hypothesis, testing it, and revising it given new facts?

      Given the current state of affairs concerning "consensus building" in science, I'm more concerned that *ANY* legal body can "change the definition of science".

    23. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Frankinmerth · · Score: 1

      I wonder if they'd take offense to a poster that read: "My priest wrote it, my grandchildren will believe it, that settles it."

    24. Re:Eternal Vigilance by sbenj · · Score: 1
      Speaking of dogmatic, quasi-religious scientific illiteracy, have a look at this one from Georgia.

      Time, I think, to declare viktery in the war against godless literacy and go home.

    25. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect that this probably wouldn't have happened in the first place if people in that area had bothered to participate in their local elections before being humiliated on an international scale.


      Don't you believe it. I moved to Kansas two years ago, and the most vocal group (minority or otherwise) are by far the ignorant, science hating, prejudiced rednecks. The folks I work with regularly advocate genocide against all Muslims as a sane policy against terror.

      I'm encouraged by the occasional bumper sticker that reads, "Kansas: As rascist as you think"
    26. Re:Eternal Vigilance by bhsurfer · · Score: 1

      I suspect that this probably wouldn't have happened in the first place if people in that area had bothered to participate in their local elections before being humiliated on an international scale.

      Ah, but the Flying Spaghetti Monster works in mysterious ways....perhaps they had no choice.

      --
      Those are my principles, and if you don't like them... well, I have others.
      Groucho Marx
    27. Re:Eternal Vigilance by utopianfiat · · Score: 1

      In before a comment about my signature.
      I'm writing this in-between college classes for a major that isn't related to religious studies at all.
      Basically, my position on religion puts personal freedom as a paramount value. A lot of new evangelical rhetoric talks about "only through God can you be free" and what not, which is clearly a load of bullshit, since any religious indoctrination is by nature controlling the way you view the world, and at base is a form of control. I've come to break with the church, recently, and further than that, you need not argue about the existence of God as part of a conversion. The existence of God is a moot point- I'd rather be free on earth and damned for eternity than rewarded as a slave to beliefs.
      Sort of the opposite of Pascal's Wager, I assume the freedom to criticize authority has a higher priority than "strength from God regardless of existence". Thus, your benefit is reaped only through doubt.

      --
      +5, Truth
    28. Re:Eternal Vigilance by misleb · · Score: 1

      Sure, but a hand in the bush is better than a firm grip on the neck of a chicken.

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    29. Re:Eternal Vigilance by vboulytchev · · Score: 1

      sigh furthermore, no wonder we're not the top nation in schience/math tests... earth is flat

    30. Re:Eternal Vigilance by mgiuca · · Score: 1

      Wow this video is scary, sad and hilarious. Continually. Now, obviously these guys are shameless logicless nutters, and I'm certainly not saying all religious people are like this (certainly I expect it's the minority). But I must must must protest against this sort of ... the only word for it is brainwashing of young impressionable children. This goes for any religious teacher, not just crazy fanatics.

      I was one of them (and this is in Australia, which is a very religiously-open society) - at my primary school (grade 3 and 4) we had a "religious education" class each week where a special teacher would come to tell us about God and the bible and all these things. It was a fun class, we got to sing songs and play games and learn all of these historical facts.

      From these classes I learned to love God, and pray, and fear the apocalypse, and chastise my mother for not believing, and all the things which you might expect an eight-year-old to do when told of such things.

      And I feel very fortunate to have grown up in a society which otherwise does not emphasise religion (though it is quite tolerant). As a teenager, I began to realise that maybe these "facts" I had been taught along with maths and english and science and history weren't entirely based on anything tangible. It took me a long time - years and years - to rationalise this down. I sort of went from believing in the bible, to realising that the bible didn't work for me, but God was still looking out for me, to deciding that maybe he wasn't, and I should be an agnostic - and I think for my whole life I had been so scared by these stories to openly say "God doesn't exist".

      By now I'm finished my path to athiesm ;) I still respect whatever people want to believe about the unknown - that's fine. I still fear that maybe He's up there, waiting to smack me for everything I've said against Him. But what I resent and hate is that they take children, who have this unwavering trust that adults tell the truth, and then feed them this stuff as fact. It's a horrible abuse of this trust.

      Now I haven't been mentally scarred or anything, but looking back, I resent the fact that I was made to believe something for so many years of my life which has no basis in fact, when I could have been told to make up my own mind (isn't that, after all, what the word "belief" means?)

      I guess, as always, I should have listened to my mother!

    31. Re:Eternal Vigilance by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 1

      Sorry ... I only got as far as "goddi-" before I lost my place. Could you dumb it down a little for me?

    32. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect that this probably wouldn't have happened in the first place if people in that area had bothered to participate in their local elections before being humiliated on an international scale.

      The fact that a few bible thumpers with sufficient time on their hands to sandbag their way to a slim majority on a school board in a small state to pull a stunt humiliates you? The only people humiliated by this tripe are those who permit the MSM to provide them with things to fret about. The recurring BBC "A War On Science" claptrap. The moment those fundy fools made their play the citizens pulled every legal string they could find to stifle it. When their terms expired they were out on their fundy asses, replaced with adults.

      You could smash a 747 into most of Kansas with no witnesses. There are 2.7 million people in Kansas. If the entire state went Scientologist tomorrow it would amount to less than 1% of the US. The aggregate of a few suburbs of Los Angeles has more significance. That the rest of the planet thinks Kansas represents something is indicative of their ignorance. All the fundys did here was demonstrate their own irrelevancy. They don't know that, of course, because they're blithering idiots; something the other %99.999 of the US takes for granted.

      Grow a hide. Reserve feelings of humiliation for something worthy. Unless you've got nothing better to fret about, which is probably the case.

    33. Re:Eternal Vigilance by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      Well, to be honest ... "God Says it. I believe it. That settles it." is not far removed from "Scientists agree on it. I believe it. That settles it." That's not to say science is the same as religion, it's just that you should believe in a theory because it consistently makes correct, falsifiable, significant, useful predictions. Whether any one group of people believes it shouldn't be the ultimate basis.

    34. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      I suspect that this probably wouldn't have happened in the first place if people in that area had bothered to participate in their local elections before being humiliated on an international scale.



      Really? Do you seriously know the people running for the board of education? Around here you only know about those people if they've truly f'ed up, but a new person running for the office.. no one ever hears anything about them until they see a name on a ballot (And I refuse to vote on a race I don't know anything about).

    35. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This video is really disturbing: http://www.truthdig.com/avbooth/item/20070206_evan gelicals_make_war_on_evolution/
      Two interesting quotes from the first speaker in the video, paraphrased a bit, perhaps:
      • "Evolution is some people's attempt to explain a world without God." Funny, I always thought the theory of evolution, like any other result of the scientific process, is an attempt to understand our observations of the universe around us. If God created that universe, how is our attempt to understand it a bad thing? And how is doing so somehow implying God does not exist? The statement creates conflict where it doesn't seem to me to exist.
      • Who should you trust first, God or a scientist? This is a misleading question. I know no one who has personally had a verbal conversation with God. So, answers from God must come from other sources. A more accurate question for this speaker would have been to ask: Who should you trust first, the Bible or a scientist?
      Faith is a powerful tool that can be used for great good, no question. But blind faith is downright scary. It allows people to divest themselves of their personal responsibilities and to be manipulated by others. It was undoubtedly manipulation by the leaders of the pre-Luther Catholic Church to conclude that a large enough donation would grant one a ticket to Heaven. To Americans, at least, it is undoubtedly a manipulation by the leaders of many jihadist movements to conclude that a suicide bomber is granted a ticket to Paradise. Why, then, is it not a questionable leap of faith to conclude that the Bible, whose books were written, translated, selected for inclusion, and re-translated over the centuries by religious leaders the unquestionable Word of God?

      Good scientists have a healthy skepticism, take little for granted and actively seek to learn more. So should those who pursue spiritual truth.
    36. Re:Eternal Vigilance by john83 · · Score: 1

      You have to watch these local governments. In 1897 in the Indiana state house there was a War on Pi which almost made it equal to 3.20
      Tell me you're kidding. That's not even rounded correctly.
      --
      Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
    37. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's not. But at least we Hoosiers have Boston to look down upon now that the Lite-Brite attacks have taken place.

    38. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Darby · · Score: 1

      Sort of the opposite of Pascal's Wager, I assume the freedom to criticize authority has a higher priority than "strength from God regardless of existence". Thus, your benefit is reaped only through doubt.

      Well put. I've always considered Pascal's wager to be the most abject expression of cowardice.

    39. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Religious fundamentalism isn't a strictly US thing and I actually do appreciate that !
      Christian fundamentalism on the other hand...
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    40. Re:Eternal Vigilance by HappyEngineer · · Score: 1

      Snopes says: "In 1897 the Indiana House of Representatives unanimously passed a measure redefining the area of a circle and the value of pi. (House Bill no. 246, introduced by Rep. Taylor I. Record.) The bill died in the state Senate."

    41. Re:Eternal Vigilance by HappyEngineer · · Score: 1

      Also, an article on straightdope.com says:

      When King Solomon constructed the Temple of Jerusalem, the Second Book of Chronicles, chapter 4, verses 2 and 5, tells us:

      "Then he made the Sea [a big tub] of cast bronze, ten cubits from one brim to the other; it was completely round. Its height was five cubits and a line of thirty cubits measured its circumference. It was a handbreadth thick; and its brim was shaped like the brim of a cup..... It contained three thousand baths."

      Apparently that translates to pi being exactly 3.

    42. Re:Eternal Vigilance by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      This is the kind of crap which makes me feel almost guilty for admitting in believing in a higher power. Yes, I believe in God, yes I'm a Christian, but yes, I do believe in evolution, science (I'm an engineer!), and that Terrell Owens is a goofball. I don't push my views on anyone, rarely talk about it except to my family, and only when stuff like this comes up. Even here on /. I've seen people say "I believe in God", and then a bunch of atheists (well, I guess they are atheists) drub the poor guy/gal for basically being a moron. Hey, I believe in an afterlife- why the hell do you care so much that you have a need to take potshots at my own personal belief? I'm not commenting on your arguments how Frodo could take out Obi-Wan while Commander Ivanova is making out with Riker, am I? (Note to self- need to write a book tomorrow)

      Sorry for the rant.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    43. Re:Eternal Vigilance by KUHurdler · · Score: 1

      Being in Kansas, My pessimistic viewpoint is that it will change back and forth every year.

      No one cares about the issue long enough to stay in office longer than a year.
      So "naturally", next election: ID will prevail once again.

      --
      Fix Your Own TV - RiddledTV.com Avoid the Landfill
    44. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Teresita · · Score: 1

      Apparently that translates to pi being exactly 3.

      1Kings 7:[23] And he made a molten sea, ten cubits from the one brim to the other: it was round all about, and his height was five cubits: and a line of thirty cubits did compass it round about.
      Since we are dealing with enough cubits, it should be 31 cubits around by 10 cubits across. But the bible is completely free of error, of course, so what the bleep do we know?

    45. Re:Eternal Vigilance by Copid · · Score: 1

      The Bible would be an awfully long book if it went to infinite precision on all of its measurements. Infinitely long, in fact. I'll tend to give it a pass on that one.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  2. God Hates Kansas by ReidMaynard · · Score: 5, Funny

    Look at all the tornados.

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

    1. Re:God Hates Kansas by dr_dank · · Score: 5, Funny

      Look at all the tornados.

      That doesn't prove God hates Kansas. It just proves that he wants to transport their homes to magical lands occupied by midgets.

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    2. Re:God Hates Kansas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      >> Look at all the tornados.

      > That doesn't prove God hates Kansas. It just proves that he wants to transport their homes to magical lands occupied by midgets.

      That's "people of Munchkin stature," you insensitive clod!

      "Welcome to Munchkinland! Welcome to Munchkinland! Deal with it."

    3. Re:God Hates Kansas by diogoko · · Score: 1

      That doesn't prove God hates Kansas. It just proves that he wants to transport their homes to magical lands occupied by midgets.

      So God hates midgets?

      --
      I set myself free of signatures. If I could, you can do it too!
  3. Mulberry Bush by hachete · · Score: 1

    Here we go round the Mulberry bush, the mulberry bush, the mulberry bush
    Here we go round the Mulberry bush on a cold and frosty morning

    One year, the wind will change and Kansas will be stuck like that forever. I just hope it's the right way.

    --
    Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
    1. Re:Mulberry Bush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Is Mulberry Jenna's age? Or younger?

  4. The future of America by abscissa · · Score: 0

    This guy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvyQRdlKiwI&NR

    The only good is knowledge, the only evil, ignorance.

    1. Re:The future of America by nacturation · · Score: 1

      After watching that for five minutes, I can't tell if that guy's trying to be sincere or if the whole thing is satire. Scary stuff.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    2. Re:The future of America by smooth+wombat · · Score: 4, Funny

      I like his comment about if we come from monkeys, does that gives us the right to act like them?

      Considering the way Creationists jump up and down and fling poo every time the word Evolution is used, I'd say his question has already been answered.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    3. Re:The future of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Considering the way Creationists jump up and down and fling poo every time the word Evolution is used, I'd say his question has already been answered." Yeah. It's a good thing evolutionists don't do the same every time ID is mentioned.
    4. Re:The future of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best argument in the history of rhetoric: (And I took 5 years of philosophy)

      - If we evolved, then it was a matter of random chance.
      - Random chance cannot create things like an eye

      - If you believe that you were created through random chance, then
      - You are a slave to chemical reactions

      - If you are a slave to chemical reactions, then
      - You cannot trust your thoughts.

      - If you cannot trust your thoughts,
      - Then you cannot believe that you can have a grasp of "Truth"

      Ergo: You cannot both believe in evolution, and the possibility of knowing truth.

      QED!!

    5. Re:The future of America by timster · · Score: 5, Informative

      If we evolved, then it was a matter of random chance.

      Well, with such an incredibly incorrect first premise, I'm sure you can prove about anything.

      Natural selection is not random.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    6. Re:The future of America by misleb · · Score: 1

      That's the problem with Creationism. You just can't tell which is satire and which is th real deal.

      I did take the time to sit through the whole thing, and I find the ending conclusion most interesting. Is this guy claiming that Bush, a supposed evangelical Christian, is the anti-christ holding a position at the supposed center of all evil in the world? Normally these creationist try to show how scientists are evil, but this guy went right for the current whitehouse occupants. WTF? Makes me believe that it might be satire. But who knows.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    7. Re:The future of America by Cheapy · · Score: 1

      The only good is knowledge, the only evil, ignorance.

      Can you support this? Pretty heavy thing you just said and you didn't give much evidence.

      --
      Would you kindly mod me +1 insightful?
    8. Re:The future of America by abscissa · · Score: 1

      You have to accept it on faith alone!!

    9. Re:The future of America by failure-man · · Score: 1

      Don't question it! TORTURE UNTIL THE END OF TIME! Don't question it! Give us all your money, and also your daughter. Maybe your son too.

    10. Re:The future of America by IDontAgreeWithYou · · Score: 1

      Natural selection is not random, but the mutations that provide evolutionary advantage/disadvantage are. That said, if I ask you to pick a number from 1 to infinity and you pick 14. I can't then say that you didn't pick 14 just because the odds are infinitely small.

      --
      Finding other idiots on /. that agree with your opinion doesn't make it any less stupid.
    11. Re:The future of America by an.echte.trilingue · · Score: 1

      Best argument in the history of rhetoric: (And I took 5 years of philosophy)
      I am sorry, but taking five years of philosophy alone does not make a person an authority on anything but the history of philosophy and maybe the structure of classic philosophical arguments. As another poster has already commented, your premise is fundamentally flawed. Philosophy is a worthy pursuit, but only when accompanied by academic pursuits that give you the basis to create informed and proper premises from which to reason.

      Thus, if you want to argue about what effect evolution has on the state of being human, you need to have a strong grounding in science, the scientific process, and the theory of evolution. Similarly, if you wish to argue about the relative strengths and weaknesses of different political systems, you need to have studied those systems, understand how they came into existence, and understand how they really work in practice (as opposed to propaganda).

      This is also why it is so important to teach science (or, more importantly, the scientific method) in schools. The vast majority of people who stand up against "The Church of Science" do so because they do not understand it and conclude that if they do not understand it, it must be a matter of faith, ergo no different than any other matter of faith.

      Education is everything.

      --
      weirdest thing I ever saw: scientology advertising on slashdot.
    12. Re:The future of America by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Yep, and if you flip 100 coins, whatever sequence that appears from those flips is exactly as unlikely as 100 heads coming up. Astoundingly unlikely things happen all the time.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    13. Re:The future of America by fyngyrz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Honestly - what that shows is that five years of philosophy has not equipped you to recognize arguments that are empty.

      - If we evolved, then it was a matter of random chance.
      - Random chance cannot create things like an eye

      The first statement is some kind of religious confusion. Evolution is not a process driven by "random chance", any more than your selection of a mate is "random chance." Evolution chooses results by an extremely powerful filtering process colloquially described as "survival of the fittest", with regard to which genes make it through various generations of interacting with the real world, as expressed in the organism of interest. The way it works is this: As genes for the eye change, the individuals with better vision do better in the world during their lives, and so those genes continue down the path of heredity. Poorer gene expressions fail to remain in the path for the obvious reasons (in humans: could not learn a craft or useful role, didn't see the bear coming, "Oh no, Martha, you don't want to marry the blind guy... he can't support himself!") This process continues until further improvement does not confer an advantage, or further improvement isn't possible because the expression of the gene is close to optimum and cannot make a radical change to an entirely new kind of vision because it is in a local minima that doesn't describe in any way, for instance, a multi-lensed system or one that can change to sense RF (which is a very good description of the eye, by the way.) But you can see myriad variations of how gene expression for the eye has changed simply by looking at the many types of eyes and their capabilities all across the set of organisms that (a) have eyes [many of them] and (b) use genes [all of them, so far.] Some animals do see in the ultraviolet, some use multiple lenses, some have more than binocular vision, some don't have a lot of use for vision, etc, ad infinitum. The process isn't random; Even reading Darwin, who had a very unhealthy respect for the supernatural not uncommon in his time, the process is obviously not random. The root cause of this inadequate line of thinking is probably the idea that the original DNA-based organism was a random product of the so-called primordial soup; whether that is true or not, once DNA was involved, the word "random" isn't anything you'd want to use to describe the process.

      - If you believe that you were created through random chance, then
      - You are a slave to chemical reactions

      This doesn't even follow. Perhaps one might say that if you believe such a thing, then you presume that chemical reactions are complicit in your existence; slavery doesn't enter into it... there is no damage to the idea of free will in this simplistic statement.

      If you are a slave to chemical reactions, then
      - You cannot trust your thoughts.

      Leaving the (already disproved) "slave" idea alone for a moment, regardless of the number, and nature, of systems that work together to implement the multi-system that allows us to think, the question of trusting our perceptions and subsequent thoughts is almost trivially answered by how well our model of the world allows us to interact with it both over time and with regard to challenges to our understanding. If your interaction is superficial and primarily depends on systems, social and technological, that others have set up for you, then you're not going to be able to make as good an evaluation of how accurate your model is. However, for those who actually understand science, this relatively simple method, by design, is excellent at exposing the error in both perception and presumption, and serves as an external, consensual check on just how well we understand the world around us, and hence, how well we can trust our thoughts and memories of that world, for the set of people who can understand these issues. It doesn't hinge upon wh

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    14. Re:The future of America by me_mi_mo · · Score: 1

      Natural selection is not random.


      Hey, don't rag on random!

      While natural selection per se may not be entirely random, I think it is fair to say that the vast majority of scientists believe that we (as a species and as individuals) would not be around today except for an amazing string of coincidences.

      You can't have it both ways: it is either physcial law plus random events, or God.

    15. Re:The future of America by l0b0 · · Score: 1

      If you want to know why, look no further than Richard Dawkins' The Blind Watchmaker - Popular science at its best.

    16. Re:The future of America by shaka999 · · Score: 1

      Wish I had some mod points to push this above the parent!

      The one interesting thing I've read that I don't quite understand is how evolution doesn't seem to be a gradual process. Rather it comes in spurts which seems to imply that mutation isn't completely random.

      --
      One should not theorize before one has data. -Sherlock Holmes-
    17. Re:The future of America by cain · · Score: 1
      A post above yours is a prefect counter-point:

      Yep, and if you flip 100 coins, whatever sequence that appears from those flips is exactly as unlikely as 100 heads coming up. Astoundingly unlikely things happen all the time.

      It's only a string of coincidences if you look at it from the "first flip" and try to predict where it will go. It is less astoundingly unlikely if you look at where you've been and what caused those specific things to happen. It may appear random, but it is not. I think this was the GP's point about natural selection not being at all random.

    18. Re:The future of America by IDontAgreeWithYou · · Score: 1

      Mutations happen all the time. Most mutations in the genetic code do nothing, some are bad for the organism and it dies, some have an effect, but the effect has no evolutionary advantage, and finally some have an effect and under evolutionary pressure, provide an advantage to the creature. This is why it appears that mutations come in spurts, most just go unnoticed.

      --
      Finding other idiots on /. that agree with your opinion doesn't make it any less stupid.
    19. Re:The future of America by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

      Natural selection is not random
      Of course it's random. Being able to run faster makes the odds of you outrunning that predator better, but whether or not you actually do outrun it is still a matter of chance.

      People who say "Natural selection is not random" have already lost to the creationists. Creationists set up a false dichotomy between random and 'intelligently' directed. It's a false dichotomy because random events can seem directed. A simple example is Boyle's law for the pressure of a gas: PV = k. It's as good a physical law as they come. But the motion of the individual molecules making up that gas is random. The same goes for evolution by natural selection. We can have countless random events taking place and yet still see emergent phenomena displaying order.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    20. Re:The future of America by IDontAgreeWithYou · · Score: 1

      You're saying the same thing as me. Natural selection is the "emergent phenomenon" you mention. But the real randomness in evolution lies in the mutation in the DNA and, of course, in the environmental conditions which may make one trait advantageous over another.

      --
      Finding other idiots on /. that agree with your opinion doesn't make it any less stupid.
    21. Re:The future of America by arth1 · · Score: 1

      While natural selection per se may not be entirely random, I think it is fair to say that the vast majority of scientists believe that we (as a species and as individuals) would not be around today except for an amazing string of coincidences.

      No, that would be very unfair to say. Flipping heads fifty times in a row would be an amazing string of coincidences, but that's not what happens. Evolution flips a coin thousands of times and discards the tails. It would be amazing if it didn't get fifty heads that way.

      Regards,
      --
      *Art
    22. Re:The future of America by mgiuca · · Score: 1

      I don't know why I am wasting my bandwidth still downloading this crap, but what can I say, I like YouTube.

      Don't you love some of this logic: "Adolf hitler once said "Let me control the textbooks and I will control the state"". THEREFORE, we have reason to believe this textbook is a lie.

      Anyway while I hate to bring myself to the level of argument with a religious nutter, I just ... couldn't ... resist ... researching on whales to find out that these "crazy evolutionists" didn't in fact claim that Whales evolved into Cows - rather that land mammals evolved into whales. Which is why the article he himself quotes states that leg bones are "retained as useless appendages".

      Whoa, after the 5 minute mark his logic just goes insane. "Evolution is the opposite of the bible - they are diametrically opposed. In fact this is proof that the Bible is right, because evolution is the exact opposite of the bible".

      To summarise this in a simple logical equation: A is not equal to B. Therefore A. :?

      Again, I'm really sorry to even be arguing with this guy but it's just so stupid...

    23. Re:The future of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Evolution flips a coin thousands of times and discards the tails.

      Nice pun.

    24. Re:The future of America by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

      You're saying the same thing as me.
      Then you need to fix your nick :-)

      I only agree if by "natural selection" you're talking about large scale statistical trends rather than individual events. Gould makes a strong case for the contingency of natural selection in many of his books. An obvious example is a perfectly fit seeming species that's wiped out by a meteorite impact.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    25. Re:The future of America by IDontAgreeWithYou · · Score: 1

      In my original post, I was using "natural selection" to refer to the large scale trends, but as you point out there is still a lot of randomness involved in that. The parent of my original post is the one who makes the claim that natural selection is not random (and was modded +5 insightful for it).

      You're right though, despite my Nick, I do occasionally agree with people. It's not as much fun as disagreeing though.

      --
      Finding other idiots on /. that agree with your opinion doesn't make it any less stupid.
    26. Re:The future of America by Iron+Condor · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wish I had some mod points to push this above the parent!

      The one interesting thing I've read that I don't quite understand is how evolution doesn't seem to be a gradual process. Rather it comes in spurts which seems to imply that mutation isn't completely random.

      A mutation either happens or it doesn't. It is by definition a stepwise process, not a gradual one.

      What you find in the fossil record is not the stepwise occurance of mutations, though. It is the stepwise occurance of selective pressure. In a stable environment, the biosphere will diversify - whatever doesn't kill something will sooner or later develop and the maximum of complexity allowd bythe energy envelope of the niche will be achieved. THEN when a change in the environment occurs (some plain gets flooded or some such - yes, that includes asteroids and such) you will "suddenly" find a shift in the fossil record towards particular traits -- because those traits are the ones that allowed the survivors of the shift in selective pressure not to be selected against.

      There's all kinds of hair colors out there. If something happens tomorrow that'll kill all people except those with red hair, you will find that "there was this sudden shift towards red-hairedness in the early 21st century". This will not mean that there's suddenly been a lot of mutations leading to red hair, though.

      --
      We're all born with nothing.
      If you die in debt, you're ahead.
    27. Re:The future of America by me_mi_mo · · Score: 1

      >Evolution flips a coin thousands of times and discards the tails. It would be amazing if it didn't get fifty heads that way.

      Well, I'll clarify. The amazing coincidences that I speak of vary from the profound (the fine tuning problems that make physicists invoke the so-called anthropic principle) to the mundane (asteroid crashes into the earth and wipes out all life).

      So the point is that for you to exist, today, an unbelievable number of things must have happened, all at the right time. If one of your ancestors had died before they reproduced you woulnd't be here. Heck, if a different sperm had done the business anywhere along the line, you wouldn't be here.

      And please note (from my post) that I was referring specifically to homo sapiens in general, and to the crowd at slashdot in particular.

      Regards, me

    28. Re:The future of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. That's the difference between the two sides of this issue. One side crusades to force ID into science, but the other side does *not* try to force evolution into religion. That's a moral high ground if there ever was one!

    29. Re:The future of America by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      Correct.
      That is because absolute truth is a ridiculous concept.

      All anyone can do is to try to get as close to the truth as possible, by gradually eliminating all the nonsense.
      Such as dogmatic religion.

  5. Church vs. State by ZOMFF · · Score: 1

    Apparently the line separating church & state is quite blurry these days...

    --
    Launch every sig.
    1. Re:Church vs. State by physicsboy500 · · Score: 1

      and in the spirit of the KC school board trials...

      ramen to that!

      --
      The original generic sig.
    2. Re:Church vs. State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not really Church vs. State, it's State vs. Ignorance. Most people who are against the theory of evolution don't understand it all that well, and as a result find it unsatisfying. If you reason about evolution with a half-baked version of the theory it's only natural that you'll find some holes.

      If we could manage a separation of State and Ignorance, that would be great...

    3. Re:Church vs. State by jsgrahamus · · Score: 1

      The citizens of Kansas should be allowed to determine what their children learn - The latter are their children, not ours or anybody else's. And if they kowtow because of other people's opinions, well that says something about those parents. Too bad for the children. This topic really revolves around ignorance and control. The people in control of the educational systems have decided that evolution is no longer a theory; rather it is a law. And disrespect of that law is not to be tolerated. And they will ignore (the root of ignorance) any evidence or signs that perhaps their law is not as absolute as they maintain it is. As a parent I would have no problem with evolution being taught. However, I would want it taught as a theory. And I would also want the teacher to be able to present alternative theories of how this world came to be and evidences of the inability of evolution to explain natural phenomenom. The ability to admit that your pet theory is not capable of explaining some natural occurrences is what enables us as a people to advance in our understanding. Ignoring the obvious only holds us back.

    4. Re:Church vs. State by grub · · Score: 2, Insightful


      The citizens of Kansas should be allowed to determine what their children learn

      By redefining "science" to believe in supernatural rubbish? Keep that stuff in Church.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    5. Re:Church vs. State by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      If we could manage a separation of State and Ignorance, that would be great...

      Wait, I thought they were the same thing.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    6. Re:Church vs. State by ZOMFF · · Score: 1

      This topic really revolves around ignorance and control.

      ... which is exactly how the church typically works. Only call ignorance & control 'faith'. And I whole heartily agree with your idea of having it taught as theory. I took a Philosophy of Religion course in college which took this exact angle. It kept the class quite interesting without going overboard into the 'holy roller' aspect of most religion based courses.
      --
      Launch every sig.
    7. Re:Church vs. State by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      And back to tired old etymological fallacies. Scientists stopped used the term "law" in the early part of the 20th century. The usage prior to that makes "laws" and "theories" the same thing. It's just not used any more.>[? I guess we can say with some certainty that you certainly don't understand science.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    8. Re:Church vs. State by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
      without their silliness dozens of people would never would have known the touch of his/her/its noodely appendage....

      Great first FSM post!!!

    9. Re:Church vs. State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't really know the difference between a scientific "theory" and "law". The "theory" of evolution is far better supported by the evidence than Newton's "laws" of motion. Actually, evolution is one of the most heavily supported facts in all of science. Nobody has a right to teach anyone's children falsehood.

    10. Re:Church vs. State by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm sick of people with this semantical misunderstanding of the word 'theory.'

      There is less evidence in support of Newton's Theory of Gravity (or even Einstein's Theory of Relativity) than there is in support of the Theory of Evolution. The term 'law' has not been used in science for a very, very long time. The word theory should not be confused with the word 'hypothesis'. In science, a hypothesis is closer to how the common vernacular uses the term 'theory'. A hypothesis is just an idea based on observation. A theory is what grows from a hypothesis: Scientists continue additional observations and experiments over the course of time and use those results and observations to refine or refute the hypothesis. Eventually the hypothesis becomes sound enough to become a theory. A theory must be supported by multiple sources of available evidence; it must be repeatable, consistent, empirically testable, and falsifiable. It must be multiply reproducible. Yes, theories must admit that they might be wrong. But there are no absolutes in this world -- just as they must admit that they might be wrong, theories are also the soundest explanations for natural occurence that science has available.

      No matter how you slice it, Intelligent Design is not science. It doesn't hold up to the rigorous scientific scrutiny that scientific theories must hold up against. Evolution does. Intelligent Design is nothing more than religious dogma; it is not now, never will be, nor can it ever be by definition, a scientific theory.

      I have nothing against people having their children taught Creationism. But not in a science classroom. The time and place for studying Creationism is in a religious setting, not a science classroom.

    11. Re:Church vs. State by Znork · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "And I would also want the teacher to be able to present alternative theories"

      Alternative theories are fine in science class, as long as they have a scientific basis and conform to scientific principles.

      I dont see any demands that evolution or other theories with a scientific basis, be presented as an alternative in church, nor requirements that the vast host of philosophical theories around the concept and nature of creation and existence be presented as alternatives at any religious function, so why the desire to present non-scientific theories in science education?

      There are any number of non-scientific theories about creation and evolution going all the way to philosophical possibilities like existence being layered simulations. They're perfectly fine for philosophy or religion classes, but they are simply incompatible with the very nature of a science class.

    12. Re:Church vs. State by Kemanorel · · Score: 1

      taught as a theory.

      As the great swordsman-philosopher Inigo Montoya once said, "You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means."

      At least, not in a scientific context anyway. Theory is used to say that a concept/model/prediction is as solid as we can see, but are willing to change it if new observable information comes to light or a new explanation better, and more completely, describes all of the evidence.

      If you want to believe God create the world in 6 days somewhere around 6000 years ago (contrary to the many established lines of evidence, not just the fossil record), or that fairies built the universe from sequins and sparkles, that's fine, but it's not science and does not belong in a science class. Philosophy or comparative religions, sure, but not science.
      --
      Mess not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup.
    13. Re:Church vs. State by yl_mra · · Score: 1

      Most people who are for the theory of evolution don't understand it all that well; that's why they attach any idea that flies in it's face. Knowledge is enlightenment; ignorance leads us back to the dark ages.

    14. Re:Church vs. State by mstahl · · Score: 1

      The citizens of Kansas should be allowed to determine what their children learn

      Um, no. Parent A doesn't have the right to dictate in this way what Parent B's children learn in the classroom. Public education systems are there to teach children, in a secular environment, what can generally be considered the consensus of fact. If you've got any other theories of how the biological systems of the world came to be the way that they are, go ahead and put them forth (flying spaghetti monster, anyone?), but Darwin's whole natural selection thing is pretty much the best secular option we've got. Intelligent design, no matter how you dress it up and try to make it look otherwise, is a religious idea, and teaching it makes certain assumptions about peoples' beliefs.

      The ability to admit that your pet theory is not capable of explaining some natural occurrences is what enables us as a people to advance in our understanding.

      First of all, I'm not so sure that you can list a convincing number of biological systems or animal traits or anomalies that can't readily be explained by the process of natural selection. Secondly, why does it matter if it doesn't completely explain anything and everything right now? Like all science, it's constantly changing—evolving even—and it may be the case that anything you could come up with we could soon explain easily. So far though, you're in the minority, and I think most people who consider themselves scientists or rationalists if you're not into the whole science thing would agree that there's some process going on out there, and we can see it happening (in new species all the time), and natural selection is a pretty good explaination.

      Ignoring the obvious only holds us back.

      I could say the same thing about you. But seriously now, where is all this evidence that natural selection is hogwash? If you can come up with a counterexample or six I would gladly capitulate, but if you can't, all you have is faith. There's nothing at all wrong with that, I don't want you to get the wrong idea here, but it is faith, and it's not the place of public schools to teach kids faith. Public schools are there to teach fact, as it's understood in our time.

      If you want your kids to learn religion, I have the utmost respect for that and that's why we have the first amendment, but the first amendment also means they're gonna have to go to a private school for that.

    15. Re:Church vs. State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have nothing against people having their children taught Creationism.

      It is child abuse. It is intentionally teaching your child a model of the universe that is false and then claiming that this false piece of information is more important than the scientifically rigorus models. I don't know how else to describe it, other than purposefully handicapping a child. Blech.

    16. Re:Church vs. State by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 1

      It's not really Church vs. State, it's State vs. Ignorance.

      It's worse than that: it's Ignorance vs Ignorance. Both sides talk past one another, and the only thing they seem to agree on is false: the belief that science and religion are incompatible.

    17. Re:Church vs. State by Sancho · · Score: 1

      It's this misunderstanding that drives the entire ID movement. To lay people, a "theory" is little more than an idea. They don't understand that the word has a distinctly different definition in the context of science. Intelligent Design, viewed in the context of science, is not a theory, and therefore does not belong in the science classroom.

    18. Re:Church vs. State by glsunder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unless I'm misunderstanding ID, it simply attempts to explain why evolution occurs. It's not science, it's religion. I have no issue with people believing in ID. I think if there was a god, it would be much cooler for him to have set the initial conditions and laws and let it go unmanaged. It'd certainly be a lot tougher than doing everything manually and having to constantly tweak things.

      To put it into more geekish terms: ID with evolution is like a linux server where you set it up using a script, thought of everything and wrote scripts to handle everything that could go wrong and it has 15 billion years of uptime. If you're a deist, then it's like that Novell server that people forgot in the closet that's still running, which is even more impressive. Young Earth Creationism however, is like a sysadmin working with a Windows server running buggy software. It's been running for 10,000 years, but it's going to have to be rebooted soon, so watch out the end of the world is nigh.

    19. Re:Church vs. State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree -- parents should not have the right to brainwash their children, any more than they should have the right to withhold medical care, blood transfusions, and such. Access to the best available human knowledge should be thought of as a very fundamental human right.

      I posted something to similar effect earlier and was modded -1, Flamebait for my trouble.

    20. Re:Church vs. State by Copid · · Score: 1

      The citizens of Kansas should be allowed to determine what their children learn.
      Within limits, that's true. However, we have every right to point and laugh when they try to change the definition of science to something that would include astrology and magic as scientific fields. They shouldn't be surprised or offended when they become the laughing stock of the rest of the modern world.

      And I would also want the teacher to be able to present alternative theories of how this world came to be and evidences of the inability of evolution to explain natural phenomenom.
      Such as?
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  6. This quote still applies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    From one of the links, quote in Nov 2005:

    "This is a sad day. We're becoming a laughingstock of not only the nation, but of the world, and I hate that," said board member Janet Waugh, a Kansas City Democrat.

    1. Re:This quote still applies by Zaatxe · · Score: 1

      I'm not american and I've never been to the USA, but isn't Kansas City in the state of Missouri while the article says about the state of Kansas?

      --
      So say we all
    2. Re:This quote still applies by Larsiny · · Score: 1

      That quote should be framed and hung over the Kansas School Board's door.

      On a side note, I sent an email to Mrs. Janet Waugh to congratulate her resolve and to wish that one day any attempts to integrate ID into science classrooms will be voted down unanimously, not the shaky 6-4 margin.

      Her contact information http://www3.ksde.org/commiss/ksbe1.html

    3. Re:This quote still applies by Larsiny · · Score: 1

      There's one in both states, with the Missouri one being larger.

    4. Re:This quote still applies by timster · · Score: 1

      KC is a city on a river with portions on both sides of the river. It just so happens that the river is also the border between Kansas and Missouri. Like most river cities, one bank is larger and more important than the other; in this case it's the Missouri side, so mostly you hear about KC in Missouri, but part of it is in Kansas.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    5. Re:This quote still applies by NorthWestFLNative · · Score: 1

      It's in both actually, the Kansas City metro area spans across the state boundary between Kansas and Missouri.

    6. Re:This quote still applies by codegen · · Score: 1

      There are two Kansas City, one in Kansas, the other in Missouri. They are
      right next to each other. State line road (N/S) has Kansas on the west and Missouri
      on the east.

      --
      Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
    7. Re:This quote still applies by lucabrasi999 · · Score: 1
      I'm not american and I've never been to the USA, but isn't Kansas City in the state of Missouri while the article says about the state of Kansas?

      Actually, there is a local municipality in BOTH Kansas and Missouri called "Kansas City". Go to Google Maps and type in "Kansas City, MO" and then type in "Kansas City, KS". The two towns are located right across the river (I believe that is the Missouri River) from each other. The Missouri city is larger in population.

    8. Re:This quote still applies by Nimey · · Score: 1

      As others have said, there's two KCs. The reason: the MO/KS border changed after KC was founded, splitting the city.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
  7. Computer Science . . . by millisa · · Score: 3, Funny

    Henceforth, all activity and research in the field of computer science must be explained by natural phenomenom. The term 'bug' will use the September 9th, 1945 definition and nothing else. Unnatural explanations such as missing semi-colon's and its ilk fall into the category of religion and a belief structure not cohesive with the true definition of science.

    1. Re:Computer Science . . . by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      So in other words, your god is Larry Wall?

    2. Re:Computer Science . . . by Frequency+Domain · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You shouldn't believe a country's name as being a true description - "German Democratic Republic" (the former East Germany), "People's Republic of China", etc. Similarly, fields that feel a need to put the word "science" in their name often aren't - "Political Science", "Computer Science".

    3. Re:Computer Science . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, as demonstrated by today's XKCD comic: http://xkcd.com/c224.html

    4. Re:Computer Science . . . by autophile · · Score: 1

      You have conflated two separate fields. Computer science is a branch of mathematics, which is science. Pure science, but science nevertheless. The examples you brought up (bugs, missing semicolons, and "its ilk") are features of computer programming, which is a branch of engineering.

      --Rob

      --
      Towards the Singularity.
    5. Re:Computer Science . . . by bunratty · · Score: 1

      Damn. And I was going to blame all of my software's problems on divine intervention! Either that or aliens.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    6. Re:Computer Science . . . by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Where did you ever get the absurd notion that mathematics is science?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:Computer Science . . . by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      Computer science is fundamentally just applied mathematics. Computer science is as much a science as mathematics is, for whatever that's worth.

      No argument about political "science," though. Not sure what to call it, since it's the study of politics. Political Theory? Politicology?

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    8. Re:Computer Science . . . by failure-man · · Score: 1

      Thanks to mathematicians we have delightful little books that are filled with canned solutions to problems which are essentially impossible to solve analytically. I say they can be scientists.
       
      Excuse me. I'm gonna go build an airplane.

    9. Re:Computer Science . . . by bcattwoo · · Score: 1

      Computer science is fundamentally just applied mathematics. Computer science is as much a science as mathematics is, for whatever that's worth.

      No argument about political "science," though. Not sure what to call it, since it's the study of politics. Political Theory? Politicology?

      "BS" works for me.
    10. Re:Computer Science . . . by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Mathematics is an entirely different branch of research from science. Mathematics, for instance, can describe the physical universe. It can also describe universes that very likely don't exist. It has a different methodology than science. It is not methodological naturalism. Thus, it is not science.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    11. Re:Computer Science . . . by jreedy21 · · Score: 1

      From the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary:
      science - noun
      1 [U] (knowledge obtained from) the systematic study of the structure and behaviour of the physical world, especially by observing, measuring and experimenting, and the development of theories to describe the results of these activities.

      How is political science not a real science, then? It is the systematic study of the behaviour of people making decisions on political topics and in candidate elections, among other things.

    12. Re:Computer Science . . . by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 1
      I'll agree to you, but only to the extent that real, hard-core computer science has almost nothing to do with computers. To misquote Kelly-Bootle, computer science is to computers what hydrodynamics is to plumbing: You can discuss Rayleigh-Taylor instability all day but sooner or later you've got to get all that shit from the bathroom to the sewer.

      I say we move Computer Science from the Mathematics Building over to the Divinity School and be done with it.

      --
      This is not my sandwich.
    13. Re:Computer Science . . . by ubuwalker31 · · Score: 1

      Social sciences use of a rich variety of scientific processes, mathematical proofs, and other methods in professional literature and studies. For example, game theory (Nash Equilibrium) and analysis of voting systems and electoral behavior (Arrows Theorem).

    14. Re:Computer Science . . . by metalcup · · Score: 1

      science - noun 1 [U] (knowledge obtained from) the systematic study of the structure and behaviour of the physical world, especially by observing, measuring and experimenting , and the development of theories to describe the results of these activities.

      because you cannot experiment in political science the way we do in the 'regular' hard sciences.

      --
      "Laziness is an optimisation protocol"
    15. Re:Computer Science . . . by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Computer science is as much a science as mathematics is, for whatever that's worth.

      Many people would argue that mathematics is not a science, since it's a man-made system. Conversely, science is something like physics or biology where humans try to figure out something that exists independent of them.

      For example, a bug in CS created by programmers, so they have inside knowledge on how to get rid of it. But a biological bug can only be studied from the outside perspective, using science. Of course, CS bugs are often so complicated that people resort to the scientific method when hunting them.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    16. Re:Computer Science . . . by RalphTheWonderLlama · · Score: 1

      Well I for one currently use algorithms I learned in CS. It would be hard not to. Sure I don't have any use for a lot of that stuff in my job but it has an application somewhere. Plus, I learned how to think which is probably the most important thing.

      --
      simple, fast homepage with your links: http://www.ngumbi.com/
    17. Re:Computer Science . . . by RalphTheWonderLlama · · Score: 1

      Buuuuut, if aliens had their own math then we'd still be able to use our math to decipher theirs, since math is really the same throughout the universe. It is a man-made system to a small degree, basically what symbols we use and our methods, but the reason that math works is inherent to the universe just like physics. Otherwise math wouldn't work at all actually. Neither would physics :)
      I consider it a sort of discovery like biology and physics discoveries.

      --
      simple, fast homepage with your links: http://www.ngumbi.com/
    18. Re:Computer Science . . . by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      because you cannot experiment in political science the way we do in the 'regular' hard sciences.
      Cram a bunch of politicians in cages in a small lab and observe what happens. I see no problem here.
    19. Re:Computer Science . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Traditionally taught computer science IS science or at least many parts of it, it's not a religion, and not some gimped out field that needs a fake label to make the learners of it feel important like the "true" science fields. Exploring algorithms, computation, computability and the countless theories this field covers is the "science" promised in the label. Computer science at least touches every other scientific field, and if you consider the universe and beyond as computational structure then every other scientific field in known existence is a subset of it. Maybe you can slap the dean of your local community college for pushing programming and web development exclusively to get into industry instead of the science parts.

    20. Re:Computer Science . . . by apt142 · · Score: 1

      It's completely ethical too, considering how much trouble you'll keep them from causing.

    21. Re:Computer Science . . . by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Many people would argue that mathematics is not a science, since it's a man-made system.

      Biology, chemistry and phyiscs are man-made systems to describe the world around us. That's what math does. How does a physicist solve a problem without using math? Physics is applied math. Chemistry is applied physics. Biology is applied chemistry. They are all linked. They are all science. Some are more "pure" than others, but they are all just descriptions of the universe.

    22. Re:Computer Science . . . by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      While we're on the topic of battling ignorance, the Oxford English Dictionary defines science as "a systematically organized body of knowledge on a particular subject." In other words, "ology" means "science." Therefore, political science and computer science are appropriately named, and no further sleep need be lost on the subject.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    23. Re:Computer Science . . . by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 1
      I didn't say it was pointless. But most programers, myself included, rarely need to implement a textbook algorithm beyond the most basic. So much of the heavy lifting has already been done in libraries. Still, they do crop up from time to time: Right now I'm trying to cull data from a 450-table database with a rapidly changing schema by building a tree out of the referential integrity metadata, which gets fun when there's self-referencing tables. I've had to dust off my algorithms book(s) more than once.

      Just like every five or ten years a pipefitter will find himself dealing with something the engineers never dreamed necessary, and he'll have to dust off That One Book and do some serious ciphering. As a working programmer, rather than a researcher, I feel more affinity for the pipefitter than anyone else.

      --
      This is not my sandwich.
    24. Re:Computer Science . . . by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Biology, chemistry and phyiscs are man-made systems to describe the world around us. That's what math does. How does a physicist solve a problem without using math?

      I agree with your general point. However, while mathematics and physics did start out as the same thing, modern mathematics is a completely abstract subject; it's neither a natural nor a social science. One key issue is that you can have 100% certainty about mathematical things, but science is never fully certain or complete.

      Another facet of the modern separation of math/physics is that physical concepts are independent of math. You can use different kinds of mathematics for the same physical idea. Physicists do solve problems without using math every day; it's the numerical part that requires math, and it's often considered secondary to conceptual insight.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    25. Re:Computer Science . . . by RalphTheWonderLlama · · Score: 1

      Yeah all right, I can agree with that.

      --
      simple, fast homepage with your links: http://www.ngumbi.com/
    26. Re:Computer Science . . . by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      But they don't use the fundamental basis of all "real" science: controlled, repeatable experiments.

      That's because any truly controlled experiment would necessitate comparing two groups of subjects that are identical but for the variable being studied. There is no way to this with people, so controlled experiments are impossible. Or at least unethical (cloning?).

      Social "scientists" try to get around this by making arbitrary statistical assumptions, e.g. "we'll just assume that the six sociology grad students down the hall are representative of the population in general, just like we always do."

  8. No more pirates? by FMota91 · · Score: 1

    Does this mean we don't need our pirate supporting overlord anymore?

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C1 bottles of beer on the wall. Take one down, pass it round... Oh, umm...
    1. Re:No more pirates? by J-Doggqx · · Score: 1

      As Pastafarians it is our duty, no our responsibility, to be ever vigilant for new campaigns promoting I.D. and to fully support them in the name of our great invisible being, the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The I.D. debate only becomes clear to an elected official when the FSM and pirates become involved. So keep fighting the good fight and someday, when we meet our noodly maker, we'll all be rewarded with a stripper factory and beer volcano.

      Ramen.

      --
      END OF LINE
  9. "ultra-conservative"? by BarnabyWilde · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Regarding the so-called "ultra-conservative Board members":

    Conservative belief does not necessarily intersect much with religion.

    These were _ultra-religious_ board members.

    Let's at least get that part right.

    BWilde.

    1. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by spun · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You have to accept the fact that, in America, the Republican party has been in large part co-opted by ultra-religious interests. Fortunately, it seems that the Republicans are waking up to the fact that these people are not representative of the opinions of the majority of Americans, they do not care about many major Republican party ideals, and they are not only not worth persuing as a base of support, but actually detrimental to the party. I'm not a Republican myself, but if you are and you don't want to see your party taken over by religious funamentalists, please do what you can to keep these wingnuts out. Moderates of both sides, lets unite to keep the lunatic fringe in both our parties from taking over.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    2. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

      You can also be ultra-religious and not a creationist. My husband is a devout Lutheran, and he thinks creationism is as silly as anyone else. Creationism is obviously not fiscally conservative, but it is very religiously conservative. But ultra-religiously-conservative was a bit awkward for use in a summary.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    3. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      You have to accept the fact that, in America, the Republican party has been in large part co-opted by ultra-religious interests

      I'm not sure why this was modded as flamebait, actually. I think one can reasonably debate whether the religious loons have co-opted the Republican party or whether they're simply unbearably annoying and loud enough to get a lot of media coverage. Exactly the same thing could be said of the most toxic, leftiest-side of the Democratic party. It's not so much the policy platforms that are shaped by either extreme, it's the completely unwarranted media coverage that the extremes on both side receive. That presents a distorted picture, and fuels each side's opposition to label their entire opposition as a lump with the extremes they loathe. Meanwhile, guys like Rudy G. (the very antithesis of a religious fundy) are polling higher than anyone else on the Republican side. Coverage of that? Nah... it's all about Mitt Romney's Mormanism (yeesh!).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by spun · · Score: 1

      I said co-opted in large part, and that that is changing. By co-opted, I don't mean taken over completely, I just mean that the platform of the Republican party has shifted towards the values of the Christian fringe. It seems to be less about states rights, fiscal responsibility and small government and more about upholding pro-life, anti-gay fundamentalist Christian values.

      Again, I also said that it appears the more moderate Republicans are recognizing that this is not a good direction for the party, and are doing somethign about it.

      How about a "fundie exchange program?" For every fundie you boot out of your party, we'll boot one out of ours. Maybe if we get rid of the crazy fringe, we can start to recognize that we aren't so different, and we all want to make our country a better place.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    5. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      How about a "fundie exchange program?"

      Yes! Sort of like using matter/anti-matter to simultaneously destroy both while also producing useful energy. Excellent plan.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    6. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by digitig · · Score: 1

      They were religious ultra-conservatives, not (necessarily) political ultra-conservatives. The description was correct, but maybe not as precise as it could have been. There are plenty of ultra-religious types who are quite happy with science.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    7. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by gillbates · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...it seems that the Republicans are waking up to the fact that these people are not representative of the opinions of the majority of Americans...

      Um, I've observed just the opposite: Republicans are fond of paying lip service to conservative ideals while ignoring both the majority of Americans and the religious fundamentalists. With things like endorsing torture, failing to take substantive action on the abortion problem*, etc...

      For example, I can find no verse in my Bible that says, "Thou shalt ban thy social networking websites...", yet an Illinois Republican proposed doing just that.

      Nor can I find any evidence of democracy being a Biblical style of government. In fact, Israel didn't go around spreading Democracy in the Old Testament, yet GW seems to think its the Right Thing(TM) to do.

      Is it any wonder why they Republican party has failed? Had they simply upheld their self-professed core values, they wouldn't be on the verge of losing power.

      * - No, appointing conservative judges doesn't count. When you think about it, if you really believe (as the pro-lifers claim) that a fetus is a human being, that would make abortion a far greater threat to humanity than terrorism. If terrorists killed 1.5 million Americans a year, you can bet that Bush & Co would be doing more about it than just appointing judges...

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    8. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by rlp · · Score: 1

      As with the Democrats, the Republicans are made up of a coalition of different interests - not solely the religious right. There's a substantial (small-l) libertarian contingent in the party that is rarely mentioned by the press. Over the past few years, the GOP has ignored this group on a number of key issues, such as fiscal management. The left views the '06 election as an ideological mandate for liberalism. I view the '06 election as a repudiation of the GOP Congress and Bush by the small government / libertarian portion of the GOP base.

      --
      [Insert pithy quote here]
    9. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Religious, conservative. I really don't care. The labels are meaningless any more.

      I was living in Iowa in 1988, and attended the Republican caucuses when Pat Robertson came in 2nd place behind Bob Dole. The fact of the matter was, that this Kansas School Board was Republican. Their anti-evolution position is a platform of the Republican Party.

      Just today there was another article about how two Republican congressmen from Georgia and Texas were promoting a website in house memos which not only denies Darwin, but even Copernicus(earth revolves around the sun for those who don't know). fixedearth.com, look it up. Apparently science is part of some Jewish conspiracy according to them.

      What's the next argument? The earth is flat, and all of us who say differently hate Christianity?

      What's amazing is how they've distorted even good old fashioned morality and religion.

      Like they're against science and evolution, but they totally support legalized gambling, and spending beyond your means. Look up the name Mac Hammond. He's turned his mega church up here in Minnesota into a very profitable con game. And this guy endorsed one of our local Republican representatives form his pulpit, and campaigns for Republicans all over the country. He preaches the Prosperity Bible, as he calls it. That you too can go out and con your fellow man and steal his wealth, and not feel bad about it cause Jesus loves you.

      No surprise he's a follower of Pat Robertson, who said we should be kind to the dictator of Liberia, Charles Taylor. Because he was a good wholsome Christian, said Robertson. In reality, it's because Robertston had struck a deal with him to get access to diamond mines using slave labor.

      These people aren't religious. They are con-artists. Sure maybe there are some stupid sheeple who follow the con artists blindly. But we shouldn't confuse their immoral putrid faith of con artists with wholesome religion and faith.

    10. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      You have to accept the fact that, in America, the Republican party has been in large part co-opted by ultra-religious interests

      I'm a liberal and I disagree with this statement.

      The Republican party is a combination of two major groups. The first are the ultra-religious. These are the foot soldiers. They use churches as organizing elements for the disseminating (dis)information and getting large numbers of people to the polls to vote for Republicans. The second group are corporate leaders who provide the money to get people elected in exchange for kickbacks and earmarks.

      These groups tend not to have anything in common. It doesn't matter to a casino or defense contractor whether women can get abortions or gays can marry or atheists are stoned to death. However, occasionally these groups are put at odds. For example, the leader of some southern christian group was recently ousted because he wanted to change the focus from gays and abortion to social welfare and environmentalism. The other leaders told him that wasn't happening.

      I don't think this is because they really hate gays that much, (hell, some of the are closeted gays themselves) but because they realized that social welfare and environmentalism were bad for business, and the gravy train they'd been riding since the early 1980s would have stopped.

      So, you see, the fundamentalist Christians in this country are being duped all the time by preachers who lust for power and money and who get it by working with big business to get Republicans elected who send kickbacks.

      And if Republicans have a problem with this, then I suggest you take your party back, because that's what it has become.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    11. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen to that. The Bush presidency completely disillusioned me about the Republicans standing for small government in any way.

    12. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by Darby · · Score: 1

      I think one can reasonably debate whether the religious loons have co-opted the Republican party or whether they're simply unbearably annoying and loud enough to get a lot of media coverage.

      It can be debated, but it's pretty clear that the Republican party was co-opted by the religious loons some time ago.
      The election of Reagan was the final nail in the coffin of the Goldwater Republicans. The Republicans were completely unelectable without that contingent and so invited them in to the destruction of their old platform (where they really even bought into it in the first place.
      There is very little difference between Reagan's administration and Bush's. We have a president publicly pushing religious agendas while engaging in extremist police state tactics at home and a foreign policy driven by largely overblown threats. Heck, it's the same exact people doctoring the intelligence.
      Heck, even the torture and death camps aren't new. Bush has yet to get anywhere near Reagan's level on that respect yet.

      Economically we have the same exact failed policy of cutting taxes while borrowing massive amounts of money at interest and using them to "address" the said massively overblown threats. We have the same exact result: massive increase in the size of the government and its power over the people. So much so that it's been pushing 30 years since you could even argue that the Republicans like small government. They hate small government even more than the Democrats do.

      So anybody who actually does believe in small government and fiscal responsibility who considers themselves a Republican is just pissing up the rope that's being used to strangle them. Neither corporate power nor the religious extremists can get their goals without massively overpowered government, so that is not what the Republican party will do.

      Heck, just look at the immigration debate. It's been the only real divide in the Republican party for some time. Corporate power is on the side of letting them all in to drive down wages. The isolationist/protectionist/what have you Republicans want to keep them all out. What do we get? More government spending on a worthless wall to appease those who are stupid enough to believe it's effective. Want to put a bet on which side will ultimately "win" that debate?

      This article does a good job of laying out the deep divides in the Republican party although it's scope is broader.

      I find generally that "follow the money" and "actions speak louder than words" to be much better ways of getting to the heart of an issue than listening to empty rhetoric spouted by politicians.

      It's not so much the policy platforms that are shaped by either extreme, it's the completely unwarranted media coverage that the extremes on both side receive. That presents a distorted picture, and fuels each side's opposition to label their entire opposition as a lump with the extremes they loathe.

      Except from my perspective, they *are* both entirely driven by extremes. Both parties are big powerful oppressive government parties. Neither party supports me, the individual. The Libertarian Party is the only party that does more than just make speeches about it in order to sucker in the more credulous who blindly believe what politicians say, but even they are driven largely by "religious" type beliefs.

    13. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by Darby · · Score: 1

      I view the '06 election as a repudiation of the GOP Congress and Bush by the small government / libertarian portion of the GOP base.

      Wow, it only took them (at the least) 26 years to get a clue that the Republican party is totally opposed to those ideals.

      I'm a small government, (more or less) small 'l' libertarian. I'm 37 years old, and I never once even considered voting for a Republican for any federal office. Not at one time in my life since I reached voting age has the Republican party worked for anything of the sort. They have always been for even bigger more oppressive government than the Democrats for my entire adult life.

      Sad to see that you think so many people are so out of touch with reality that it takes them that long to even look around them rather than buying into ancient outdated mewlings of politicians dedicated to fucking them.
      Not that I disagree with you, but people that slow and clueless scare the shit out of me.

    14. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by potat0man · · Score: 1

      I agree with your observations but as the parent was saying:

      religious nut != conservative

      And ever more lately:

      conservative != republican

      Gratned, often they go hand in hand but even more often people incorrectly use them interchangabley.

    15. Re:"ultra-conservative"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I said co-opted in large part, and that that is changing. By co-opted, I don't mean taken over completely, I just mean that the platform of the Republican party has shifted towards the values of the Christian fringe. It seems to be less about states rights, fiscal responsibility and small government and more about upholding pro-life, anti-gay fundamentalist Christian values.
      The nature of political parties is compromise and finding common ground. There is never a perfectly stable balance in which all people are happy all of the time. I typically vote Republican and while I'm not perfectly happy with everything my party does, your characterization of the religious movement is wrong (even if common). Yes, the fundamentalists are a significant voice within the Republican party. However, you make the mistake of lumping all religious and moral conservatives in with the fundamentalists. You ignore the powerful influence of the Envangelicals. You also ignore that much of the moral agenda also has a much broader appeal, a huge overlap with the fiscal conservative type (most of the party) (and, in fact, most of the country) that have centrist religious and moral beliefs, but that believe that the country has become a little too morally permissive and is generally heading further and further that way. For instance, I am basically an athiest and I am pro-choice (not a zealot though) etc, but I've voted for Bush and other people that profess religious values, in part, because they help counter-balance the drift towards complete permissiveness. I wouldn't want to stuff every seat with highly religous people, but having some people in office that feel passionate about traditional American values (family, religion, etc) helps to balance out politics and better represents in practice the actual beliefs of most of the country.

      People like you make far too much of the religious right. You focus far too much on the words of various religious leaders, cherry picking the most extreme words from people on the outer reaches, and not enough on the actual changes in law or the administration of government.

      How about a "fundie exchange program?" For every fundie you boot out of your party, we'll boot one out of ours. Maybe if we get rid of the crazy fringe, we can start to recognize that we aren't so different, and we all want to make our country a better place.
      Puhleaeese. Are you trying to claim that your ultra-leftist, property-is-theft, whines-constantly-about-capitalism, up-with-communism, etc really represents the center of Democratic party? What nonsense.
  10. Quick... by grub · · Score: 1, Troll


    Quick... queue the "But science doesn't explain everything, there has to be a designer" kooks.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Quick... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Modded Troll by believers of retarded superstition everywhere.

    2. Re:Quick... by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      that would be the touch of his/her/its noodely appendage! This article is proof that FSM moves in mysterious ways.

    3. Re:Quick... by n3k5 · · Score: 1

      Modded Troll by believers of retarded superstition everywhere.
      That post literally called for idiots to make silly postings. You don't have to believe in retarded superstition to recognize this as a textbook example of trolling.
      --
      but what do i know, i'm just a model.
  11. On second thought by gx5000 · · Score: 1

    I for one welcome our new flip flop masters.
    For you see, it's getting harder to see if we really are in Kansas anymore...

    --
    End of Line.
  12. good for Kansas by misanthrope101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it's telling that every time the public finds out that a school board tried to undermine science education via an attack on mainstream scientific theories, the public votes them out immediately. It happened at Dover, and now in Kansas. The ID crowd only get the chance to promote their "alternative theory" when they keep quiet about what they intend to do, but as soon as they do it, the cat is out of the bag and they get voted out of office. Somehow they still think that they have grassroots support, but the movement only survives as long as they lie about it. People love talk about being more Godly and all that, but they don't want their state to be the laughingstock of the country.

    1. Re:good for Kansas by garcia · · Score: 1

      I think it's telling that every time the public finds out that a school board tried to undermine science education via an attack on mainstream scientific theories, the public votes them out immediately.

      For now -- at least while this Board is in office. If another Board takes office and turns it back over they'll be the laughing stock again for two more years.

      The only way to eliminate this is to end the discussion, once and for all, by saying that ID is *not* scientific and doesn't belong anywhere but theology and philosophy courses.

    2. Re:good for Kansas by blakestah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Somewhat more telling that people more interested in ID are also more interested in serving on school boards. What is it about evolution that makes people not interested in the future of their children's schools?

    3. Re:good for Kansas by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      That's very true, but at the same time, the federal court system is being packed with exactly these kinds of people. And they're not subject to being voted out of office.

      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    4. Re:good for Kansas by envelope · · Score: 1

      The only way to eliminate this is to end the discussion, once and for all, by saying that ID is *not* scientific and doesn't belong anywhere but theology and philosophy courses.


      I'm pretty sure that's what the judge said in the PA case. Only applies to that circuit for now, but I'd think its a pretty strong precedent for the rest of the country. /too lazy to search for links
      --

      appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars
    5. Re:good for Kansas by envelope · · Score: 1

      I think its because people with an agenda to promote are more likely to want to get on the school board. Most mainstream folks accept evolution and the teaching of evolution in schools, and so are satisfied with the status quo.
      Those with a gripe against what's going on in the schools are more likely to try to get control.

      --

      appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars
    6. Re:good for Kansas by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1
      The only way to eliminate this is to end the discussion, once and for all, by saying that ID is *not* scientific and doesn't belong anywhere but theology and philosophy courses.


      It's already been done in the Dover case. See the judges ruling (pdf document) starting with Section D. on page 10. Or, if you prefer a non-pdf format, see this link at TalkOrigins which is the conclusion of the judge regarding ID.

      Granted, the American Taliban won't stop their efforts at imposing their religious views on everyone else despite this and other rulings, but at least they can't claim that their ideas have already been ruled as religious, and not scientific, in nature.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    7. Re:good for Kansas by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Dover is a pretty poor example, as a number of the board members lost by only a pretty slim margin. What's more, it appears that the fact that the case had cost a million bucks, which came out of the school board budget, may have been as much a motivating factor as anything.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    8. Re:good for Kansas by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "I think it's telling that every time the public finds out that a school board tried to undermine science education via an attack on mainstream scientific theories, the public votes them out immediately."

      Is it that the people don't agree with these representatives, or that they're simply embarrassed by all the scrutiny they're getting because of it?

    9. Re:good for Kansas by Rolgar · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think it works like this (I'm a Kansas Christian evolutionist). Most Kansas Christians (which are a majority here) that are conservatives care about 2 issues, good education for a low cost, and sex education (abstinence). A few radical fundamentalists, who believe that creationism vs. evolutionist is an important topic, run for positions with a platform that agrees with the majority of Kansas Christians, not advertising their support for creationism. When they got in a few years ago, they got a majority of the board, and got their way with the standards. We the voters just got our chance to vote these bums out, but now have to worry that we'll have to be concerned that the sex education standards will go to far the other way. Fortunately for me and my wife, we'll be sending our kids to Catholic schools, where things like evolution were taught, and creationism never was.

    10. Re:good for Kansas by digitig · · Score: 1

      But it looks to me like a case of out of the fundamentalist frying pan and into the new-wave fire, with stuff like "In some respects, humans at the dawn of the species probably knew more about the natural world than does the average Kansas citizen of today. The rise of civilization and more recent increase in urbanization has been paralleled by decreasing personal contact with the natural world. Despite the fact that we are a part of a highly interconnected web of life, the separation of so many people from direct contact with nature has had enormous consequences. The accumulating research reveals the necessity of contact with nature for healthy child development."

      Is this the Disney version of science? Or Rousseau's 'Noble Savage'?

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    11. Re:good for Kansas by eaolson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...good education for a low cost, and sex education (abstinence).

      Why is sex ed the only place we consider ignorance as a safety mechanism? You wouldn't teach driver's ed and refuse to give out information on what to do in slippery conditions to prevent kids from driving recklessly. Abstinence-only programs routinely misinform, distort, and outright lie about sex and safety. That's probably because their main focus is to prevent sin, not to keep kids safe.

    12. Re:good for Kansas by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      So does the magical Christian majority believe in evolution, or just that the truth of creationism isn't an important topic as lower taxes?

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    13. Re:good for Kansas by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Well, all the liberals are the ones actually teaching. It's the ID nuts that are willing to lie to take a position on a school board in order to sabotage education (getting quickly booted out when their hidden agendas are revealed). I don't fight for my right to believe that oxygen is what I breathe, but some nut that wants everyone else to believe that it's actually the nitrogen that fuels my metabolism may be more willing to fight to push that agenda on everyone else.

    14. Re:good for Kansas by den479 · · Score: 1
      From judge's ruling

      It is ironic that several of these individuals, who so staunchly and proudly touted their religious convictions in public, would time and again lie to cover their tracks and disguise the real purpose behind the ID Policy.

      I'm glad we have such good Christians watching over the education of our children

    15. Re:good for Kansas by bogjobber · · Score: 1

      Well, from their viewpoint, they actually are interested in the future of their children. They're just stupid. They don't want all the godless liberals teaching their children about something that "isn't true."

    16. Re:good for Kansas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somewhat more telling that people more interested in ID are also more interested in serving on school boards.

      Nope. You don't get on the board by wanting it. You get there by being elected. These "grass roots" takeovers are normally done on "off" elections (ones without significat offices up for vote). They use the churches to do a get out the vote. So the question really is, "Why don't normal people vote in schoolboard only election?" That's because nothing normally goes wrong, so they don't bother. When something did go wrong, people turned up for the next election and fixed it.

    17. Re:good for Kansas by misanthrope101 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well, thinking that evolution is part of a Satanic plot to drag your children into the very pit of hell is somewhat motivational. I'd say that's more motivational than being merely interested in education for education's sake. They're envisioning the creation/evolution debate as a battle between God and Satan, with themselves being soldiers in God's army. Megalomania may make for more active citizens, but it still isn't healthy.

    18. Re:good for Kansas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is sex ed the only place we consider ignorance as a safety mechanism? You wouldn't teach driver's ed and refuse to give out information on what to do in slippery conditions to prevent kids from driving recklessly. Abstinence-only programs routinely misinform, distort, and outright lie about sex and safety. That's probably because their main focus is to prevent sin, not to keep kids safe.

      Perhaps he was voting for an sex education abstinence-only program that does not "misinform, distort, and outright lie about sex and safety"?

      Just a thought.

    19. Re:good for Kansas by khchung · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't teach driver's ed and refuse to give out information on what to do in slippery conditions to prevent kids from driving recklessly.


      More like, it is a driver's ed where the teacher tells you never to drive a car so you won't get into a crash. A swimming class where the teacher tells you never to go near water so you will never drown. A pilot class that tells you never to try to fly a plane, etc, etc.

      Simply being told to avoid an activity cannot be called an education about that activity.
      --
      Oliver.
    20. Re:good for Kansas by Copid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Perhaps he was voting for an sex education abstinence-only program that does not "misinform, distort, and outright lie about sex and safety"?
      The first criterion will be hard to meet. Kids come in misinformed and leave misinformed due to gaps in the curriculum. It's not directly misinforming them, but it's not exactly producing an informed graduating class. I would say that a "lie by omission" certainly counts when we're talking about matters involving physical safety.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  13. I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

    Science is the endeavor to explain what can be oberved. It does this by creating models which explain current observations and predict future results. It then tests these models by setting up scenarios in which the predictions can be determined to be accurate. In short, from a Christian perspective it's an attempt to understand the universe God created and how it works. I can imagine no greater subject of study than that of the works of God.

    Evolution is a scientific model. It looks at the current state of life, fossil records, and historical accounts and establishes a model of life which fits all thse observations. Each new finding tests the model, and it has several times been refined by new discoveries. The system of evolution is almost undeniably correct; it is difficult to argue that evolution can occur in the way it is described. The evolutionary history of various organisms is debateable, as there is always a chance that new findings will change the current version. That's how science works.

    So many of my fellow Christians seem to think that evolution is an attack on us and our beliefs. It's not. It is simply the result of rational consideration of the facts at hand. Science is not (well, should not be) malicious and has (should have) no interest in attacking religion, as the existence of diety is currently outside the reach of science.

    They also make the mistake of lumping everything they disagree with under the name "evolution". I've heard the Big Bang mentioned in discussions of evolution, even though it's part of a completely different field of science.

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    1. Re:I just don't get it... by nacturation · · Score: 4, Funny

      Heresy! We have a perfectly rational explanation. 6000 years ago God created the Earth. There were people on it and those people were bad. So He caused a flood and wiped out everyone but Noah's family. And now, generations later, we're the result of Noah's sons and daughters having sex with each other to repopulate the Earth. Now whether you believe in God or not, I'm sure you can agree that this is the most sensible explanation for Kansas.

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    2. Re:I just don't get it... by garcia · · Score: 1

      So many of my fellow Christians seem to think that evolution is an attack on us and our beliefs. It's not. It is simply the result of rational consideration of the facts at hand. Science is not (well, should not be) malicious and has (should have) no interest in attacking religion, as the existence of diety is currently outside the reach of science.

      There are plenty of Christians that believe that the Bible is the actual word of God and is not to be questioned. When the Bible says that life started directly by God's hand and everything has been the same since he created it, they believe exactly that.

      Now, other Christians, that aren't taught that the Bible is to be interpreted literally, might be able to understand as you do -- but that doesn't include *all* Christians.

    3. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to have a solid grasp on science and rational thinking in general. How is it that you're still a Christian, given that religion is superstitious, irrational, and non-provable?

    4. Re:I just don't get it... by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

      Everything you need to know is in the Bible. Everything else is temptation and devilry. Remember that Gal[ae]lio was arrested for using a 'diabolical instrument' (the telescope) and claiming that the earth revolved about the sun (heresy!)

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    5. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

      To give you a short answer: They see it as an assault on faith in God.

      God asks us to have faith in his existence and in his world. Studying it and attempting to understand it can be seen as a refusal to place faith in God and instead placing faith in man. (In the form of rational thought, I guess - I won't claim to fully understand the reasoning.) So science causes a lack of faith in God (I guess) and is therefore evil.

      In short: science is seen as indicating a lack of faith in God, and placing faith in God above all else is the most important aspect of Christian religions.

    6. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 2, Funny

      Noah didn't have any daughters, at least they aren't mentioned. Get your facts straight: his grandkids were the incestuous ones, getting it on with their first cousins. His sons' wives' pedigrees aren't known, or I can't recall them being mentioned.

      Tangent: first cousin incest isn't particularly risky and can be tolerated in the gene pool for several generations before it becomes an issue. With the genetic contributions of four families, it's not all that unrealistic.

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      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    7. Re:I just don't get it... by flynt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The reason is this.

      If evolution is true, you'd agree that God did not create Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, right?

      Well, that Adam and Eve story is the entire basis of Christianity, because that's where sin originated. If there is no original sin, then what was Jesus sent to save us from? If Jesus was just a man who was trying to preach love, he wouldn't be the savior of the world, whatever that means.

      So that's why Christians have to not believe evolution. If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.

      I agree completely with your points, I don't think scientists have an a priori "attack religion" mentality. If the observable data led people to believe that Christianity was true, of course scientists would believe it. A scientist is just someone who uses observation and experiments to get at the truth, not dogma.

    8. Re:I just don't get it... by Bastian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Christianity that you recognize reconciles easily with scientific discovery is not the Christianity practiced by Creationists.* This other form of Christianity includes a large amount of doctrine that simply cannot coexist with much of science, including evolutionary theory. Examples are: The world is 7,000 years old, humanity is the centerpiece of creation, the world as described in the Bible is the world as it has always been, etc.

      Really, I think the most important chafing point is the understanding that humans are somehow special - created in God's own image, whereas that's usually associated with evolution is that we're an unremarkable (except by our own measure) midpoint in a process of random chance that has been happening for billions of years and will happen for billions more.

      The second most important chafing point is that there is simply no way to reconcile evolution with Biblical literalism - to someone who is a Biblical literalist, the Bible is either true or it is false. It is God's word, and therefore must be 100% perfect - even one factual error, such as whether the earth is a few thousand or a few thousand thousand years old, calls the entire thing into question.

      For this kind of Christian, evolution (and cosmology) is worse than an attack on their beliefs - it's an attack on the entire foundation for their understanding of the world.

      *Just to put it on the table - Intelligent Design is a straw man. It's Creationism in a lab coat picked up at the local thrift store. The idea was cooked up shortly after Creationism was shot down by the US court as a way to try to submarine Creationism back into the school systems.

    9. Re:I just don't get it... by Chacham · · Score: 0

      And now, generations later, we're the result of Noah's sons and daughters having sex with each other to repopulate the Earth.

      The Bible does not list Noah had any daughters. It does however list Noah and his wife, his sons and their wives.

      You may make fun of it if you'd like, but at least don't misquote it. Otherwise, you're no different than the people you purport to be against.

    10. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      I guess I just don't see where science could be construed as a lack of faith. It's a desire to understand *how* the world works. If God wrote the laws of physics, shouldn't we consider learning and understanding the nature of those laws to be equivalent to studying the Bible? Both are the work of God.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    11. Re:I just don't get it... by nacturation · · Score: 1

      The Bible does not list Noah had any daughters. It does however list Noah and his wife, his sons and their wives. Good point. I must've been thinking of Adam and Eve.
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    12. Re:I just don't get it... by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

      Science is the endeavor to explain what can be oberved. It does this by creating models which explain current observations and predict future results. It then tests these models by setting up scenarios in which the predictions can be determined to be accurate. In short, from a Christian perspective it's an attempt to understand the universe God created and how it works.

      ...without stipulating that God made it so.

      The more stuff that science can explain, the less stuff that can fit under the catch-all explanation "God".

      This wasn't such a big problem (in modern times), until science started explaining stuff in a way that directly contradicts a literal reading of the Bible. E.G. evolution & fossil records vs creation
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    13. Re:I just don't get it... by GogglesPisano · · Score: 1

      Check out the documentaries Jesus Camp or Friends of God to see people determined to create some sort of Christian Taliban in the US. Truly chilling stuff.

      In recent years, opposition to Abortion, Gay Marriage, Evolution and Global Warming have moved from fringe social issues to central articles of faith for these people.

      I'm especially puzzled by the inclusion of Global Warming in the mix: how does a particular stance on climate change get included as a litmus test of Christian values? Is selling out to Big Oil now the eleventh commandment?

    14. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is you can't observe evolution. To further clarify, you can't observe macroevolution happening. You can see modifications of existing genetic information in an organism, but there haven't been ANY observable (seen in a lab, or in present day) mutations where brand new genetic information has been added to an organism.

      That's the issue with evolution. I think it's interesting how crazy people get when the slighest criticism of evolution is discussed. It almost makes you think science wants you to just blindly accept it and leave your brain at the door.

    15. Re:I just don't get it... by robbiethefett · · Score: 1

      imo, the problem lies in tradition. for the record, i was raised christian, and i was made to go to church until i was old enough to debate to no end the flaws of religion. my mother eventually just decided that i was not going to accept it, and let me stay home when she went to church. now, don't get me wrong, i DO think that spirituality is a good thing. in fact, i think it's spirituality that most christians lack. imo, religion takes a good thing--spirituality--and perverts it into a system of control. if one were to look back at history and the socio-economical clime of the times in which religion was most prevalent, i think one would find a direct correlation between the need for controlling mass populations and the persistence of religion. this being said, i think that the first part of the new testament; mathew, mark, luke, and john, are an excellent story that one should read, and understand the concepts of. however, like most fairy tales, it should not be taken literally. science may be able to prove or disprove a great many things, but that is not to say that one should not embrace spirituality as a basic motivation. i do what i feel is right, despite what cold, hard logic would lead me to believe. i.e. family comes before work, school, or anything else, even if it isnt necessarily a good idea in terms of convenience or economics. i guess what i'm trying to say is that zealots are bad, no matter what side they are on.

      --
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    16. Re:I just don't get it... by bunratty · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So that's why Christians have to not believe evolution. If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.
      Perhaps it's time to inform the Pope. But seriously, mainstream Christians (Pope included) have been saying that evolution and faith are completely compatible for many years.
      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    17. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A scientist is just someone who uses observation and experiments to get at the truth, not dogma." Guess you don't read anthropogenic global warming studies.

    18. Re:I just don't get it... by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, that Adam and Eve story is the entire basis of Christianity, because that's where sin originated. If there is no original sin, then what was Jesus sent to save us from? If Jesus was just a man who was trying to preach love, he wouldn't be the savior of the world, whatever that means.

      So that's why Christians have to not believe evolution. If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.


      Except for one problem. The majority of Christians belong to churches that don't, in fact, deny evolution. The key to all of this lies in the fact that a good many churches, including big ones like Catholicism, Lutheranism and Anglicanism, do not espouse Biblical literalism. Not every word of the Bible had to be a literal truth for the book to still be the word of God.

      This is another angle on this problem. Not only are these Creationists in Kansas, Dover and elsewhere trying to bring down science, they're also attacking other strains of Christianity.
      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    19. Re:I just don't get it... by FangVT · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

      [...]

      So many of my fellow Christians seem to think that evolution is an attack on us and our beliefs. It's not. It is simply the result of rational consideration of the facts at hand.

      [...]

      They also make the mistake of lumping everything they disagree with under the name "evolution". I've heard the Big Bang mentioned in discussions of evolution, even though it's part of a completely different field of science.

      The reason so many of them are opposed to science is that they have a gut understanding that ultimately religion cannot stand in the face of science. Arguably, all of human advancement has been due to rational thought, so we can expect that rational thought will continue to play a larger and larger role in the human condition. The realm of rational thought is science. The realm of religion is faith, and faith is irrational thought. In essence, science is not an attack on their beliefs, but rather it is an attack on all beliefs that are not supported by evidence. When it comes to beliefs that are not supported by evidence, belief in God is right there at the top of the list.

      Given all of that, I don't find it in the least surprising that many of the minds that are capable of accepting belief without evidence are also capable of conflating wildly different scientific disciplines. Weakness of the mind will show itself in many ways.

      Just to be clear, I'm not saying that belief in God implies weakness of the mind, I'm saying that weakness of the mind is likely to lead to acceptance of the unsupported allegations of religion. It's perfectly possible, also, for brilliant minds to be brainwashed into believing the unsupported allegations of religion.

    20. Re:I just don't get it... by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      When is the last time you saw an electron?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    21. Re:I just don't get it... by Chacham · · Score: 1

      Good point. I must've been thinking of Adam and Eve.

      Yep.

      I will point out, just in case you're interested, that Lev 20:17 in the KJV is mistranlated, and says "it is a wicked thing". It is a mistranslation because the word itself has no such meaning. It possible means "shame" here. Though, the normal translation is "kindness". IOW, brother and sisters is a no-no, but it's a kindness nonetheless. How? As you pointed out, Adam's children married each other. Because we all come from one family there is less rivalry. Can you imagine if there were different strains of humanity?

    22. Re:I just don't get it... by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      It's interesting that both Jews and Christians study the same story and come to different conclusions. Many Jews believe that the story can really be just a story and still use it to learn about god. They don't have to take it literally to get its meaning. So Adam and Eve teach sin and evolution is possible, all without losing faith in god.

    23. Re:I just don't get it... by flynt · · Score: 1

      Well I'd ask them my question then: If you don't literally believe that God created man in a perfect state, and that man subsequently chose to fall into sin as described in Genesis, then what was Jesus sent for?

    24. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      I'm a pseudo-watchmaker Christian. I believe in an old universe and evolution, but believe that there is something about us that was the goal of the whole thing. The Bible says we were created "in his image". I seriously doubt we look like God, so the resemblance is something other than physical...our souls, or some aspect of our souls (free will, immortality, etc). God tampers with the watch just enough to keep things going in a given direction without interfering too much in our ability to choose our own lives.

      After spending quite some time trying to wrap my head around the Big Bang, I'm fairly convinced there's a divine component there. It's probably just that the math is way over my head, but it strikes me as odd that we basically have to rearrange all the laws of physics in order to create a model which explains the initial expansion of the universe. "God did it" seems as plausible as "the core forces of physics were combined into a single force and matter and energy didn't behave the same way and somehow the entire universe escaped from its own gravity"

      I'm not one of those people to say "See, the world proves God exists" or anything like that. I just think that when we get so deep into theoretical science as the big bang equations take us, there's a lot of room left for divine influence. Right now that particular field is theory upon theory upon theory, trying to describe an event that hasn't been observed using concepts that can't be tested.

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      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    25. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If evolution is true, you'd agree that God did not create Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, right?

      Not necessarily. Not that when their son Cain fled after murdering his brother, he went out among other people. Adam and Eve couldn't have populated even a single village with children, so the other people came from somewhere.

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    26. Re:I just don't get it... by flynt · · Score: 1

      I'd also ask them as to how we're to divine which parts of the Bible are literal, and which aren't? Who is God talking to today that can tell us which parts we should live by? Is it just whichever fit in with people's worldview today regarding science, women's rights, etc? It sure seems that way.

    27. Re:I just don't get it... by iabervon · · Score: 1

      Well, you have to accept that the bible isn't literally true. But you can't really help but accept that the bible isn't literally true, because it contains Jesus giving parables, and either the contents of the parable aren't literally true or the frame narrative is actually false, because the frame says the contents were made up to illustrate a lesson.

      If the bible can have explicitly-marked parables, why can't the older portion have implicit parables? The Garden of Eden story makes sound theological and psychological sense, despite the fact that there are plenty of problems with the stories being literally true. But if you look at Genesis as a set of parables God told to the Israelites that lost a lot of the irrelevant details before they were recorded, it's not a bad explanation, considering that God didn't have laptops to hand out to all of the kids.

    28. Re:I just don't get it... by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

      That's a false dichotomy. Many Christians are perfectly capable of reading Adam and Eve as an allegorical myth describing how men, after being given free will by God, used that free will to turn away from God, and God didn't like it. Only those who think the Bible can only be interpreted literally word-for-word or else it's all a lie think otherwise.

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    29. Re:I just don't get it... by Critical+Facilities · · Score: 1

      If evolution is true, you'd agree that God did not create Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, right?

      Not necessarily. First of all, many people (clergy, theologians, etc) believe the story of Adam and Eve to be a parable . Even if one does choose to believe that Adam and Eve were real people, why is it impossible to believe that God created them through the process of evolution as s/he has done with all living things? Is it not possible that the authors of the parables/stories of Adam and Eve lacked the understanding or the ability to articulate HOW god made them? Could it not also be possible that despite being able to accurately describe HOW god created them, that they still existed even though they may have been created through the process of evolution (which again, is the process that god started)? While it's not something that I believe, I can see that a person might be able to make this leap of faith as easily as believing that they were made from dust.


      If there is no original sin, then what was Jesus sent to save us from?

      This is another one of those areas with many interpretations, even within the christian community. No one seems to be able to explain how Jesus' being "sent" to earth saved us from anything. As a recovering Catholic who endured 12 years of Catholic school and even has clergy in the family, no one has been able to articulate this idea. This is one of those, "god works in mysterious ways" areas that just doesn't cut the mustard for me (admitting that this is my choice to not accept this, not saying that no one should believe it). The point is, since there isn't a clear idea of the correlation between the existence of Original Sin and Jesus' arrival/departure from earth, and since Original Sin is still believed to exist (otherwise why would there be baptism?), why should the manner in which Original Sin is thought to have begun call into question whether christians still live their lives according to the major tenets of their faith?

      I guess I'm saying that just because it's possible that god made Adam and Eve through the process of evolution shouldn't necessarily be construed to mean that the message (literal or not) of their story shouldn't still hold up, nor should it mean that the ideals of the religion ("love thy neighbor", "thou shalt not kill", etc) should be somehow invalidated. I do not think that it is the goal of science to undo or disprove god. I think the point of science is to explore the unknown and try to understand it which often puts us in the realm of things that had previously been attributed to god. It is not at attempt to attribute these phenomena to someone/something OTHER than god, merely to understand the mechanics of the process and leave the individual the right to decided whether s/he believes that god is ultimately behind the process "turning the gears" or not.

      Just my opinion.

    30. Re:I just don't get it... by hedrick · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how large it actually is, but they're certainly active.

      It's not ignorance. Many fundamentalists are engineers or hard scientists. In general fundamentalists are committed to rationalism. They tend to be opposed to the more emotional versions of Christianity. Of course there are plenty of ignorant people out there, but that's true of all viewpoints. But the people they get their ideas from aren't ignorant.

      Rather, the concern is that the kind of interpretations that allow for evolution open the Bible to subjective interpretation. The same kind of techniques can be used to justify homosexuality, premarital intercourse, Jesus not being God, etc. And they're right about that. I really think that's the issue. However I judge approaches by whether they are consistent with the nature of the documents and the way the prophets and Jesus worked, not by whether they produce results that I like. Jesus spent much of his career fighting literalism, and the way he taught isn't what you'd expect if he wanted his teaching to turn into a new legalism. I'm particularly concerned because it gives people the wrong impression about Christianity's attitude towards science. While there were certainly incidents from time to time, in general Christianity supported (indeed enabled) the development of science. The war between science and religion is largely 19th Cent atheist propaganda. However current fundamentalists are making it look true.

    31. Re:I just don't get it... by DeathFromSomewhere · · Score: 1

      As more and more people start to realize that religion is a giant pile of lies, the tend to stop donating to the collection fund. This upsets the preachers who then start these ridiculous "grassroots" campaigns in an attempt to bring some of there flock of sheep back.

      --
      -1 overrated isn't the same thing as "I disagree".
    32. Re:I just don't get it... by flynt · · Score: 2, Informative

      My point is, the Christian story seems ultimately grounded in the fact that at some point, humans were "pefect beings", uncapable of sin. Then, at some precise moment, man *chose* to become a sinful creature. If you believe evolution, how can you reconcile those two things? Did evolution lead to sinless humans? Was the first sin really a woman eating an apple?

    33. Re:I just don't get it... by Rolgar · · Score: 1
      This is really only the belief of a subset of Christianity known as Fundamentalism. One of the fundamentals of Fundamentalism is that every word of the bible is literally true, especially the account of God creating the world in the first chapter of Genesis.

      Unfortunately for Fundamentalists, the second Chapter gives a second account of the creation story that conflicts with the first. The first says that humanity was created on the 6th day, after everything else (the animals and other creatures were created on days 4 and 5 I think). In the second account, God made Adam (Hebrew for man), then wanted to create a companion for him, so then created all of the animals, and when none were sufficient, created Eve (Hebrew for woman). So how do they reconcile this in Fundamentalism? I assume they must think when God created Adam on day six, he brought to him the animals created on earlier days, then made Eve, which doesn't fit the text, but does allow them to ignore that their fundamentals are broken. The reason that the Hebrews had two accounts of creation were that each explained something important about humanity. The first said that we are the pinnacle of God's creative act. The second, that men and women are complementary parts of a whole, made to be together.

      To bad we all have to live with the results of bad Fundamentalist theology.

    34. Re:I just don't get it... by oyenstikker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Where does the Bible say that everything has been the same since he created it?

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    35. Re:I just don't get it... by martyros · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

      Well, speaking as someone who goes to church, there are a couple of issues here.

      First of all, there are the following two tendencies:

      1. The tendency of people to associate "science" with "proven to be true".
      2. The tendency of scientifically minded people to associate "science" with "naturalism" -- i.e., that science looks only for naturalistic explanations for all phenomena.

      Combine these, and you get the idea that "truth" == "naturalism"; or that science has somehow proven that there is no supernatural. I'm sure if you look at posts here on slashdot, you will find this attitude quite widespread. What's more, children are going to school and basically being taught that "science" and "logic" go hand in hand, but that "religion" is some other random thing that people just make up. Naturally, religious parents object to their children being taught this.

      The fact is that either #1 is true, or #2 is true, but they cannot both be 100% true unless there really is no such thing as the supernatural. I think religious people would be happy if one of two things happened:

      • Scientists were more humble with their claims; i.e., they said up front, "Scientific theories are based on the assumption that the supernatural never interferes with human events. If there is a supernatural world that interferes with the natural world, some of our theories may be totally wrong."
      • Scientists were willing to use the scientific method to entertain supernatural explanations.

      In fact, it looks from the excise of "natural" from the definition of science, the Kansas board was trying to do do just that. (For an example of someone using the scientific method to test supernatural explanations, see the story of Gideon.)

      The second factor has to do with people who prefer a simple, literal interpretation of the Bible. Genesis says, simply, "God did x... the morning and the evening were the first day. God did y.... the morning and the evening were the second day." It sounds to them like the evolutionary description, or anything that implies that the universe is more than 10,000 years old, is contradicts that. They feel like they have to chose either the Bible or science. Science doesn't give them a sense of purpose, or explain the meaning of life or why it's so hard; science never helped their marriage or saved them from self-destructive behaviors; science doesn't satisfy their religious longings. The Bible does. So, they chose the Bible.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    36. Re:I just don't get it... by Silentknyght · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution. It depends on what you mean by "the Church". I am a Roman Catholic and intelligent design has never, ever been broached as a topic by any of the priests that deliver mass at my church. Additionally, this creationism vs evolution vs intelligent design debate has never once surfaced in my family, entirely Roman Catholic, or with any of my Roman Catholic friends. I'd be curious if the ID / creationism "push" originates from a singular christian denomination...
    37. Re:I just don't get it... by flynt · · Score: 1

      "Blacks are twice as likely as whites (62% vs. 31%) to say that the Bible is the actual word of God and is to be taken literally, and this is significantly higher than among Hispanics (38%) and other non-whites (32%) as well."

      http://pewforum.org/docs/index.php?DocID=29

      That's a lot of fundamentalists in my opinion.

    38. Re:I just don't get it... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

      You can see modifications of existing genetic information in an organism, but there haven't been ANY observable (seen in a lab, or in present day) mutations where brand new genetic information has been added to an organism.

      Um... yeah, there has. Moreover, it's obvious - almost any mutation will add information in an information-theoretic sense to an organism.

      Now, you're trying to imply that "improvements" in some sense haven't been observed. And that's false, too. There are plenty of examples of bacteria that evolve both antibiotic resistance and compensatory mutations that allow them to compete just fine when they aren't under pressure from antibiotics.

      This isn't a trivial point. Mutations that have the effect of producing antibiotic resistance have been happening since long before there were antibiotics. But much of the time they weren't advantageous and thus never achieved much frequency. Meanwhile, mutations that could compensate for any disadvantages of the resistance genes were happening, too, but (a) the compensation would generally be a disadvantage without the resistance gene, and (b) since both types of mutations are quite uncommon, rarely (if ever) would the twain meet in the same bacterium.

      But, under massive environmental pressure, antibiotic-resistance genes have become practically mandatory in certain environments - environments that are otherwise attractive, like weakened people. So in some populations practically all the individuals have resistance genes... and these resistant strains are now competing internally. Now the frequency of resistant genes are common enough that, when a compensatory mutation arises, it's very likely be paired with the resistance, unlike a century ago.

      Now you've got a bacterium with (at least) two mutations, one that confers resistance, and another that lets it compete even when the antibiotic isn't around, with non-resistant strains. A powerful and otherwise unlikely advantage, but one that's predicted by evolutionary theory... and sadly we're seeing it actually happening now.

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    39. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      I've been appalled lately by some of the things I've seen, and some of Jesus Camp portrays that. People are teaching their children an unrealistic and unbalanced view of the world, thus setting them up for failure. Either they will retreat into their religion and use it as a shield, trying to push the world away with it and not fulfilling the comission of Christianity, or they will abandon it and

      As for the four issues you mentioned:

      Abortion: I oppose it on the basis that I believe the fetus is a human being with a right to life that should only come into question should the mother's life be threatened.

      Gay marriage: I both support and oppose it. As a Christian I have to say that I believe gay marriage is a contradiction in terms; gays cannot be married because marriage has a very specific definition to me and I will never personally recognize a homosexual union as being the same as what I have with my wife. On the other hand, as an American I see a very clear injustice in the fact that any heterosexual couple can marry and get significant financial and legal benefits, regardless of how they then behave in that marriage. I reconcile these two positions by advocating civil unions that join any two consenting adults with all the rights and privileges of marriage, and moving marriage to being a purely religious thing so that the religious communities can work it out for themselves.

      evolution: My stance should be obvious.

      Global warming: It really doesn't matter whether global warming is happening or whether we caused it. Most Christians grow up hearing about how we should be good stewards of all God's gifts to us; we should manage our money well, take good care of our property, and treat our families with love and respect. This world is also God's gift and we should treat it with the same care. That means keeping the air and water clean and doing our best to preserve the natural order of things.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    40. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me get this straight...

      ... God created Adam and Eve in his image, and until they disobeyed him, they lived in a utopian jungle-like environment and ate fruit from the trees...

      ... Some Christian Groups are fighting to block a theory that would say their ancient ancestors lived in jungle-like environments and ate fruit from trees...

      In an unrelated story, God gave this legislation 4 opposable thumbs down.

    41. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      Really, I think the most important chafing point is the understanding that humans are somehow special - created in God's own image, whereas that's usually associated with evolution is that we're an unremarkable (except by our own measure) midpoint in a process of random chance that has been happening for billions of years and will happen for billions more.

      There are things that man creates that require a process and use natural bahaviors to facilitate manufacture. We grow crystals using the same process found in nature, but influence that growth at key points with catalysts and other devices to shape the crystals.

      Evolution could be the same thing. In order to reach the end result he wanted, God might have taken a more subtle approach than clapping his hands and having everything spring into being. We would be no less "created", just created by a different means than we would expect.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    42. Re:I just don't get it... by denoir · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Yes they have but in fact the fundamentalists are the more honest ones. The problem with non-literal interpretations of the bible is that there is absolutely no reference of which parts can be taken literally and which are supposed to be interpreted metaphorically.

      Stoning your children for talking back to you impractical? Well, let's call that a metaphor. Being nice to other fellow human being sounds good? Well, let's take that one literally. The cherry picking of the good stuff (according to current moral standards) just shows how meaningless the whole thing is.

      Religious moderation is in a sense a betrayal of both faith and reason. The pope chooses to accept evolution because the other position is untenable in the face of scientific evidence. Yet he claims to be certain of the virgin birth of Mary, the holy trinity and other equally nonsensical stuff.

      It is not because of the bible that we have a moral society - it is despite of it. Had we been following the good book we would have still have slavery. Make no mistake, the slaveholders in the south were on the winning side of the theological argument.

      So why not see it for what it is - iron age philosophy that is for the most part unsuitable for the 21st century and that doesn't contain any remarkably novel scientific or moral insights.

    43. Re:I just don't get it... by oni · · Score: 1

      If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.

      Only because *they* (the christians) have backed themselves into that corner. You know, the bible also says that god laid the foundation of the Earth, and it makes references to the four corners of the Earth etc. Well, obviously the Earth must be flat right? If it were a sphere then the bible would say, "god created the core of the Earth."

      So why don't christians believe that the Earth is flat (and I'm sure that some do, but those have got to be less than 0.001%). The majority of christians look at bible passages about foundations and corners and they accept that these things are metaphors. Just like how jesus said, "I am the vine, you are the branches" it's a metaphor. He wasn't actually a tree.

      But for some reason, Christians have painted themselves into a corner on the creation thing. They could have taken it as a metaphor like they do with everything else and then we wouldn't have this stupid, waste of time evolution vs. ID war.

      I just don't get it.

      And btw, while I'm ranting, I know that Richard Dawkins is an intelligent and articulate scientist. I've read two of his books. But the guy is a jerk and I think he actually makes things worse by ridiculing creationists. Contrast Dawkins with Carl Sagan. In his book _The Demon-Haunted World_ Sagan makes mention of his believe that even when you are dealing with people who are wrong and ignorant, you need to treat them civilly because doing otherwise escalates things. Dawkins should learn that. Calling IDers idiots (if though they are) just makes them feel all warm and martyry inside and encourages them.

    44. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      I don't believe humans were ever perfect. The Bible doesn't say that (that I can recall) and, seeing as we sinned at our first temptation, I doubt perfect describes Eve or Adam very well.

      There was a point at which man was no longer just another animal, but a human being. I believe that is when Man first had a soul, which is what God is interested in. It wouldn't be until we had souls that God communicated with us on any meaningful level. Without communication we couldn't have known the rules, therefore we couldn't willfully disobey them (sin). So there would be somewhere in there a definite starting point that sin was possible.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    45. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      Not a single denomination, but certainly a collection of them. The push largely comes from evangelical protestants. I suppose I would fall into that group as it is defined by most; I'm definitely a Protestant and I do follow most of the ideals of the evangelicals. The difference is I'm not a fundamentalist, and it shows any time such issues come up at church. There are some people who really wish me and my rational answers would go away :)

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    46. Re:I just don't get it... by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      >I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

      I have a theory about this. I'll try and condense it.
      Let's say you have two populations: one who believes in religion/god X, and another who believes something different. Call them X, and notX.
      Let's say, further, that the notX group is doing 'better' -- more money, more influence, more hookers and blow, whatever you want to define 'better' as.
      How does the group X rationalize this?
      There are only two possibilities: the X group is wrong, and their god doesn't exist, or (they believe) the notX group is being helped by the Forces of Darkness, whatever those are. If god X is on the side of the X group, well, they'd *have* to be doing well, right? so the only possible way someone else could be doing better is if they are agents of the Enemy of god X.
      Once you've made that step, it's easy to demonize anyone who believes differently than you.

      Many evangelical Christians loathe Hollywood: money, fame, beauty, and pure evil (to hear them speak of it.) Many radical Muslims loathe the West in general for exactly the same reasons.

      If you are religious out of fear, you regard anyone else who even appears to challenge your belief system, even if it's just by the way they live, as being threatening and an enemy. Note the 'out of fear' -- there are many good religious people. I hope I'm one of them. There are also nasty atheists. In the end it's not about the religion, it's about why a person takes a belief. People who can't handle their beliefs being challenged react aggressively to suppress those challenges, because they threaten the person's choice in belief, and by so doing, the person's self-worth. Groups of people like this, are mobs, and dangerous.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    47. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod this up, perfect post.

    48. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      Many evangelical Christians loathe Hollywood: money, fame, beauty, and pure evil (to hear them speak of it.) Many radical Muslims loathe the West in general for exactly the same reasons.

      I loathe Hollywood because they're the frontrunners in the ruination of our culture as we try ever-harder to emulate Paris Hilton and keep track of which marriages are ending this week. It's full of uncreative, untalented people who play to the lowest common denominator so they can make the biggest buck, and contribute to the ignorance of the population in doing so. It's the culture that brought us reality TV and pop stars who all look the same (bleached blonde bimbo clones and white hip hop boy bands, for example), and helped usher in a new age of rampant, wasteful consumerism that ignores the well being of the individual and the community in favor of making sure everyone has the latest MP3 player, cell phone, game console, clothing fashion, and diet book.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    49. Re:I just don't get it... by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      So that's why Christians have to not believe evolution. If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.
      You make a very good point. I do believe that's why _some_ Christians choose to be ignorant. I also know that a lot of Christian religions find evolution completely compatible. One explanation I was given was this:

      "It says in the bible that God created the heavens and the earth in 6 days. How do we know how long one of God's days is? If the solar system never existed, why would God base his day/night cycle on a silly measure like how fast the third planet from the sun in a solar system that he hadn't yet created rotated? For all we know one of God's days could be millions or billions of years."

      That makes a lot of sense when you think about it.
      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    50. Re:I just don't get it... by pagaboy · · Score: 1

      Except for one problem. The majority of Christians belong to churches that don't, in fact, deny evolution. The key to all of this lies in the fact that a good many churches, including big ones like Catholicism, Lutheranism and Anglicanism, do not espouse Biblical literalism. Not every word of the Bible had to be a literal truth for the book to still be the word of God. ...particularly given that, in my experience at least, Genesis is not generally subtitled "A thesis. By God. How I created everything. For the benefit of 21st Century Scientists".

      I mean, modernity is quaint and all that, but imposing a historical scientific reading on a book like Genesis is pure silliness.
    51. Re:I just don't get it... by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Well, that Adam and Eve story is the entire basis of Christianity, because that's where sin originated. If there is no original sin, then what was Jesus sent to save us from? If Jesus was just a man who was trying to preach love, he wouldn't be the savior of the world, whatever that means.

      Technically, no.

      This is not problematic in that the bible does not necessitate Adam and Eve being the -first- human beings (in fact strongly suggests otherwise by discussion of creation of a wider number of "them", male and female previously in Genesis, as well as leaving the question of Cain's wife's origin unspecified).

      As of the time of the New Testament, which is when salvation from sin becomes relevant (eternal life was not even offered to man before then), the "official answer" of Christianity would be that all others would have died due to the Flood other than Adam and Eve's decendants through Noah. Hence, if Original Sin applies from Adam (note "sin" is not "immorality" per se, it is specifically -disobedience to God-), it applies to all humans remaining today.

      The deep answer here is much more interesting, but the preceding simple answer should suffice for advocacy purposes.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    52. Re:I just don't get it... by DrXym · · Score: 1
      I don't understand why such a large portion of the Church is opposed to science and evolution.

      Because put simply, the Bible says or implies one thing and then science promptly demonstrates it to be utterly false or baseless. Think floods, stars, geological time, orbits, fossils, evolution etc.

      Some people can't cope with that. When it comes down to it they'd rather believe the literal word of a book cobbled together from thousands of years of superstition than what facts or reality might otherwise say.

    53. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard the Big Bang mentioned in discussions of evolution, even though it's part of a completely different field of science.

      The whole "evolution" debate is really about the validity of a literal interpretation of the Christian creation mythology (it's worth noting that if the creation mythology is not interpreted "literally" then it doesn't actually provide any useful information - it can mean whatever someone wants it to mean). Although advances in biological science relating to evolution played a role, it was really advances in physics relating to astronomy (e.g. Newton) that moved popular thinking away from a "literal" interpretation of the Christian creation mythology.

      The key point here is that, for all but a few religious extremists, the "evolution" debate is over. The debate of our time is the debate of heaven and hell (divine reward and punishment). These days most religions, specifically Christianity, focus on people getting what they "deserve" - usually after they die. It is this focus on divine reward and punishment that is being called into question by modern advances in science.

      There are huge numbers of Christians that really believe that after they die they will get what they "deserve" in some absolute sense. It is biology (along with computer science) that is beginning to call this into question. As biology and computer science allow us to understand the nature of consciousness, and "free will" in particular, the popular beliefs that people people "deserve" to be rewarded or punished based on their actions will have to be abandoned.

      That is not to say that human society will abandon reward and punishment as a means of modifying individual behavior. Society certainly has collective goals that can be furthered by modifying individual behavior. The notion that people are "good" or "bad" in some absolute literal sense will, however, have to be abandoned by most people - in the same way that a literal interpretation of the Christian creation mythology has been abandoned by most people.

    54. Re:I just don't get it... by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      There are some great reasons to loathe Hollywood, and I think you've hit a bunch on the head. To that, I'd add that they're distracting people from critical issues -- the idea that more people watch American Idol than vote for the freaking President is just appalling.
      My point is that many evangelical people of any faith, and even some atheists, set up a dichotomy with themselves labelled as 'good' and anyone who opposes them necessarily being 'bad' -- and if the people in the 'bad' camp are outcompeting the people in the 'good' camp, well, that means they must have sold their souls to whatever uncompromising evil the person making the judgments believes in.

      By the way, you should read some Neil Postman. I recommend "How To Watch The TV News" and "Amusing Ourselves To Death". I think, given your comment, you'd appreciate what he had to say about entertainment and its effect on Western thought and culture.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    55. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "absolutely no reference of which parts can be taken literally and which are supposed to be interpreted metaphorically."

      Huh. I wonder if you could still derive value from it by taking the whole darn thing metaphorically.

      (Hint: The answer is "Yes.")

      Run Christianity in a thought-experiment sandbox. The principles are pretty sound.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    56. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If evolution is true, you'd agree that God did not create Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, right?

      Not necessarily.

      Assumptions:
      God alone created the world.
      Adam and Eve came into being on this world.

      From this, it can be derived that God, directly or indirectly, caused Adam and Eve to exist. The exact mechanism used is not relevant to the message of the story.

      Well, that Adam and Eve story is the entire basis of Christianity, because that's where sin originated.

      Actually, I think the point was that free will originated with Adam and Eve. The capacity for sin derives from knowledge, because without knowledge, any wrongdoing cannot be willful. Thus, eating the fruit from the tree of knowledge removes your ability to live in blissful innocence and allows you to learn and grow, in ways that may be good or bad. All human creations spring from the tree of knowledge, and these creations are not in and of themselves good or evil. It is only when humans act of their own free will that sin can exist.

      If there is no original sin, then what was Jesus sent to save us from?

      "Original sin" can be thought of as many things, but one way to look at it is the sum of all transgressions of humanity. It can be hard to move forward and do good things for the world with thousands of years of violence, oppression, and intolerance on your shoulders, so absolving people of the burden of that sin can allow them to start fresh while acknowledging that they come from a legacy of sin.

      If Jesus was just a man who was trying to preach love, he wouldn't be the savior of the world, whatever that means.

      Exactly what Jesus was or was not is something that took a few hundred years to hammer out, and the eventual compromise is more a result of the limits of human understanding than actuality. What Jesus truly saved was not "the world," but religion. By incorporating elements from other systems of beliefs into Judaism, he was able to show that religion could grow as society changed, allowing people to shed the old ways when they no longer had relevance in modern society. As a people grow, so must their beliefs, otherwise society and religion will be incompatible, rife with hypocrisy and corruption, as is once again becoming the case.

      So that's why Christians have to not believe evolution. If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.

      Christians don't have to believe or not believe anything (just look at all of the different sects that have split off because of differences in opinion). The problem with evolution, or really any other large-scale scientific theory, is that it doesn't fit with a purely literal interpretation of "God's words," which are inflexible and unchanging even though every translation and even many transcriptions differ from each other on major points. Once you tug at any one thread, the whole thing starts to unravel. Reason would dictate that this interpretation is therefore not valid, but those who hold faith above reason may come to the conclusion that it is in fact the entire universe outside the scope of their understanding that is not valid.

      I agree completely with your points, I don't think scientists have an a priori "attack religion" mentality. If the observable data led people to believe that Christianity was true, of course scientists would believe it. A scientist is just someone who uses observation and experiments to get at the truth, not dogma.

      Truth is an illusion. It is a compelling one, and one that always seems close at hand, but it is an unattainable quantity. Both science and religion attempt to get us closer to that truth, but neither one can be successful. Both are valid when one does not assume that either contains absolute truths, and therefore understands that the pursuit of truth involves continually questioning our understanding and applying it to new situations. Faith is there to sustain us through the times when we cannot reconcile our observations with our understanding, not to keep us from furthering our understanding.

      But what do I know, I'm an engineer, not a theologian.

    57. Re:I just don't get it... by robbiethefett · · Score: 1

      i am not a physicist, but i'm pretty sure that the laws of mathematics work flawlessly as you work backwards in time untill you hit the singularity. theres a theory called 'm theory' that has a pretty neat sounding explanation for the singularity. as i understand it, m theory states that there are an infinite number of universes that exist within a multiverse. the universes inside the multiverse are sort of amoeba looking membranes kinda floating around, and the edges of these membranes can, and do, collide with one another, creating off chute universes. again, i am not a physicist, and im not sure if im grasping the concept correctly, but it sounds to me like a plausible explanation for the big bang. as i understand it, each of these universes that make up the multiverse each have different laws of physics, so in m theory, our laws of physics would have been created by the collision and combination of those two sets of laws that ruled the universes that clashed to create ours. i apologize to any physicists reading this that want to bash my head against a wall for butchering their elegant theories, and i admit that i really dont know enough about the subject to even open my mouth, but since we are debating something that will likely never be resolved, i thought i'd throw my wild conjectures out there too.

      --
      "Luke, you've switched off your targeting computer, what's wrong?"
    58. Re:I just don't get it... by Annoyed+broccoli · · Score: 1

      If evolution is true, you'd agree that God did not create Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, right?

      I will agree that God didn't create a place on Earth called "Garden of Eden", and didn't create a physical white male named Adam, didn't physically extract a physical rib from him and didn't physically turned that physical rib into a physical Caucasian female with physical long blond locks.

      I will agree that God created all this in a meta-physical world. Now if you can think outside of the box, and beyond the Earth, you can ask yourself some profound metaphysical questions: Are Adam and Eve representative of the people of the Earth, or of any other planets bearing intelligent life? Is the Original Sin limited to the Earth, or is it universal? Does the sacrifice of Jesus only saves us human, or does it save people from other planets as well? If so, why did Jesus came specifically to Earth? Is he visiting the other worlds as well?

      Taking the Bible to the letter, whether you're an atheist or a fundamentalist evangelical, kind of restrict the thought process. One group will read the Bible and declare it a bunch of hogwash. The other group will say it's the unquestionable Word of God transcribed in its magnificent purity.

      The rest of us will read it, close the book, and start will thinking: What's the real meaning? How does that fit with my understanding of the world? How do I reconcile the notion of a universe created in 6 days, while living in a planet that was formed 4.5 billions years ago?

      That's some serious paradoxes that are so fascinating to resolve if one keeps an open mind. If you are a fundamentalist evangelical, it's easy: Ignore the physical reality, and the paradox is resolved: God is everything. If you're an atheist: Easy also. Remove God and the paradox is resolved too.

      Personally, I choose the hard way. By definition, it's not always easy. But I do believe I the learning, questioning, yearning, praying, make me a better man.

      (PS) For an example of a man of God who believed strongly in evolution, check http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Teilhard_de_Ch ardin

    59. Re:I just don't get it... by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you believe evolution, how can you reconcile those two things?

      Are you serious? The question is easily answered. Humans became capable of sinning when they became capable of differentiating right from wrong. A dog can maul a child, but that's not since because it's just an anmimal and doesn't know better. The same act, for a human, is a sin because he should know better than to senselessly kill a child.

      The creation story in Genesis gives a description of (among other things) man's evolution to something greater than the animals. When a suitable match for Adam is sought for among the animal kingdom, none is found. Man was above the animals at that point. The serpent can represent man's constant innate desire to return to eschew morality and descend into animal-like behavior, satisfying various lusts rather than being a self-controlled, reasoning being.

      The inability for humans to truly live up to our potential of living selflessly and righteously ends up being our curse. Sin is inherent in the race and is something none of us can overcome on our own. Thus, our Creator provides us with a free way to achieve the next stage in our evolution if we will simply make the effort to overcome to overcome our sin. Those who reject this offer and who choose to simply live by their own desires are evolutionary dead-ends and will ultimately be destroyed.

      Evolution is like God's little science experiment to make independant, reasoning beings with which he can commune.

      (I've probably pissed off antitheists and Kansas by now. Wooo!)

      --
      Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
    60. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      So you should not call yourself a Christian, then. You're a non-believer. You've simply redefined the word "Christian" to mean whatever is convenient to you. You're as much of a Christian as the KKK who claims they want America to be a Christian nation.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    61. Re:I just don't get it... by denoir · · Score: 2

      Huh. I wonder if you could still derive value from it by taking the whole darn thing metaphorically.
      Ok, so we shouldn't take the golden rule ("Do to others as you would have them do to you.") literally? And what values do you suggest we derive from the instructions of stoning apostates, homosexuals, adulturers, people that work on the sabbath etc?

      Run Christianity in a thought-experiment sandbox. The principles are pretty sound.
      Which principles? The vengeful god or the loving god? The instructions for the murder of those that don't follow the laid out rules or the instructions to forgive and forget? On what grounds do you suggest we pick the principles from what is a very inconsistent text?
    62. Re:I just don't get it... by flynt · · Score: 1

      The rest of us will read it, close the book, and start will thinking: What's the real meaning? How does that fit with my understanding of the world? How do I reconcile the notion of a universe created in 6 days, while living in a planet that was formed 4.5 billions years ago?

      Agreed completely. The problem is, then we get 2 billion different interpretations of what the "real meaning" is, one for each person who takes this route. That is *not* actually a problem, sorry. It would be, in my opinion, a beautiful thing to have 2 billion different interpretations, and everyone sharing them with each other in a respectful manner, much of this is happening in this thread right now!

        The problem is when some of these "real meanings" are close enough that people form ideological groups around them with the intent of furthering their narrow views. This can lead to hate, anger, violence, and death.

      I love personal interpretations, it's all we have. But sometimes what follows is a closed-mindedness that your interpretation is the only right one, and that all others must change.

      I'm not like that, I don't feel you're like that, but I think a lot of people *are* like that, and that's what I dislike.

    63. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      An no, the principles are NOT pretty sound. What's so smart about persecuting homosexuals, stoning women who cheat on their husbands, and all those other principles of Christianity? Or did not just happen to pass over those principles when you were cherry-picking the bible?

      Why don't you state all the points that you disagree with the bible, each and every time you call yourself a Christian? Or make a web page that says which principles you agree with and disagree with, and point to that whenever you mis-use the word "Christian" to describe yourself? Otherwise you're just purposefully misleading people (and yourself) when you call yourself a "Christian".

      -Don

      --
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    64. Re:I just don't get it... by zenyu · · Score: 1

      One of the fundamentals of Fundamentalism is that every word of the bible is literally true, especially the account of God creating the world in the first chapter of Genesis.

      No, fundamentalists believe every word in the version of the bible authorized by Kind James of England. King James lifted the death penalty on importing English language versions of the bible written in Geneva by protestant refugees of the reign of the Catholic Queen Mary of England. But the death penalty for importing these bibles (or printing them locally) was only lifted so long as the copies didn't have footnotes or alternative translations along with some other conditions.

      For a while what is now called the King James bible was also known as the "Geneva bible without notes" or the "Authorized Version". In fact it was much worse than the Geneva bible because the authorized version had to conform with Church of England orthodoxy rather than the most likely meaning of the words on the page whenever it was possible to twist the meaning of a passage to either establish the church, even though Jesus was very much against churches and temples, or to establish the rule of tirants (see James' title). Despite the fact that it was one of the worst translations of it's time and is the absolute worst today for deciphering the original meaning in the Hebrew and Greek, the fundamentalist still cling to it as their idol.

      I think it is the height of hypocricy for the fundamentalists to call themselves Christians, as they oppose every basic principle of the religion. The members of the "700 Club" are no more Christians than Osama bin Laden is a space cowboy from the Mars colony. Unfortunately, I think the people who follow the snake-oil salesmen of "fundamentalist christianity" are a result of our piss-poor educational system producing infantalized adults who seek out anyone who will tell them how to organize their lives and the piss-poor educational system is self-sustaining now because the snake-oil salesmen know that to keep their flock they need to keep them and their children down and have been extreemely effective in hobbling schools that attempt to break away from the low standards of yesteryear.

    65. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I'm not getting into this with you again. Your discussion has no value.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    66. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Try a FIFO sort. IE: The more recently espoused principles are the better ones.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    67. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      OK, again: I'm not getting into this with you. You've got your bigotry to keep you warm at night, so you have no need for my discussion.

      "Otherwise you're just purposefully misleading people (and yourself) when you call yourself a "Christian"."

      I am not responsible for your false premises.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    68. Re:I just don't get it... by khallow · · Score: 1

      Nobody buys into this. The Bible is full of inherent contradictions and it was written long ago. That makes it wide open to interpretation as metaphor. And your comment about slavery is incorrect. The Bible was notoriously used both for and against slavery. Following the Bible could have gone either way. As it were, a considerable portion of the people most against slavery were usually deeply religious (eg, quakers, abolitionists in the States).

    69. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed completely. The problem is, then we get 2 billion different interpretations of what the "real meaning" is, one for each person who takes this route. That is *not* actually a problem, sorry. It would be, in my opinion, a beautiful thing to have 2 billion different interpretations, and everyone sharing them with each other in a respectful manner, much of this is happening in this thread right now!

      You're spot on. The thing is, through our journey of life, we all come up with our own answers. And it doesn't mean we all have to agree on everything, but if at least we could respect each other, and learn from one another instead of fighting... I'm sure I'm not the first one to say that, and I won't be the last!

      To your point specifically, on thing I appreciate in the Catholic Church, is to have the Pope to have the ultimate say in interpreting the scriptures. It doesn't mean that I have to agree with everything he says, but at least I know where the official line is.

      At the end of the day, spirituality should be something personal, not some kind of mob exercise. It is sad that too many religious leaders of all faiths abuse of their leadership to advance their own mindset. Their job should be to help people find their own answers. It's fine if they want to share their own conclusions, but it should be some kind of FYI, not the final answer.

      I love personal interpretations, it's all we have. But sometimes what follows is a closed-mindedness that your interpretation is the only right one, and that all others must change. I'm not like that, I don't feel you're like that, but I think a lot of people *are* like that, and that's what I dislike. These people my friend, are what we call "bigots". They exist in all creeds. I hope there aren't as many as you think, but they are bloody noisy, I'll grant you that!
    70. Re:I just don't get it... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      IIRC the conservative Lutheran denominations believe in biblical inerrancy. The Missouri Synod and Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod are examples of these. ELCA, the largest in the USA, is more liberal. There's also conservative Catholic movements who disavow anything the mainline church did starting with Vatican II, and conservative elements in the Anglican church as well (see the flap over the gay bishop), though I can't comment on their believes in inerrancy.

      I'm ex-Lutheran.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    71. Re:I just don't get it... by metalcup · · Score: 1

      Why has the parent been modded troll? Don't mod him up if you don't agree with his/her position; what the parent has said is aggressive, but it is hardly inflammatory.. sheesh!

      --
      "Laziness is an optimisation protocol"
    72. Re:I just don't get it... by ciggieposeur · · Score: 1

      By definition, science MUST look to natural explanations of phenomena. If the supernatural can be measured and tested, then it is no longer supernatural.

      Personally, I think that people should stop conflating the feeling of "sacred and/or sublime" with the word "supernatural". Scientific atheists have no trouble with feeling or honoring the sacred; it is religious people who assume that the entire domain of the Platonic Good belongs only to them.

    73. Re:I just don't get it... by denoir · · Score: 1

      The abolitionists and quakers cherry picked what they liked. The bible however is if read literally pretty clear on slavery. And Jesus, this supposedly perfect moral role model, never once spoke up against it. It doesn't mean that the bible is an evil book - just a very outdated one that has little relevance today. The science and ethics that is proposed in it is a product of its time. Today it holds a cultural and historical value but nothing more.

    74. Re:I just don't get it... by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Well, that Adam and Eve story is the entire basis of Christianity, because that's where sin originated. If there is no original sin, then what was Jesus sent to save us from? If Jesus was just a man who was trying to preach love, he wouldn't be the savior of the world, whatever that means.

      So that's why Christians have to not believe evolution. If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.


      I've never felt comfortable with Christainy or with the concept of sin. What is sin? Anything God doesn't like. Who says what God doesn't like? Priests/Preachers/little old ladies in the back of the church (you know who I mean.) I believe in a supreme being that created the universe. I've not come to a conclusion if that being just started the universe or if the being is the universe or if the universe was spawned from other universes and we are just by products, or if the supreme being is actively playing with the universe or us. I think that we'd be below the notice of the supreme being for the most part. Religion is about enforcing a set moral code on your populance. When you have a religious people following the basic morals of your religion then you don't need a police state. It's always been non practical to deploy the kinds of police states slashdot likes to theorize about. Religious states are the closest to a mental police state where everyone monitors everyone else for obeying the rule set. This is why people like things like the ten commandments. Really, we'd like 5 now a days : don't steal, don't kill other citizens, don't rape, and don't commit assault or battery, and behave yourselves! Your average person can't remember more than 4-5 rules anyway so you shouldn't expect them to be able to be able to follow 10. I can't wait until we build God or something like John Ringo's Mother that could track every living thing on the planet. We could then slip in 1 rule for people to remember don't do anything that Mother wouldn't like. Why? Because Mother could instantly fry any one's ass on the planet. That was the old school reason for following God. How long will it take folks to build one to enforce their rule set on everyone else?

    75. Re:I just don't get it... by cparker15 · · Score: 1

      it's just an anmimal and doesn't know better

      So, what do you have to say about all of the non-human animals that can and constantly do distinguish between right and wrong?

      A simple example: My cats know that they're not supposed to sleep on my clean clothes as I'm folding them and putting them away. However, when I catch them in the act, they know I'm upset with them even if I don't do or say a thing. They'll immediately jump off of the clothes when I enter the room and give me that leery look. The same happens when I get home and find them digging through a tipped-over trash can, on the kitchen table/counter, or any other thing they know they're not supposed to be doing.

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    76. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you the sole prophet of that interpretation?

      My view is the opposite, the most recent are the worse, so who is right, me or you? I think it's me. You think it's you.

      At this point, there's aboslutely nowhere we can go, since there is no "divine" guidance to lead us about who is right and who is wrong.

      So let's fight a war, and the winner's idea gets the nod.

    77. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      You're just afraid to defend you faith, because you're embarassed about all the contradictions. Doesn't the bible tell you to go out there and try to convert people? Don't you feel bad that my eternal soul is going to roast in hell because you were too weak to stand up for what you believe and convince me to change my mind?

      Do you believe in the virgin birth? The resurection? That Jesus ascended to heaven? How many miles up is heaven? Is there an oxygen atmosphere all the way up, or did Jesus suffer from explosive decompression on the way? How do you reconcile all that supernatural bullshit with you belief in science, cause and effect?

      -Don

      --
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    78. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      You're just on the wrong end of a losing argument. You know you're intellectually dishonest, and your beliefs are self serving bullshit. Why don't you tell us what you really do believe, so we can openly discuss it? Unless you're too embarassed because you know it will be torn apart by logical arguments.

      -Don

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    79. Re:I just don't get it... by Bastian · · Score: 1

      But that's simply not the evolutionary theory that science is talking about. The standard scientific understanding is that evolution is not a directed process and humans are not an end result, any more than homo erectus or australopithecus was an end product. We're going to continue evolving and eventually there will be no such thing as homo sapiens anymore; we will have been superseded by a new species.

      According to evolutionary science, humans have more to do with the patterns you might see at any one moment in a lava lamp than they do with a manufactured product.

    80. Re:I just don't get it... by The+Good+Reverend · · Score: 1

      I can't believe we're all honestly arguing about 4,000 year old myths and debating the details of stories told through oral tradition, then written down and translated repeatedly, all about events that are logically inconsistent and contain amazing claims that have never been substantiated.

      There are surely a few elements of truth in the stories, but the idea of taking any of it literally, much less as proof of all existence, is the sign of a gross ignorance or mental deficiency.

    81. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He doesn't. He's just a whipped lil bitch who can't think for, or stand up for himself. So he hides behind a religion.

      He's the same as a Nazi who believes that his German pride and nationalism is a good thing, but doesn't believe in killing Jews, yet he still salutes Hitler; so he's just as guilty as the rest of them.

      How anybody who posts to this site and can pick up a history book and thumb through the last 2000 years and then can honestly say that they're a Christian, is just mindblowing to me. Weak. Weak. Weak.

      Give up your crutch, your life and your god are worthless to this planet. Fucking tools.

    82. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "You're just afraid to defend you faith"

      Afraid? Of YOU? That's funny. You don't threaten my faith, so I see no reason to "defend" it. If you wanted to have a discussion, that'd be fine. I know you don't (I've tried before), so I'm not going to bother.

      Have a nice day.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    83. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "You're just on the wrong end of a losing argument."

      Hey, whatever makes you feel good. No skin off my nose.
      "You know you're intellectually dishonest,"

      I do, do I?

      "and your beliefs are self serving bullshit."

      Which you know, because...you're psychic. COOL!

      "Why don't you tell us what you really do believe, so we can openly discuss it?"

      That didn't work last week, so I have no expectation that it would work now. You're a bigot, and there's no point discussing anything with you.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    84. Re:I just don't get it... by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      My favorite part of that story is that they ate of the tree of knowledge and then God said "You know stuff, I don't like you anymore."

      Personally, given the choice between knowledge and living in perfection, I'd take the knowledge.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    85. Re:I just don't get it... by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      ...as the existence of diety is currently outside the reach of science.

      I find it strange to say that an all-powerful being doesn't act in a manner which would be noticeable by any measurement equipment. what you meant to write is:

      ...the ultimate proof of the non-existence of god is currently outside the reach of science.

      howey

    86. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      I never implied you're afraid of me. You're afraid of your own intellect. You know that if you continue this discussion and answer my questions, then you will be exposed as a fraud, because you know that you believe things that are provably wrong. You're afraid of logic, not me.

      So please enumerate which supernatural beliefs you have? Or do you not believe in anything supernatural at all? Then how can you possibly call yourself a "Christian"? If you don't believe in anything supernatural, but you call yourself a "Christian", then you are a liar, and you know it.

      -Don

      --
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    87. Re:I just don't get it... by TFloore · · Score: 1

      But seriously, mainstream Christians (Pope included) have been saying that evolution and faith are completely compatible for many years.

      Close. The position of the Catholic church on evolution is slightly more nuanced than that. Only slightly, really.

      Evolution is (stealing from Wikipedia) the change from generation to generation in a population's inherited characteristics through random mutation.

      The Catholic church has a problem with that word "random" but accepts the rest of it. Their position is that God causes the changes, and they are not random. At some point in history, God caused a change, said "these are now humans" and started handing out souls.

      That is significant for them, because Catholics believe in souls in humans and not animals, and God had to define the point of separation where humans get souls and animals don't.

      Except for that, Catholics officially have little problem with evolution.

      --
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    88. Re:I just don't get it... by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      If they accept evolution, then the entire point of Christianity is called into question.

      Actually, that's not quite so. The point of Christianity is pretty nice; when they start talking about loving one another, I really start liking these people.

      It's Christianity's dogma that is called into question. And fundamentalists have a hard time with that. They can't learn how to live from their best prophet, without accepting all the weird bullshit that somehow got attached to it all.

      To them, without the dogma, the prophet loses his mystic credentials. Oh no, mustn't listen to a man's ideas; it has to come from God or else it's suspect.

      Humanity-loathing idiots can't take their own teachings (stop hating) seriously, without undermining those teachings' very authority. What a paradoxical loop. No wonder they're so weird.

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    89. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Calling a liar on his lies is not bigotry. Asking a member of a religious cult to explain what they believe is open minded, and searching for truth. Why don't you just tell us what supernatural beliefs you hold, so we can discuss your beliefs? Or are you embarassed about your beliefs because you know they are wrong?

      -Don

      --
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    90. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You misunderstand.

      Whether crystals grow in a lab or in nature, they grow in a similar fashion and are governed by the same laws. The lab-grown crystal grows in conditions that, from the start, have a designed result and require very little additional influence from their creator. From inside the crystal all you would see is growing crystal; it's not until you look at it from outside that you understand that its growth has purpose.

      Evolutionary science sees chaos because God cannot be accounted for in science. We look at the forces acting upon life throughout natural history and see a near-random system. That does not mean that it is not directed; it means that such direction cannot be observed by science.

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      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    91. Re:I just don't get it... by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      The key to all of this lies in the fact that a good many churches, including big ones like Catholicism, Lutheranism and Anglicanism, do not espouse Biblical literalism. Not every word of the Bible had to be a literal truth for the book to still be the word of God.

      I think a lot of people, both Christian and atheist (excluding all other faiths for simplicity), get tripped up on the "literalism" of the Bible.

      How to explain color to a blind man? I think the Bible faces this same problem. Why does Jesus speak so much in parables? In my opinion, at least partially because it is literally (heh) impossible to describe the things he wants to describe using human language. He is describing ideas and experiences beyond our comprehension, but at least giving us something to latch onto, some analogy to at least understand something about the greater thing we do not understand.

      So what sense does it even make to say something describing God is literal or not? Perhaps the universe, all of humanity, everything, is just a poor analogy for God in the first place. Maybe we don't even have direct access to "literal" truth.

      How do we even know that there isn't something of the creation account that points to truths we have not yet comprehended? A fun take on this is a guy who wrote a book trying to reconcile the Biblical and scientific worldviews. He did a calculation on the relativistic time experienced from the "viewpoint" of the initial reference frame of the Big Bang until now(hope I'm not mangling this too badly). His result? About 6 days.

      I think this also goes over the heads of atheists criticizing the Bible: "Why doesn't the Bible answer all our scientific questions if God is so smart?" Because God has other priorities? Trying to get us to love each other, maybe? Now, you can argue about the efficacy of the Bible as a means to that goal, but why do you think God's number one priority is giving people accurate scientific knowledge? If He is God, he can just make us live forever and never get sick with a thought. Maybe he wants us to focus also on spiritual truths?

      Which opens a whole other raft of questions, the problem of pain, etc. But the point is now we are firmly in the realm of philosophy, morality, and, yes, religion. Which is where the Bible resides and should remain, despite attempts by Christians and atheists alike to the contrary.

      -jimbo

    92. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "I never implied you're afraid of me. You're afraid of your own intellect."

      You're the one who's pretending to be psychic, so you've not much of a leg to stand on wrt the supernatural.

      "You know that if you continue this discussion and answer my questions, then you will be exposed as a fraud, because you know that you believe things that are provably wrong."

      Since you ostensibly don't know what I believe (although I told you several of my principles last week), supposing that I will be exposed as a fraud is a poor hypothesis. If you were truly of a scientific mind (which you're not), you would start from "I do not know. Let's find out." You start from assuming I subscribe to a set of beliefs that you have determined to be wrong. That's bad science.

      "but you call yourself a "Christian", then you are a liar, and you know it."

      That's your baggage, not mine. Have a nice day.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    93. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      The problem with trying to detect an all-powerful being is...what if he doesn't want to be seen?

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    94. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "Calling a liar on his lies is not bigotry."

      Not when you are presupposing that I believe the things that you have predetermined to be lies. That is bigotry.

      "Asking a member of a religious cult to explain what they believe is open minded, and searching for truth"

      If you were asking honest questions, I would have answered them. I attempted to do so before, and failed to get through your preconceptions. I don't care to try again.

      "Or are you embarassed about your beliefs because you know they are wrong?"

      You're remarkably bad at reading.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    95. Re:I just don't get it... by Bastian · · Score: 1

      Gotcha.

      But I still think that that understanding is incompatible with the kind of Christianity that holds to Creationism, particularly the young-earth kind. The deist God and the God of Biblical literalism are two very different Gods.

    96. Re:I just don't get it... by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      well hoorah, what a stunning scientific rebuttal.

      seriously, a bit of intellectual masturbation for a philosophy lesson, but absolutely pointless in science.

      howey

    97. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my personal opinion the only thing worse then someone who just says "god did it" for everything is a person who tries to reconcile god and religion. At least the religious wingnut has stupidity or ignorance as an excuse.

      You are just as bad as them, praying to the god of the gaps. Just like them you'll send your kids to church and probably sunday school, and (being kids) there is a good chance they'll come out actually believing everything they are told even if you don't.

      Remember that 5 hundred years ago we didn't understand germs, and blamed disease on god. Today we don't understand the first few nano-seconds perfectly something that happened billions of years ago. I still see no reason to call for a omnipotent being to explain it, and certainly no reason *AT ALL* to believe that said being billions of years later on one small planet inspired someone to write a book, and in the last two thousand years it hasn't been completely changed in both name and meaning. I also see no reason why he would do *anything* found in the bible, or require every person to worship him and praise his name every 7 days. You'd think an all-powerful all-knowing being wouldn't be so vain, or if he was that he wouldn't just make a race that did nothing but adore him.

      Basically I see anyone who brings their kids to church as being an active part of a campaign to destroy reason and logic in an effort to bring money and power to an organization with no real point.

      Everyone seems to pray to three gods... The God of the Gaps (what hasn't been explained *YET*), The God of the Dark (OMG I'm scared help me), and/or The God of your Parents (I believe because my parents believe because their parents believe all the way back to "their parents were forced to believe/pretend to believe by the Romans"). You pray to the god of the gaps and your parents...

      You are right that science doesn't say a god is impossible, but it *does* say that unless you find real evidence there is no reason to invoke the supernatural. The relevant principle is Occam's razor. Oh, and the lack of a reason for something a few years after said thing was discovered isn't evidence for the supernatural.

      (Also if you want a reason for the big bang look into M-theory (see wikipedia entry of the same name) for a current possible explanation)

    98. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Well answer the question, stop trying to avoid it: As a so-called "Christian", what supernatural events do you believe in?

      -Don

      --
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    99. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Make me. *sticks out tongue*

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    100. Re:I just don't get it... by plunge · · Score: 1

      You really need to stop reading ID claptrap and start reading people that actually know how genetics and evolution work. The trope about "brand new genetic information" is pure nonsense. ANY mutational change at all changes informational content: whether or not it is an increase depends almost entirely on how you define information (there are many different levels and definitions, some of which are very different): under the most basic definition it is increase no matter what simply by virtue OF being random. Furthermore, evolution is not about pure mutational change: it is mutational change plus natural selection: i.e. adaptation, and ANY selection of one genome over another is almost by definition an increase in information in a genome in a very obvious and important sense: it is an imprint onto a genome of information about the environment.

      "I think it's interesting how crazy people get when the slighest criticism of evolution is discussed."

      The problem isn't criticism: mainstream biology is a screaming torrent of scientists criticizing each other's work! It's when the "criticisms" are a bunch of oft-repeated falsehoods and misleading, misinformative nonsense that people get annoyed. "No increase in information" is one of those. It is like a red flag announcing that the person using it understands neither what information is nor how evolution works.

    101. Re:I just don't get it... by khallow · · Score: 1

      In other words, this is your opinion. Even though billions of people believe something is true, it need not be so. But if billions of people believe something like the parts of the bible (mostly the Old Testament, the only part that overlaps three major religions) has value, then it does so by virtue of that belief. You may indeed be correct that the Bible is obselete even as metaphor (though many modern belief systems start out just as obselete IMHO), but your claim that it has only cultural and historical value is clearly wrong.

    102. Re:I just don't get it... by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you can agree that this is the most sensible explanation for Kansas.

      I thought their primary influence was British prog-rock, there was really little religious influence until the 1980's, when they became born-again Christians.

      --
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    103. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      I'm not presupposing: I'm asking questions you REFUSE to answer. You are a liar if you claim to be a "Christian", but don't believe in anything supernatural. What do you believe in that is supernatural?

      -Don

      --
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    104. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      If you want a scientific rebuttal, you have to make a scientific argument. You haven't yet.

      --
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    105. Re:I just don't get it... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      Agreed. And I keep my distance from the YECs as often as I can; there are too many things seen in the world today that indicate an old earth for them to be right.

      Last time it came up in a church setting and someone asserted the young earth theory, I asked them if God deceives us. The answer was "no, of course not." Then I pointed out the fossil record, the geological record, the speed of light and distance to other stars, et cetera. If God doesn't deceive us, why does the earth *look* so old when examined?

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      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    106. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Seeing as how you said you weren't going to ever respond to me again a long time ago, and you have responded to me many times since then, I'm doing a pretty good job.

      You can't defend your beliefs, because you know they're wrong. Tell us what you do believe, instead of claiming you're a Christian, and then denying everything the bible says.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    107. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "I'm not presupposing:"

      That's ridiculous. Every single question you've ever asked me is loaded, and slanted by your preconceptions.

      "I'm asking questions you REFUSE to answer."

      Yep. I refuse to answer any more of your questions, because answering your last batch didn't make a single dent in your seamless armor of ignorance and bigotry. Why bother?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    108. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I'm having fun baiting you. You seem to have fun being baited. Win-win.

      "You can't defend your beliefs, because you know they're wrong."

      Two assertions based on your psychic mojo, bolted together by your assumptions. Good job so far.

      "Tell us what you do believe,"

      Got a mouse in your pocket? I'm not accountable to you. Any time you wish to have a civil discussion, moderate your tone and we'll have a civil discussion. Until then? Get bent.

      "instead of claiming you're a Christian, and then denying everything the bible says."

      Uh huh. There aren't any assumptions in that little statement, are there?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    109. Re:I just don't get it... by bogjobber · · Score: 1

      I have two very close friends, both of whom are Lutheran and very religious. My one friend's father is a preacher and is very much into biblical literalism. My other friend is extremely liberal and her church also seems to be extremely liberal. She is a biologist, and definitely does not believe in taking the bible literally. I'm not sure about the different "churches" within Lutheranism, but apparently they disagree on a lot of issues and generally dislike each other.

    110. Re:I just don't get it... by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      so instead you came with philosophy for teenagers 101 :)

    111. Re:I just don't get it... by noigmn · · Score: 1

      Some would say the question doesn't matter unless you're a fundamentalist. The religion revolves around selflessness, and care and respect for other people. The question you ask is completely self serving. The whole save from sin stuff I would say generally is the result of a need for control or power in the church. Just a basic rewards scheme to make members feel important or compelled to agree with them. It isn't that much different to what people do in most parts of society. Just at some stage people assumed the people in charge of these things were somehow superhuman and always right. These days it might just be people repeating what the people before them have done oblivious to the reasons.

      In terms having to be sent to connect with genesis, it's a black and white view. I would say the idea is essentially there because people like completeness. We aren't prepared to accept that maybe he was just there to do something in that time, rather than fulfil some mystically prophesies from before the time. The reality of it is that the old testament says these are the laws, do it this way, whereas the new testament is actually open. But try starting a religion and holding a church together with the concept that you can do what you like, just show some care for the people around you. What garbage would you have to argue and reread every sunday? How would you know people would stay and life wouldn't lead them where they wanted to go rather than to serving you? You wouldn't. Hence churches need to alter it a little to create a church.

      A lot of stories in the bible were created to inspire people at the time also. It wasn't a world of sit infront of the PC and philosophy. More one where keeping the people in the right state of mind was crutial to survival as a leader, and survival against attackers. You don't compile a giant book to tell people the law either. If there were set laws and the answers were all clear, why not shrink it to a page or two so people could actually find them. It is food for thought to get people thinking. Just some people don't want to think and learn about all the aspects of the world and life, they want it fed to them as some great answer to everything. Therefore we have things like religion...and string theory :).

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    112. Re:I just don't get it... by Darby · · Score: 1


      Abortion: I oppose it on the basis that I believe the fetus is a human being with a right to life that should only come into question should the mother's life be threatened.


      So you believe that a baby should be forced into this world against the will of the person who will then be forced to raise it even though, in your opinion, she would rather have murdered it than given birth to it. To you this is better than the baby never having been born?
      As a related note, what are your thoughts about sex education in schools?

      As a Christian I have to say that I believe gay marriage is a contradiction in terms; gays cannot be married because marriage has a very specific definition to me and I will never personally recognize a homosexual union as being the same as what I have with my wife.

      Of course, marriage isn't a Christian institution so your thoughts on what it is "as a Christian" are meaningless. It's not your institution. It is older than your religion by far. You are certainly welcome to think what you like about it, but you should know that it has always been an economic institution, not a religious one.
      It's nice that you see the anti-American nature of the anti position. It's sad that you don't realize that you're doing nothing to get away from it by advocating civil unions. If it confers those economic benefits, then it's marriage. Nobody cares what your church thinks the definition is since it has nothing to do with your church or your religion. "Separate but equal" which is what you're proposing is only used for discriminating against groups and making second class citizens.

      Nobody is trying to make your church perform gay wedding ceremonies, and as long as that's true you have no business getting in their way. Especially when your only motivation is religious as the fundamental difference that set America apart at its founding was the hard coded idea that religious belief has no place whatsoever in the government of a free country. It was for exactly this sort of reason.

    113. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Awww, an internet tough guy! That's just ADORABLE.

      At least I put my name on my thoughts.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    114. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So many of my fellow Christians seem to think that evolution is an attack on us and our beliefs. It's not. It is simply the result of rational consideration of the facts at hand. Unfortunately, you're very wrong: Each major scientific advancement, from Copernicus to Darwin to undermines and chips away at religion's credibility. If the Bible teaches points A, B, and C, but points A and C have been proved to be false, it seems likely that it is just a matter of time before point B and the rest can be deemed false.

    115. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there were set laws and the answers were all clear, why not shrink it to a page or two so people could actually find them.

      It's for the same reason that physics books are hundreds of pages long, and not just one or two pages of equations.

    116. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 0, Troll

      Remember what I said about flip-flopping? You're flip-flopping again!

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    117. Re:I just don't get it... by SimHacker · · Score: 0, Troll

      You know my questions are loaded because you know the contradictions in your own beliefs with reality, and you don't want to discuss them, because the topic is TABOO. You SHOULD be embarassed about believing in that supernatural stuff. If you aren't embarassed, then why don't you tell us what you believe in the bible that's supernatural? Or do you reject all parts of the bible that are supernatural, and still call yourself a Christian? Do you really believe in Heaven and Hell? Or just one or the other? Or neither? Simple question! Why won't you answer?

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    118. Re:I just don't get it... by noigmn · · Score: 1

      If you are suggesting that the bible is a comprehensive and ordered piece of literature with scientific reasoning i think you should look again...

      It reads more like a book of historical accounts, especially the new testament. Which is basically what I was pointing out. It doesn't try to be a book of laws or concise. It gives the reader room to interpret. It doesn't ask conformism like the church, more suggests that any person in any situation or class or society can do something to better it. The fact such tedious and unproductive dogma has come from it is quite sad. You see churches somehow attempting to justify groups of people as unchristian or less worthy. In reality they just do most of the things that Jesus was pissed off about in the first place. He came to look to include all and see something in the worst of us. They decide to exclude. He told the church not to be greedy self righteous pricks, nothing's really changed. Most churches are all talk and no action. And most action is in the interest of serving the church, not the people. I'm not big on churches but i have a lot of respect for the guy they say they follow. Because he had a backbone and wasn't compromised by vanity. He wasn't some pragmatic wimp who requoted the same old shit and didn't know how to stand against the majority. And he didn't need to play little narcisistic games to make sure everyone was on his side and he was winning. As far as I can see, him and the church are near opposites.

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    119. Re:I just don't get it... by martyros · · Score: 1

      If the supernatural can be measured and tested, then it is no longer supernatural.

      Measured? Perhaps, and perhaps not... Tested? It depends. The main thing is that with God, you're not dealing with a natural process that always does the same thing; you're dealing with a Person, who doesn't really like to be analyzed.

      Consider what would happen if someone decided to perform an experiment on you at the dinner table; he wanted to know the correlation between asking you to do something and you doing it. So he asks you to pass the salt 15 times. You might give it to him the first couple of times, but by the 4th time, you'd be sick of him messing with you. And if you knew he was messing with you from the beginning, you'd probably just ignore him entirely.

      But God doesn't mind being tested when you really need it. In the link I posted, there's the story of Gideon. An angel had appeared to Gideon, told him that Yahweh (God) wanted him to go to the local town & tear down the altar to Baal (a god). Gideon hadn't had much experience with Yahweh, but he knew the local town people would be pretty pissed if he did that. So he performed a simple test, to make sure he wasn't going crazy; using, essentially, the scientific method.

      One evening, he put out a thing of wool, prayed to Yahweh and said, "If you're the real deal, make the wool wet and the ground around it dry tomorrow morning." The next morning, the wool was wet, and the ground dry.

      The next evening, he put out the wool again and prayed, "If you're the real deal, make the ground wet and the wool dry." The next morning, the ground was wet, and the wool dry.

      So, he went and tore down the altar.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    120. Re:I just don't get it... by Copid · · Score: 1

      You can see modifications of existing genetic information in an organism, but there haven't been ANY observable (seen in a lab, or in present day) mutations where brand new genetic information has been added to an organism.
      Challenge! Please define "information" and how you measure it in this context.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    121. Re:I just don't get it... by Copid · · Score: 1

      Part of good science is repeatability of observations. If somebody could repeat the results of the wool experiment, that would be a very interesting trick and well worth investigating. Do you think it would work if we tried it now?

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    122. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I've never really seen somebody argue with themselves before. It's pretty amusing. I mean, you've got this little wind-up fundamentalist in your brain, and you turn the little key, and it spouts out crazy talk (which you attribute to me), and you furiously debate it, throwing up straw men all over the place, and then holler "WHY WON'T YOU ANSWER MY QUESTIONS!?"

      Are you having fun? Seriously. Do you even bother to read what I type?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    123. Re:I just don't get it... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Karl Rove? Is that you? Did you seriously just call me a flip flopper?

      "Remember what I said about flip-flopping?"

      As a matter of fact, I don't. You've said all kinds of nutty things, though, so I'll give you the benefit of the doubt, and assume that you did. Would you care to enlighten me as to what specifically you're referring to? Go ahead and make up something really crazy. It'll be fun.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    124. Re:I just don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are suggesting that the bible is a comprehensive and ordered piece of literature with scientific reasoning i think you should look again...

      I don't think you can infer that from what I said.

      Anyway, what I meant is that, even when something can be boiled down to a few pages, reading those pages isn't the best way to gain a real understanding of the material. I picked physics because its rules are simple and expressed in a very exact way. (Well, also because I'm a grad student in physics.) But if this is true about understanding physics, shouldn't it also be true for understanding subjects in which the rules are much more complicated and the statements are not as exact?

      [The Bible] gives the reader room to interpret. It doesn't ask conformism like the church, more suggests that any person in any situation or class or society can do something to better it.

      Clearly it is possible to interpret the Bible in many ways, as you can see from the various different branches of Christianity as well as people's own personal interpretations. On the other hand, the Bible itself records that from the early days of Christianity there were different teachings, and it insists that proper guidance is essential.

      From Paul's letter to the Galatians: "I am amazed that you are so quickly forsaking the one who called you by (the) grace (of Christ) for a different gospel (not that there is another). But there are some who are disturbing you and wish to pervert the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach (to you) a gospel other than the one that we preached to you, let that one be accursed!"

      Anyway, the sentiment of 'interpret however you want' is not really consistent with the content of the Bible.

      You see churches somehow attempting to justify groups of people as unchristian or less worthy.

      I don't think I see that very much, but I guess it might depend on what churches you're talking about. I do think it's important to draw a distinction between the inherent, undeniable value of a human person, and the moral value of the actions which the person has chosen.

      He came to look to include all and see something in the worst of us. They decide to exclude.

      Jesus' teachings were and are radically inclusive and forgiving. But at the same time, his teachings are very demanding.

      "If your right hand makes you stumble, cut it off and throw it from you; for it is better for you to lose one of the parts of your body, than for your whole body to go into hell."

      I think most people agree that this is exaggeration for effect, as can be seen in many of his parables. But I think it's pretty clear that Jesus' agenda is not only pro-forgiveness, but also anti-sin. Surely it's okay for churches to tell people what is sin, and to urge avoidance of sin. It's not a matter of exclusion.

    125. Re:I just don't get it... by noigmn · · Score: 1

      I wasn't arguing scripture, just pointing out that in my view the structure of the church sets up an environment where people are inclined to do something very different to what scripture should inspire them to do. I think we have quite a similar view of what it says. I'm more concerned with how it is used. To be anti-sin is very different to being pro good. In a way it is negative utilitarianism, which is a wonderfully self defeating way of turning the world into nothing so there is no bad stuff. Every person who walks into the church is their own person, with their own personality and their own strengths. The question is what is most important to the church, that they realise the gifts they are given and make the most of them, or that they don't sin and don't learn in the process. The only thing to be gained from being anti-sin is control. It gives a way to keep people in check and keep them coming back. As I already said, if the church didn't play on the emotions of its members and said we believe in you, be all you can be, add something to the world, but do it honestly.. they would be a far more powerful and useful unit than drones trying ot protect an ideology by saying what they are taught to say to defend it.

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  14. Sad faith by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Faith is great. It might well be the best of all human qualities. It has helped people survive the worst moments of life, and to go on when hope should have been lost.

    But, faith itself can be twisted and misused. When faith is used as a tool to prevent people from using their god given gifts, then it's become a weapon. I have seen people use their faith to ignore what they have seen with their own eyes. I have seen faith used to prevent normal healthy inquiry. It is my opinion that this is the path to pure insanity.

    If you except that God created man, and you also except that you were not consulted on God's plan and work habits, then you should be open to explanations as to the details of his creation. Was evolution part of God's plan? Most people admit that they do not know how God works, but some of those same people claim to know exactly how he does not work.

    Scientist are only looking for the truth, and sometimes to be published. But I think they are truthful. I imagine that someone with a greater observance of what God has created and it's inner workings is much closer to God than someone who twists faith to blind themselves to God's wonders.

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
    1. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I argue the opposite. Faith is a weakness. Faith leads people to accept their conditions and pray that it will get better rather than act. Faith leads people to accept conditions that are unacceptable.

      Faith keeps women from leaving abusive husbands because the hope they'll see the light. Faith keeps people from speaking out against the government because they hope their God will intervene. Faith keeps people from enjoying the only life they know they have because they hope that the words in a particular book are true.

      Our best quality isn't our ability to blindly accept conditions as they are because they might change, but to recognize the flaws in our condition right now through research and figure out a way to change the stuff we can. In fact, the ability to drastically modify our environment is what makes us a technological species.

      Perhaps you're using a different definition of "faith" than I am.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    2. Re:Sad faith by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Scientist are only looking for the truth, and sometimes to be published. But I think they are truthful.
      No!

      Scientists are only looking for FACTS

      Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy are true....
      right up until the point that you learned the facts.

      "Truths" are and always have been flexible,
      especially when they are 'revealed' truths.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:Sad faith by exspecto · · Score: 0

      Faith keeps women from leaving abusive husbands because the hope they'll see the light. Faith keeps people from speaking out against the government because they hope their God will intervene. Faith keeps people from enjoying the only life they know they have because they hope that the words in a particular book are true. I've seen this happen several times to people in my family. It's very sad indeed. I try to tell them that they need to stop using their religion as a crutch and that they have the power to make a change themselves. Doesn't work though.
    4. Re:Sad faith by lovebyte · · Score: 1

      I agree with you 100%, but your first paragraph is in disagreement with your sig. Time to find a new one I guess!

      --

      I'll do it for cheesy poofs.

    5. Re:Sad faith by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 1

      I argue the opposite. Faith is a weakness.

      I argue orthogonally: everybody has a belief system, which is a system of logical rules that build upon one another. The axioms (initial assumptions, unproven by definition) of a person's belief system is what we call faith, or religious belief if you will. Attacking faith itself isn't useful because everybody has it about something.

      An axiom of my belief system that I have identified: logic is valid.

      Attacking an axiom of someone else's belief system can only be successful if you can prove to their satisfaction that it contradicts some other axiom they hold; this is made easier by the fact that human belief systems tend to be internally inconsistent (thus enabling people to change their minds.)

      Convincing someone to discard a particular position is much easier if you can agree with them about the axioms underlying the belief. The reason so many people in internet discussions talk past each other is because they ignore this fundamental fact.

    6. Re:Sad faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Faith leads people to accept their conditions and pray that it will get better rather than act.


      No it doesn't. The slothful might use faith as an excuse, but most faithful people believe some form of "God helps those who help themselves".

      Faith leads people to accept conditions that are unacceptable.


      Faith helps people tolerate conditions they cannot change and provides courage to change the ones they can.

      Faith keeps women from leaving abusive husbands because the hope they'll see the light.


      These women do not truly hold hope. They just convince themselves they hold hope because they are too afraid to leave. It's a rationalization - not faith.

      Faith keeps people from speaking out against the government because they hope their God will intervene.


      Our country was founded by people whose faith did not allow them to tolerate their government. Creationists are people of faith speaking out against the government teaching of evolution.

      Faith keeps people from enjying the only life they know they have because they hope that the words in a particular book are true.


      How do you know the faithful do not enjoy their lives?

      Our best quality isn't our ability to blindly accept conditions as they are because they might change, but to recognize the flaws in our condition right now through research and figure out a way to change the stuff we can.


      Without faith in ourselves we would never believe we can change anything. No one would conduct twenty years of research if they thought they would ultimately be proven wrong. They do it because they have faith that they are correct. Without faith in science, science would not be useful. (And yes, science requires faith. It requires faith that the way things are today is the way they will be tomorrow. It requires faith that there is order to the universe. It requires faith that there is an objective truth.)

    7. Re:Sad faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/except/accept/g

    8. Re:Sad faith by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      You're talking about using faith as a crutch. He's talking about using faith as a safety net.

      The way you explain it, the faithful rely on their faith to see them through thick and thin, instead of their own wits and the help of others.

      The way he explains it, the faithful rely on their own wits and the help of others to get them through life, knowing that if the worst were to befall them, they still have something to look forward to. (Perhaps an insurance policy or investment is a better comparison.)

      However, both of these are used in faith. Some people try to rely on it to help them. Others hope it will help and shove forward on their own, looking forward to eternal rest. Some people mix the two.

      As with things like guns or fire, faith itself isn't a bad thing, but can be used for evil by those who are. See: Fred Phelps, these fundamentalists, radical Muslims.

    9. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Where's the disagreement? There's a big difference between knowing you can change and wanting to change.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    10. Re:Sad faith by l0b0 · · Score: 1

      The important difference between faith and science is their usefulness. Faith (belief without evidence) used to be useful to explain natural phenomena (people stopped "wasting" time to explain them), but now science gives more useful answers. This is because science is based on evidence, which can be used to explain the actual workings of nature, and thereby plan into the future with measurable accuracy.

      If you need a good example: How could humans ever have landed on the Moon if our society was based on faith alone? And who would care to take or research medicine? For me, it's paradoxical that people take medicine, pray, and then attribute their recovery to the praying.

    11. Re:Sad faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Faith is a force-multiplier, nothing more. If you believe that you are not a failure, you are likely to work harder because of that irrational belief. ( And vice versa ). Faith is neutral.

    12. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      I don't agree that "logic is valid" is an unproven assumption. It's actually proven every day. We arrive at conclusions in a logical manner and when those conclusions are verified, our logic is shown to be valid.

      For example, if I were to drop a hammer and were to see it hit my foot, I can logically assume, because cellular destruction causes pain, and a hammer dropping on my foot would cause cellular destruction, that my foot is going to hurt in a moment. It's a classic A -> B, B -> C, therefore A -> C reasoning. A moment later, my "faith" in logic's validity is proven yet again.

      However, faith in an unproven thing, like heaven, salvation, or even God, is irrational. There is no experiment that provides evidence of God or heaven or hell or ghosts or goblins or angels or psychic friends. All of these things are, currently anyway, supernatural. As such, the only thing they have going for them is the fact that millions or billions of people around the globe believe they exist and can intervene. And some of those people will defer to an unproven God over proven science when it comes to matters of life and death.

      Faith in things that cannot be or have not been proven is destructive at worst and counter-productive at best.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    13. Re:Sad faith by Dachannien · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Faith keeps women from leaving abusive husbands because the hope they'll see the light.

      That's not faith. It's fear, of their husbands, of not being able to take care of the kids as a single mom, and of loneliness. "Faith" is just how they rationalize it.

      Faith keeps people from speaking out against the government because they hope their God will intervene.

      Four out of five suicide-bombing Muslim extremists disagree.

      Faith keeps people from enjoying the only life they know they have because they hope that the words in a particular book are true.

      Sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll are not the only way to enjoy life.

      Now, I'm not saying that faith is always 100% good or 100% bad. It's a tool, of a sort, that can be used to increase the joy in your life or to piss you off at the world.

    14. Re:Sad faith by Starker_Kull · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I argue the opposite. Faith is a weakness. Faith leads people to accept their conditions and pray that it will get better rather than act. Faith leads people to accept conditions that are unacceptable. Faith keeps women from leaving abusive husbands because the hope they'll see the light. Faith keeps people from speaking out against the government because they hope their God will intervene. Faith keeps people from enjoying the only life they know they have because they hope that the words in a particular book are true. Our best quality isn't our ability to blindly accept conditions as they are because they might change, but to recognize the flaws in our condition right now through research and figure out a way to change the stuff we can. In fact, the ability to drastically modify our environment is what makes us a technological species. Perhaps you're using a different definition of "faith" than I am.

      And faith also keeps you going when you rationally should give up hope, or when your rationality is overcome or undercut by powerful emotions. You have faith in rationality. Faith is more akin to an emotion, and rationality to a method of interpreting information. They are not really opposites, any more than rage is the opposite of a trial by jury. We associate them with opposite scenarios, but they are not strict antonyms.

      But faith obviously must have survival value, otherwise it would have been weeded out by evolution quite some time ago. Perhaps when the world was a much more risky, unknown, isolated place, having faith allowed our progenitors to survive and succeed when the best, rational course of action in the face of the unknown was to call it a life and expire. Like many of the emotions we have, they were shaped in a very different environment than the typical human finds themselves in today. My personal suspicion is that faith is a highly useful, good thing to have, INDIVIDUALLY. It gives us the courage to try new things that we don't know that we can do, to face disease, death, selfishness, and all the evil in life and try to make the world a better place despite that. OTOH, when it starts becoming a group ritual, it seems to take on many of those negative aspects you mentioned; it tends to enforce existing power structures, allow one to suffer through circumstances rather than change them - to make it acceptable to be a victim, if I may sum up some of what you said.

      Faith isn't going anywhere, any more than greed, lust, love, or curiosity are leaving the human condition. Figuring out how to accommodate it in society without it becoming a cancer like the American-style religious right is the challenge.

    15. Re:Sad faith by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      Faith is great. It might well be the best of all human qualities.

      As you may know, Paul rejects the idea that faith is the best human quality. He emphatically says love is greatest, and faith is worthless without it.

      Peace be with you,
      -jimbo

    16. Re:Sad faith by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      Faith keeps women from leaving abusive husbands because the hope they'll see the light. Faith keeps people from speaking out against the government because they hope their God will intervene. Faith keeps people from enjoying the only life they know they have because they hope that the words in a particular book are true.

      Perhaps it is important to have faith in the right things, or the right kind of faith?

      Martin Luther King, Jr. was incontrovertibly a man of faith. His faith absolutely did not keep him from speaking truth to his government.

      As to enjoying life, faith gives a lot of people a totally unreasonable amount of happiness, peace, and comfort. I'm not so sure that all atheists are happier and more content than all people of faith.

      Peace be with you,
      -jimbo

    17. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      The appendix must have survival value, but we remove them all the time. Why should faith be any different?

      I can try new things without faith. All I need is for my curiosity to overwhelm my fear of the unknown. I can face disease without faith. I am aware of the power of our medical system, and if I'm beyond help, then I'll die, just like billions before me. I'm working to make the world a better place. I don't need faith. Any progress made in overcoming the great evils of the world is a good thing.

      So maybe faith is a way for people to overcome fear and do things that need done. If Og the caveman didn't have faith that the sun would rise the next day, he'd be paralyzed with fear. But if he made up a sun God and said "I have faith that the sun god will haul the sun across the sky again tomorrow," he'd be able to concern himself with surviving until tomorrow. Is it any suprise that many religions have festivals at the winter solstice?

      Maybe, like our appendix, we've developed beyond the need for faith. Maybe the tool of faith is as antiquated as a stone axehead.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    18. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      That's not faith. It's fear, of their husbands, of not being able to take care of the kids as a single mom, and of loneliness. "Faith" is just how they rationalize it.

      You've obviously not been around a woman like that. When they talk about their husband, they actually get happy and hopeful that he'll stop mistreating them. It's not fear, it's faith and their religious disinformation regarding divorce.

      Four out of five suicide-bombing Muslim extremists disagree.

      True, and a bad example on my part. A better one would be those suicide bombers. Their faith in their book is so strong that they'll destroy themselves and others over it.

      Sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll are not the only way to enjoy life.

      I never said they were. However, to close your mind to the glory around you by viewing your very existence as flawed ("sinful," in the terms of the faithful) is a sure fire way to make your life into a living hell. And all because you've got faith in the validity of your book.

      Now, I'm not saying that faith is always 100% good or 100% bad. It's a tool, of a sort, that can be used to increase the joy in your life or to piss you off at the world.

      Faith stops questions. If I'm sure of something, why would I question it? And if I have faith, it would be destroyed by asking too many questions. (It sure was for me, anyway.)

      So faith is good for people who don't want explanations for things. Just like the poster in a video posted earlier: "God said it. I believe it. That settles it!" That's the best definition of faith that I've ever seen.

      The problem is that moderate people who value faith let extremists off the hook. If faith is a good thing, then extreme faith must be extremely good, even if it's destructive.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    19. Re:Sad faith by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

      Faith keeps us from having to distrust all we read and except as fact. You could call it trust or credibility. In any case, we can read about something from a trusted source or an expert and take it on faith as truth. That's often how we come about many of the givens we take for granted in our daily lives.

      Faith is the ability to believe something without the need for proof. I have had no genetic test or film of my birth, but I believe without proof that my parents are my parents. I expect you feel similarly about your parents, without proof.

      Faith is not shameful or weakness. It's a subtle part of our thinking.

      --
      -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
    20. Re:Sad faith by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

      You are correct. They catalog facts. From those facts they can make observation, and conclusions based on those observation.

      While something does not require this process to be true, it must be true to be a fact. For an observation to be correct it must also be true. But, conclusions are speculation, and thus hopefully true.

      While truths are flexible science is not about lies.

      Or as Andrea Daniel says "Just because I made it up, does not mean it's not true."

      --
      -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
    21. Re:Sad faith by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      The problem is that moderate people who value faith let extremists off the hook. If faith is a good thing, then extreme faith must be extremely good, even if it's destructive.

      I definitely disagree with that statement. See the following set of polls: http://pewforum.org/docs/index.php?DocID=174

      If you take Democrats to be correct that the 2006 election was a referendum on the Iraq war, then people of "stronger" faith (more frequent churchgoers) supported Republicans more strongly in 2006 than other demographic groups. While the link between Iraq and terrorism was originally tenuous at best, much of the violence in Iraq today is being perpetrated by extremists, and those who support continuing our efforts in Iraq do so because they feel that Iraq would fall to extremists (a la Iran, Syria, and possibly Lebanon) if we were to leave today. That's hardly "letting extremists off the hook".

    22. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      You're not getting what I'm saying.

      That little old lady down the street who takes in lost kitties and bakes you cookies has faith. Every night, she sits down with a cup of hot cocoa and watches the 700 Club or John Hagee and then picks up the phone and sends those theocratic fascists money because they're asking for it on behalf of Jesus.

      They, in turn, take it and give it to groups who fund fundamentalist Jewish groups that want to reclaim Israel. Why? Because once all the Jews move back to Israel, Jesus comes back. (They neglect to tell these Jewish folks that 2/3 of them will be sent to hell, according to Revelation.) Then, these groups decide that a foresaken patch of dirt is theirs and not the property of the Palestinian family living on it and bulldozes their house, killing a small child.

      Then the guy who runs the 7/11, a recent Pakistani immigrant, who gives the old lady cat food at a discount because she takes in the lost kitties sees the Palestinian homes being bulldozed and donates money to a group who says they're providing support to Palestinians who have been displaced.

      This group buys some C4 and straps it to the back of the kid whose house was bulldozed and promises him 72 virgins if he walks into a market and blows himself up. The kid does.

      Both people think they're doing something nice to support other people of faith. They're little bit of faith, which everybody admires, turned into a horrible expression. And they both think that the actions of the groups they support are justified by their faith. But, the thing is, THEY'RE BOTH WRONG.

      So, you see, it's not about our extremists being tough against their extremists. It's about people putting up faith as a virtue and then it being twisted to suit political and ideological goals.

      The only way to stop this is to denigrate faith as the weakness it is. It clouds judgement and stops a thinking mind. If the shopkeeper and little old lady would pull their heads out of their respective holy books, they'd realize that REAL PEOPLE ARE DYING.

      But they don't, and the killing continues. And people like me, who see the sheer idiocy of the whole thing are dismissed as "hate-filled atheists."

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    23. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      That's inaccurate. The example of you having "faith" that your parents are your parents is not the same as having faith in God. You can see evidence of your parents being your parents. You might have your dad's nose or your mom's eyes or your Uncle Ernie's ears. That's evidence that supports your assertion that your parents are, in fact, your parents.

      Now, if you were blue eyed, blond haired, and tall and your parents were both brown eyed, brown haired and short, then you would have less evidence. You wouldn't love them any less, but you wouldn't be as sure that they were your biological parents.

      The same goes for things you read. A book on cosmology by Stephen Hawking is automatically, by virtue of his career and previous, more trustworthy than a book on cosmology by some kook from the backwoods of Tennessee. But if the subject was how to make the best moonshine or the history of the backwoods of Tennessee, I'd trust the kook more than Stephen Hawking.

      Trust or credibility is absolutely NOT the same thing as faith. Faith, by its nature, lacks evidence. Trust and credibility are earned through previous encounters, which provide the evidence used to justify that trust.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    24. Re:Sad faith by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1

      Which one of your parents do you look like?

      --
      -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
    25. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      I'm tall, like my dad and his dad, and have his ears and eyes and build. I look very much like my grandfather did at my age, except I've got my mom's brown eyes.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    26. Re:Sad faith by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      But you're taking faith as being 100% bad, and that's simply not the case. What about the people who give money to support their church's soup kitchen, or help out in other ways to provide for those who are homeless or otherwise down on their luck? They give because of their faith, in part. The charitable givers who are Christian, for example, give because they believe that Jesus told them to provide for the needy. The only "evidence" they have of that - and that Jesus was more than just some guy - is their faith.

      As I said before, faith itself is neither evil nor good. It's all in what you do with it.

    27. Re:Sad faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when you say "except" do you really mean "accept" or "expect"? a little confused...

    28. Re:Sad faith by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 1

      I don't agree that "logic is valid" is an unproven assumption. It's actually proven every day. We arrive at conclusions in a logical manner and when those conclusions are verified, our logic is shown to be valid.

      It's reaffirmed, shown to be consistent with our experiences, but does that prove something? How can one prove something without logic?

      However, faith in an unproven thing... is irrational.

      Yes, absolutely. Irrational is not always bad (unless one axiomatically believes it is); human beings are at our core irrational. Do you deny that we have axioms in our belief systems? The next paragraph provides some great examples:

      There is no experiment that provides evidence of God or heaven or hell or ghosts or goblins or angels or psychic friends. All of these things are, currently anyway, supernatural.

      Some people have this axiom in their belief systems: there is no such thing as the supernatural. Other people believe the opposite: the supernatural does in fact exist. How can one prove it, one way or the other? One is forced to decide with insufficient evidence (or to say "I don't know," which is perfectly reasonable.) Maybe one chooses to disbelieve in the supernatural because of lack of evidence, but logic tells us that lack of evidence is not evidence of lack, and I believe in logic. Maybe one chooses to believe in the supernatural because of stories written down in a book thousands of years ago; again, unscientific -- irrational -- human.

      Many people claim to live according to scientific principles, to only believe things that science supports, but I don't think they have fully thought out their position. To fully follow such a philosophy would require being agnostic about a great many things that we all take for granted. The fundamental nature of science is to disprove, not to prove.

      In fact, the fundamental accuracy of the scientific method -- the claim that correlation leads to accurate predictions -- is something that must be taken on faith. Why does the repetition of an experiment show something meaningful? If it gave random results, maybe it would give the predicted result a thousand times and then on the 1001st attempt fail. How many repetitions are necessary to convince a true skeptic? An infinite number. Fortunately, human beings are not true skeptics. The true skeptic, the true scientist knows that correlation does not always equal causation, but we have evolved to behave as if it does, because that behavior provides a meaningful survival advantage. When there might be a saber-toothed tiger about, better safe than sorry.

      Faith in things that cannot be or have not been proven is destructive at worst and counter-productive at best.

      How would one go about proving that?

    29. Re:Sad faith by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      But you don't need faith to know that you should feed the hungry. If the only reason you're giving to a soup kitchen is because Jesus says it's a good thing, that doesn't make you a good person. You do need faith, however, to think that one group of people should kill to protect "their" land that was given to them by "their" god.

      In other words, if you took faith out of the world, the hungry would still be fed, but the religious wars in the Middle East would be over.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  15. The real news here by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 4, Informative

    The board also rewrote the standards' definition of science, specifically limiting it to the search for natural explanations of what's observed in the universe.
    The previous board had redefined "science" as not being limited to "natural explanations". That is: the supernatural has a place in science.

    Maybe we should go back to calling ourselves "natural philosophers" rather than "scientists".
    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  16. Chuck's 198th birthday by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

    This is the 198th birthday week of Charles Darwin. Happy Birthday Charles.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  17. I do.... by CasperIV · · Score: 1

    I freak out every time I hear someone talk about "ID".... it means a user is in a database again and my day just started down hill.

  18. What I've never understood by bhalter80 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've never gotten a satisfactory answer to the question of why God could not have created man to evolve. He clearly created bacteria and virii to evolve. That we can witness on a daily basis as illnesses adapt to the drugs we use to treat them and become resistant. There is evidence that species have come and gone from this world, and that some have morphed into others (trying to use evolve here as much as possible). Why is it so inconceivable that man would have been made to adapt to his surroundings in similar ways?

    1. Re:What I've never understood by Matt+Edd · · Score: 1

      Because there is no evidence for it. Scientists don't want to prove that God doesn't exist or that he isn't responsible for evolution but since you can't prove if he exists or had a hand in anything it becomes a non-issue. We (IAAS) aren't going to make up evidence but we aren't going to make any spiritual claims either. We deal in facts and want to keep it that way. When someone asks what my beliefs are I say that I would be an athiest if there was any proof God doesn't exist.

    2. Re:What I've never understood by Chacham · · Score: 1

      I've never gotten a satisfactory answer to the question of why God could not have created man to evolve.

      Noone says He didn't. It's just that the span of time allowed by the Bible, and the span of time required by Evolutionists do not coincide.

      There is evidence that species have come and gone from this world

      Actually--and i will split hairs here to make a fine point--there is evidence of alternate species, but there is no evidence that they have come or gone. The "coming and going" part is a theory that passes Science's threshhold of reasonable doubt, and is accepted omn that basis. But it would be prudent to note that this is where Science begins to diverge from other disciplines, and that, ultimately, it is based on opinion, not evidence.

      Why is it so inconceivable that man would have been made to adapt to his surroundings in similar ways?

      In minor ways it is pretty much accepted that people have sdapted. I don;t think anyone argues that point. But the termed "evolved" infers (rightly or not) that a new stage has been reached, and that is inconvable to Creationists who believe that man was made in His image, and while adaption is good, evolution would be bad.

    3. Re:What I've never understood by quarterbrain · · Score: 1

      Because some people want to take the literal interpretation of the Bible. Since the Bible says God made man with the snap of his fingers or whatever, that's the way it has to be. Yes, it's foolish on many levels and has massive logic holes from every direction, but some people think that that is what faith is. There IS room for evolution and religion. To be honest I think it is far more remarkable for God to have planned this incredibly vast, complex and changing system that is our universe, rather than a tacky *poof* there it is. It's smart, it's graceful, and it's cool as hell.

      If this God guy exists, he is one kickass engineer.

    4. Re:What I've never understood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some fundamentalists interpret Genesis literally, that is, they believe that the story of Adam and Eve is the literal truth about how the world was created. That, obviously, isn't really compatible with any scientific thought on the matter. Clearly, many people do believe that God created man to evolve; this is what all the religious people I know personally believe(though note that "creation" is not a simple, unambiguous, thing - some beliefs might perhaps be described better as "God created natural processes to evolve man", rather than "God created man to evolve").

    5. Re:What I've never understood by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Actually--and i will split hairs here to make a fine point--there is evidence of alternate species, but there is no evidence that they have come or gone. The "coming and going" part is a theory that passes Science's threshhold of reasonable doubt, and is accepted omn that basis. But it would be prudent to note that this is where Science begins to diverge from other disciplines, and that, ultimately, it is based on opinion, not evidence.

      You are really making a stretch there. Speciation has definitely been observed. Here is an article listing a bunch of observed speciation cases, and here's a list of a few more. It's all referenced so you can follow it up to original sources if you don't happen to like talk.origins. That pretty much covers the fact that there is clear evidence of species "coming" - as in new species arising. As to whether species have "gone" - I think the burden of proof for that is falling squarely on you: there are plenty of species tht have been identified as extinct, both species that had been previously observed and documented while alive (such as the dodo, among many others), and those determined via fossil or other archaeological records (for instance the moa of New Zealand, which are known by actual bones, not fossils). To claim that these species have not "gone" is to claim that they are still around somewhere. I think the odds (due to lack of observation despite concerted efforts to find them, and in the case of, for instance, larger dinosaurs, their lack of ability to hide very effectively) have to come down pretty strongly in favour of the fact that they are no longer around, and thus have "gone".
    6. Re:What I've never understood by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      The default position is atheism, insofar as atheism means "not believing in a god." Since there's no evidence, there's no reason to assume God exists and, therefore, no reason to believe in one. I mean, you're an atheist with respect to Odin and Zeus and Ra, correct?

      Look at it another way: The default position on the invisible purple dinosaur that lives in my basement is to no accept it until there's evidence. You can't disprove it because I can merely make more things up that you can't disprove. So you'd be an "atheist" with respect to the invisible purple dinosaur that lives in my basement.

      The problem is that the word atheist has come to mean, through efforts from the theists and mistakes made by vocal atheists, "I think you're dumb for believing in a god."

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    7. Re:What I've never understood by Chacham · · Score: 1

      Speciation has definitely been observed.

      While i appreciate your efforts here, they may be a bit misplaced. I believe the context in which i responded is talking about a more general topic. I understand that a couple recent species were observed. Nor am i really mentioned the "going"; it just follwed "coming".

      for instance, larger dinosaurs, their lack of ability to hide very effectively

      A: Why do dinousaurs wear red sneakers?
      B: I don't know.
      A: So they can hide in cherry trees.
      B: But i've never seen a dinaosaur in a cherry tree!
      A: See how good it works?

      More specifically, while we have documentation of the dodo being existant, the "proof" is in the bones, the observation is a weaker link (from Science's perspective). Not that anyone disputes it, it's just a point.

      Dinosaurs, for example, have never even been observed. We just have bones. It is likely that they came from dinosaurs, and not leftovers from the Great Turtle's dinner. But, that itself is no _proof_ of existence, it is just very likely.

    8. Re:What I've never understood by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      I think the point is that if you are demanding "_proof_" where even observed remains don't count then you may as well fall into solipsism.

    9. Re:What I've never understood by Chacham · · Score: 1

      I'm not demanding anything other than recognition of the process.

    10. Re:What I've never understood by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1

      Actually creationists don't even concede evolution in viruses or bacteria. I've worked with a NURSE who hands out antibiotics all day who, even knowing the facts of antibiotic resistance, still insists that there is no evolution. His explanation for antibiotic resistance was so torturous and hard to follow that I can't actually put it into words (something along the lines of "no, the organisms didn't change--these are just different organisms") but it's both fascinating and terrifying to behold.

    11. Re:What I've never understood by Matt+Edd · · Score: 1

      No. I mean it's a non-issue. I don't believe in God any more than I do believe in Him. It simply does not matter one way or another as long as the issue is ouside the relm of science.

  19. Home School / Education Choice by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    Yet another solution that could easily be solved by Home School or Educational Choice.

    You don't like your neighbors democratically deciding what religion your children should have or what type of job you should take or what your living arrangements should be or determining what kind of medical procedures you have. Why do you want your neighbors democratically deciding what to teach your kids?

    Don't like your child learning / not learning about sex ed / evolution / intelligent design / Islam / Christianity? Want or not want your kid to have a homosexual teacher? That's your business and by allowing you to choose what kind of school (a liberal one or a conservative one or a religious one or a .... ) or deciding to educate the child yourself, then it is completely removed as a matter of political debate.

    1. Re:Home School / Education Choice by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I think the people most interested in home schooling are people who do not want their children exposed to un-godly ideas such as evolution, science, rational thought etc and I think this is a very bad situation to foster.

      Children brought up in this manner are totally controlled by their parents ideas of what is right or wrong and are only going to hear what their parents want them to hear only going to mix with people sanctioned by their parents. In the case of religiously inspired home schooling this means that by the time the children have grown up and join normal universities and get jobs they hold completely entrenched viewpoints and are not capable of assessing arguments which challenge their beliefs and upbringing. Really this is child abuse and shouldn't be allowed under any circumstances whatever the motivation, worthy or otherwise.

    2. Re:Home School / Education Choice by armb · · Score: 1

      > Don't like your child learning / not learning about sex ed / evolution / intelligent design / Islam / Christianity?

      If you are that scared, why not go the whole way and have the kid lobotomised, so there's no chance whatsoever of it learning to disagree with you?

      --
      rant
    3. Re:Home School / Education Choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's your business and by allowing you to choose what kind of school (a liberal one or a conservative one or a religious one or a .... ) or deciding to educate the child yourself, then it is completely removed as a matter of political debate. No, it is not the just the parents business. Not until the government stops giving tax breaks for children and asking all of society to support children. The only reason I accept paying for other children via my property tax (and lack of tax breaks because I have no children) is that I do have a say in what they learn. And well I should, these children will one day be joining the adult society we all live in.
    4. Re:Home School / Education Choice by bmajik · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The people most interested in home schooling are those that actually give a shit about their child's education and the experiences they'll have growing up and the values they'll be indoctrinated with from a young age.

      How many home schooled children do you know on any real basis? How many home schooled children of ultra-conservative christians do you know on any real basis? What makes you think your opinion is accurate or representative?

      There are a large variety of reasons to be utterly and completely dissatisfied with public schools. Private schools go part way to addressing these problems, but not far enough for some people.

      I'm good friends with a large family (6 kids!) of ultra-conservative christian homeschooled kids. They're the most wonderful people i've ever met. The older kids openly disagree with aspects of their parents viewpoints on religious and societal issues -- they're certainly not brainwashed. And arguing about contemporary issues with them is engaging and rewarding - the kids are smart and have well considered opinions. they have to because all of society attacks everything about their very existinace at every turn. (how they're educated, their religious beleifs, their family structure, etc).

      These kids are learning how to be adults and have their own identities, just like normal kids. They're rebelling, they get in fights, the older ones have jobs, etc.

      The amount of anti-religious and anti-conservative christian prejudice on slashdot is sickening.

      It is a perfectly valid and oft heard criticism of christianity that "the biggest problem with christianity is the christians". However, my opinion is that the notion of government indoctrinating all children is a far scarier, uglier world than a family "indoctrinating" its own children. Indeed, it is only when people assemble in groups, so that some may weild power over others, that societies ugliest traits are brought to bear.

      You need only to look at all of the criticisms of public education here on slashdot, by prominent educators, by historical politicians, by people like Mark Twain... and perhaps your own experiences to understand that public education is fundamentally flawed. Yet when people are successfully engaging in alternatives, you criticize or seek to eliminate that opportunity. Why?

      I hope that I am able to homeschool my upcoming child. I've had the amazing opportunity to meet a family that has made it work. It opened my eyes to the possibility of unthinkable things.. like a middle school girl that you don't want to choke to death after 4 minutes. That's saying something.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    5. Re:Home School / Education Choice by bmajik · · Score: 1

      taking a favorite cue from the slashdot playbook, the wikipedia link to today's logical fallacy is:

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

      I am reluctant to let something so important as the proper development of my child's mind and love for learning be left to the government.

      It's not that home schoolers don't like their child "learning" a certain thing. They object to their child being taught specific _values_. To deny that government schooling has any sort of value subjugation aspect in its curriculum is being dishonest. It does, and some parents find it objectionable.

      When you add to that the horrible quality of education received, and the numerous behavioral disorders arising from the large-prison-colony approach, and the legal maze teachers, parents, and students are subjected to... it is very apealing to step away from all of that mess and try and do a better job yourself. And results suggest that more often than not, homeschooled kids are smarter and better adjusted than public schooled kids. You can interpret that however you like, since we both know of the shortcomings of the distillation of survey data into talking points :)

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    6. Re:Home School / Education Choice by bmajik · · Score: 1

      Your mother uses the same public restrooms as my wife. As your mother is a member of the adult society we all live in, please, instruct her to report to the genital examination room, where me and the other democratically elected members of the health board will "inspect her vigorously" for infectuous diseases.

      Look, the health of everybody is important. I'm sure you understand.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    7. Re:Home School / Education Choice by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      OP here.

      Well put.

      Also, he will probably violate his own principals because odds are he went to a public university OR took federal funding if he went to a private university. Surely he wants the freedom to choose where to go and what to study and for profs to have academic freedom - totally contradicting his point in the post. His logic ... fails.

      Also, ask him why 57% of DC public school teachers with children opt to send their kids to private schools, and why shouldn't everyone have that choice? Citation.

    8. Re:Home School / Education Choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, the health of everybody is important. I'm sure you understand. Sure. Gasp (he agreed)! Not a problem if society deems it so we can inspect all of us for public lavatory use.
      But society hasn't deemed it essential (yet). My libertarian side would prefer we didn't fund public lavatories anyway (but that's off topic).

      Society has deemed the welfare of children important. And it has asked us all to contribute, whether we have children or not. In fact, more so if we do not have children (doesn't that say something about how important this is?). And I don't think that was such a bad choice. I am not anti-children. It is good that parents think this is an intrusion, it shows they care. But I haven't found a parent yet that is willing to put up all the money and forgo the subsidies (which are more than just government).

      It isn't even taxes, I'm sure corporate America would love to stop health insurance for employees children, save them quite a bit. Let's not bother with enumerating all the ways society helps parents out, because I'm not disagreeing with that.

      I'll also respond to your supporter.

      Also, he will probably violate his own principals because odds are he went to a public university OR took federal funding if he went to a private university I went to a public university, that allows voters to decide on offices like chancellor. Perhaps you should register to vote, or vote in all elections.

      Surely he wants the freedom to choose where to go and what to study and for profs to have academic freedom - totally contradicting his point in the post. How? Academic freedom isn't valued by society? Or is it assumed I don't value it? Corporations made heavy donations to my alma matter's engineering department. Even if state funding is dwindling it still appears to have value. I think you missed my point, and I'll take some of the blame for that. And I did have freedom to choose among universities. And I chose an accredited institution. I believe we are arguing separate ideas here though.

      Also, ask him why 57% of DC public school teachers with children opt to send their kids to private schools, and why shouldn't everyone have that choice? I didn't propose that you can't send your children to private schools. And parents who do so still reap many benefits from the rest of us. I am saying parents don't have the sole right to decide what their children are taught. Again, because they are deemed so important. That is the deal we appear to have: children matter enough that we will subsidize them. They matter enough that we don't allow you to beat them either. Do you have a problem with that?

      I think my point was missed (or I stated it badly). So here it is: the welfare (including education) of children is so important that society should have a voice. Indeed we have all agreed to help you raise your children. You should have some latitude in where to send your child, but basic curriculum is not your sole decision. And furthermore, we are compensating you for this intrusion.

      I wanted to make this point because (and I may be wrong again), I felt the parent of this thread was advocating curriculum decisions be given to the parent. From this qote:

      Don't like your child learning / not learning about sex ed / evolution / intelligent design / Islam / Christianity? And I still do strongly disagree with that sentiment. We all pay the same amount for public lavatory use, but children are subsidized :-)
    9. Re:Home School / Education Choice by dreadclown · · Score: 2, Funny

      I hope that I am able to homeschool my upcoming child. I've had the amazing opportunity to meet a family that has made it work. It opened my eyes to the possibility of unthinkable things.. like a middle school girl that you don't want to choke to death after 4 minutes. That's saying something.
      So, you want to choke young girls to death? Well, that certainly is saying something.
  20. Don't misunderestimate the electorate by RichPowers · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My local schoolboard faced a similar reversal after the ultra-conservative members tried pushing I.D. into our classrooms. The public hearing on the matter was a hoot though. The district's science instructors, a few PhDs, and even some students all went on record as saying the whole thing was a dumb idea. Oh, and the fiscal conservatives were outraged to learn that the district spent $10,000+ on legal fees.

    The next schoolboard election saw a higher voter turnout and the pro-ID board members were ousted, replaced by moderates.

    All this in a county that votes 65% Republican. If only voters had paid attention during the first election hehe

    1. Re:Don't misunderestimate the electorate by adisakp · · Score: 1

      The real problem isn't conservative Republicans (that are conservative politically in the fiscal management of their budgets). It's that the words "conservative" and "liberal" have been hijacked to represent fundamentalist versus everything else so that in order to be an electable member the Republican party you practically have to be Anti-Gay, pro-Intelligent Design, and against reproductive choice regardless of your views on actual gov't policies.

  21. It will happen again by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1, Troll

    Fundamentalists are, by definition, incapable of learning. They keep doing the same thing over and over again, no matter how many times it fails. Some other group of fundamentalists will fool the people of Kansas into electing them and, being utterly incapable getting it through their thick skulls that the people of Kansas don't want creationism in their public school science classes, they will try to get this crap pushed through again. And they will subsequently be utterly shocked when they are voted out of office in the following election, just like the last two groups of fundies were when they pulled the same thing.

    1. Re:It will happen again by JPMaximilian · · Score: 0

      It is unfair to say Fundamentalists are incapable of learning and I see nothing in the definition of fundamentalist that would merit such a claim. Labeling doesn't facilitate constructive dialog or understanding.

      --
      "I'll see you next time." - LeVar Burton
    2. Re:It will happen again by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Fundamentalists don't want constructive dialog or understanding. They want their arbitrary beliefs to be the ultimate say-so on everything.

  22. "flock of dodos" documentary by peter303 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I saw it on Darwin's birthday five days ago. Its a Michael Moore kind of humor piece poking fun at the evolution debate making the rounds of science museums and film festival (Washington DC screening Thursday). The maker is former Harvard paleontologist turned full time film maker. The film claims the ID people are wrong and the scientists are terrible communicators.

  23. What? by CasperIV · · Score: 1

    You're comparing people who have a religious belief in a concept to people who accept the more explained theory. It's apples and oranges, one is an agreement with a concept and the other is faith. Now, what are you using as your basis that people who agree with evolution do not have interest in the future of their children? If the majority of the country has accepted evolution, wouldn't that suggest the majority of those that participle on school boards agree with evolution?

  24. But its obvious! by 91degrees · · Score: 2, Funny

    Eviolution is wrong. We were all created as part of an experiment by aliens. The experiment has since been abandoned.

    This argument is consistent with Intelligent Design. I wonder if the ID proponents would be happy about that being taught in schools.

    1. Re:But its obvious! by mdm-adph · · Score: 1

      read much Ursula K. LeGuinn?

      --
      It is by my will alone my thoughts acquire motion; it is by the juice of the coffee bean that the thoughts acquire speed
    2. Re:But its obvious! by 2Paranoid · · Score: 1

      Close, but I think it is spelled Evilution.

  25. So um...tags.. by Unlikely_Hero · · Score: 3, Funny

    Not that I am questioning the wisdom of the fine system/people/whatever that determines which tags for a story are put on the front page but I fail to see how "buttsexwithfishsquirrels" is really..um...relevant.
    In closing
    "WTF PEOPLE?!"

    --
    Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
    1. Re:So um...tags.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its a South Park reference. I think it was last season, they had a couple episodes about science vs. faith.

    2. Re:So um...tags.. by Lord+Lemur · · Score: 1

      it's obligatory south park

  26. What what with what what? by Wilson_6500 · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, I must've missed the meme-o on this one--what the hell does butt-sex with fish-squirrels have to do with evolution?

    1. Re:What what with what what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's from a South Park episode where Mr. Garrison explains the theory of evolution.

    2. Re:What what with what what? by pryonic · · Score: 1

      It's reference to a South Park episode in which Mr(s) Garrison is forced to teach evolution in his classroom. He doesn't agree with the theory so teaches is very badly, implying that a mutated fish frog had sex with a squirrel which gave birth to humanity. This is all until Richard Dawkins starts teaching at the school, and because Mrs Garrison fancies him, he end up renouncing God so Richard will sleep with him. There's also the whole thread about Carman freezing himself until the Wii is released, only to end up being frozen til the 25th Century in a hilarious Buck Rogers satire. It's actually a really good episode

      Go God Go

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
  27. Usefullness of science by DrYak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    saying 'goddidit' is easier than learning the facts
    ...and is less useful.

    Actually I'm not happy with their definition of science. I'm sure there'll be crackpot around there to say that "God" is part of the "natural process that drives things" and therefor He's divine presence is needed to explain phenomenons.

    I think it'll be more meaningful to describes sciences as a series of models that humans have inventend that are designed to describe the world around us in a way that can be measured/checked (numerically, for exemple, in the case of physics), that can be proved/disproved (what ever your own deity say you should believe about the shape of the earth, that doesn't stop the newtonian physic to be rather good at predicting phenomenons happening on it's surface : object falling and being thrown around), and that can be used to predict the behaviour of some object (all the science used in engineering can be used to invent new technology by knowing in advance how they're supposed to work once build).
    These models aren't necessarily perfectly exact, they are just good enough inside their scope (newtonian physic isn't good enough for very masses and high speeds. Einstein's physic is better and more precise in those cases).

    In that perspective, when encountering complex phenomenons like evolution, scientific believes like Darwin's theory are a good interesting model for interpreting the facts that you discover (lots and lots of slightly different animals in archeologic discoveries, and if you put them together in chronological order, they seem to slowly transform from one specie to another. The monkey->ape->human evolution is a nice example) and that can make interesting prediction (you can't directly make an experiment to prove/disprove it. At least not as long as crackpots repeat that micro and macro evolutions are different. BUT you can predict that as we dig up more and more fossils, we'll fill the holes and get more steps that details in a better way the evolution).

    Whereas if one's intellectually lazy and prefer to say "goddidit", one just stuck with this single explanation. Nothing useful can be made of it. To the question "What happens next", the only possible answer is "depend's on god's mood today" and that isn't very useful.

    I think that these notions :
    - science is descriptive of phenomenon,
    - science puts quantities and classes on them,
    - science can be proven and disproven (and mostly be proven to be accurate enough for some scope), and
    - science may be useful to predict outcome of experiment and behaviour of inventions ...are better for the goal, rather than "only natural phenomenon are used in science".
    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Usefullness of science by Dastardly · · Score: 4, Insightful

      - science can be proven and disproven (and mostly be proven to be accurate enough for some scope), and

      One modification is absolutely necessary to your definition.

      Science can only be disproven.

      Science cannot prove to you that General Relativity is true everywhere all the time.

      "God did it" is not science because it cannot be disproven.

    2. Re:Usefullness of science by cain · · Score: 1

      The monkey->ape->human evolution is a nice example

      Just to be pedantic, I think that the facts do not support a monkey->ape->human evolutionary path, but that all of them share a common ancestor in the distant past. This is an important point as the creationists are always screaming that they were not descended from apes and falsely claiming that evolution claims this when it does not.

      FWIW.

    3. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      [W]hen encountering complex phenomenons like evolution, scientific believes like Darwin's theory are a good interesting model for interpreting the facts that you discover ... and that can make interesting prediction (you can't directly make an experiment to prove/disprove it. ... BUT you can predict that as we dig up more and more fossils, we'll fill the holes and get more steps that details in a better way the evolution).

      That is an excellent way of putting it. I just wish the people writing the standards and the textbooks would explain it that way instead of saying / implying that evolution is a proven fact. What a person believes about the origin of species is all well and good, but when it comes down to it, no one can prove conclusively that it happened "just like this". I'd like to see some standards that acknowledge there are several theories (evolution, creation, intellegent design) that currently have some level of support within the scientific community and society. Is it too much to ask that we try to take a neutral point of view with education standards?

    4. Re:Usefullness of science by ciggieposeur · · Score: 1

      Not a bad start, but I think that last point could be clarified to explicitly include the social sciences.

    5. Re:Usefullness of science by Coco+Lopez · · Score: 1

      We're not *descended* from apes, we *are* apes; and *great* ones at that. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human

    6. Re:Usefullness of science by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Actually I'm not happy with their definition of science. I'm sure there'll be crackpot around there to say that "God" is part of the "natural process that drives things" and therefor He's divine presence is needed to explain phenomenons.

      Who cares? That's just fine! If you want to say "physics works the way it does because God says so" then that's fine, because Science doesn't deal with the Why (which in this case also encompasses the Who,) it deals with the What, When, Where, and How.

      The people who believe that ID and Evolution are irreconcilable don't get this concept, for example. They are not in the least incompatible! An omnipotent god is capable of utilizing evolution to achieve a desired end condition. That's what omnipotent means! It means he can also create a rock so big he can't lift it, and then lift it. He can decide whether a tree that falls in the forest makes a sound. See what I'm getting at here?

      Another reason that science and religion don't actually conflict is that religion is about faith, while science is about fact.

      The only time that they DO conflict is when you start taking things invented by man too seriously. Yes, I believe that the whole thing is invented by man, but the point is that if someone has faith they can accept that I feel that way without it affecting them beyond believing that I'm going to hell. Of course, this is what the catholics will tell you is true about any "lesser" Christians...

      Ultimately, anyone who follows the bible isn't a Christian. They're a Biblist or something. In fact most Christians aren't really Christians anyway, since the bible is mostly full of the admonishments of apostles. They're apostleites. Christ had a very simple and compelling message. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, believe in divinity of the lord God and ye shall be saved. That's pretty much the whole story right there, although there are numerous clarifications.

      By that definition, most Christians are just hypocrites. For example, if you found yourself living on the street, would you like someone to take you in and help you? HomelessInLaJolla's possible responses notwithstanding :) the answer is pretty much going to be yes. Anyone who DOES answer yes to that question, considers themselves a Christian, but isn't actively engaged in taking in the homeless is a hypocrite. It is just that simple. They are ignoring the strongest and most important admonishment from what the Christian dogma decided upon at the Council of Nicea says is an embodiment of their God.

      Face it, there are only a handful of true Christians in this world, and generally their stories don't end well. Look at the Saints. Check out Jesus in a Catholic church sometime with a big fat hole in his guts, hanging from a telephone pole. The rest of you sitting fat, dumb, and happy in your multi-bedroom house while there are people starving in the streets even in this country, you're all a bunch of hypocrites, and Jesus would be bitch-slapping you right along with the money changers.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Usefullness of science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...I just wish the people writing the standards and the textbooks would explain it that way instead of saying / implying that evolution is a proven fact. What a person believes about the origin of species is all well and good, but when it comes down to it, no one can prove conclusively that it happened "just like this". I'd like to see some standards that acknowledge there are several theories (evolution, creation, intellegent[sic] design) that currently have some level of support within the scientific community and society. Is it too much to ask that we try to take a neutral point of view with education standards?

      I rather doubt any science text describes evolution as a "Fact". I imagine more likely, they claim that it's the best available idea that describes the empirical evidence and will stand until it fails to describe reality accurately. Not all theories are of equivalent quality. Anyone can pull an idea from their nether regions and proclaim that they have a "theory", which must be given equal consideration to any other. Because they're all theories, after all. Heck, until you find "(C) Yahweh" encoded in the genes of all living things, I think assuming that it must have been done by some invisible omnipotent being, just because you're unable to understand it, is, well, something of a cop-out.

      Might as well add any other creation myth of your choosing, to your list of competing "theories" and have a general vote to see which one society feels is the Right Answer and just settle it. And while your at it, make life easier for us all and declare Pi to be equal to 3.00; provided Society feels it's Right.

      AC (nice of those folks to make my name the default one, heh)

    8. Re:Usefullness of science by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      we *are* apes; and *great* ones at that
      Are you sure you didn't mean *grape* ones?
    9. Re:Usefullness of science by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      there are several theories (evolution, creation, intellegent design)
      As has been repeated many, many times, creationism/intelligent design is not a scientific theory. You could conceivably find evidence that contradicts evolution, forcing the abandonment or revision of the theory. Creation/intelligent design is not falsifiable, nor can it be used to make any predictions about what will happen in the real world, and that's why it isn't science.
    10. Re:Usefullness of science by ranton · · Score: 1

      because Science doesn't deal with the Why (which in this case also encompasses the Who,) it deals with the What, When, Where, and How.

      That is rediculous. Science deals with the "Why" all of the time.

      - Why is the sky blue?
      - Why does a ball fall down when you drop it?
      - Why is the human brain capable of believing in religion?

      Another reason that science and religion don't actually conflict is that religion is about faith, while science is about fact.

      Another incorrect statement. Science is not about fact. A simplistic view would be that science is about reproduceable and predictable phenomenons. Science is not about finding facts; it is about creating theories that allow to to produce useful knowledge about how the world works.

      Most of what I have said is semantics, but it is very important semantics. VERY VERY VERY Important semantics.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    11. Re:Usefullness of science by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      That is rediculous. Science deals with the "Why" all of the time. - Why is the sky blue? - Why does a ball fall down when you drop it? - Why is the human brain capable of believing in religion?

      No, that's not the why, it is the what. What makes the sky blue. What makes a ball fall down when you drop it. What makes the human brain blah blah blah. Why is why are these things the state of affairs? Why is THIS the way the universe turned out? That is an entirely different question.

      Another reason that science and religion don't actually conflict is that religion is about faith, while science is about fact.
      Another incorrect statement. Science is not about fact. A simplistic view would be that science is about reproduceable and predictable phenomenons.

      Yes, and we call those facts. Science is about facts. When I do this, this happens. That's a fact. Now I work towards a theory based on those facts and when I have one that seems to fit, well, we go with that. But it's based on facts, whereas faith is based on beliefs.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    12. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      I rather doubt any science text describes evolution as a "Fact".

      They might not say it's "fact", but they strongly imply "this is the way it happened". Students don't realize it is not "fact" because they don't realize there is any alternative explanation.

    13. Re:Usefullness of science by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Whereas if one's intellectually lazy and prefer to say "goddidit", one just stuck with this single explanation. Nothing useful can be made of it. To the question "What happens next", the only possible answer is "depend's on god's mood today" and that isn't very useful.
      The common equivalent of this being sticking your fingers in your ears and singing at the top of your voice "LA LA LA I CAN'T HEAR YOU" while running around the living room sofa when your older sister is asking you why the hell you dyed the cat pink (replace this with your childhood equivalent).

      So "intellectually lazy" or "not able to come up with an answer" or "scared to face the real world"...take your pick.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    14. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      Creation/intelligent design is not falsifiable,

      How can the statement "humans evolved (through many, many generations) from single-celled organisms" be falsifiable and the statement "humans were created by a supernatural being" not be falsifiable? How would you disprove either without a time machine to go back and see what happened?

      If you could disprove "a single-celled organism could evolve (through many, many generations) into a human" or "a supernatural being could create a human", that would answer the question, but proving it is possible that humans came into existence by (theory of your choice) does not prove that that is what actually happened.

      nor can it be used to make any predictions about what will happen in the real world

      How do you make predictions based on the theory "an organism can evolve (over several generations)"? That's like making predictions based on "a meteor could crash into the earth today". Well, sure, it's possible, but who knows if it's going to happen?

      And, for the record, Intelligent Design is a theory that states that humans (and all other living things) were designed by a supernatural being. It does not specify how those designs were implemented (creation, evolution, or something else). Let's try not to lump together two different ideas.

    15. Re:Usefullness of science by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Just to be pedantic, I think that the facts do not support a monkey->ape->human evolutionary path, but that all of them share a common ancestor in the distant past.
      We will consider replying further to your weak argument when you have posted your complete DNA.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    16. Re:Usefullness of science by ranton · · Score: 1

      Yes, and we call those facts. Science is about facts. When I do this, this happens. That's a fact. Now I work towards a theory based on those facts and when I have one that seems to fit, well, we go with that. But it's based on facts, whereas faith is based on beliefs.

      Those are still not facts. They are observations. Calling them facts distorts the meaning of the word within the confines of scientific literature. A lawyer can call them facts, but a scientist cannot.

      No, that's not the why, it is the what. What makes the sky blue. What makes a ball fall down when you drop it. What makes the human brain blah blah blah. Why is why are these things the state of affairs? Why is THIS the way the universe turned out? That is an entirely different question.

      No, it is the why. Why is simply a pro-adverb that is used in questions concerned with causality. A simple definition for the word why is simply: for what reason/cause/purpose? (Ex. Why is the sky blue? = For what reason is the sky blue?) Why and What are fundamentally the same interrogative words just said differently.

      What you are trying to do is only ask questions that have not been answered yet with Why, but ask questions that have been answered with What. Why is THIS the way the universe turned out? is not an unanswerable question for science. If we ever found the building blocks of the universe then we may find out why gravity and electromagnatism, etc. work the way they do.

      The same why questions you have are just as unanswerable by religion.

      Why does God love us?
      Because we are his creations.
      Why does he love his creations?
      Because we were created in his image.
      Why does he love that which is created in his image?
      Because he does...
      But why does he?
      Because he does...
      But why?
      BECAUSE HE DOES!

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    17. Re:Usefullness of science by plunge · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Um, the poster you were replying to is seriously downplaying the amount an quality of the evidence for evolution. It isn't simply a matter of fossils happening to create an apparent pattern. It's a matter of countless different independent lines of evidence all converging on the one very particular pattern that evolution requires. Simple layperson observance of fossil morphology when placed in sequence is barely even scratching the surface (despite many people for some reason thinking that this is all evolution has going for it).

      In science, we don't speak of certain Truth or Facts, but talking about evolution as true and a fact in a colloquial sense is perfectly appropriate if talking about ANYTHING as a fact is. That people get upset at evolution and only evolution when referred to that way, despite the reality that the evidence for evolution is far far stronger than virtually anything else to which they DON'T object being called a fact, I think we have a right to question their sincerity or fairness.

      " I'd like to see some standards that acknowledge there are several theories (evolution, creation, intellegent design) that currently have some level of support within the scientific community and society."

      This claim would be a falsehood. Even intelligent design, which is a PR movement devoted to trying to "create" the circumstances for this claim, has virtually no support amongst biologists. That many Americans believe in creationism has no bearing on whether it is sound science. Science is about the evidence, not about people's beliefs. The evidence says that creationism is ridiculous, and that intelligent design is not even a coherent or scientific theory. Neither is a scientific alternative.

      "Is it too much to ask that we try to take a neutral point of view with education standards?"

      Should we also take a neutral point of view on the holocaust, astrology, numerology and 2+2=4? Should we simply stop teaching science altogether? Isn't that basically what you are asking for, in the end?

      Science ISN'T neutral. Science is about what the evidence shows, not about surveying everyone's opinions and beliefs.

    18. Re:Usefullness of science by plunge · · Score: 1

      "How can the statement "humans evolved (through many, many generations) from single-celled organisms" be falsifiable and the statement "humans were created by a supernatural being" not be falsifiable? How would you disprove either without a time machine to go back and see what happened?"

      Uh.... by looking at the evidence. When things happen in the natural world, they have all sorts of predictable consequences. We figure out what those are, and we test to see if we can piece together what happened.

      Are you asserting that in a murder trial, we shouldn't deal with forensic evidence because we can't prove or disprove anything without a time machine?

      The idea that the only standard that matters is seeing things with eyeballs is just nonsense: it's not an idea that scientists treat seriously, and with good reason. Eyeballs aren't even all that reliable compared to convergence of evidence. Give me a good DNA sample and several convergent chains of custody over an eyewitness any day.

      Supernatural events, on the other hand, do not necessarily provide anything predictable or discoverable at all. If God commits a murder, he could make it look like just about anything happened. Heck, he could even make it look like the person is still alive! Especially if a supernatural claim is vague enough that it could be consistent with anything, we can't possibly test or distinguish it from anything else.

      "but proving it is possible that humans came into existence by (theory of your choice) does not prove that that is what actually happened."

      That's something of a caricature, but really, that's what proof IS: showing that something CANNOT be ruled out despite all the other alternatives can be. Totally consistent with all the evidence is the HIGHEST standard of proof, not the lowest. But, like I said, it's pretty much a caricature to simply say that all we can do is show it's "merely" possible in the colloquial sense. The sheer amount, consistency, quality, and convergence of the evidence we can amass not only for how, but for a very particular set of events and their cascading effects (all of which much match up exactly right... and do!) is not something one can brush aside as "merely possible."

      "How do you make predictions based on the theory "an organism can evolve (over several generations)""

      If you really think that is all evolutionary theory says, then you really need to learn a heck of a lot more about it. Evolution requires a very specific set of circumstances that work in a very particular way to get a very particular result.

      "And, for the record, Intelligent Design is a theory that states that humans (and all other living things) were designed by a supernatural being. It does not specify how those designs were implemented (creation, evolution, or something else"

      That's exactly the problem! The whole point of a SCIENTIFIC theory is that it DOES specify a how. In the case of biological evolution, it's a very specific, almost absurdly specific (compared to the number of possible other options) pattern and set of events. Intelligent design claims basically say "something that we can't explain did it in a way we can't explain." In terms of logical meaning, however, that statement is pretty much exactly identical to "we don't have any idea how it was done."

      It's worse than that though. Because you can get specific about the ways in which known intelligences, like us, operate. And when you consider those, it fact becomes clear that biological life constantly defies everything we would expect to see from designers like us: traits aren't treated as "good ideas" that are reused and jump lineages, muck isn't cleared out, design problems aren't so much solved as they are compensated for, and so on. The only real escape from these obvious problems is to jump back to the idea that the designer ISN'T like us at all, which is to say that we have no idea at all what it is like, what it's motives are, or how it works. Which is to say, we jump out of science and basically say nothing much at all.

    19. Re:Usefullness of science by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself, I'm just a pretty good ape. (I'll get the brachiation thing down sooner or later... Ooof... Later it is then...).

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    20. Re:Usefullness of science by Copid · · Score: 1

      They might not say it's "fact", but they strongly imply "this is the way it happened". Students don't realize it is not "fact" because they don't realize there is any alternative explanation.
      This is a failing of primary school science programs in their teaching of the philosophy of science. It has nothing to do with evolution per se. I would say that just skimming over the posts here should be enough to indicate that we're doing a terrible job teaching kids how science works and what it is. The idea that yanking evolution from the curriculum or singling it out for special scrutiny will somehow "fix" the problem is simply nonsense.

      Creationists typically use the "critical analysis" problem as an excuse to beat on a theory they don't like. If they were truly concerned about kids absorbing the fundamentals of how science works, they wouldn't push unscientific philosophical wanking like ID into the classroom. They'd be pushing for a lot more work on making kids understand the tentative nature of all scientific results and a lot more discussion of the philosophy and history of science. As it stands, most serious science instructors have learned to recognize "critical analysis" provisions as the Trojan horses they are. That's why they get shouted down. There's too much history to ignore.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    21. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      This claim would be a falsehood. Even intelligent design, which is a PR movement devoted to trying to "create" the circumstances for this claim, has virtually no support amongst biologists. That many Americans believe in creationism has no bearing on whether it is sound science. Science is about the evidence, not about people's beliefs.

      So, if 4 out of 5 biologists believe it, it is true?

      Should we also take a neutral point of view on the holocaust, astrology, numerology and 2+2=4?

      Yes.

      Should we simply stop teaching science altogether? Isn't that basically what you are asking for, in the end?

      No, I'm not sure why you think that's what I'm saying.

      Science ISN'T neutral. Science is about what the evidence shows, not about surveying everyone's opinions and beliefs.

      I think you must be working on a different definition of neutral. I think "based on evidence rather than opinions" is neutral.

    22. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      Are you asserting that in a murder trial, we shouldn't deal with forensic evidence because we can't prove or disprove anything without a time machine?

      The standard of proof for a criminal trial is "beyond a reasonable doubt". If you want to talk about evolution in those terms, I don't believe it has met that standard.

      "but proving it is possible that humans came into existence by (theory of your choice) does not prove that that is what actually happened."
      That's something of a caricature, but really, that's what proof IS: showing that something CANNOT be ruled out despite all the other alternatives can be. Totally consistent with all the evidence is the HIGHEST standard of proof, not the lowest.

      I agree with your logical analysis, but it does not address my point. I said, "X is possible does not imply X occured". Your statement (as I understand it) is, "X is the only possibility implies X occured".

      It's worse than that though. Because you can get specific about the ways in which known intelligences, like us, operate. And when you consider those, it fact becomes clear that biological life constantly defies everything we would expect to see from designers like us: traits aren't treated as "good ideas" that are reused and jump lineages, muck isn't cleared out, design problems aren't so much solved as they are compensated for, and so on.

      You clearly don't spend much time reading old code. I see many of those "issues" with the programs I work on every day. It's also difficult to look at someone else's code and know exactly why they did what they did in any program that's more than a couple thousand lines. Maybe "the designer" coded the DNA in a particular way for reasons we don't see because it's hard to analize the potential interactions of every gene in the entire genome.

    23. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      This is a failing of primary school science programs in their teaching of the philosophy of science. It has nothing to do with evolution per se. I would say that just skimming over the posts here should be enough to indicate that we're doing a terrible job teaching kids how science works and what it is. The idea that yanking evolution from the curriculum or singling it out for special scrutiny will somehow "fix" the problem is simply nonsense.

      If it is a fundamental failing in science education, then how better to "fix" it than teaching kids where the flaws lie? It doesn't have to be "evolution" that is singled out, but it seems a good candidate. Currently kids hear* "evolution is fact" at school and (some of them) hear "creation is fact" outside of school. Addressing the issue would be more productive than ignoring it.

      *I realize they are being told "evolution is a theory", but many hear this as "evolution is fact".

    24. Re:Usefullness of science by plunge · · Score: 1

      "The standard of proof for a criminal trial is "beyond a reasonable doubt". If you want to talk about evolution in those terms, I don't believe it has met that standard. "

      First of all, you completely dodged the implication of the question which was to ask why you scream bloody murder over physical evidence used in science but not in court.

      Second of all, evolution has not only met the reasonable doubt standard, but also the "no one can supply any other alternative that explains all the evidence" standard.

      "I agree with your logical analysis, but it does not address my point. I said, "X is possible does not imply X occured". Your statement (as I understand it) is, "X is the only possibility implies X occured"."

      Of course it addresses your point. If we nail down virtually every physical factor that would be implied by something happening and then rule out all the possible alternatives, it's just dishonest to say that we're merely talking about vague possibility. In science, what you say is technically the case, but in terms of applying that standard consistently, it's extremely dishonest. You don't run around saying that it's merely possible that the Battle of Gettysburg occured, even though history uses the exact same empirical standard as science.

      "You clearly don't spend much time reading old code. I see many of those "issues" with the programs I work on every day."

      Again, I don't think you're thinking very clear about this. The point is not that human designers can't be sloppy. The point is that the artifacts of even a human ingenuity are simply missing entirely from DNA. Most tellingly, despite the fact that HUMAN genetists today can swap entire genes across even kingdoms of life to gain useful effects with no downsides, we don't see this in nature. We see nested clades in genetics like everything else, not good ideas developing somewhere and then used across the board.

      "It's also difficult to look at someone else's code and know exactly why they did what they did in any program that's more than a couple thousand lines. Maybe "the designer" coded the DNA in a particular way for reasons we don't see because it's hard to analize the potential interactions of every gene in the entire genome."

      If all you are saying is that a designed code can look exactly like non-designed code, then you aren't really saying much, and you clearly aren't getting what I was saying. The possibility that one can identify artifacts of design is one I was considering because it MIGHT help the ID, but it turns out it doesn't. Essentially agreeing that it doesn't, as you are doing, doesn't really help your case much. And it only underscores how eager ID proponents are to hide themselves from any testible hypothesis: i.e. hide from doing science.

    25. Re:Usefullness of science by plunge · · Score: 1

      "So, if 4 out of 5 biologists believe it, it is true?"

      This is like arguing with the guy from Memento. YOU were the one who claimed that there was some level of support in the scientific community for creationism and ID.

      And biologists don't "believe" anything: they look at what the evidence supports.

      "--Should we also take a neutral point of view on the holocaust, astrology, numerology and 2+2=4?--
      Yes. "

      So we should teach kids that the holocaust happened, but also that it didn't happen? That 2+2=4, but also it could equal 5 or 2.3, or 6.12 ?

      "--Should we simply stop teaching science altogether?--
      No, I'm not sure why you think that's what I'm saying."

      Well, what you are essentially asking is that we stop teaching science (i.e., the evidence) and start teaching all the different things people believe.

      "I think you must be working on a different definition of neutral. I think "based on evidence rather than opinions" is neutral."

      So then, you have no complaint with the way science is taught then?

    26. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      First of all, you completely dodged the implication of the question which was to ask why you scream bloody murder over physical evidence used in science but not in court.

      I did not respond to your implication because it is completely unfounded and untrue. I believe physical evidence is the cornerstone of the scientific process.

      Second of all, evolution has not only met the reasonable doubt standard, but also the "no one can supply any other alternative that explains all the evidence" standard.

      I don't think you (as an individual) can assert that evolution has met the reasonable doubt standard. Perhaps it does in your mind, but it does not in mine. That's why a jury makes those sort of determinations. When it comes to the "no one can supply any other alternative that explains all the evidence" standard, I can come up with any number of alternative theories. Most of them would be implausible, but that leads us back to "reasonable doubt".

      Most tellingly, despite the fact that HUMAN genetists today can swap entire genes across even kingdoms of life to gain useful effects with no downsides, we don't see this in nature. We see nested clades in genetics like everything else, not good ideas developing somewhere and then used across the board.

      No downsides? How can we tell if there are downsides that don't manifest themselves for 1000 generations when we've only produced 10 generations?

      If all you are saying is that a designed code can look exactly like non-designed code, then you aren't really saying much, and you clearly aren't getting what I was saying. The possibility that one can identify artifacts of design is one I was considering because it MIGHT help the ID, but it turns out it doesn't. Essentially agreeing that it doesn't, as you are doing, doesn't really help your case much. And it only underscores how eager ID proponents are to hide themselves from any testible hypothesis: i.e. hide from doing science.

      I didn't say that "designed" can look exactly like "non-designed". I'm simply saying "designed" does not always mean "designed the most efficient manner, reusing the maximum amount of code". I'm saying there are other plausible explanations for the things you see as a nail in the coffin for ID.

    27. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      And biologists don't "believe" anything: they look at what the evidence supports.

      At some point, it always come down to belief. Try this exercise:
      Why do you believe in evolution?
      "Because it is supported by scientific evidence."
      Why do you believe scientific evidence is accurate?
      "Because it uses the scientific method."
      Why do you believe the scientific method works?
      ...

      So we should teach kids that the holocaust happened, but also that it didn't happen? That 2+2=4, but also it could equal 5 or 2.3, or 6.12 ?

      We should show them the evidence that supports "the holocaust happened" and the evidence that supports "the holocaust didn't happen" and let them decide what they believe.

      Well, what you are essentially asking is that we stop teaching science (i.e., the evidence) and start teaching all the different things people believe.

      I think we should show kids all the evidence and discuss how to formulate a theory. We should talk about how to test a hypothesis / theory using experimentation and physical evidence. Isn't that the scientific method? We just need to make sure we don't censor the theories and evidence that don't fit the majority view.

      So then, you have no complaint with the way science is taught then?

      I have a problem with "cherry-picking" the information you're giving to kids so that they can only reach one conclusion.

    28. Re:Usefullness of science by Copid · · Score: 1

      If it is a fundamental failing in science education, then how better to "fix" it than teaching kids where the flaws lie?
      The problem is, the "flaws" that you're bringing up are typically the same tired old creationist claptrap that gets regurgitated time and time again on the Internet. It's typically nonsense designed to sound credible to people unfamiliar with the field. If we actually wanted to discuss the real cutting-edge research and areas of true uncertainty and confusion in evolutionary biology, we'd have to bring kids up to a graduate school level in very short order. We certainly wouldn't be doing them any good by bombarding them with Kent Hovind videos or Dembski's pesudomathematical chatter. Primary school science is there to teach kids the basics of what science is and generally what our best science results are.

      *I realize they are being told "evolution is a theory", but many hear this as "evolution is fact".
      You've hit upon the problem. Kids aren't being taught what "theory" and "hypothesis" and other very important words mean. I had a great science class my sophomore year in high school. It was taught by a real biologist who worked very hard to instill in us the philosophy of science. She made sure that we understood the tentative nature of all conclusions, that the hallmarks of a good scientific theory are its testability and ability to explain things, and that some things simply aren't testable with the tools of science. She addressed the creation issue simply by saying that evolution is the best result we've come up with an that it's an incredibly powerful theory that explains the data well. Creationism doesn't meet the criteria to be science, but that's not the same thing as saying it's 100% wrong. It just means that a number of the claims that are made simply can't be addressed by science.

      I can't say that I remember the Krebs cycle, but I do remember a lot of more meaningful lessons in that class. I think that students should be taught very early on what science is for, what claims it can address, and what claims it simply can't address. It should go without saying that anything taught in a science class is our best understanding of the world, and that their kids may laugh at some of the things they were taught when new data becomes available.

      My problem is with how people are proposing to do it. Usually, the people bringing in the critical analysis clauses try to single out evolutionary theory, even though it's among the best supported scientific theories the students will learn. They are also the same people who tried to get creationism into schools years ago and the same people who tried to re-brand creationism as "intelligent design" after their first attempt was rebuffed. I have no doubt that critical analysis clauses are simply getting the foot in the door for more expansive programs designed to satisfy religious crusaders who simply have religious issues with evolutionary theory--regardless of the quality of the science. It's an insult to think that people wouldn't see through this stuff.

      If they really cared about students getting a good science education, they'd vote for a program that teaches the best science we have available to us after teaching the kids what it means to be good science. Of course, they never propose anything like that because it would completely obliterate any hope they have of getting creationism/creation science/intelligent design/whatever the label for the day is into classrooms. They're not here to play the science game. They're here to get their own brand of dogma inserted into the curriculum because they couldn't get it past peer review by adults.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    29. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with half of what you say, and I completely disagree with the other half of what you say. It's clear that this debate could go on forever, but I think we've covered everything we usefully can.

      That was fun. Now back to work!

    30. Re:Usefullness of science by plunge · · Score: 1

      "At some point, it always come down to belief."

      That's the creationist "everyone must go blind because we choose to" line. Not going to fly.

      "We should show them the evidence that supports "the holocaust happened" and the evidence that supports "the holocaust didn't happen" and let them decide what they believe. "

      The evidence doesn't support the "holocaust didn't happen" claim. In elementary school, what we teach kids is history, not any fairy story anyone proposes that for some reason deserves equal time merely because someone said it.

      "Isn't that the scientific method?"

      The scientific method is about the evidence. The evidence is what's taught. Not cherry-picked or anything else.

    31. Re:Usefullness of science by plunge · · Score: 1

      "I did not respond to your implication because it is completely unfounded and untrue. I believe physical evidence is the cornerstone of the scientific process."

      Whatever. The point is, I don't see you picketing courtrooms demanding that a time machine be invented before forensic evidence can be presented.

      "Perhaps it does in your mind, but it does not in mine. "

      Dollars to doughnuts, that's because either you don't know the evidence, don't understand it, or don't care.

    32. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      "At some point, it always come down to belief."
      That's the creationist "everyone must go blind because we choose to" line. Not going to fly.

      Now who's dodging? Answer this: "Why do you believe in physical evidence?"

      The scientific method is about the evidence. The evidence is what's taught. Not cherry-picked or anything else.

      You previously stated that we can't teach kids everything (e.g. graduate-level evolutionary biology). Who chooses what we teach?

    33. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      Dollars to doughnuts, that's because either you don't know the evidence, don't understand it, or don't care.

      Those first two statements are certainly possible, but I could say the same thing about your understanding of creationism or intellegent design. Does finger-pointing really help?

    34. Re:Usefullness of science by Copid · · Score: 1

      I have a problem with "cherry-picking" the information you're giving to kids so that they can only reach one conclusion.
      What information, specifically, is being left out that you'd like to see put in?
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    35. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      I have a problem with "cherry-picking" the information you're giving to kids so that they can only reach one conclusion.
      What information, specifically, is being left out that you'd like to see put in?

      To start, the fact that alternate theories exist for how we came into existance. We have no problem mentioning that prior to Keppler, Copernicus, and Galileo everyone* believed the earth was the center of the universe, so why not mention everyone* believed god created man?

      *By "everyone" I am refering to "western civilization". I'm not certain what scientific theories were favored in other parts of the world.

    36. Re:Usefullness of science by Copid · · Score: 1

      I have a problem with "cherry-picking" the information you're giving to kids so that they can only reach one conclusion.
      What information, specifically, is being left out that you'd like to see put in?

      To start, the fact that alternate theories exist for how we came into existance. We have no problem mentioning that prior to Keppler, Copernicus, and Galileo everyone* believed the earth was the center of the universe, so why not mention everyone* believed god created man?

      *By "everyone" I am refering to "western civilization". I'm not certain what scientific theories were favored in other parts of the world.

      Well, I would guess that the reason it's generally not done that way is that it would be perceived as biology teachers busting on somebody's religious beliefs. I can't imagine somebody saying something to the effect of, "Western Civilization used to take the Bible literally on creation, but modern science has discarded that view" not raising somebody's ire. I think that a good biology class generally covers discarded ideas like works of Lysenko and Lamarck, which are good for historical perspective. In fact, I think that covering those ideas covers the historical angle fairly well, just like covering older models of the atom and the solar system are useful in illuminating modern theory, whereas digging into a deep discussion of Apollo or the four basic elements is probably stretching the exercise a bit far.

      Fundamentally, I think the issue is that teaching evolution is sticky enough. It's all good fun to point out that we're not so big on the Apollo explanation of celestial mechanics, but as soon as you bring up a religion that isn't dead, you're stepping on somebody's toes. I have no problem making the statement you recommended, but I have a feeling that it would cause more hurt feelings rather than less.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    37. Re:Usefullness of science by VWJedi · · Score: 1

      Fundamentally, I think the issue is that teaching evolution is sticky enough. It's all good fun to point out that we're not so big on the Apollo explanation of celestial mechanics, but as soon as you bring up a religion that isn't dead, you're stepping on somebody's toes. I have no problem making the statement you recommended, but I have a feeling that it would cause more hurt feelings rather than less.

      Well, I'd rather have a curriculum (in science or any other topic) that doesn't shy away from "sticky" issues regardless of whose feelings get hurt.

      It's probably good that I don't write the curriculum.

  28. Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the most intellegently designed piece of legislation ever to come out of Kansas.

  29. Atheist by Tony · · Score: 1

    You seem to have a solid grasp on science and rational thinking in general. How is it that you're still a Christian, given that religion is superstitious, irrational, and non-provable?

    Because they are two different domains?

    Science is about the naturalistic world, the world in which quarks dominate the very small, and gravity dominates the very large. It is about deep time, and deeper knowledge.

    Religion explores the *why* of it all, the deeper meanings behind the quarks, and gravity, and the nature of thought and self-awareness. For some, it is the foundation of morality, which science has not fully addressed.

    Science is about knowledge. Religion is about understanding.

    (Note: I do not believe in God. There is much science does not answer, but human compassion and the desire to see the universe up close provides the only morality I need. But I understand where religion comes from. I just don't understand how folks turn religion into dogma.)

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Atheist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate it when people say science answers "how" but not "why" questions. Science answers plenty of "why" questions, and as Dawkins puts it...what exactly is a "why" question anyway? Formulating a question in such a manner that the word "why" precedes it doesn't necessarily make it some deep, thought-provoking introspection. I believe it was Carl Sagan who said that facts are what the universe is made of - a theory is WHY that is. And don't try to say "but it's just a theory!!"

      I will digress for a moment and get to the heart of what I'm sure you intended to mean with your "why" statement - which is subjects like meaning, purpose, so on. These are issues that religion certainly contends with - although it's not the ONLY institution that does - my beef is that it's based on not just an unprovable premise, it's HIGHLY unlikely. It's essentially superstition, it claims to provide an ultimate answer which, by it's nature cannot be disproven since it's based on infallibility, therefore cannot be subject to scrutiny. Whereas science welcomes scrutiny with open arms; I'd personally be very skeptical of any model that cannot be proven wrong and is unwelcoming to criticism.

      Religion seems to grip hardest to the minds of children, and is indeed quite a childish premise. Of course as you age you start to lose sight of that original vision, it becomes more mature, and your thoughts on morality, meaning, virtue evolves. This evolving process includes the same ideas that everyone has access to - it's not solely exclusive to religion. You don't need to accept Christ into your heart to grasp it.

      As for science not fully addressing morality - I urge you to consider that religion would hardly be considered a viable replacement, and in my eyes would be a vastly inferior one. Consider picking up "The Origins of Virtue" by Matt Ridley for some insight to see how far science has come on understanding morality.

  30. "God Says it" by truthsearch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I never completely understand why people argue "God says it". Even if people want to believe that god wrote the books of the bible, the christian bible was put together by humans. No one argues that the chapters put into the bible were selected by people. So god may have said lots of other things, but these people have chosen not to listen. Maybe another text which wasn't included describes evolution.

    And if these people believe the bible was written by humans, then everything "god says" is hearsay and could be misquoted.

    And let's not even get started on the fact that the bible Americans read has been translated. There are many phrases which can be translated multiple ways. Plus with the old testiment the English language can't properly represent the multiple meanings of Hebrew words, and so much is lost in translation.

    1. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      The argument is that the people were overcome with the Holy Spirit when composing their stories, and thus it is the Word of God. Similarly with translators.

    2. Re:"God Says it" by OriginalArlen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I never completely understand why people argue "God says it". Because they didn't receive a proper education, and failed to learn how to think independently and critically assess propositions put to them?

      Personally I'm less bothered by teaching science; I just wish the US would start teaching a bit of history, like the the idea that the country was founded on the principle of religious tolerance. I must say Mutt Rimney's declaration was especially stomach-churning. It's more likely that a black man or a woman will be elected in the next few decades than an atheist. Sickening, really :(

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    3. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It's simple: Most Christians are stupid. The ones who aren't are intellectually dishonest, perfectly willing to believe contradictory statements and lie to themselves and their children.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    4. Re:"God Says it" by jfengel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The people who say that believe that the Old Testament was divinely inspired, that it represents the Word of God. In particular, the bits in Numbers and Leviticus which starts with "and God said unto Moses..." were written down and faithfully copied, letter for letter.

      The Jews have a rather vigorous tradition concerning writing of the Torah. It's not done by just any schmuck; you have to train for years. There's no white-out in a Torah; if you screw up you chuck the entire sheet of parchment and start over. (It's made of many segments sewn together, so it's not quite as horrible as it sounds, but it's still pretty harsh.)

      Compare the Dead Sea Scrolls to modern Torahs and you'll find it's letter-for-letter exact in the parts where they overlap.

      There's no need to believe in a missing set of scrolls which describe evolution. It's right there in the book, beginning with "B'reshit": in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. Six days later he took a nap.

      Clearly, such a belief is incredibly precarious. There's absolutely no reason to believe that those scrolls are the word of God, even if they've been faithfully copied for thousands of years. The only thing that distinguishes this book from all of the others is that your priest/pastor/parents/minister told you so.

      Well, that, and the feeling one gets in one's heart. You and I and every scientist on the planet knows that it's never safe to trust one's heart on matters of fact, but once somebody has stepped outside of that you're never going to use logic or evidence to bring them back into the fold of rationality.

      Even as a scientist, you go with your gut instinct fairly often. Your basic notion of evidence and proof is, ultimately, more about what your gut tells you is likely to be true. Sure, it works, and everything from transistors to amoxycillin comes from that, but the whole edifice could be knocked over at any instant by a guy with a white beard who sayeth, "I am the Lord your God".

      Learn to understand where they're coming from, and maybe you have some hope of convincing them not to destroy the minds of your children with their self-serving fundamentalist rubbish. Ultimately, this is far less about belief than it is about power. They hate the fact that evolution justifies everything they hate, from moral relativism to sexual promiscuity. Evolution is just the touchstone.

    5. Re:"God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 2
      s/Christians/strict creationists

      They're not synonymous. Though if you really think that ALL Christians are either stupid or intellectually dishonest, there's probably not much I can do to change your bigotry (and those of whoever modded you Insighful).

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    6. Re:"God Says it" by Rei · · Score: 3, Funny

      Bah, it's not because people didn't get a proper education -- it's because ID is totally true and totally scientific. Haven't you ever read about it? ;)

      --
      "Who the hell is Nietzche? It's a question stupid people are asking." -- Newscaster, "Jesus Christ Supercop"
    7. Re:"God Says it" by xeromist · · Score: 1

      Actually this one isn't that hard. If you believe that God guided the writing of the bible then it would be natural to believe that he guided it's assembly as well. By the same token God would make sure any translations had the "intended" meaning. If you're an omnipotent being who wrote a book to guide your people you're going to let them leave parts out or mis-translate it? I don't think so.

      --
      This sig is exactly seventy characters long and a real waste of space!
    8. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It's too bad they are synonymous. It means that the word 'Christian' has been watered down.

      You can NOT be a Christian and not also be a strict creationist. That's not possible with what a Christian is and should be. They can't be separated, and if you do, then you aren't truly a Christian.

    9. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's more likely that a black man or a woman will be elected in the next few decades than an atheist. Sickening, really :(
      Maybe not if you're black.
    10. Re:"God Says it" by Sciros · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Granted the US is one of the most religious countries in the world (Vatican City taking top honors there), I think that a black man or a woman is more likely to be elected than an atheist based purely on population statistics :-P

      But I understand what you're saying, in that while the US has pretty much overcome racial and gender discrimination, it's nowhere near that stage when it comes to religion (or lack thereof). In many parts of the country, it's arguably "better" to be a black woman than a white male atheist as far as the community accepting you. Ideally none of these factors would make any difference.

      --
      I like basketball!!1!
    11. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is exactly where "faith" comes in. At some point, you just have to believe what you're reading is right. There are people who look at life and find it hard to believe that "natural selection," going back to when every living organism was some sort of amoeba (sp?), has occured so perfectly that it has led to where we are today.

      Even as one of the scientific-mindedness, you should be open to the possibility of an explaination that life was created by some force that we don't quite understand (possibly God). What came before us, dinosaurs? What before that? And before that? At what point do you consider "time" beginning, and what was before that? I'm not trying to assume that these are your beliefs; instead, I only try to present one possible view from someone who believes in what would be considered to be a higher power (God).

    12. Re:"God Says it" by Kemanorel · · Score: 1

      But, where does that leave free will?

      Honest question. The way I understand a concept like free will is that if it is taken away once, it was never there at all. Kind of an absolute thing. If it was taken away to write any part of the Bible, the choice of the writers and all of our choices are predetermined.

      --
      Mess not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup.
    13. Re:"God Says it" by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      You seem to be assuming there's a direction to evolution. There isn't.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    14. Re:"God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Okay, here's a hypothetical situation for you. Pretend you're God for a minute. And pretend, for the sake of argument, that you used the Big Bang to create the universe and the process of evolution to create mankind. This is just pretend, remember, don't get up in arms about it.

      Now let's say that you want to explain this to mankind. You want to let them know you created everything. But right now, they're at a point where they don't even have basic mechanics figured out, you know they'd never comprehend the big bang. And they are far from figuring out how traits are passed down. The intricate process of natural selection that you've so cleverly crafted would go over their heads.

      So what do you do? Do you just not reveal yourself as creator until they've figured these things out? Personally, if I were God, I'd probably give them an allegorical account that they can understand but communicates the basic facts - I created the universe, created man, man has a special place in my heart, I gave man free will, and I'm a little upset that man has used that free will to turn away from me. I'd know that my humans would eventually figure out the details behind the allegory, that they're smart enough that I don't need to spoon feed them.

      If you were God in that position, what would you do?

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    15. Re:"God Says it" by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 1

      they didn't receive a proper education, and failed to learn how to think independently and critically assess propositions put to them But what percentage of students in the You Ess Of Ay are receiving a good education? We can immediate rule out all those students who are told they'll burn in hell if they don't belief in some silly myth.

      I have a suspicion that teaching independent thinking and critical analysis would not produce good consumerist sheep and would destabilize the plutocracy.

      --
      Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    16. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      How is it bigoted to call somebody who lies a liar, or somebody who believes something probably wrong an idiot, or somebody who says they're one thing but believes and practices something else a hipocrite?

      There's no reason to treat Christians or any other kind of religious fundamentalists like children, and pretend that Santa Clause exists in order to avoid hurting their feeling. That's bullshit. Their false beliefs and foolish actions are tearing apart society. Why should we respect the religious beliefs of the terrorists who knocked down the World Trade Center, because they had heart-felt beliefs that it was the right thing to do?

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    17. Re:"God Says it" by Richard+Allen · · Score: 1

      If you're serious about wanting to understand why texts were included in the Bible and why we believe what "god says" wasn't misquoted, perhaps you should pick up a good book regarding the cannon of the bible. We Christians don't deny that meanings can be lost in translation, that's why we study the original languages as well and scrutinize that. Can you think of any book in the world that has been more closely scrutinized on translation and meaning? There isn't one. The fact that humans speak different languages doesn't invalidate the original meaning of the text.

    18. Re:"God Says it" by kripkenstein · · Score: 4, Informative

      Compare the Dead Sea Scrolls to modern Torahs and you'll find it's letter-for-letter exact in the parts where they overlap.
      Actually, that is false. A nice summary of this matter can be found here, pages 27-30 in the PDF version (note that the rest of the paper is interesting also).

      Some examples: (1) there is anywhere between 1 character in 20 and 1 in 2000 difference between the dead sea scrolls fragments and the current text; (2) truly identical copies of the Torah are found only from the 16th century on, and those are not handwritten; (3) even today there are slightly-different versions of the Torah in use, e.g. the Yemenite version differs in 3 characters from the Koren (which is perhaps the 'standard').

      So, by no means has the text been copied without error, at least not according to the people researching this topic.
    19. Re:"God Says it" by karlandtanya · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It seems that if an all powerful God did exist, and that God made some sort of statement or directive, that rule would be pretty hard to break.
      Damned (heh) near impossible to break, actually--if this God was omnipotent.

      It seems that we could just look around us and see what rules are not being broken--those would be the word of God.

      And if we could see the rule is being broken, well, then it must NOT be the word of God.
      We'd have to go back and refine our understanding of the word of God to reflect what's actually going on around us.

      There would be no need to kill each other over which book had the correct version of the word--we each check our beliefs against the world God had created.

      --
      "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, it doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    20. Re:"God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      somebody who believes something provably wrong an idiot

      (Typo corrected as per your other post)

      Of course that's okay. My point was that not all Christians believe in creationism, so why would you call those Christians idiots if they DON'T believe something provably wrong?

      There's no reason to treat Christians or any other kind of religious fundamentalists

      Again, my whole point is that not all Christians are fundamentalists. Did you just hit reply to a random post in order to post your rant, without reading what I'd actually written? I'm not defending fundamentalists or creationists at all - I'm pointing out that there are many Christians who are neither.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    21. Re:"God Says it" by truthsearch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      that's why we study the original languages as well and scrutinize that.

      I've never met or heard of a christian who knows ancient hebrew well enough to study the bible like a jewish scholar. And I've also never met a christian who quotes such scholars to validate their understanding of the bible. Therefore I don't see how they can know the original meaning of your "Old Testament".

      The fact that humans speak different languages doesn't invalidate the original meaning of the text.

      That's right. It means that no one who has read it in a translated form can know the original meaning if not educated by someone who can read the original. In the footnotes of every translated Jewish bible are explanations of the multiple meanings of Hebrew words and phrases. I've never seen anything similar in translations of the "Old Testament" of the Christian bible. The English language simply does not have the capacity to clearly convey the original text without much explanation. Therefore a direct translation is simply never sufficient.

      Many of the Christians who claim to fully understand their bible have no knowledge of what was lost in translation from the original texts. Congratulations if you're educated on the subject. How about helping out the rest?

    22. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      doh, 'aren't synonymous', my bad

    23. Re:"God Says it" by compro01 · · Score: 1

      has occured so perfectly that it has led to where we are today.

      it didn't necessarily have to result in us. one difference somewhere and things could end up completely different.

      as for the "time beginning", i would say the big bang. and we currently have no idea what happened before that, hence why i believe that there is something and find atheists rather ridiculous.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    24. Re:"God Says it" by KKlaus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      At the end there you said that they hate evolution because it justifies immorality. Is that really it? I always had that stance on abortion, that the reason they hate abortion has nothing to do with fetuses and everything to do with hating young, promiscuous girls and not wanting them to be able to escape from (what they consider) their deserved consequences.

      But where is the connection with evolution? It would have to be a sort of statement of immorality being a survival trait, or that immorality is inherent to the universe, both of which seem overly complicated for what isn't really an intellectual side to take. Evolution complaints, near as I can tell, are about it undermining the authority of God and the Bible, plain and simple. So imho, the best way to convince people to allow themselves to be educated is to convince them to to treat the creation story as metaphorical, i.e. that yes oceans were first... and then there were some animals... and finally came people. It's not entirely honest from a purely atheistic standpoint, but it's a pretty good compromise. So give that a shot too.

      --
      Relax I just want some peanuts.
    25. Re:"God Says it" by d'fim · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You forget that you're talking about an omnipotent deity.

      To make up rules which are impossible for God to violate is to negate that omnipotence.

      Just because some human sees a logical fallacy in the temporary suspension of free will does not make it impossible for God to have done so - assuming, of course, that there actually is a God and that he actually did attempt such a thing.

      On the other hand, it is sometimes argued that the purpose of organized religion is to control God by defining what he is and is not, and what he can and cannot do, while at the same time proclaiming his omnipotence.

      --
      Adherence to the truth is a form of disloyalty.
    26. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I gave man free will, and I'm a little upset that man has used that free will to turn away from me.

      Why would you be upset if YOU'RE GOD?!

    27. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why has evolution on a inter-speacies scale stopped? Becuase it was never there. Evolution as in the changes in animals to adapt to their suroundings has and still exists. Look into the bubble theory for more. And truthfuly, there is more scientific evidence supporting the bubble theory then darwin's big bang everything came from one cell theory.

      I wonder if this means I should start calling all popular evolutionist liars and idiots and such like they do with christians? Well, that seems pointless becuase they won't get it either. This has come about because the same "freedom of religion" that keeps religion from public schools is being used to tell people their god doesn't exist and the god they used to believe in is a liar. It doesn't take long to see this point in reading posts here. they learned this somewhere. I remeber when i was going to school and we had a teacher who would call anyone who believed in the bible a foolish sheep after discussing evolution.

      You will see this stuff until someone figures a way to teach science without indoctinating people into their atheism. And I personaly think that the state should in no way be teaching anything against a religion or in support of another religion when someone has "the freedom from and freedom of religion". There is no definitive empeericle evidence that proves evolution over creationism, just as many gaps as biblical theories. But sadly for some, science has saught to replace religion with a religion of their own. and as long as the state allows it to violate other peoples freedoms, there will be problems with people trying to fix them like in kansas.

    28. Re:"God Says it" by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Though if you really think that ALL Christians are either stupid or intellectually dishonest, there's probably not much I can do to change your bigotry (and those of whoever modded you Insighful).

      Do you have an alternative explanation for the phenomenon?
      I'm sure that fear of a final death raises the susceptibility to become religious, and that peer pressure drastically increases just what flavour of religion you end up subscribing to, but are these factors stronger than the reason that tells you that fairy tales should not be believed?
      What could cause an intelligent person to choose a Christian belief? Without begging the question.

      Regards,
      --
      *Art
    29. Re:"God Says it" by Cedric+Tsui · · Score: 1

      True. An omnipotent being could do anything it wanted to by definition.

      But would an omnipotent being guide its people with a book? Wouldn't it make more sense to always have a profit with divine inspiration who we can ask questions? Or perhaps every human could have a direct link to god.
      This would all depend on God's motives of course.

    30. Re:"God Says it" by Skreems · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The question then becomes, when you see mankind embroiled in a battle over what you did or didn't say, why not drop by again and clear up a few things? Or, to put it another way, why are some stupid sheep herders who'd be impressed by a light bulb more worthy of direct physical contact and proof of God than we today, who understand enough of science to know something truly miraculous when we see it?

      My own answer to that, of course, is that Jesus was at most a relatively bright human, God doesn't exist, no miracles occurred, and the entire thing that it's grown into is people taking some fun stories waaaaaay too seriously.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    31. Re:"God Says it" by kabocox · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Personally I'm less bothered by teaching science; I just wish the US would start teaching a bit of history, like the the idea that the country was founded on the principle of religious tolerance.

      Yes, it's really surprising that we turned out so well considering those Pilgrims. They basically were religious Nazis that killed off the native Indians rather than convert them to Christiainty. The natives weren't human because they weren't white European Christains so it was o.k. to kill them off.

      The only religious tolerance that this country even thought about was for various sects of non-Calthoic christainity. We've only recently started to pretend that religions other than our versions of Christainity may get any tolerance.

      Actually, it could be argued that slashdot is a religious forum that worships open source and Linux and bashes MS and Bill Gates as their models for earthly material evil. That really boils down the slashdot community right there.

    32. Re:"God Says it" by jrp2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "If you were God in that position, what would you do?"

      Hehe. Good one. I'll bite.

      I would probably clarify the situation now that a large number of folks can comprehend me.

      Heck, I am omnipotent, I can be VERY convincing even if I seem to be contradicting earlier simplified statements.

      I might also, while I am motivated, clean up some of these war and hunger problems, eradicate a few corrupt governments, etc. I might even make more people gay to deal with the population problem. A little spring cleaning, so to speak.

      Of course, I would have to exist to do all that.

      --
      The only athletic sport I ever mastered was backgammon - Douglas William Jerrold
    33. Re:"God Says it" by adisakp · · Score: 1

      The Jewish myth of creation -- where God creates the universe in six days including all life on earth and rests on the seventh -- is presented in the Old Testament. Fundamentalists who hold strictly to this viewpoint ignore many other parts of the same tome... for example, the proscription against eating pork or mixing dairy and meat.

      Everytime they're eating a bacon cheeseburger from McDonald's they're defying God in a manner at least as heinous as giving a little thought to Evolution.

    34. Re:"God Says it" by rucs_hack · · Score: 1

      Wow, you've converted me, right there. I have seen the light!

      I'm going to change all the proofs in my Thesis to 'because God did it'.

      I win! instant phd, no possibility of argument remains, my hypothesis is proved :-)

      ps. Uncyclopedia is a bad place to link to, every time I go there I get trapped for hours...

    35. Re:"God Says it" by bill_kress · · Score: 1

      I really recommend you take some time talking to some Evangelical ("Born Again") Christians. Don't piss them off right away, listen to what they believe and ask questions, it's really interesting (and somewhat entertaining).

      They believe that the bible is the Exact word of God. Most that I have talked to believe that there was absolutely no human intervention or interpretation and that it contains no inaccuracies or contradictions.

      Honestly I don't remember anyone saying this when I was a child (1970's), I believe it's a newer movement--but then I could have been sheltered from it--I still run into a lot of people who are blind to the fact that Americas' Christians have these beliefs.

      This is true fundamentalism. They believe Adam had a rib removed to create Eve, Eve ate a physical Apple, etc. For references, most non-EV Christians believe that this is a story passed down by word of mouth for generations being changed and adapted on the way; that the bible is more about telling you how to live your life than a record of events --for instance that the apple represents knowledge (most often the "Knowledge of Sex") and that Eve's seduction of Adam is what got them kicked out of the garden.

      I think all Americans should do their best to understand the Born Again religious movement in this country. Take notice of their drives to teach religion in schools and then try to figure out how long they would tolerate the teaching of any other religion to their children... Understand how quick they are to deride and control others in "Moral" areas such as abortion, sexuality and homosexuality, but how often they tend to apply these morals to others while feeling themselves excluded (or how well the tolerate others controlling them in a similar manner).

      I'm not saying that All Christians are the same, but the second you hear the words "Born Again" or Evangelical, I recommend you try to get into a conversation and find out for yourself.

    36. Re:"God Says it" by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Of course there are religions which take into consideration several if not all of your suggestions. Christianity being one among them that believes in the book, in prophets, and in a personal connection to God.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    37. Re:"God Says it" by CheeseTroll · · Score: 1
      I would probably clarify the situation now that a large number of folks can comprehend me.

      Of course, that's assuming that we're relatively any closer to comprehending "God" & his creative processes than humans were X years ago.
      One could also argue that our definition of "God" has changed as our understanding of our world has grown. We keep upping the standard, so to speak. So that's why we never seem to meet God 'in-person' like we'd like. Or if we do, we don't realize/appreciate it as much as we would have previously expected.

      --
      A post a day keeps productivity at bay.
    38. Re:"God Says it" by rblancarte · · Score: 1

      Woa woa woa. Don't bring your facts to a debate about the word of God.

      But seriously, very good points. I think the problem is that you have this very vocal group that has to be heard, and they all seem to live in Kansas.

      RonB

      --
      It is human nature to take shortcuts in thinking.
    39. Re:"God Says it" by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Fundamentalists who hold strictly to this viewpoint ignore many other parts of the same tome... for example, the proscription against eating pork or mixing dairy and meat.
      Either that, or 1) they read the rest of the Bible, including the part where Peter had a vision where God said it was okay to eat other kinds of meats, or 2) they are not descended from Abraham and are not covered by the rules of Abraham's covenant with God.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    40. Re:"God Says it" by Kemanorel · · Score: 1

      That is very interesting and you have given me much to think of. Thank you very much.

      --
      Mess not in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and good with ketchup.
    41. Re:"God Says it" by rblancarte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe I am wrong, but IMHO, you are confusing the two.

      Free will is something we do have. We have the ability to make choices. It is assumed that God knows our choices already, but that doesn't mean he has determined them, only that he knows the choices we are going to make. So, IMHO, that still means we have the right to choose.

      If it is argued that the Bible is the word of God, and as such, free will is not necessary in it's writing.

      RonB

      --
      It is human nature to take shortcuts in thinking.
    42. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But where is the connection with evolution?

      The basic connection is that evolution helps create a "natural" world where God is not needed. One of the fundamental reason why people "need" their faith in a god is because it explains the unexplainable. Every new peice of information that gives another explanation makes their faith just a little less reasonable.

      The other major connection is that a "natural" world means a world without a purpose. A "natural" world means a world without right and wrong. Without good and evil. God gives us a world where good people are good, bad people are evil, and there is a purpose for all of it.

      Evolution gives us a world where there is no purpose, and that scares people into irrational beliefs.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    43. Re:"God Says it" by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      If you were God in that position, what would you do?

      If I were God? I'd do one of two things. I'd wipe the slate (more or less) and start over. If I had promised not to flood the world again, then I guess I'd have to go with fire the next time. Or a really nasty ice age, it's not a flood if the water is solid, right? :)

      The thing is that we basically have multiple accounts of God in the Bible. He behaves utterly different in some portions than in others. In one place he's smiling on David, who is stealing other men's wives and having them killed so that they're widows and he can marry them. In another place he's saying thou shalt not kill. In another he's telling people to kill people. Who can figure out what the hell is going on in God's head?

      I think the most reasonable answer, at least one that assumes the existence of God in the first place, is that his thinking is too complex for us to even follow. When he handed down his laws to Moses, maybe Moses didn't really understand them. Or maybe it was with the understanding that you could break the laws if you were divinely inspired. Which is a nice excuse for any serial killer. I mean, if God created everything, including the Angels, then Jehovah and Lucifer (or whatever names you like to use for them) are just two sides of the same coin anyway. But basically this argument boils down to "God is unknowable".

      In other words, if I were God, I'd think completely differently. My awareness would encompass the cosmos. I might love the little humans, but any individual human is, well, just one life. In terms of saving humanity, one human is quite irrelevant. Kind of like the ants in Neal Stephenson's book The Diamond Age - "You can't possibly kill more than a million!" (Not sure how accurate this quote is. Consider it paraphrase.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    44. Re:"God Says it" by impleri · · Score: 1

      I think you are overlooking one thing: most of these people that believe God wrote the Bible also believe that God directed the human authors to write every single letter, stroke, and accent mark--in the Hebrew and Aramaic (Hebrew Bible/Old Testament) and Greek (New Testament). The humans who "wrote" the Bible, from this point of view, were more like transcriptionists than actual authors. Then, these same people, by adhering to Scottish Common Sense Realism, believe that every single point of transmission of this text was divinely guided so that there was little-to-no corruption between the earliest manuscripts we have and the originals that are (possibly forever) lost. In addition to that, they then argue that the differences we do have between the earliest manuscripts is little enough that we can extrapolate what the originals had (and therefore, have a perfect copy of the originals that God wrote through the transcriptionist authors). Finally, these people then argue that by taking reducing the text to a set of words, they believe that we can get a nearly perfect (if not perfect) translation of the text, because even though the Hebrew word Adam is used to signify an individual as a name, it should always mean "man" and nothing else. So, the English version we read is perfect, in their eyes, as coming straight from God's proverbial mouth.

    45. Re:"God Says it" by ozeki · · Score: 1

      That statement is what I love the best about "Liberal" thinking. Everyone that doesn't believe in what you believe in is stupid. Remember when the Democratic party was an open one here in the US not an exclusionary one. The "liberal" in the US is more openly hostile and racist than any Republican is now.

      Having said that I left Kansas 20 years ago and haven't looked back. Backwards thinking being a smallpart of the reason. Of course your arguement was the same one the zealots used 20 years ago, its nice to see that racism can go full circle.

    46. Re:"God Says it" by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Your assumption ignores the fact that, if I were God, I'd be omnipotent and omniscient. I'd be able to see the grief that's going to be caused by me originating this creation myth.

      You're also ignoring the fact that cultures around the globe have differing creation myths, some so drastically different that there's no real way they could be interpreted from same original idea.

      If I were God in this position, I'd teach people about the scientific method. I'd teach them skepticism and the other skills necessary to know the universe the way I know it. And then I'd tell them to use these to explore and know the universe and, by doing so, understand me more fully, as well as answer any other questions they might have.

      And if those Bronze Age idiots couldn't understand, I'd ignore them for the rest of eternity. One species on an unimpressive mudball in a boring suburb of an ordinary galaxy isn't worth that much grief.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    47. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Of course, I would have to exist to do all that.

      Hell, you should be able to rectify that easily. You're omnipotent, aren't you?

    48. Re:"God Says it" by TheOldFart · · Score: 1

      If you were God in that position, what would you do?

      I would come down to Earth as a black lesbian atheist Linux lover and run for presidency as a republican. Just to watch the fireworks.

    49. Re:"God Says it" by tompaulco · · Score: 1
      You can NOT be a Christian and not also be a strict creationist. That's not possible with what a Christian is and should be. They can't be separated, and if you do, then you aren't truly a Christian.
      It's not up to you who is a Christian or not, nor is it up to a sect of Christianity, a denomination, a religion or anybody on this Earth.

      I am a Christian. I believe in Creation, but I don't believe that it was necessarily a literal 6 days. If you want to judge whether I am a Christian or not, you have to take it up with God, because the Bible says you will judge angels, but you can't judge me.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    50. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      as for the "time beginning", i would say the big bang. and we currently have no idea what happened before that, hence why i believe that there is something and find atheists rather ridiculous.

      Why does the fact that we dont know what there was before the big bang make atheists rediculous?

      The fact that some matter/energy either came from nothing or has always been there does not make a God or divine power more plausible. It simply means there are some aspects of physics that we do not understand yet. Our current understanding of the laws of Conservation of Energy is that energy cannot be created or destroyed, but that doesnt necessarily have to be so.

      Newtonian mechanics does not allow for special relativity or quantum mechanics, but is still useful for virtually all aspects of engineering and science. Only in rare cases does F=ma break down. This could very well be similar to Conservation of Energy. Perhaps there is a way to create energy, we just havent found it yet.

      And there is also the possibility that all of the matter/energy in the universe has simply always been here. Just because everything in our narrow viewpoint of the world has a beginning and end doesnt mean everything has to follow the same pattern.

      You dont have to create a supreme being to explain the beginning of time. In fact it just complicates things because then you have to explain where the supreme being came from.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    51. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...give them an allegorical account..."

      Or even better, you give them *two* allegorical accounts that don't have the events in the exact same order, as a kind of giant freakin' neon sign with flames suggesting that maybe, just maybe, the accounts shouldn't be taken literally because you can't do it without contradiction--just like in the Bible. I've always been amazed by the fact that Biblical literalists just ignore this. You can even read their apologitics as they tapdance and tango all over the place (unless they're particularly conservative Baptists, who know that dancing is from the Devil) without ever attempting to address the difference in order of creation in the two Genesis accounts.

    52. Re:"God Says it" by misleb · · Score: 1

      They hate the fact that evolution justifies everything they hate, from moral relativism to sexual promiscuity. Evolution is just the touchstone.


      No, they hate the idea that evolution seems like it could justify those things. The fact is that evolutiton doesn't justify anything. It EXPLAINs things. There is a big difference. No scientific theory justifies. It merely explains. For example, If I say that humans are promiscious because such is an evolutionary advantage, that in no way justifies it. It just explains why some people might have an inclination to be promiscuous.

      But even that as an explanation it is sketchy. I can think of a lot of reasons why promiscuity would be an evolutionary disadvantage. Sexuually transmitted disease being the big one. Also, children aren't going to survive as well without a stable family (at least back in the day) The most reliable and safest way to have many children (and have them survive) is to be monogamous (or nearly so) and have a single partner who churns out the babies. At least that is one way of looking at it.

      So ultimately that are even mistaken about evolution's supposed moral implications.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    53. Re:"God Says it" by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 2, Insightful

      in that while the US has pretty much overcome racial and gender discrimination, it's nowhere near that stage when it comes to religion...In many parts of the country, it's arguably "better" to be a black woman than a white male atheist
      Oh, I dunno about all that. I guess your qualifier "In many parts of the country" means rural areas or the South, aka the Bible belt. Assuming you are a white guy who is an Athiest, you'd be much better off. It's not as though anyone would necessarily *know* your beliefs. A black person cannot hide. I have travelled to the south (Yazoo MS) with some black friends and I can tell you, I was surprised by the differential in how I was treated when by myself and with them. Racists are so backwards and dumb. But that's another story.

      Also, in lots of circles, as a Christian, I often feel discriminated against. Maybe that is also due to the fact that my beliefs don't fit in with all the subtly-racist, uber-patriotic, neo-Fundamentalist zealots. But being a Christian, I am also ridiculed by zealots on the /. side of the fence, too. Watch -- someone will reply to this post negatively (though maybe saying that prevents it from happening, we'll see). Just because many who claim to be Christian are real morons, people around here just lump us all together. That's frustrating. Just because a person claims to have faith doesn't mean said faith is based on mere credulity. I believe God gives us ample evidence upon which to base well-founded beliefs.

      Ideally none of these factors would make any difference.
      Agreed. Just because I am a Christian doesn't mean I hate Atheists. Just because I disagree with you that doesn't give me license to hate you or discriminate against you. I have friends who are Athiest, and at times we discuss religion. We don't have to agree by the end of the conversation. Not that I believe in moral relativism, I do not think my Athiest friends are right ;). But what has happened to the concept of agreeing to disagree? Why do we (people in general) want everyone else to think just like us?

      I think, just in general, everyone group tends to think it's discriminated against in some fashion. How much of that is real and how much is perceived, well, that's just impossible to tell I suppose. But I would pretty much bet that blacks have it worse than athiests in terms of discrimination. Seeing as how I belong to neither group, I may be somewhat objective in this regard.
      --
      blah blah blah
    54. Re:"God Says it" by BlueItalian · · Score: 1

      I never completely understand why people argue "God says it". Even if people want to believe that god wrote the books of the bible, the christian bible was put together by humans. This is the exact stance of the Catholic Church. I'm an atheist and italian, live in the usa and always amazed how different are religions over here: you're much more integralistic and purists than anything I've seen in the old world, therefore it's easier for poorly educated people (remember, a catholic priest must study over 12 years to become one) to become moral guides and dictate the political agendas of people that hardly have any kind of education.
    55. Re:"God Says it" by Gorm+the+DBA · · Score: 1
      "Why has evolution on a inter-speacies scale stopped?"

      Evolution happens over thousands of years, you live maybe 100.

      Furthermore, how many species have gone extinct over the past 300 years? At least 1000.

    56. Re:"God Says it" by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      Or, to put it another way, why are some stupid sheep herders who'd be impressed by a light bulb more worthy of direct physical contact and proof of God than we today, who understand enough of science to know something truly miraculous when we see it?

      My guess is that it has something to do with the arrogance of people thinking they are inherently more worthy of hearing from God than a bunch of stupid sheep herders, just because of the circumstance of having been born at a time after the lightbulb was invented.

      Just a thought.

      -jimbo

    57. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 2, Funny

      And you name would be Condaleeza Rice.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    58. Re:"God Says it" by misleb · · Score: 1

      The other major connection is that a "natural" world means a world without a purpose. A "natural" world means a world without right and wrong. Without good and evil.


      But isn't that basically what Eden was?

      God gives us a world where good people are good, bad people are evil, and there is a purpose for all of it.


      No, God (according to Genesis) gave us a world with no good people and no bad people and no (as far as I can tell) purpose. Seems to me that *humans* were the ones who created such a world by disobeying God.

      Of course, I don't believe any of that actually happened, but it makes for interesting mythology.

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    59. Re:"God Says it" by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 1

      I've never met or heard of a christian who knows ancient hebrew well enough to study the bible like a jewish scholar.


      I know this won't convince you of anything, but my father reads and understands ancient Hebrew. He's a Southern Baptist minister with a Ph.D. in Theology. He has written several books and scholarly papers on various biblical subjects. I can't say if he can "study the bible like a jewish scholar", 'cause I'm not really sure what that means...but at least now you've heard of him.
    60. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything you wrote is incorrect. Evolution has not stopped in any way and it never can stop as long as organisms reproduce. Your mistakes come from your not knowing anything about biology. And the English language.

    61. Re:"God Says it" by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      In one place he's smiling on David, who is stealing other men's wives and having them killed so that they're widows and he can marry them.

      Huh? Smiling?

      -jimbo

    62. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      There is a problem with believing that a theistic viewpoint of the world is just an alternative to a natural viewpoint of the world.

      One fundamental rule that we have humans have found is that complex things come from simple things, unless they are created by an external source. Elements come from protons/neutrons/electrons, compounds come from elements, etc. A bench is less complex than the carpenter that makes it, but that is a created object.

      Without having an external creator, everything that exists is derived from something simpler. That is why the building blocks of the universe are almost certainly the most basic elements possible. We have almost certainly not found what these basic elements are, which is why we have such a hard time understanding questions such as what happened at the beginning of time.

      God is not a simple being. God is the most complex being that has ever existed (or made up). He (she/it) is omnipotent, which means he has the ability to break the most fundamental laws of physics that we know of. But not only that, God also shares many anthropomorphic qualities such as Love, Jealousy, Compassion, Intolerance, etc. He can know feelings that he has never had, since if he is truly all-knowing then he must be able to know what it feels like to enjoy torturing and killing (which a good God couldn't enjoy). He also has a very different and more complex sense of morality than we do, since any human that acted like God would be considered very evil indeed. He had the capacity and intelligence to create the greatest and most complex beings that humans have come across yet (ourselves).

      Anything is possible. Technically there is the possibility that a Supreme Being was the first thing created in the universe, or that he has always existed. But it is the most infinitely improbable idea that humans have ever come up with. For an even slightly rational person to believe this it would take the most powerful proof that anyone has ever had. No booming voice from the sky or personal connection with God would be enough, because there are an infinite amount of more probable explainations than the existance of a Supreme Being. Having a personal belief in God is no different than any other form of schizophrenia.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    63. Re:"God Says it" by indifferent+children · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It is assumed that God knows our choices already, but that doesn't mean he has determined them, only that he knows the choices we are going to make.

      So you're trying to choose between a bowl of ice cream and a nice salad. The fact that you are going to choose the ice cream was carved in stone over 4 billion years ago, but you think that you have the "freedom" to choose the salad? That belief is kind of sweet in a really sad way.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    64. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      No, God (according to Genesis) gave us a world with no good people and no bad people and no (as far as I can tell) purpose. Seems to me that *humans* were the ones who created such a world by disobeying God.

      Even if humans make the choice to be evil, God created the capacity for evil (or so a non-atheist would believe). He also supposedly created the rules for what is considered good or evil.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    65. Re:"God Says it" by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      It's right there in the book, beginning with "B'reshit": in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth. Six days later he took a nap.
      It's actually pretty easy to conclude that Creation according B'reshit didn't happen in six days, and it's almost universally accepted at least in Conservative (and I would guess Reform) Judaism. The important point to remember is that the sun wasn't created until the fourth day. Before that, it's fairly difficult to measure time in days. Because of that, most modern commentary explains that the word "day" does not mean a standard 24-hour day, but an imprecise "age". The phrase I've seen in the commentary is something like "To God, a million years is but a day."
    66. Re:"God Says it" by OzoneLad · · Score: 1

      It seems that if an all powerful God did exist, and that God made some sort of statement or directive, that rule would be pretty hard to break. Damned (heh) near impossible to break, actually--if this God was omnipotent. It seems that we could just look around us and see what rules are not being broken--those would be the word of God. And if we could see the rule is being broken, well, then it must NOT be the word of God. If you want to get philosophical about it, that would destroy the whole point of free will, the freedom to make your own choices for good or ill. If the only things that are forbidden are impossible to achieve, then we're all going to Heaven anyway and screw this God guy.

      Or, if you want to get practical about it, there's very little point in forbidding people from doing something which is patently impossible to do. Even our absurd and overgrown legal system realizes this. When's the last time you saw a law that describes fines for going faster than the speed of light, or assigns mandatory prison terms for creating matter or energy out of nothing?

      -HT
    67. Re:"God Says it" by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      bashes MS and Bill Gates as their models for earthly material evil

      Don't be so simplistic. I am willing to entertain the idea that Microsoft is merely an earthly manifestation of a transcendent evil.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    68. Re:"God Says it" by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the other hand, if God excerts the slightest pressure on us, say by offering a reward or a punishment for certain behaviours, that would undermine our free will.

      You cannot give someone "free will" and then tell them if they don't do X or you'll do Y and still call it "free will," except with some Orwellian definition of "free."

    69. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Because the so-called Christians who cherry-pick the bible and don't believe it's literally true are INTELLECTUALLY DISHONEST, and stupid to think what they believe is the truth. Nowhere in the bible does it say you can pick and choose what you believe. There is only one "truth" (no matter who believes it).

      Life is not a Philip K Dick novel, like Faith of our Fathers, where multiple contradictory universes exist in parallel and the government puts anti-hallucinigens in the water to make everybody believe in the same reality.

      What are the odds that the particular set of cherries you choose to pick are the "truth"? Infintesimally small! It's ridiculous and arrogant to believe you're the only one who just happened to throw out all the bad parts and retain all the good parts, and everybody else is wrong.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    70. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      s/Christians/strict creationists
      They're not synonymous. Though if you really think that ALL Christians are either stupid or intellectually dishonest, there's probably not much I can do to change your bigotry (and those of whoever modded you Insighful).


      You are correct, he should have used the word "irrational" instead of stupid. A majority of Christians are just stupid (just as most humans are generally not that bright), but the ones who have actually thought about their faith and still believe are just irrational.

      But the general meaning of what he said is the same, the words just arent as harsh and degrading.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    71. Re:"God Says it" by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

      If you were God in that position, what would you do?

      Take a vacation-- the universe is runnin' itself!

    72. Re:"God Says it" by purify0583 · · Score: 1

      While the claim that the dead sea scrolls are letter-for-letter is false, I have always understood the errors to be spelling errors or grammar. While it is not exact, none of the errors you speak of significantly change the content/meaning, which is amazingly remarkable for a document that old. If only 1/1000 characters are in error, 99.9% accuracy for a 3000+ old document to the present is by far the best error/time ratio of any document in existence.

    73. Re:"God Says it" by ganhawk · · Score: 1

      "I created the universe, created man, man has a special place in my heart, I gave man free will, and I'm a little upset that man has used that free will to turn away from me."

      This is what I could never understand. In your example you make up a God who is omnipotent, omnicient and yet has all the human emotions/fallacies. I as a mere human know of drugs that can alter the mental state to make people happy or sad, why can't God use his power to not "turn away from him". If you are God and you create the universe, you can simply make all the humans have "faith". Unless you claim that people who have "faith" has no free will, God can still give people free will yet make them do what he wants.

      Anyways my main point is that, its strange for us humans to not yet understand the mechanisms by which the universe was created/works yet we "know" what God thinks/ wants us to do so clearly from the begining (when we had even very little knowledge about what our earth is/how it works)

      --
      Python script to convert photos into "artsy" portraits: http://p2pbridge.sf.net/pyPortrait/
    74. Re:"God Says it" by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      So what do you do? Do you just not reveal yourself as creator until they've figured these things out?

      I would pick some tiny, obscure tribe on the edge of a desert as my "Chosen People", and the rest can just burn in Hell for all eternity. It's kind of like a "tough love" approach, with a less polite word substituted for "love".

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    75. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      My other point is that most of the so-called Christians who don't believe in creationism DO BELIEVE in many other provably wrong things. But they're to stupid and intellectually dishonest to examine their beliefs for contradictions, and throw out the ones that are impossible.

      Do you believe that Jesus is the son of God? The virgin birth? The resurrection? The miricles he performed? Do you believe in any supernatural activity at all? If you don't, then you're certainly not Christian by any definition of the term. If you believe in supernatural events, or astrology, or any of the other fairy-tails in the bible, then you're a self-deceiving idiot. It's as simple as that. If you don't believe in any of that mumbo-jumbo voodoo bullshit, then you're certainly not a Christian, and you're a liar if you call yourself one.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    76. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      I gave man free will, and I'm a little upset that man has used that free will to turn away from me.

      If I were even a fraction as smart as an omniscient being, I would not be surprised or upset that humans dont believe in me if I went out of my way to make sure there is no proof that I exist. In fact I would be ashamed of my creation if they still believed in those books thousands of years later with no proof. It would just mean I have to go back to the drawing board and create a more intelligent species.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    77. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because a person claims to have faith doesn't mean said faith is based on mere credulity. I believe God gives us ample evidence upon which to base well-founded beliefs.

      You can certainly decide to see evidence of what you want to believe (a God) if you have already chosen to do so, but the biggest problem I see is the extremely detailed, and usually contradictory aspects of any particular religion.

      So being a deist (there is a god who created everything but that's about as far as he cared to interact with people) is a reasonable choice if you need to believe in a god to make yourself feel better. We don't know and might well never know what happened before the universe was here or how it got here. Arbitrarily deciding to believe that it was created doesn't lead to any contradictions and doesn't hurt anybody.

      Believing some specific dogmatic religion does not meet the same criteria and is only possible through credulity. Take Christianity for example.
      It says:
      An all powerful, all knowing being created the universe and everything in it. He created people with the express intention of making them exactly as they are. He then made up a bunch of rules for them to follow which demand that they act in a manner contrary to their natures and that they would be punished for all eternity if they refused to go against their natures.
      Being all powerful, he knew exactly what would happen in each and every individual case and tweaked every variable in exactly the way to make it happen in that exact manner.
      Then, here's where it gets completely insane, *he got pissed off at people* for acting exactly how he made them, so he murdered the vast majority of them in order to start over with a few people. He then did the same damn thing over again. That meets the definition of insanity given by "doing the same thing over and over expecting different results", but it's much worse than that. He couldn't possibly have expected different results since he created things in such a way as to attain exactly the results that he got.

      That's the old testament. For the new testament:

      After going through this idiotic, pointless process a few times, he realized that it wasn't working so he came up with a new plan. In order to *allow* himself to forgive us for acting in exactly the manner that he created us to act he would have a kid and have him tortured and murdered.

      That is the entire basis of the Judeo-Christian religion. Any of the other tenets rest squarely on this exact basis.
      Tell me how anything but extreme credulity could possibly lead a reasponable person to consider this anything but insane?

    78. Re:"God Says it" by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      I really recommend you take some time talking to some Evangelical ("Born Again") Christians. Don't piss them off right away, listen to what they believe and ask questions, it's really interesting (and somewhat entertaining).
      I discovered them about 8 or 10 years ago through IRC (from France) and was fairly amazed since I had a number of US friends and knew that people were on average more religious there than on this side of the pond (and I knew about the atheism problem) but I hadn't encountered this breed yet. I've had a number of completely surreal (but polite, although less and less so as time went by) conversations before quitting the little IRC network I used to hang out on which they had taken over.

      My conclusion is that those people aren't religious, they are however completely brainwashed, like any average cultist is. I also briefly met Mormons when I made the mistake of entering their "sphere of influence" (I even asked for a beer in one restaurant, and said "what the hell, why not" in reply to a barmaid who asked me if I'd like another drink in another, in both cases I thought I was going to be burned at the stake) and from talking with them it's pretty much the same thing. Only even sillier ("really there was a great city there when Jesus came back to N. America" "but the archaeologists can't find anything there" "who cares, they're all godless atheists anyway" "uh, I'll just go away now"). No *those* guys are *way* gone.

      The US really got stuck with all the christian loonies. It's the Saudi Arabia of christianism. It would be funny if it wasn't so scary.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    79. Re:"God Says it" by Elbowgeek · · Score: 1

      Indeed, in some of the rejected books of the bible, the youthful Jesus was portrayed as a vengeful, even murderous little bastard towards those other kids who pissed him off. But apparently he resurrected his victims. So I guess He should then be fitting as the one all of those gangsta rappers tend to thank when they win in those award shows.

      --
      Who is this delectable creature with an insatiable love of the dead?
    80. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      No, evolution into other species doesn't happen at all. And extinct is a reletive term, we find new species quite a bit. And we find these in places we havn't been looking for them.

      Declaring something Extinct to "us" is only that we cannot see or find them, not that they don't exist. This isn't to say that we don't hit it corectly everyonce in a while and make something completley extinct.

    81. Re:"God Says it" by Nevyn · · Score: 1

      Pretend you're God for a minute. And pretend, for the sake of argument, that you used the Big Bang to create the universe and the process of evolution to create mankind.
      [..]
      Now let's say that you want to explain this to mankind.

      Ok, why would I want to explain anything to them? I leave bird food outside and enjoy watching them eat ... I feel no need to "explain" to them that they have free food because of me, they don't need to worship me and I don't care if they go down the street and bring enjoyment to someone else. On the other side I might drop a bannana in the forest and mold will grow on it, not only would I not want to explain anything to the mold I am totally indifferent to it's life.

      --
      ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
    82. Re:"God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      Perhaps I just believe that we haven't reached the limits of what science will someday be capable of proving. Good thing a lot of people have agreed with me over the years.

      Do you believe anyone loves you? That's not currently scientifically provable, just like many "supernatural events."

      And you seemed to miss the part in a previous post where I said I'm not Christian?

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    83. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They hate the fact that evolution justifies everything they hate, from moral relativism to sexual promiscuity. Evolution is just the touchstone.

      I don't think hating evolution has anything to do with God except in the most peripheral sense.

      The book says that we were formed, as we are, as perfect beings in the image of God, by God. The translation of this is: you are special. Humanity was a special act of deliberate creation. Someone comes along and says no, actually. You are the result of billions of years of trial and error (mostly error) and things like cockroaches and sharks are much better suited to their environments than you are. They hate when someone questions how special they are.

      I read a thing on livescience about the 'top ten' creation myths, including Nordic, Chinese and Aztec. Humans tend to be almost an afterthought or an accident in most other creation myths; someone's tears or blood or, in at least one case, randomly flung droplets of mud turn into human beings. There are no creationists for these other mythologies because humanity isn't afforded special status; no one wants to defend "I'm the semen of the Giant, Celestial Bull that spilled over the side when all the really important beings were being fathered" and no one ever shouted "Kill them! They're the same random theological accident that we are! For the glory of our god who views us as annoying vermin!"
    84. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      So then why would you get the order of creation wrong, sometimes laughably wrong?

      And why NOT just tell us the stuff we don't know. If we're smart and will figure it out, isn't it better that we start out with correct stuff we just can't understand yet rather than incorrect vague stuff that we base all sorts of bizarre rituals around? I mean, people were litterally PUT TO DEATH for working on the Sabbath (and God says to do this right in the Bible). That's a pretty high punishment for violating the logic of what's supposedly just a nice neat story about how God loves us and all.

    85. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 2

      Of course I also believe that Science hasn't explained everything yet, but the people you're apologising for believe that that fact means that Creationism is true, which is bullshit. Love is not supernatural, it's an emotion.

      I'm not accusing you of being Christian, but you certainly are an apologist and an enabler, if you try to come up with lame excuses like your theory of evolution guided by a Christisan God, who you seem to think you know what he'd do. There's nothing scientific about that, and it's extremely arrogant and sacreligious. It's unfalsifiable and doesn't make any predictions. You're trying to nickle-and-dime your way into justifying a book full of lies. The bible doesn't say that God put dinosaur bones in the ground to test your faith, that's just another lame excuse the young earth creationists made of when confronted with the preponderance of evidence that contradicts what they want to believe. You're doing just the same thing: making lame excuses.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    86. Re:"God Says it" by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      But what percentage of students in the You Ess Of Ay are receiving a good education?

      Only those students who see the value and make the effort to get a good education.

      Same as anywhere.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    87. Re:"God Says it" by misleb · · Score: 1

      Even if humans make the choice to be evil, God created the capacity for evil (or so a non-atheist would believe). He also supposedly created the rules for what is considered good or evil.


      Right, the *potential* for evil was there, but as far as I can tell Adam and Even were the ones to bring it into actuality. Acording the Genesis, God created the world... and it was "good."

      What I'm getting that a "natural" world, without good vs. evil, right vs. wrong, would appear to be the ideal situation. Why continue to encourage a world where good fights evil and everyone suffers for it?

      -matthew
      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    88. Re:"God Says it" by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Okay, here's a hypothetical situation for you. Pretend you're God for a minute. And pretend, for the sake of argument, that you used the Big Bang to create the universe and the process of evolution to create mankind.
      Here's another hypothetical situation. You're an an all powerful being who has a kitten in a room and leaves it alone with nothing but the little resources he has in there. You go on a tour of the world for two years. I what state is the kitten when you return ?

      Now should your powers be revoked ? Should you be allowed to care for other beings again ?

      What I don't get is WTF is that (those ?) god doing ? When I have a pet project, I take care of it. If mankind was *the* big thing of the christian god (assuming it was - or is - the right one) you'd assume it would take care of its precious creation. In the bible, it appears in every other page. Nowadays it's nowhere to be seen. So either it was an intern and got sacked, either it died since its heyday, or most likely it lives in lalaland with the easter bunny and the tooth fairy.

      Which option do you think is most likely (not most comfortable) ?
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    89. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1

      Honestly I don't remember anyone saying this when I was a child (1970's), I believe it's a newer movement--but then I could have been sheltered from it--I still run into a lot of people who are blind to the fact that Americas' Christians have these beliefs.

      They've been around longer than that although they are new in the grand scheme of Christian sects.
      I remember as a kid (likewise in the 70s) reading some of Heinlein's books and how they "predicted" the rise of theocracy in America. I was all "cool books, but he was pretty much a kook on that".
      How wrong I was and how perceptive he was.

    90. Re:"God Says it" by kripkenstein · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree wholeheartedly that the low error rate of the Jewish scribes is very impressive, as you say. But to be accurate we must admit that it isn't perfect.

      However, you say it is the "best error/time ratio of any document in existence" - I don't know about that. The Koran was copied for almost a thousand years before the printing press, and those transcriptions may be 100% exact, for all I know - we would need to ask a scholar in that field. (Yet even if it is, this may have something to do with the Jewish text changing punctuation during its history, which makes things hard - the Muslims have not had that difficulty.) There are also very old Hindu and Buddhist texts (much older than the Koran), but I know little about them. Likewise with Chinese ancient literature.

      Perhaps someone here can enlighten us about these matters, it's a fascinating topic.

    91. Re:"God Says it" by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      You can certainly decide to see evidence of what you want to believe (a God) if you have already chosen to do so
      It's the other way around. I didn't always believe in God. But I do now because I see evidence of his existence. The bible contains wisdom that is unparalled in both ancient and modern times.

      ...That is the entire basis of the Judeo-Christian religion. Any of the other tenets rest squarely on this exact basis.
      No it's not. Your summation of the Bible is incorrect. If you use words like "exact" you should be exact.

      Tell me how anything but extreme credulity could possibly lead a reasponable person to consider this anything but insane?
      Mu. Your summation was a strawman.

      If you would like for me to correct your misunderstanding, I can attempt to do so. If you are genuinely interested in my perspective, I can share it. If you just want to argue, then I have better things to do.
      --
      blah blah blah
    92. Re:"God Says it" by mhollis · · Score: 3, Informative

      um ...

      The Pilgrims weren't all Puritans. In fact, the Mayflower Compact was writtten on board the Mayflower to try to prevent mutiny by the majority on that ship who were not in it for religious reasons but rather, for profit (which was the primary motivation for almost all colonies.

      Converting the people living in the Americas to some kind of faith or another was more the motivation of Spain, who had (in 1492!) only just rid the Iberian Penninsula of non-Christians. Occasionally, some of the English Colonists would pay lip service to this ideal, but it was rarely policy.

      The 37 Separatists (Puritans) fleeing religious persecution who were on board the Mayflower had set about trying to convert their fellow shipmates. And when it was discovered that they were strongly desirous of creating a theocratic movement in the new colony, their shipmates immediately threatened to let them off right where the boat was at the time (in the middle of the Atlantic) where they could set up their government in any way they preferred.

      Since the victors tend to write the history books, we tend to be particularly focused on these particular Separatists who narrowly missed setting up a theocracy in salt water. Over the course of the years following the original Mayflower landing, more Puritans emigrated and it is these people who began linking governance with their religion. They were primarily interested in making money, realizing the trade in shipbuilding timbers and exploitation of the costal fisheries was making a number of the colonists wealthy and land in the colony was available at low cost.

      And, rather than indescrimately kill all Native Americans, the earliest colonists were beneficiaries of a French trading mission that had passed through the area five years before the Mayflower landed, unwittingly exposing their trading partners to European diseases. It is said that influenza killed off half of the tribal population in the area the first year and when the Mayflower landed, the colonists found the land empty.

      This stands in sharp contrast to the Roanoke colony which lasted some 10 months, the survivors of which were returned to England due to increasingly hostile Native Americans.

      If you look at a map of New England, you'll see many towns and cities with the word "field" in the name. The reaon why this reoccurs is due to the habit of the Europeans referring to these areas as clearings. Now these areas wold not have been cleared had the Native Americans cleared them but, due to disease sweeping through the indigenous populations whenever contact was made with the Europeans, these clearings had been abandoned. Europeans called a "clearing" a "field."

      The Plymouth colonists' first contact with the Native Americans was in March, 1621, when Samoset, a Wampanouy, entered their encampment and began conversing with them in English, which he had picked up from English sailors in the area. Samoset and later Squanto, a Massasoit, were interested in these new white settlers because they wanted to form an alliance between them and their tribes in order to be able to fend off incursions from other tribes. They figured that the European technology might help them resist encroachment on their lands and that an alliance would help them both from a military standpoint and a trade standpoint. But the Europeans would never have been a consideration had their tribe not suffered substantial losses in population due to disease.

      Now, I have read history and part of it is due to my ancestry being from the founders of the Cape Ann colony, which settled in Massachusetts in 1623. Many relocated to Connecticut by the 1680s. While the Puritans were very strict in their adherence to the tenants of their religion, you have to understand that they did not try to convert Native Americans--that was just not their aim. I

      --
      Gods don't kill people, people with gods kill people.
    93. Re:"God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that people who don't believe what I believe in are stupid and intellectually dishonest. That's what I hate about "Conservative" thinking: you always have to twist what people say and misunderstand it on purpose. I'm saying that people who believe things that are provably false are idiots and intellectually dishonest.

      Please hold up your end of the argument and justify why it's OK to believe things that are provably false. What do you believe that's provably false, and what is your excuse for believing it?

      Do you find it convenient to believe that Global Warming is a myth? That Sadam Hussein was working with Osama bin Laden and had something to do with 9/11? That he had weapons of mass destruction? That Bush's latest "surge" is going to work, even though the last three surges were disasters? That Abraham Lincoln said anyone who questions the president should be hanged as a traitor? That gays getting marries will somehow ruin heterosexual marriages? That's a bunch of bullshit that conservatives choose to believe even though they know it's wrong, but their evil politics dictate that it's ok to lie. That's why Christians and Conservatives are so closely aligned with each other: their beliefs are based on lies.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    94. Re:"God Says it" by Harry+Coin · · Score: 1

      Free will is something we do have. We have the ability to make choices. It is assumed that God knows our choices already, but that doesn't mean he has determined them, only that he knows the choices we are going to make. So, IMHO, that still means we have the right to choose.

      Ah, but if he already knows the choices that we will make, then all choices are illusory, because you could not have done otherwise. Therefore, no free will. Omnicience and free will are incompatable.

      --
      That's pre 7-11 thinking....
    95. Re:"God Says it" by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      That's fantastic (seriously). It's commendable. And now I've heard of one such person. Now if he'd be kind enough to educate the rest of the US christians...

    96. Re:"God Says it" by king-manic · · Score: 1

      in that while the US has pretty much overcome racial and gender discrimination. As a minority, I missed this overcoming youspeak of. The Us still has a long way to go. In some major metropolitan areas it may have overcome those issues but the majority fo the rest of the countries needs a lot mroe work.
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    97. Re:"God Says it" by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      How is this any different from argueing that people can't have free will unless they have absolute freedom in every action? If god makes Gravity always work, then "He" is limiting your freedom to defy Gravity. Even a God that doesn't impose any moral laws still presumably imposed the physical constraints of our universe. Your phrase "Orwellian" presumably is possibly relevant to limitations on political or moral freedom, but how can you justify it if the same God is responsible for non-moral or non-political limits? Is God behaving like Big Brother if "He" makes a universe where you can't live forever by sheer act of will or fly to the moon on a chariot drawn by swans?

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    98. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      Right, the *potential* for evil was there, but as far as I can tell Adam and Even were the ones to bring it into actuality. Acording the Genesis, God created the world... and it was "good."
      What I'm getting that a "natural" world, without good vs. evil, right vs. wrong, would appear to be the ideal situation. Why continue to encourage a world where good fights evil and everyone suffers for it?


      I agree with what you are getting at, and this argument is mostly about semantics, but I think it is very important semantics.

      God created evil (if you believe in God that is). If he created the world, and it has evil in it in any form, God created evil. If I create an artificially intelligent tank and give it missiles that I tell it not to use, I created the missiles. Just because I gave the tank free will doesnt mean that I still didnt give it the capacity to shoot missiles. I may not be the cause for every missile firing, just as God would not necessarily be the cause of all evil. But God would still be the one who created the capacity for evil when he created a being that was capable of evil acts.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    99. Re:"God Says it" by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      What evidence do you have that evolution on an inter-speacies scale has stopped? We haven't seen much of it the last 100 years, but that's not the correct time-scale. And as for the teacher calling you a foolish sheep, this can easily happen when, after explaining evolution, the age of dinosaur and all that, the stupid student comes up and asks how this can be if the earth is only 4,000 year's old, because some old book says so. Exasperation ensues, and another christian gets dumber.

    100. Re:"God Says it" by Harry+Coin · · Score: 1

      And truthfuly, there is more scientific evidence supporting the bubble theory then darwin's big bang everything came from one cell theory.

      If you mean, this Bubble Theory, then you've mixed up cosmology and biology. Darwin never wrote about cosmology. Since the Big Bang theory was only initially conceived in 1927 (by a Catholic priest no less) and Charles Darwin died in 1882, he would have been a very early adopter indeed.

      Also, Darwin never wrote that all life came from one cell. He wrote on how existing life changed, not how it came to be.

      I wonder if this means I should start calling all popular evolutionist liars and idiots and such like they do with christians?

      So, since you've gotten your facts completely wrong, I have to ask. Did you do so intentionally (making you a liar), or unintentionally (making you an idiot)?

      --
      That's pre 7-11 thinking....
    101. Re:"God Says it" by Sciros · · Score: 1

      Actually I wasn't necessarily thinking of the Bible Belt ... indeed portions of the Midwest are no better when it comes to what I was talking about (they are less racist, but just as homogenous in terms of religious beliefs). I just wanted to say, that though you mention one can "hide" his/her beliefs, I personally do not see how that is a very acceptable solution. In fact, I think the choice between keeping your beliefs secret (and maybe pretending they are something else in order to keep that secret) and letting them be known at the expense of being [partially] ostrasized [by some people] is not an easy nor a welcome one to make!

      --
      I like basketball!!1!
    102. Re:"God Says it" by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It seems your whole view is wrong. Speciation occurs. I'm sorry to be the one to blow your entire worldview completely out of the water, but when you adopt falsehoods, that's what you get.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    103. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem you are both having is that Free Will is an incoherent concept. No one can define what it really is or it does. No one can even sketch out the fundamental functional difference between a chooser that has free will and one that doesn't. It's a concept like a square circle that makes no sense, but gets dumped into arguments to throw them off track.

      We make choices. We make those choices in SOME way, and a way that is characteristic and causally related to who we are. That's what makes them OUR choices, and not just some random things we do based on chance. Where does "Free Will" fit in to any of that? Not even the cleverest of theologians has been able to explain, utterly regardless of what other concepts like souls or supernatural realms they invoke: none of them help in the slightest. In fact, if you think about it, even trying to offer an explanation of HOW "choosing" happens makes Free Will into conceptual nonsense, no matter what set of rules you use. Only by avoiding the question can we avoid this realization.

    104. Re:"God Says it" by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It hasn't even stopped in the last century.

      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.htm l

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    105. Re:"God Says it" by Chyeld · · Score: 1

      The question then becomes, when you see mankind embroiled in a battle over what you did or didn't say, why not drop by again and clear up a few things?

      Devil's Advocate: (irony intended)

      What if, the point of it all isn't what happens down here. If this is just elementary school for exsistance, preparing us for all that will come later.

      In that case, you don't drop by because you want to force them all to work this stuff out themselves and start to be able to do it because they have finially reached that 'level' as opposed to having to be led around by a burning bush every time.

      And while you care about the suffering that occurs, you realize that with an infinity to play with, whatever suffering occurs is trivial to the potential rewards/punishments.

    106. Re:"God Says it" by jstott · · Score: 1

      I've never met or heard of a christian who knows ancient hebrew well enough to study the bible like a jewish scholar. And I've also never met a christian who quotes such scholars to validate their understanding of the bible. Therefore I don't see how they can know the original meaning of your "Old Testament".

      There are lots of excellent Christian scripture scholars, most with an excellent knowledge of scriptural Greek and Hebrew, and often a working knowledge of a few other first-century languegs like Aramaic, Coptic, or Syriac. A quick check through any scholarly biblical journal will confirm this. They may not be your average bible-thumpers, but they do exist.

      Competant biblical scholars do, however, tend to work in Theology departments which would seem to be terra incognita for most Slashdot posters.

      -JS

      --
      Vanity of vanities, all is vanity...
    107. Re:"God Says it" by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      you mention one can "hide" his/her beliefs Sorry, I did not mean to imply you should. I just meant that people on the street (in stores, etc) cannot make snap judgements by merely looking at you. Of course, I do think your argument is valid. People of certain "non-traditional" belief systems are discriminated against. I can certainly see how Athiests, in certain settings, fall into this category. Don't hide who you are, though. As someone once said, "Be yourself. Those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind."

      --
      blah blah blah
    108. Re:"God Says it" by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To make up rules which are impossible for God to violate is to negate that omnipotence.

      And at the same time, to be unable to bind his power means God has not the power to bind himself, which means he's not all-power.

      Just because some human sees a logical fallacy in the temporary suspension of free will does not make it impossible for God to have done so ...

      Actually, it does. That's precisely what logical fallacies are about proving: faulty logic. Let me give you another example, again steming from the idea of God's omnipotence. Now, the Christian God is supposed to be merciful and overall fair (obviously, the human concept of fair, as we're the audience). At the same time, he has supposedly set down rules that dictate how one gets into heaven. Well, that's the paradox right there. If he sets rules that insure one's entry into heaven, then he is binding himself to allow people into heaven. Yet, if he's not binded to follow his own rules on who gets into heaven, then he's not fair. The concept of God's grace follows virtually reverse logic; inherently him choosing certain unworthy people is unfair, so has bound himself to only allowing certain people in, but such reverts back to the issue of him not being able to bind himself.

      What does this all mean? Among other things, an omnipotent, fair God, Christian or otherwise, can't exist. But if we remove the quality of omnipotence, then we're left with a being who can be fair (and can bind himself to his own rules). Whether he's fair or omnipotent, the Bible, Quran, etc is in error, which leaves what and why to believe from it is very much placed on the people who read it. So, feel free to turn towards a slightly less-than-omnipotent God and worship him. Me, personally? I don't find it any more logical to worship to a nearly omnipotent God any more than a nearly omnipotent Devil. And why would I worship a being who is unfair?

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    109. Re:"God Says it" by jahudabudy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So if I offer you a choice between $1 million, and a swift kick in the nads, the fact that I know which one you will choose implies you didn't really have a choice at all? Or does it imply that I have a good enough understanding of your nature to know how you will choose to react to certain stimuli?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    110. Re:"God Says it" by bogjobber · · Score: 1
      I've never met or heard of a christian who knows ancient hebrew well enough to study the bible like a jewish scholar.

      You've got your head in the sand. Ever heard of a theologian? Ever been to a school with a religious studies department? Most theologians in the West are Christian, and a whole lot of them read and understand classical Hebrew.

      I've never seen anything similar in translations of the "Old Testament" of the Christian bible.

      There are more "academic" translations of the Old Testament available with footnotes and the like. Just because most people read the KJ or other version and take it at face value doesn't mean other options aren't out there. Note that I agree with you that the parent poster was being highly idealized. Even if he/she does act that way, the majority of Christians do not.

    111. Re:"God Says it" by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

      Gravity doesn't punish you if you don't believe in it providing you don't do something stupid besides-- the "thought crime" of disbelief in gravity is not what kills you, it's the fact you jump off a cliff *because* you disbelieve in gravity that kills you. If the mere fact of disbelieving in gravity was enough to kill you, then it is a penalty for a "thought crime." It is free will and thought crime that I find incompatible.

      You don't "choose" what you believe. You either find something to be believable or you do not. You are either convinced or you are not. I find the idea that you should be rewarded merely for being credulous or punished merely because you find something preposterous to be morally reprehensible.

    112. Re:"God Says it" by hawg2k · · Score: 1

      It's about respecting you enough to let you use the free will He gave you.

      First, you can't doubt something that's "slap you up the side of the head" obvious, even if you have the free will to do so. I have the free will to doubt that 2 + 2 = 4, but clearly it does. It's so ovious that it equals 4 I woudln't be able to use the doubt about it not equaling 4 as basis for my chosing to believe it doesn't equal 4. I'd simply be choosing to not believe it. So, if He just showed up to clear things up for us, it would hinder (maybe even effectively eliminate) free will.

      2nd, people still wouldn't choose to follow Him if it was "slap you up the side of the head" obvious that He existed. Look at Satan and the 1/3 of the angels that rebelled and were kicked out of heaven. It was no big mystery to them whether or not God existed, they just chose not to have faith, follow, and obey. Again, in the book of Revelation, it states that after Jesus does come down and clear it all up for us, there will be a millennial period were Jesus will be sitting on His throne in Jerusalem. It states that not everyone born in that age will choose to accept Him. He'll be sitting right there in front of their faces, but there will still be people born in that age that will not choose to follow Him.

      That aside, I don't understand how people can call Jesus a "great teacher" or "great moral person" or "realtively bright". Not that He wasn't that too, but the man walked around for 3+ years openly claiming to be God. Generally when you do that, you fall into one of three categories: liar, lunatic, or Lord. There have been others who have claimed to be God or Jesus in more recent times. No one's calling them anything positive like "great moral teacher".

    113. Re:"God Says it" by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1

      If you were God in that position, what would you do?

      Pick up chicks, and party like it's 4004 B.C.! Now guess what God would do in my position.

      --
      .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
    114. Re:"God Says it" by koreaman · · Score: 0

      I'd just magically make them understand all the secrets of nature, as well as my own existence. Shouldn't be too hard for God.

    115. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1

      It's the other way around. I didn't always believe in God. But I do now because I see evidence of his existence.

      I'd say you saw it because you wanted to see it. If it were in any way clear cut evidence, then surely you'd present it. You'd be the first person in history to be able to do so.

      The bible contains wisdom that is unparalled in both ancient and modern times.

      Laughable. Let's hear it then.

      No it's not. Your summation of the Bible is incorrect. If you use words like "exact" you should be exact.

      Is there anything incorrect? Other than particular details, is there anything important missing? If so what are they.
      The fact is that that is the essential details of your faith laid bare. You're upset that it looks as silly as it does when viewed that way. Were that not the case then surely you would have actually pointed out *something* inaccurate with my summation.

      Mu. Your summation was a strawman.

      Twaddle. Let's hear some actual facts and/or reasoning to back up that statement.


      If you would like for me to correct your misunderstanding, I can attempt to do so. If you are genuinely interested in my perspective, I can share it. If you just want to argue, then I have better things to do.


      Like I said, I'm perfectly happy to hear rational arguments. You haven't provided anything at all to back up your assertions.

    116. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet, if he's not binded to follow his own rules on who gets into heaven, then he's not fair. Nonsense. You're saying if a being could be unfair, e.g. not follow his own rules, then he must be unfair. You're missing the concept of said being being fair despite the fact that he could choose to be unfair, and ignore his rules.

      Just because a being does something, whether it is eat a ham sandwich or let people into heaven, and does it consistently according to a set of rules, like toasted bread and mustard or the good people, does not mean the being has to.
    117. Re:"God Says it" by Artifakt · · Score: 1


      "You dont have to create a supreme being to explain the beginning of time. In fact it just complicates things because then you have to explain where the supreme being came from."

      Why? There's a real reason why I may want to explain where the universe came from. The Big Bang theory won out over Steady State. If the Steady State theory had the preponderance of the evidence, then the Universe was (and is still in the present theoretical era) likely eternal, and needed no explanation for what came before it. We need an explanation because of what kind of universe our best theory specifically says we have, not because universes in general automatically are things that need explanations.
              No one doing science has claimed that the Steady State was an unscientific theory just because it didn't have an origin included. But when someone posits "God" as an explanation, these same people suddenly start claiming that everything needs an origin, and everything has to have that origin explained or it's not science. Do you want to revoke Penzias and Wilson's Nobel because they never really needed to disprove Steady State, because all those scientists who considered Steady State a possible theory were automatically wrong, even before the cosmic microwave background evidence that tipped the balance was actually gathered? You're argueing for a definition of Science where some things are true or false in advance of actually gathering the evidence.
              You yourself just made a statement in your next to last paragraph that contradicts your last paragraph. You also seem to be arguing that Science formally includes some rule that everything must have an origin. Sorry, but that's not one of the rules. Read some Karl Popper for insight into your last problem, or Kuhn if you can take lots of exposure to that annoyingly overused word "Paradigm". Don't just take my word for it, but Science allows for theories that claim a phenominon is unchanging or eternal.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    118. Re:"God Says it" by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nonsense. You're saying if a being could be unfair, e.g. not follow his own rules, then he must be unfair.

      No, I'm saying if an *omnipotent* being could be unfair, then he must be unfair. It comes down to this. There are certain circumstances where God can make a choice, A or B. A is fair. B is not. If God is truly omnipotent he can choose B. But, if he's fair, there's no way he can choose B. To do so would make him, by definition, unfair. So, he is either not omnipotent and bound to fair choices or he's omnipotent and not bound to fair choices. This is just a weaker form of the question whether God can create a rule he cannot break, where fairness would be the effective rule.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    119. Re:"God Says it" by Skreems · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point was not that we are more or less worthy than people 2000 years ago, but that we are obviously better equipped to understand the message now. The fact that it was "revealed" during a time full of myth and superstition is a huge problem, because even if the message is real, it blends in with a bunch of other stuff that we're much more sure isn't.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    120. Re:"God Says it" by Skreems · · Score: 1

      Then why come in the first place? It just seems kinda convenient that he showed up when people knew next to nothing of the world around them, and won't now that we've progressed farther.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    121. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      "The bible contains wisdom that is unparalled in both ancient and modern times."

      Like the similar claim that the Koran is so perfect that not one line could be improved upon, I beg to differ.

      Virtually any human being today, no matter how mundane or lousy a writer, could sit down to write a book on morality, wisdom, and insight that would be in virtually every respect superior to the Bible. Just the ability to outright condemn pointless cruelty, slavery as an institution, explain the ideas of tolerance, the concept of classical enlightenment liberalism (democracy, capitalism, liberal science, and liberty) blow any insight in the Bible out of the water. Human thought on morality and culture neither began nor ended with the Bible, and most certainly did not find anything even approaching perfection there.

    122. Re:"God Says it" by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      Yep, I should have known better. You just want to argue. I have better things to do than to argue with imbeciles. You have already wasted too much of my time. Get lost.

      --
      blah blah blah
    123. Re:"God Says it" by Skreems · · Score: 1

      It's about respecting you enough to let you use the free will He gave you. First, you can't doubt something that's "slap you up the side of the head" obvious, even if you have the free will to do so. I have the free will to doubt that 2 + 2 = 4, but clearly it does. It's so ovious that it equals 4 I woudln't be able to use the doubt about it not equaling 4 as basis for my chosing to believe it doesn't equal 4. I'd simply be choosing to not believe it. So, if He just showed up to clear things up for us, it would hinder (maybe even effectively eliminate) free will.
      This is exactly my point, though. For the people who were around at the beginning, it WAS "slap you up the side of the head" obvious. They SAW miracles. They saw the resurrection, or heard about it first or second hand, rather than 3000th hand like we do now. Do they deserve less free will than we do now? Frankly, it all feels like a justification without much basis in logic.

      That aside, I don't understand how people can call Jesus a "great teacher" or "great moral person" or "realtively bright". Not that He wasn't that too, but the man walked around for 3+ years openly claiming to be God. Generally when you do that, you fall into one of three categories: liar, lunatic, or Lord. There have been others who have claimed to be God or Jesus in more recent times. No one's calling them anything positive like "great moral teacher".
      I'm not even a Christian, and I know that Jesus never referred to himself as "God" or even "the son of God". He DID refer to himself as "the son of Man" many times, but that's an entirely different thing.
      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    124. Re:"God Says it" by heptapod · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Good. Now explain how God did it.

    125. Re:"God Says it" by CommunistHamster · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, his argument is "You argue God has no limits. The rules concerning whether to allow someone into Heaven are limits (these rules, you also argue, exist). Therefore God has limits."

    126. Re:"God Says it" by Chyeld · · Score: 1

      Under the theroy I put forward, he showed up before because we needed his presence to be able to get to the level where we no longer needed it directly. When I watch parents with children learning to walk, they often are there to help the child stand by holding their arms and giving them the support they need to balance on legs that aren't used to supporting weight. However this stops once the child has learned to walk on their own. Then the parent actively encourages the child to walk on their own, and only intervenes when the child too tired to walk. Lastly, the parent lets the child deal with it all on their own.

    127. Re:"God Says it" by Anomolous+Cowturd · · Score: 1

      This is the No True Scotsman fallacy.

      Christians are a diverse lot, ranging from complete idiots to almost rational. They hold a large variety of beliefs which are subtly or largely incompatible with other species of Christian. Claiming that your own narrow definition is the only "true" Christians is totally bogus.

      --
      Software patents delenda est.
    128. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Virtually any human being today, no matter how mundane or lousy a writer, could sit down to write a book on morality, wisdom, and insight that would be in virtually every respect superior to the Bible
      First response: then do it. Illuminate the world with your shining light.

      Second response: You just show your ignorance of the Bible. Make no mistake -- most modern religion does not teach what the Bible does. No, rather they teach an amalgam of general Bible concepts, modern psychology, and classical philosophy. So in reality, most people feel the way you do, including religious leaders. It must be working, because the world is in such great shape, right? Riiiight. If more people lived according to what the Bible actually teaches, then we'd have a lot less problems.

      Don't bash what you don't understand.

      For example, read the sermon on the mount (matthew 5-7). If people lived according to teachings found there, we'd be better off.
      Another example, read proverbs. Unparalleled wisdom.

      Even God's law to Moses (which deals with slavery, yes) is advanced for its time. The mistake many make is that they judge ancient cultures based on modern standards, especially dealing with things like slavery. Just like God didn't drop modern technology out of the sky for the Israelites to enjoy, he also gave them a legal framework which was consistent with the times.

      The same law contains hygiene laws that show more understanding than modern man had as late as the 19th century.
      It ensured that often marginalized elements of society (orphans, women, children, immigrants) were treated justly.
      It ensured that animals were treated properly.

      Again, do not bash something you don't understand and have probably been misled about your entire life.
    129. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1


      Yep, I should have known better. You just want to argue. I have better things to do than to argue with imbeciles. You have already wasted too much of my time. Get lost.


      So I state arguments that you could have chosen to refute with facts. You responded with "no it isn't no it isn't no it isn't" and were entirely unable to offer one single rational defense of your statements.
      I pointed it out to you and it means that I'm an imbecile? Wow, you really do live in a delusional dream world.

      That's fine, but quit pretending that you have all these magical answers. You don't. You had a perfect opportunity to present them and all you could do was rant about how you're magically right and lob ad hominems.

      You're a shining example, that's for sure.

    130. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      I think I understand it pretty darn well.

      Perhaps the Bible was advanced for its time in some things, though clearly not in everything, and much of this is subjective. But that doesn't make it much different than any other set of thoughts and poetry from folks all throughout human history. The proverbs contain much that is wise, but also much that is foolish, culturally contingent, or even wrong. In that sense they are interesting, but hardly necessary or sacred above all other human works.

      "First response: then do it. Illuminate the world with your shining light. "

      Ok: cruelty is wrong, we should tolerate the views of those whom we disagree, we should never wish endless pain on anyone. We should not infringe on the liberties of others to speak and believe and think. Slavery is wrong. Racism is wrong. Treating women as property is wrong no matter how much we claim to respect them while we do it. Equality isn't just a matter of things in God's sight, but in political treatment as well. And so on.

      These statements are far superior to anything in the mind of Christ, and yet they are to most people today mere trivialities. More importantly, they are far CLEARER than anything Christ said, instead of being cryptic and vague, able and in fact many times interpreted in many different ways. (In fact, the ONE clear and unique teaching that Christ had was the idea of eternal torment: an idea probably more monstrous than anything ever before imagined.)

      Your defense of the OT isn't particularly credible either. There is nothing in it that suggests anacronistic insight, and much that is utterly barbaric. The bible doesn't merely condone slavery, for instance, it stipulates the degree to which an owner can rend the flesh of a servant. It calls for the death penalty for all sorts of absurd supersitutions. Half of the Ten Commandments would be unconstitutional today, and the rest are so obvious to ANY workable human society as to render the claimed insight irrelevant and old news by the time they were written.

      My point is not that the bible isn't interesting, or even that it contains nothing of value at all, but rather that the idea that is is the culmination of wisdom and morality is, simply put, utterly absurd. The sermon on the mount is a pretty sentiment, but it is not a particularly useful guide to anything, and never proved such. It was, after based on the completely false belief that Jesus was the messiah and would soon herald in the messianic age/end of the world, none of which ever happened (which at least in terms of Judiasm was why virtually no educated Jew ever found his claims anything more than ridiculous).

      And good grief: would you really trade the relatively minor "troubles" of the modern world for the barbarism and squalor of the ancient?

    131. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Don't push your religious views on me. You have no proof speciation occurs. All you have is a fossil record that shows simularly related fossils wich back the bubble theory as much as it does yours. And acording to Occam's razor, interspecies evolution is the gamble.

    132. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The question then becomes, when you see mankind embroiled in a battle over what you did or didn't say, why not drop by again and clear up a few things? Or, to put it another way, why are some stupid sheep herders who'd be impressed by a light bulb more worthy of direct physical contact and proof of God than we today, who understand enough of science to know something truly miraculous when we see it?

      Why not, indeed?

      My own answer to that, of course, is that Jesus was at most a relatively bright human, God doesn't exist, no miracles occurred, and the entire thing that it's grown into is people taking some fun stories waaaaaay too seriously.

      Jesus told a story which remarks upon this attitude (among other things).

      Jesus said to the Pharisees,
      "There was a rich man who dressed in purple garments and fine linen
      and dined sumptuously each day.

      And lying at his door was a poor man named Lazarus, covered with sores,
      who would gladly have eaten his fill of the scraps
      that fell from the rich man's table.
      Dogs even used to come and lick his sores.

      When the poor man died,
      he was carried away by angels to the bosom of Abraham.

      The rich man also died and was buried,
      and from the netherworld, where he was in torment,
      he raised his eyes and saw Abraham far off
      and Lazarus at his side.

      And he cried out, 'Father Abraham, have pity on me.
      Send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue,
      for I am suffering torment in these flames.'

      Abraham replied, 'My child,
      remember that you received what was good during your lifetime
      while Lazarus likewise received what was bad;
      but now he is comforted here, whereas you are tormented.

      Moreover, between us and you a great chasm is established
      to prevent anyone from crossing
      who might wish to go from our side to yours
      or from your side to ours.'

      He said, 'Then I beg you, father, send him
      to my father's house,
      for I have five brothers, so that he may warn them,
      lest they too come to this place of torment.'

      But Abraham replied, 'They have Moses and the prophets.
      Let them listen to them.'

      He said, 'Oh no, father Abraham,
      but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will repent.'


      Then Abraham said,
      'If they will not listen to Moses and the prophets,
      neither will they be persuaded
      if someone should rise from the dead.'"
    133. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      If you mean, this Bubble Theory, then you've mixed up cosmology and biology. Darwin never wrote about cosmology. Since the Big Bang theory was only initially conceived in 1927 (by a Catholic priest no less) and Charles Darwin died in 1882, he would have been a very early adopter indeed.
      No, I was thinking of this bubble theory. It has little to do with Darwin except show he is wrong to a degree.

      Also, Darwin never wrote that all life came from one cell. He wrote on how existing life changed, not how it came to be.
      Your right If your speaking about Darwin himself. I'm talking about the new religion that is darwinism or something simular who claim we came from monkeys and vice versa. It isn't as cut and dry as that but watch how the open minded scientific comunity closes up and refuses to except change like many of the religions do.

      So, since you've gotten your facts completely wrong, I have to ask. Did you do so intentionally (making you a liar), or unintentionally (making you an idiot)?
      And since you obviously know everything. Why don't you tell me? Or should i just sit back and say point proven? You won't get it now, but in 20 or so years, if you havn't evolved into a dingbat, you will read this and wonder how you were worse off then you called me.

      Good day
    134. Re:"God Says it" by rucs_hack · · Score: 1

      ah, well, he had this little bag of, um, miracles, and he, well, sort of fell over one day and dropped it on a pile of worldUgrow.

      Then out of that, he created tall the lovely little animals, the end.

    135. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      What evidence do you have that evolution on an inter-speacies scale has stopped?
      Your right, it can't stop if it never happened. But that was a question to get you thinking not command the typicle religions defense mode.

      And as for the teacher calling you a foolish sheep, this can easily happen when, after explaining evolution, the age of dinosaur and all that, the stupid student comes up and asks how this can be if the earth is only 4,000 year's old, because some old book says so. Exasperation ensues, and another christian gets dumber.
      And this is the exact reason why there will always be stickers in georgia and attempts to discredit evolution in kansas. You apear to be making the claims that you version of everything is more acurate then others. I'm not going to get into the fact that it isn't but straight to the point of freedom of religion. You cannot have the state attempting to stop someone from practicing their religion by claiming it isn't valid wich is exactly what is going on here. The teacher went past the "in bioligy we think evlution is how all the animals became what they are today" and straight into insulting people who hold religious beliefs in an attempt to make them feel bad. It is unacceptable behavior that you just justified because your right and they are wrong.

      So as long as attitudes like yours and this teachers prevail, there will always be an attempt to have freedom of religion.

      And BTW, the talk origins link the other guy posted to is eronious in many ways. It talks about almost interspecies evolution not not the actual thing. But that is what I would expect from a website designed to preach to the quire about why everyone else is wrong. It mihgt have slid under the radar if it didn't openly blast everyone who doesn't agree with them. The arguments often result to name calling and such to drive a point home Which is strange because that is exactly what the fundlementalist do when you tell them their religion is a bunch of lies. hmm... comparisons here? nah..
    136. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How does one explain a painting to someone who glues his eyelids shut?

      You see, there are people who believe, who pray, and who get their prayers answered directly and immediately.

      You may not be one of them. But they exist.

      And usually, the next rebuttal is: "Is that so? Then make God dance for me, prayer boy!"

      Problem is, those prayers are almost always answered in the negative....

      (Taking the grandparent further, if you really were God, would you grant an audience to such arrogance? Would that be in the best interest of the arrogant?)

      The thing with prayer is that even the most devout person won't get a Yes answer most of the time. But when you do get that Yes answer, it is great. For me, it has never been answered Yes when any part of the result had a selfish component. Which makes sense - but is disappointing to the folk who were told that God is the Magic Goodness Vending Machine, pop in prayer, out comes health/wealth/renown.

    137. Re:"God Says it" by Rutulian · · Score: 1

      The basic connection is that evolution helps create a "natural" world where God is not needed.

      Statements like this (and there are a lot of them here, I'm just picking on this one) are the reason why this whole evolution discussion is such a problem. Look people, the scientific Theory of Evolution has absolutely nothing to do with God. This is the problem with politicized debates of scientific principles. People take pieces of ideas and try to use them to rationalize their own ideas. The process of evolution is a scientific model describing (using known observable evidence) the appearance of closely related yet genetically distinct species in ecosystems for which many have special physiological adaptations. Notice how I made no mention of God. You cannot prove or disprove the existence of God. That is why religion is not science, and science cannot be used to refute religion.

      One of the fundamental reason why people "need" their faith in a god is because it explains the unexplainable.

      Wow, thanks for that terse summary. It is good to know that the entire human construct of religion, which has existed in some form in every society for thousands of years, can be summarized in one line of Western, eurocentric, pseudo-Christian philosophy. Now try actually learning something about religion. I suggest looking into Buddhism, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, Islam, and some of the Native American religions. Religion is far more complicated than "it explains the unexplainable", which, by the way, it doesn't (see comment about division between science and religion above).

      If you are atheist, fine, that is your choice. Just be intelligent about it, and don't drag science into your religious or anti-religious arguments.

    138. Re:"God Says it" by d'fim · · Score: 1

      "Oh dear", says God, "I hadn't thought of that," and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic. -- HHGTTG

      --
      Adherence to the truth is a form of disloyalty.
    139. Re:"God Says it" by alienmole · · Score: 1

      "To God, a million years is but a day."
      Make that a billion years, and double it, and we're in the right ballpark!
    140. Re:"God Says it" by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      So I state arguments that you could have chosen to refute with facts.
      You made specious statements that weren't intelligent enough to merit a response.

      and were entirely unable to offer one single rational defense of your statements.
      you replied to my post, I did not respond to yours. I stated a position which you failed to refute. I did not come looking for you, you came looking for me. The burden of proof is on you.

      rant about how you're magically right and lob ad hominems
      You started with the ad hominems. Childish, maybe. Sorry I went there.

      This is why I don't debate with people like you. You aren't genuinely interested in what anyone else has to say, because your hubris prevents you from seeing what you probably read on some atheests ar kewl website. The only other reason to debate you would be for intellectual stimulation, but given the poor quality of your previous posts that would not provide much. So like I said, arguing with you is pointless.

      What is telling, though, is that you attack my beliefs with such vigor. I haven't attacked your beliefs once. I attacked your misconceptions about the Bible, maybe, but not your belief system as an Atheist. I feel no need to do so, as I am secure in my own beliefs. Insecure people feel the need to go on the offensive. You could have asked questions rather than proffering baseless, uninformed claims about the Bible. Your methods reveal your intent, though, which is why I indicated in the first place that I wouldn't argue with you (I guess I can't resist). Just let me help you with one thing, though: next time you get into a debate with someone who is informed about the Bible, listen, don't assume you know everything. You might learn something. Your summation of the Bible was quite incorrect, and what happens when you start with a false premise? You arrive at a bad conclusion.
      --
      blah blah blah
    141. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't get why people view the bible as so great and "unparalled." The book of proverbs has some wisdom... basically it says that you should be wise, be good to people, and don't sleep with an adulteress. It says these things over and over and over and over again. Oh, and it also says over and over that poor people are wicked and the wealthy are righteous. And that wealth will lead to ruin. Honestly, the proverbs that Benjamin Franklin included in Poor Richard's Almanac and various other writings carry more wisdom, are more clear and more applicable to living a good life than those in the book of Proverbs.

      While the Sermon on the Mount has some very insightful parts, a large portion is filler; sophistry laden and more cryptic than a Beatle's album. The speeches of Martin Luther King Jr. are at least as moving and justice inspiring as those of Jesus.

      When you say "You just show your ignorance of the Bible. Make no mistake -- most modern religion does not teach what the Bible does" all that tells me is that you are ignorant of the teachings of the bible, and of those who follow it. If you cherry pick verses and lines, almost any philosophy or way of life can be justified. Hippies, revolutionaries, police, drug dealers, soldiers, politicians and megalomaniacal corporatists all find justification for their actions in the bible. And there is no way to take in all of the teachings of the bible, because many teachings (and items laid out as plain facts) are flat out self contradictory. This isn't to say that wisdom and a guide to righteous living can not be eked out from the bible, but one has to first be wise and just to do so. Otherwise one will only find justifications for their folly and cruelty. Note what I am saying about you if you have found wisdom and a path to righteous living from the bible... this is not an attempt at insulting the faithful, but an attempt to elucidate the fact that the bible does have flaws... believing otherwise has led to some of the greatest travesties that the western world has seen (Conquest of the Native Americans, Crusades, Inquisition, Witch Trials, Lynchings, Jewish Holocaust...) Basically, without faith in the God of the Christian bible, good men would still do good deeds and wicked men would still do wicked deeds. Faith can cause a good man to perform wicked deeds (However I have enough impartiality to be open to the possibility that faith can also lead a wicked man to do good deeds.) My intent here is also not to attack Christianity per se, but to show the folly of faith over reason.

    142. Re:"God Says it" by superiority · · Score: 1

      Er...you should probably specify that the "atheists are unlikely to get elected" part is what's sickening, not the "black people/women are likely to get elected".

      At least, I hope that's what you mean.

    143. Re:"God Says it" by superiority · · Score: 1

      That's the old testament.
      Mark Twain's Letters from the Earth described the God of the old testament as "before he got religion". An apt description, I think.
    144. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      ... *he got pissed off at people* for acting exactly how he made them ...

      That is the entire basis of the Judeo-Christian religion. Any of the other tenets rest squarely on this exact basis.

      Actually, traditional orthodox Christian teaching would be that God created people flawless, but with the power of choice. They were given instruction and were fully capable of obedience up until the time they chose not to. Their nature was changed through sin.

      Whether or not you think that Christianity requires credulity is not my point. Christianity is not reasonable from a human perspective. The bible specifically states that to follow God requires the suspension of your own understanding. Proverbs 3:5 "Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding." (KJV) There are more verses like this, but you can look them up yourself if you really want to.

    145. Re:"God Says it" by krishn_bhakt · · Score: 1

      So people like Einstein, Hawking and Witten who were/are trying to find Grand-Unified-Theory were not doing science?

      --
      The Answer Lies in The Genome
    146. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Now let's say that you want to explain this to mankind. You want to let them know you created everything. But right now, they're at a point where they don't even have basic mechanics figured out, you know they'd never comprehend the big bang. And they are far from figuring out how traits are passed down. The intricate process of natural selection that you've so cleverly crafted would go over their heads.

      Genesis 2:7 And the LORD God formed man from the beasts of the field. From the beasts man arose and became like the image of God.
      Instead of:
      Genesis 2:7: And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.

      Evolution gets explained to primary school children. There is no reason that it could not have been explained in scripture if it were intended by the authors to be beleived. They didn't have to understand the science of it any more than they understood how a man could be formed from dust.

    147. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      I Corinthians 1:21: For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.

      Since the gospel was already considered foolishness at the time it was written, the advanced education we have today would not seem to be an advantage to understanding it as it is intended.

      One major obstacle to reconciling a biblical worldview and a naturalist one is the naturalists tend to see intellect as the highest human function, while the bible teaches that intellect must be subjected to faith. Naturalists tend to see truth as being defined as something being observable and repeatable ie: tangible physical reality, while someone with a biblical view sees truth as being defined by revelation, ie the bible.

      As a result of this, these views will never be reconciled. As long as either group tries to impose by force their ideas on the others, there will be some level on conflict.

    148. Re:"God Says it" by Anonymous+McCartneyf · · Score: 1

      "Neither you, Simon, nor the fifty thousand,
      Nor the Romans, nor the Jews,
      Nor Judas, nor the priests, nor the law-giving scribes,
      Nor even doomed Jerusalem itself
      Understand what power is,
      Understand what glory is,
      Understand at all--
      Understand at all."
      --from Jesus Christ Superstar

      --
      There is a fine line between recklessness and courage... -- Paul McCartney
    149. Re:"God Says it" by rucs_hack · · Score: 1

      oh no, they went wrong by not looking for the little bag of miracles.

      Last I heard it was somewhere outside Stoke on Trent. All the answers are in there you know..... :-)

    150. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      "Actually, traditional orthodox Christian teaching would be that God created people flawless, but with the power of choice. They were given instruction and were fully capable of obedience up until the time they chose not to. Their nature was changed through sin."

      You are aware that this is completely incoherent, aren't you? Perfection implies that one WOULD choose obedience, unless obedience was imperfect. There is no way to formulate the concept of choice that does not rule out an either obedient or non-obedient nature. There has to be SOME reason why one person would choose this over that, and unless you simply dodge explaining what that some element is and where it came from, the idea of perfecting sinning is nonsense.

      "The bible specifically states that to follow God requires the suspension of your own understanding."

      This is, then, why it is immoral. Acting with certainty when certainty is not only not possible, but actually undermined, is as immoral as handing someone a gun and telling them to point it at their face and pull the trigger without knowing whether or not it is loaded. The more one strives to make a doctrine beyond human understanding, the more it simply goes beyond any reason to trust it. The degree to which God cannot be understood is the degree to which the possibility that what we know as God is, say, really just Satan tricking us becomes equally and irrefutably possible.

    151. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      "Right, the *potential* for evil was there, but as far as I can tell Adam and Even were the ones to bring it into actuality."

      So if I hire someone to murder a bus driver, I'm not actually a murderer?

      There is no way to formulate the concept of choice and responsibility for choice that doesn't include causality from nature, and hence also chain the responsibility back to whatever determined the nature.

      "According the Genesis, God created the world... and it was "good.""

      According to Genesis, birds existed before lizards. Shrug.

    152. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      You are aware that this is completely incoherent, aren't you?

      I apologise if I falsely gave the impression that I was trying to make Christianity seem coherent to you. The parent post stated that a particular teaching was the basis of the Judeo-Christian religion. I was simply pointing out that the teaching was substatially different than stated, not trying to put forward a rational argument for Christianity.

      This is, then, why it is immoral. Acting with certainty when certainty is not only not possible, but actually undermined, is as immoral as ...

      I'll quote myself from another post in this thread: "Naturalists tend to see truth as being defined as something being observable and repeatable ie: tangible physical reality, while someone with a biblical view sees truth as being defined by revelation, ie the bible."

      So while you see certainty as not possible regarding God (presumably because of the lack of observation) someone with a biblical view regards certainty as coming from the revelation (the bible) and any contrary observable evidence is seen as a temporary condition which will eventually change to conform to the revelation. Mind you, this is not a recent insight into Christianity or a response to science, it is actually taught in the bible. II Corinthians 5:7: (For we walk by faith, not by sight:) . The morality of it really depends on whether Christianity is true or not, rather than the method of learning about it.

      That's why reasoning with a committed Christian or showing them evidence contrary to the bible won't convince them.

    153. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      "So while you see certainty as not possible regarding God (presumably because of the lack of observation) someone with a biblical view regards certainty as coming from the revelation (the bible) and any contrary observable evidence is seen as a temporary condition which will eventually change to conform to the revelation."

      The problem is larger than that. Relevation does not solve it, because any being sufficiently more powerful than man but whom cannot be understood by man could have any motive or purpose at all in giving out particular revelations to folks. There still is no degree of certainty there, and the more one claims that God is unknowable, revelation or no, the more unreasonable it is to say anything about God with any degree of certainty at all.

    154. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      You post basically explains the reason why having "equal time for creationism" or ID stickers or whatever is a bad idea for everyone. It would put the teacher in EXACTLY that position. First they have to teach creationism, and then they turn to all the evidence against it? That's exactly what we don't want.

      When science classes stick to teaching science, there is no real need to get into religious arguments. You learn the science, no one makes any grand metaphysical claims, you go home and believe whatever you want.

    155. Re:"God Says it" by plunge · · Score: 1

      "It has little to do with Darwin except show he is wrong to a degree."

      Were you under the impression that anyone, including Darwin himself thought he was right about everything having to do with biology? For goodness sakes, he got the basic mechanism of heredity wrong (though by the time he figured this out, he didn't have time to track down the accurate picture, sadly despite the answer sitting on his bookshelf unread in the form of Mendel's paper on genetics). Darwin was a pretty quiet dude who spent most of his life dissecting barnacles and wondering about stuff, not a saint.

      "I'm talking about the new religion that is darwinism or something simular who claim we came from monkeys and vice versa. "

      If you don't even understand what evolution says, how can you possibly credibly criticize it as being dogmatic, let alone wrong? Evolution isn't a religion and "Darwinism" as such exists only in the mind of paranoids. The evidence for common descent and evolutionary change as the driving force is overwhelming and clear.

      From the way you post though, I seriously suspect that you are not a creationist, but are, in fact, a troll posing as one.

    156. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Were you under the impression that anyone, including Darwin himself thought he was right about everything having to do with biology? For goodness sakes, he got the basic mechanism of heredity wrong (though by the time he figured this out, he didn't have time to track down the accurate picture, sadly despite the answer sitting on his bookshelf unread in the form of Mendel's paper on genetics). Darwin was a pretty quiet dude who spent most of his life dissecting barnacles and wondering about stuff, not a saint.

      No, I'm under the impression that he was wron on a lot of things. The problem is with all the people who think he was exactly right and use this in a way to discredit other religions. And this is why I refere to it as a religion. There is a large part of society that is substituting evolution for religion in some ways. The parelells are obvious if you look. The faithfully believe things that cannot be proven to the point that their view is more correct then anyone elses. God forbid you bring up a problem with their belief, it as simular to commiting blasphemy. look around and you will see it too.

      If you don't even understand what evolution says, how can you possibly credibly criticize it as being dogmatic, let alone wrong?

      I understand completley what evolution says. What I don't understand is the comlete blind faith in one version of evolution when so many competing theories make much more sence. The bubble theory wich you probably had not heard of untill recently makes more sence, requires less stepps and complication to work and acording to Occam's razor should be the prevailing logic. I know your not the GP who made it blatently obvious with his assinine comments but that sort of illistrates my point. And later in your post, you do the same.

      The evidence for common descent and evolutionary change as the driving force is overwhelming and clear.

      Yep, And the bubble theory supports this in few steps and complexity then common ancestrial interspecies evolution.

      From the way you post though, I seriously suspect that you are not a creationist, but are, in fact, a troll posing as one.

      Well, You are correct in that I'm not a creationist. Although it would bring meaning and value to some mundain aspects of life if there was a supream creator, the value behind one is just to comfort the populace and set in place rules for the survivla of a common society. Every religion I know of can be boiled down to this. It is more of an attempt to apease the laws of nature and explain the unexplainable while at the same time, laying the fundementals for a thriving populace. Something you should look at is a book by Matthew Alper called "The god part of the brain". It doesn't explain the bubble theory or anthing like that but does go to the reasoning behind why most religions come away with the same besic principles even though the name and events have been changed. And after readiong this and watching the Evolution verses creation debate I was able to see that quite a few people have just substituted evolution for their now discredited religion of choice. To claim different is just wrong. To claim it isn't a centralized effort might be correct but that doesn't mean it isn't happening.

      As for being a troll, If not agreeing with you or the common belief system means I'm a troll then by all means I am. But the evidence fits more nicly with my views on evolution then it does with yours or inteligent design or even creationism. Unfortunatly, The amount of name calling and resistance to a differing view even though it fits completly into the same picture just shows this. Not once has you or anyone in responce to my bubble theory attempted to discredit it rather everyone has resulted to calling me names instead. I ask you, I fI walked into a church and claime

    157. Re:"God Says it" by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You post basically explains the reason why having "equal time for creationism" or ID stickers or whatever is a bad idea for everyone. It would put the teacher in EXACTLY that position. First they have to teach creationism, and then they turn to all the evidence against it? That's exactly what we don't want.
      Your right, we have to teach evolution in a way that doesn't conflict with the freedom of religion. I wasn't arguing for anything else. But I am saying that in real life, evolution has an agenda and proving religions is wrong is part of that agenda. If little johny says "but mommy and my pastor says god created everything" the resopnce could be "that might be true but in bioligy we understand things better this way." and leave it at that. In this case, he isn't disproving religion and he isn't acknowledging it either.

      But this isn't what is going on at all. The teacher is ridiculing the pupil (at least in my experiences) based on his belief of something that isn't even true. Or at least isn't provable beyond wild jumps and guesses. And don't tell me that the scientific consensus belives something so it must be true because there are counflicting views within them.

      When science classes stick to teaching science, there is no real need to get into religious arguments. You learn the science, no one makes any grand metaphysical claims, you go home and believe whatever you want.
      Whenthe world is perfect and ideal, Everything will work this way. It doesn't take long before even here people will claim their version of evolution is "fact" and will start calling other religion's gods "fairy tales" and such. It is kewl to do it her but in the classroom of a state sponsored school were there is a freedom of religion guarenteed by the same document that keeps religion out of schools it isn't. And i support the consitution above any religion or science. And I do see were science in some cases is trying to suplant religion./
    158. Re:"God Says it" by OriginalArlen · · Score: 1

      Yes, you are of course totally correct - that's what I get for a hasty post after the post-work G&T and not using 'preview'. The moment I saw the thing I cringed to the soles of my feet. Fortunately you seem to have been the only reader on the thread equipped with the ability to correctly parse English. Including me :)

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    159. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1

      "Actually, traditional orthodox Christian teaching would be that God created people flawless, but with the power of choice. They were given instruction and were fully capable of obedience up until the time they chose not to. Their nature was changed through sin."

      But who created sin? Who created evil? Who created the universe, people, and everything in it in such a way as to make it occur in exactly that way? That is the point I'm making.

      Whether or not you think that Christianity requires credulity is not my point. Christianity is not reasonable from a human perspective. The bible specifically states that to follow God requires the suspension of your own understanding. Proverbs 3:5 "Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding." (KJV) There are more verses like this, but you can look them up yourself if you really want to.

      Sure, just more apologetics. Ignore the facts and just buy into what I tell you no matter how nonsensical.

      The parent post stated that a particular teaching was the basis of the Judeo-Christian religion. I was simply pointing out that the teaching was substatially different than stated, not trying to put forward a rational argument for Christianity.

      Except, "the teaching" is nothing but rhetoric designed to hide the underlying truth which is what I was bringing to the forefront.

      None of what you said changes the fact that an omnipotent omniscient god not only knew what choices would be made, but set all the variables in such a way as to cause those exact choices to be made. The fact is that it is a rigged game. Nothing different could have happened once god put things into motion in exactly the way that he did. Shifting the blame to people, which is all those teachings you speak of attempt to do, just says that holding the entity responsible for the situation responsible is wrong.
      So regardless of the rhetoric, the underlying "facts" in the Judeo-Christian myths about god remain what I said they were. They are completely unescapable once you posit an omniscient, omnipotent creator. Those 2 characteristics completely determine all else regardless of whatever else one trys to throw on top of it to absolve god for responsibility for his actions.


      That's why reasoning with a committed Christian or showing them evidence contrary to the bible won't convince them.


      Sure, which is why the poster I originally responded to has done nothing but talk about how he really knows the truth and how I'm entirely wrong and yet is unable to come up with a single coherrent refutation of anything I said.

      You tried, but I think you missed the point that I wasn't talking about the apologetics, rather the basic underlying assumptions and the basic facts that follow inevitably just from the assumptions of omniscience and omnipotence.

    160. Re:"God Says it" by Casualposter · · Score: 1

      And we must mention that the original christian bible was put together at the behest of a PAGAN casear, Constantine, who was interested in unifying a political and military EMPIRE with a common religion. As a matter of historical fact, Constantine was not baptisted into the christian religion until he lay upon his death bed. The protestant bible is a stripped down version that was changed mostly for POLITICAL reasons, though many of the issues that Martin Luther had with the Catholic Church of his era were quite valid and philosophical. It is most annoying to me that more people are interested in forcing someone else to live according to a bible that they are not willing to live by. Many of these passionate campaigns against evolution, abortion, etc., are not CHRISTIAN values.

      --
      Creative Spelling Copyright (2002). May use without Persimmons
    161. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      Wow, thanks for that terse summary. It is good to know that the entire human construct of religion, which has existed in some form in every society for thousands of years, can be summarized in one line of Western, eurocentric, pseudo-Christian philosophy

      Uh, did you read the part where I said "One of the fundamental reasons"? I never said that this was the only reason religion was created. I never even said it was The major origin of religion. I just said it was one of the major reasons religion was created and has endured for so long.

      Look people, the scientific Theory of Evolution has absolutely nothing to do with God.

      That is the reason that this whole evolution discussion is such a problem. People who do not confess that there is no seperation between science and religion. Absolutely nothing is outside of science's realm, because science can cover everything and anything that we can percieve. Just because it is not measurable yet or visible yet, doesnt mean it isnt within the realm of science.

      Religous people are frightened by the Theory of Evolution because it allows for the possibility that there are no Supreme Beings. It makes it more plausable to not believe in God. That is the conflict, and it is real.

      Notice how I made no mention of God. You cannot prove or disprove the existence of God.

      You cannot truly prove or disprove anything with 100% certainty. The last 2 weeks of your life might just be an elaborate dream, so you cannot prove that anything you have done recently actually happened. All you can do is have a certain level of certainty.

      I have a 99.999999999999999999999% certainty that my hair color is red. I could be scizophrenic and just cannot accept that it is actually blonde, but I am fairly certain that I am sane and that my hair is red. Of course I am not 100% certain.

      You can never be 100% certain that God does not exist. But you can use science (anthropology, psychology, etc.) to determine the likeliness that a God exists. Having a working hypothesis and then theory about how and why humans created early religions goes a long way to disproving that God exists. That is just one example, but there are many more.

      If you are atheist, fine, that is your choice. Just be intelligent about it, and don't drag science into your religious or anti-religious arguments.

      I am being intelligent about it. And science should be dragged into any religious argument, just as it should be dragged into just about any argument. Using the scientific method is valid in any discussion.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    162. Re:"God Says it" by Debello · · Score: 1

      "And let's not even get started on the fact that the bible Americans read has been translated. There are many phrases which can be translated multiple ways. Plus with the old testiment the English language can't properly represent the multiple meanings of Hebrew words, and so much is lost in translation." Being the nephew of two Lutheran pastors, I know that to become a pastor you must be able to read the dialects of greek and hebrew that the Holy Bible are written in. So, if you want to see the Holy Bible untranslated so you can read it without confusion, ask a pastor (or, at least, a Lutheran Missouri Synod pastor, which I think my uncles are) or learn hebrew and greek. If you're not willing to, then please don't go around saying "It's wrong because it's translated." Also, most Bibles have footnotes listing other alternative meanings to words and often rephrase entire verses in the other possible translation.

    163. Re:"God Says it" by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      If I were a masochist, I would choose the kick.
      All such "He knows what choice you would make" arguments are equally foolish.
      IF you have a choice THEN
      --nobody else (including God) can predict what it will be
      ENDIF

      That's what "choice" means.

    164. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Relevation does not solve it, because any being sufficiently more powerful than man but whom cannot be understood by man could have any motive or purpose at all in giving out particular revelations to folks.

      In which case resistance would be futile. If you suspected a revelation to be deceptive, your only hope would be that the god was not really all powerfull and all knowing. The bible doesn't claim that god is unknowable, it claims that a human without revelation cannot understand god's ways or know god. The bible claims a personal relationship with god is possible. Your statement that "Revelation does not solve it" is true though, from a logical perspective. If there is a God that is all powerfull, all knowing and against you, what could you do?

      ... the more unreasonable it is to say anything about God with any degree of certainty at all.

      Perhaps I haven't been clear on this point: I agree it is unreasonable.

    165. Re:"God Says it" by Rutulian · · Score: 1

      I just said it was one of the major reasons religion was created and has endured for so long.

      Yes, I know that is what you said, and you are wrong. Attempts to "explain the unexplainable" with religion (i.e: God did it) are, at best, a side product of a superstitious and ignorant period of human history. Prior to Christianity, people simply referred to the unexplainable as supernatural and magical. When Christianity came about, God came into the equation. People superposed their supernatural beliefs onto God. But that is not what Christianity teaches, and it is not why it was created. Superstition arises from ignorance, not from religion.

      Absolutely nothing is outside of science's realm, because science can cover everything and anything that we can percieve.

      That statement doesn't make any sense and doesn't have anything to do with what I said. Science is the study of the natural world. Religion is not. More importantly, science is a tool for understanding and manipulating the world around us, and religion is a social construct. Suggesting that the existence of science nullifies the need for religion is just as absurd as suggesting that visual art nullifies the need for music.

      Religous people are frightened by the Theory of Evolution because it allows for the possibility that there are no Supreme Beings.

      Once again with the banal generalities...certain sects of Christianity choose to refute evolutionary theory because they don't understand it, don't understand the Bible, and because they are politically motivated and/or manipulated. Extending our treatment of "religious people" beyond these groups reveals, in fact, that most followers of religion do not feel threatened in any way by scientific advancements.

      And, as I said before, the Theory of Evolution has absolutely nothing to do with God. It doesn't suggest or deny the existence of God in any way. People try to use it for this purpose, but it is logically impossible to use a scientific theory to describe a concept that has no substantive presence in the natural world.

      You cannot truly prove or disprove anything with 100% certainty. The last 2 weeks of your life might just be an elaborate dream, so you cannot prove that anything you have done recently actually happened. All you can do is have a certain level of certainty.

      I have a 99.999999999999999999999% certainty that my hair color is red. I could be scizophrenic and just cannot accept that it is actually blonde, but I am fairly certain that I am sane and that my hair is red. Of course I am not 100% certain.


      These examples don't make any sense. You are taking subjective labels (dream, red, schizophrenic) and by declaring them subjective saying that they are subjective. That is completely circular logic and a waste of time anyway because subjective labels are exactly that, subjective. The words "prove" and "disprove" don't mean anything without a context. In the context of science, you form models to describe the natural world based on known observations. You can absolutely disprove any scientific model with the appropriate observation. You cannot prove any given model, although the lack of any contradictory evidence over a long period of time does tend to convey a certain level of certainty among the scientific community. It is a simple rule, really: don't assume your model is incorrect until you have a good reason to. Outside of science, proving and disproving becomes a logical exercise and doesn't have any real bearing on the natural world.

      Having a working hypothesis and then theory about how and why humans created early religions goes a long way to disproving that God exists.

      No, not really. Acknowledging that religion is a social construct does not nullify the existence of God. It is a way of rationalizing disbelief in God, but that is all. It can also be used to rationalize a belief in and search after God.

      Using the scientific method is valid in any discussion.

      You have obviously never studied any philosophy. The scientific method is valid when you are trying to answer scientific questions. Not every question that can be asked is a scientific question, and therefore the scientific method is not always the right tool.

    166. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Sure, just more apologetics. Ignore the facts and just buy into what I tell you no matter how nonsensical.

      As I understand it, apologetics is the attempt to make a reasoned argument for Christianity. I'm not sure how you think my statement "Christianity is not reasonable from a human perspective" would be apologetics.

      You tried, but I think you missed the point that I wasn't talking about the apologetics, rather the basic underlying assumptions and the basic facts that follow inevitably just from the assumptions of omniscience and omnipotence.

      I'm not sure what it is that you think I've tried to do. You claimed that some things are taught by Christianity, some of which are actually not taught by Christianity but are your logical assessment of Christian teachings. It is similar to if I did a logical assessment of some poetry, then presented my assessment as the poem. It is not the poem, it's my opinion. Even if my opinion is correct, it's still not the poem.

      You claimed: [Christianity teaches] "He [God] created people with the express intention of making them exactly as they are [sinners]." Christianity does not teach this. The fact that you think it follows inevitably from other Christian teaching does not make it a Christian teaching.

    167. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1


      As I understand it, apologetics is the attempt to make a reasoned argument for Christianity.


      Bah, 50 lashes with a wet noodle for me for misusing the term. Make it 100 since I did it more than once in the same post and should have known better.

      You claimed: [Christianity teaches] "He [God] created people with the express intention of making them exactly as they are [sinners]." Christianity does not teach this. The fact that you think it follows inevitably from other Christian teaching does not make it a Christian teaching.

      Christianity teaches that god is all knowing and all powerful and created the universe and everything in it. It teaches that god is perfect. Hence the fact that we are the way we are is entirely due to his specific choices in that creation.
      That is an inevitable result of the fundamental basis of the religion. They do teach god's perfection, omniscience and omnipotence, so that is part and parcel of their teachings. The fact that they spend a lot of time trying to teach other things which directly contradict the fundamental basis of their faith just shows how flawed it is, it doesn't change the fact that their teachings demand the truth of my statement.

    168. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Bah, 50 lashes with a wet noodle for me for misusing the term. Make it 100 since I did it more than once in the same post and should have known better.

      and people think religions are harsh! Be fair, misusing a word on /. doesn't deserve any more that 5-10 lashes with a wet noodle. That or an insightful mod, your choice :)

      Christianity teaches that god is all knowing and all powerful and created the universe and everything in it. It teaches that god is perfect. Hence the fact that we are the way we are is entirely due to his specific choices in that creation.

      That presupposes that god always chooses to exercise his power to control every situation. To be fair, there are actually branches of Christianity that have taught that or something similar, however most mainstream teaching and certainly the bible teach that we have the power of choice, and that there are many things that happen that are not the will or doing of God. I'm sure you yourself have sometimes not liked something, been able to stop it, but have chosen not to. If you have children, this would no doubt be a common occurence for you.

      It's a bit like blaming chair manufacturers for creating chair throwing. They create the chairs, it's Ballmer that throws them. Indeed, chair throwing is not an object that has been created, it's an action that has been performed. Likewise, nobody "created" sin, it is not an object requiring creation.

    169. Re:"God Says it" by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      First, you do chose what you believe. You may start out either finding something believable or not, but as time passes, you have an area of effectively unlimited free choice where you can either choose to remain open to new evidence or not, to focus on further thought about the issue or put your attention elsewhere and so to modify and/or strengthen or weaken your opinions. I'm only qualifying that as "effectively" because obviously, just how many distractions to clear thought you experience varies, and unless you are very highly disciplined you probably seldom frame all the issues consiously, so when you are in habitual modes, your habits may be either good or bad (with regard to how well they help you think, rather than any absolute moral standard). I'm not saying any of that to belittle you, I'm pretty damned sure I myself function in habitual mode most of the time.
          Personally, I find the idea that God punishes people for rational doubt or rewards them for blind adherence to be reprehensible as well, and I am also convinced it is simply incorrect. My point to you however, is rather different. Look at the alternative viewpoints - for most naturalists, if there are any absolute moral laws, they derive from physical laws. The most basic physical laws affect everything, while some laws (such as mandates to survive or reproduce) apply only to living things, and an even more derivative set applies only to those living things sophistocated enough to have notions of right and wrong.
            There are Atheists and Agnostics who reject all concept of moral absolutes, and certainly others who believe that certain ethics, i.e. the golden rule, can be derived naturalisticly, and are still functionally as absolute as if they were handed down from on high. The point still remains there are very few non-deistic people who believe the converse, that basic physical laws are derived from more omnipresent or fundamental moral laws (Most people who do make that claim are actually locked away in loony bins. Yes many would argue that's where Deistic believers in moral law giving rise to physical law should be too. It's still a little different to believe that something with intelligence would put moral law first, than to believe a non-intelligent inchoate organizing force would do the same.).
              So, my point to you - if God makes physical laws first, and the moral laws are somehow derived later for a more limited class of entities, you're still criticizing him for making moral laws that are 'Orwellian'. If nature makes physical laws first, you're cutting 'her' slack for the same consequences. Yes, blind, inanimate processes can't be characterized as 'Orwellian', but they can certainly be characterized as utterly incompatable with the idea of human freedom.
              Applying the same logic you did to God to a naturalistic, non-God explanation for how we and everything else 'got here', means that naturalistic explanation is a blindly malevolent process, one in which all human hopes and asperations can mean precisely nothing, and are relentlessly violated, torn apart and consumed by an insensate, all devouring enthropic maw. The whole universe is meaningless, and the most basic question every human should ask his or herself is "Why don't I just kill myself now and avoid the rush?" In other words, congratulations, you are not just another Atheist, you are an Existentialist.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    170. Re:"God Says it" by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      IF you have a choice THEN --nobody else (including God) can predict what it will be ENDIF That's what "choice" means.

      No, that is not what choice means. That is what "random" means. If you think choice means random, implying that free-will requires randomness, I can see why you think knowledge and free-will are mutually exclusive. People predict which choices others will make all the time - I just recently predicted that all 12 people on that side road would choose to stop at the red light rather than plow through it and run into my car. Based on that prediction, I chose to drive through the intersection. Are you suggesting that those people had no choice but to stop since I accurately predicted they would?

      I am not really trying to argue one way or the other re: God's omniscience vs. free-will, but the assertion that the ability to accurately predict how someone will choose negates their free-will is absurd.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    171. Re:"God Says it" by ranton · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know that is what you said, and you are wrong. Attempts to "explain the unexplainable" with religion (i.e: God did it) are, at best, a side product of a superstitious and ignorant period of human history. Prior to Christianity, people simply referred to the unexplainable as supernatural and magical.

      Prior to Christianity, people believed that Atlas held up the sky. They believed that Prometheus gave humans fire. They believed that Gaia created the world we live in. Or they believed that Re-Atum appeared from the water and created the Gods that ended up creating the world. Or they believed that Tiamat was killed by Marduk and her body was used to create the universe.

      "God did it" was not a Christian creation. The first human religions were most likely little more than attempts to anthropromorphize the world around us (the Sun, the Seasons, the Cattle) so that we can attempt to control the uncontrollable. If they knew why the Sun rises, or why one growing season was more productive than another, they could control the world around them by worshoping the gods that control the world.

      Even if this is not a completely accurate theory of the origin of religion, your claim that Christianity started the practice of superposing supernatural beliefs onto gods is incredibly innaccurate. You are correct however that superstition arises from ignorance, which is the same place that religion originates from.

      Science is the study of the natural world. Religion is not. More importantly, science is a tool for understanding and manipulating the world around us, and religion is a social construct. Suggesting that the existence of science nullifies the need for religion is just as absurd as suggesting that visual art nullifies the need for music.

      Science is the study of the world, the entire world. Science is what takes the supernatural and merges that into our understanding of the natural world. Lightning was supernatural, and science made it natural. Floods were supernatural, and science made it natural.

      Even if religion is just a social construct, that is still within the realm of science. Sociology, psychology, history; all of these fields deal with social constructs. And all of these fields take observations to create hypotheses which are then further studied to create theories. Sounds alot like the scientific process to me.

      Science and religion are not different things, like visual art and music. They are different ways of viewing the same world. Science does nullify any rational reason to be religious. You are correct that it doesnt nullify all irrational and ignorant reasons for religion, but I do not believe that is a strong case for the importance of religion.

      And, as I said before, the Theory of Evolution has absolutely nothing to do with God. It doesn't suggest or deny the existence of God in any way. People try to use it for this purpose, but it is logically impossible to use a scientific theory to describe a concept that has no substantive presence in the natural world.

      If there was no other valid explanation for the creation of the world, animals, and humans; then being religious becomes are far more rational belief. Or at least that is how a large percentage of Christians view it. Evolution does not deny the existence of God, but it does provide a rational alternative. It is that rational alternative that they fear.

      The words "prove" and "disprove" don't mean anything without a context. In the context of science, you form models to describe the natural world based on known observations. You can absolutely disprove any scientific model with the appropriate observation.

      You can disprove a scientific model. But you cannot disprove a non-scientific model. The existance of the Christian God is not a scientific model. That does not mean that you cannot study a non-scientific model scientifically. Psychologists study the origins of psychotic beliefs all of the time, using psychology, neurology, etc

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    172. Re:"God Says it" by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      The kind of prediction you are talking about could be called "probabalistic guessing". You predict what you think other people are most likely to choose. The "free will" comes from them being able to choose actions even if you think them unlikely.

      This has nothing to do with omniscience, where a deity always knows exactly what choices you and everyone else will make, along with the most chaotic consequences of those choices, centuries later.

      For example, if Lee Harvey Oswald had decided to get steaming drunk one night a year before the Kennedy assasination, he might have tripped on the stairs and broken his neck. Then Kennedy might have lived longer, gotten the US out of VietNam sooner, which might have prevented Nixon's election, which might have prevented Watergate, Reagan, Bush, etc.

      None of these consequences could have been predicted probabalistically on the night that Oswald didn't get drunk and break his neck. But an omniscient God would have known all these things, since by definition He knows everything. But if that is the case, then Oswald had no free will as to whether he would get drunk or not. Since God knew he didn't, that was that.

      In summary, there exists omniscience or there exists free will. Not both.

    173. Re:"God Says it" by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      Well,practically speaking, if you can probabilistically guess with 100% accuracy on 100% of events, I would call that omniscience. But ok, I'll accept that omniscience as applied to God doesn't mean that. But there still seems to be a double standard in play. From your example, you and I know that Oswald didn't get drunk and break his neck a year before shooting Kennedy. Assuming you believe he had free will in that act, why doesn't our knowledge of his choice indicate he in fact had no choice? The only argument I can see is that our position in the temporal dimension, relative to Oswald, allows us knowledge of his actions without depriving him of choice. But, if time affects the manner in which knowledge effects free-will, how does that apply to a being that is outside the temporal dimension?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    174. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1

      Be fair, misusing a word on /. doesn't deserve any more that 5-10 lashes with a wet noodle. That or an insightful mod, your choice :)

      I'll take the lashes. Poor modding helps bring the whole place down ;-)


      That presupposes that god always chooses to exercise his power to control every situation.


      Not unless you presuppose that he has to involve himself in every detail of the world to keep it spinning.

      To be fair, there are actually branches of Christianity that have taught that or something similar, however most mainstream teaching and certainly the bible teach that we have the power of choice, and that there are many things that happen that are not the will or doing of God.

      True, it was taught or often just allowed to be realised by the believers. It doesn't lend itself as well to creating sheep obedient to the people running the religion so it was done away with.
      I never said that we still didn't have choice in that situation. Just that that choice was predetermined.
      Nothing could possibly ever happen that wasn't the direct will and choice of god once you have presupposed such a creature.


      It's a bit like blaming chair manufacturers for creating chair throwing. They create the chairs, it's Ballmer that throws them.


      Very well played on the example ;-)
      Chair manufacturers only create (or build rather) chairs. They didn't create Ballmer, they didn't create the universe he exists in and they didn't decide on exactly what rules such things would operate by.

      Likewise, nobody "created" sin, it is not an object requiring creation.

      But it is. I, personally, don't even believe such a thing exists.
      I believe in right and wrong based on my morals but when I do wrong it isn't a sin. It's a bad thing that I need to apologize for (without complicating it too much). However from a religious perspective, before God created the universe, there was nothing here. No sin, no evil, no possibility of picking up a rock and bashing another person's head in to play with the goo inside. No rocks, no heads, no goo. However, it's entirely possible to create a world in which there are no rocks, or that the worst they can do when bashed up against one's skull is to tickle. God did not create that world. He created this one.
      Regardless of the fact that I can freely choose to bash or not to bash (insert random csh joke here) were I to decide to do so to some random person, that would have been known to god at or before the time he put it all in motion. Did he want that not to happen, he could have easily tweaked a variable before setting it all in motion.
      Denying that is a contradiction of either omniscience or omnipotence.

    175. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      I'll take the lashes. Poor modding helps bring the whole place down ;-)

      True, true.

      Likewise, nobody "created" sin, it is not an object requiring creation. But it is. I, personally, don't even believe such a thing exists.

      Sublime logic there. Something that I don't believe exists is definitely a created object :)

      Did he want that not to happen, he could have easily tweaked a variable before setting it all in motion.
      Denying that is a contradiction of either omniscience or omnipotence.


      Not necessarily. Einstein said "The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them." Natural learning is a process of observation, thought and the gradual growth of understanding. The people who study quantum physics started with learning to count, learning to add, learing the multiplication tables etc just like everyone else. To go from learing to add to learning quantum physics is just a series of small increases in understanding, same as any other natural field. Miss any of the steps of learning and it would seem like nonsense, being a higher level of understanding. Since the supernatural is not subject to observation, if it can be learned the primary method would be through revelation rather than gradual learning. If the revelation was capable of solving significant problems, it would of necessity come from a higher level of thinking. If this revelation was to occur, there is a high probability that it would seem like nonsense.

      I find it entirely possible that given a high enough level of thinking, omniscience or omnipotence would not be regarded as automatically resulting in predestiny.

      Hiding behind logic and facts won't get you anywhere with me ;)

    176. Re:"God Says it" by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

      Applying the same logic you did to God to a naturalistic, non-God explanation for how we and everything else 'got here', means that naturalistic explanation is a blindly malevolent process, one in which all human hopes and asperations can mean precisely nothing, and are relentlessly violated, torn apart and consumed by an insensate, all devouring enthropic maw.


      One could say that malevolent processes have no moral implication unless they are intentional. However, even an unconscious malevolent process can present "meaning." Evolution presents us with a meaning of life that is to preserve and enhance the information carried in DNA. But it does not have to be our meaning, as we can still redefine meaning. From Logotherapy-- even if God were to exist and we could know it, that is insufficient justification to abdicate our will to meaning.


      The whole universe is meaningless, and the most basic question every human should ask his or herself is "Why don't I just kill myself now and avoid the rush?" In other words, congratulations, you are not just another Atheist, you are an Existentialist.



      You've apparently found your meaning in applying labels. In that regard, you might want to consider fallibilist or critical rationalist...


    177. Re:"God Says it" by hawg2k · · Score: 1

      If you're a Hebrew living in ~ 30 AD, calling yourself "the son of Man" is calling yourself God. Make no mistake, that's what they understood it to mean.

      He never actually said "I am God" in that exact phrase, as that is too simplistic to be completely correct, and would have just confused the people. God is a triune being. John 1:1-5,14 explains the part of the Trinity that became Jesus.

      John 10:30 "I and the Father are one"

      It only takes a cursory reading of the 4 gospels to understand that Jesus thought of himself as God the Son. It's plainly clear that they killed him for blasphemy because they didn't believe him.

      I suppose you will now argue that the scriptures have been contaminated over the years and are not an accurate reflection of what really happened 2,000. You'll have to excuse me if I take the scriptures over your statement, a non believer, "I know Jesus never referred to himself as "God" or even the "Son of God"." Unless, you can prove somehow that you were there taking notes.

    178. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1


      Sublime logic there. Something that I don't believe exists is definitely a created object :)


      Poorly phrased perhaps, but valid nonetheless.
      I don't believe in any sort of God, therefore not in sin either since they're intimately related.
      Were there to be a God and sin, then he would have had to have created it since presumably nothing existed before he decided to create it.
      Given that I don't buy into any of that, I think it is consistent to say that there is no such thing as sin, but if there were it would have had to have been created.


      I find it entirely possible that given a high enough level of thinking, omniscience or omnipotence would not be regarded as automatically resulting in predestiny.


      Well, at that point, I think we might have to just agree to disagree.
      Were that the case, then there wouldn't be omniscience or omnipotence. Granted, were that not the case, the same thing would apply.
      That's a contradiction meaning the initial assumption (that there is such a being) is incorrect.

      Damnable logic rears its ugly head again ;-)

    179. Re:"God Says it" by Skreems · · Score: 1

      Mostly I'm basing that whole thing off a book by Chris Nolan (a Jesuit priest) called "Jesus Before Christianity". So yeah, I think I'll take the word of a priest and a scholar over yours when he tells me that "son of man" was NOT meant to be a proclamation of divinity.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    180. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Damnable logic rears its ugly head again ;-)

      You've gained some revelation at last! ;-)

      Your logic and reason are no match for my powers of nonsense!

    181. Re:"God Says it" by Darby · · Score: 1


      Your logic and reason are no match for my powers of nonsense!


      Arrrggghhhh!!! I should have guessed you were a discordian ;-)

    182. Re:"God Says it" by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Arrrggghhhh!!! I should have guessed you were a discordian ;-)

      I'm a Non Sense-su Master.

      I strike down logic when it's least expected. You think you're having a sensible conversation, when suddenly, out of the blue, splat , nonsense strikes! Then, just when you're getting a handle on what's happening, blam , more nonsense, from the green this time. Next, I usually attack from the red or yellow. Soon, the logical person is left only with black and white, until the revelation comes .... white is the combination of all the colours! It's a blow delivered with the timing and devastating force passed down from the ancient Nonsa's. Of course, the logical person then retreats to the black.

      That's why people who rely on logic and facts are in darkness.

      Consider the power of nonsense:
      1 - The health benefits of laughter are well known. People laugh more at nonsense than logic. Nonsense gives health and life!
      2 - Read a Microsoft press release. Nonsense makes you rich!
      3 - Ask a person on the street to name three current comedians and three current physicists. They will easily name three comedians and probably not even one physicist. Nonsense makes you famous.

      So, nonsense gives you popularity, wealth, health and life. By a simple process of nonsensical deduction then, we can conclude that depending on logic and facts make you lonely, poor, sick and dead.

      You can now amaze your friends with the story of how you had a converstation with a fundamentalist Christian, and enjoyed it. I've been putting the fun back in fundamentalism since 1998!

    183. Re:"God Says it" by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Actually, If I'm going to make assumptions about you, I'd prefer to assume you aren't just parroting Sartre or Camus, and particularly their lesser fans (a bunch of philosophers who have made what is at least interesting in French numbing in translation). The Logotherapy remark shows promise - I don't recall seeing it before, but all I've read there is some Frankl - Is that from Man's Search for Meaning and I missed it, or is that from elsewhere?

      You could indeed say that moral implications (malevolent or benign) require intention. I'm just not certain how many people are just doing that.
            What I usually see people doing with that arguement is creating a paradox instead. We don't complain to nature because nature simply can't listen. Many of us either complain to God, or say we would if we believed he existed. Intelligence, awareness, and choice all being attributed to God means God (considered merely as a theoretical construct) is more powerful than nature, but that extra power somehow becomes a limit. Nature is free to conduct itself without our moral judgement, but God, being more powerful (Super-natural), is made subject to our criticism by the very things that give him more power.
              Arguing that God has certain obligations to "His" creation if "He" posesses intelligence is very like redefining the very word intelligence in an unusual and quite nonstandard way, to say that an intelligent being is generally more limited than a non-intelligent one. So far as I know the only thing like it is the idea in the Western legal system that proving that someone has enough intelligence to foresee the consequiences of their actions is required before we can go from simple to criminal negligence. While charity is generally considered a good thing, we don't normally expect every person to devote more and more effort to helping the less fortunate if they are more intelligent. Did Karl Sagan have less obligation to be decent than Einstein, but more than Paris Hilton?
              As an ethical arguement, it sounds like we are supposed to assume in advance of logical proof God needs to be judged by the sort of standard we use in criminal trials, rather than as we would judge a typical hyper-intelligent being we encountered on a day to day basis. It's kind of like God=Galactus, there's a planet missing, and he just burped!

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    184. Re:"God Says it" by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

      The Logotherapy remark shows promise - I don't recall seeing it before, but all I've read there is some Frankl - Is that from Man's Search for Meaning and I missed it, or is that from elsewhere?

      It's my paraphrase/interpretation of Frankl's core principles.

      Arguing that God has certain obligations to "His" creation if "He" posesses intelligence is very like redefining the very word intelligence in an unusual and quite nonstandard way, to say that an intelligent being is generally more limited than a non-intelligent one. So far as I know the only thing like it is the idea in the Western legal system that proving that someone has enough intelligence to foresee the consequiences of their actions is required before we can go from simple to criminal negligence. While charity is generally considered a good thing, we don't normally expect every person to devote more and more effort to helping the less fortunate if they are more intelligent. Did Karl Sagan have less obligation to be decent than Einstein, but more than Paris Hilton?

      I think the essential difference is; presumably, neither Sagan, Einstein or Hilton created the "less fortunate."

      The creator's obligations are derived not just from the fact he is intelligent, but from the fact that he is knowingly responsible for the circumstances, unlike Einstein with the "less fortunate." Intelligence simply removes ignorance or incompetence as an excuse. While one could imagine justifying a scenario where certain exploratory conditions are devised for the purpose of observing how the human guinea pigs behave, I claim the designer of such an experiment should uphold some ethical standards, as should human scientists who utilize lab animals. At least human scientists may have a quest for knowledge in order to combat disease as a possible justification for some degree of mistreatment, which the superintelligent superpowerful creator would not have-- perhaps this is an argument for an imperfect creator?

  31. Okay, so.. by mikkelm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    John Calvert, a retired attorney who helped found the group, accused the board of promoting atheism. And Greg Lassey, a retired Wichita-area biology teacher, said the new standards undermine families by "discrediting parents who reject materialism and the ethics and morals it fosters." Perhaps there's something I'm not getting here, but if this supposedly "undermines" families, is he advocating that parents should decide what their children think instead of letting them settle on what they find most reasonable?

    I guess this guy is going all out with his conservatism.
    1. Re:Okay, so.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The important bit seems to be that children DO NOT LEARN TO THINK for themselves. They must swallow what their parents or their teachers or their preachers tell them.

  32. shmevolution by Essequemodeia · · Score: 1

    Welcome to 1859, Kansas. Hugs, mwah.

  33. Why must evolution and creationism be seperate? by sherriw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I never understood why creationists are so anti-evolution. Is it so inconceivable that God had a hand in the evolution of humans? Sounds more realistic than 'poof' one man and one woman. All done.

    I think evolution is a scientific fact and that it is just miraculous enough to possibly be god-inspired. Why do these fools have to fight about this? Oh yeah, because if you don't believe the bible was faxed to us word-for-word from heaven, then you're going straight to hell. *sigh*

    1. Re:Why must evolution and creationism be seperate? by wizkid · · Score: 1

      Here's a question,
      How do we know that one day to god is a mellenia to us. Maybe he created us in 6 of his days, which is a millenia to us.

      I personally believe that both should be taught, with an explination of the contriversy.here's a question,
      How do we know that one day to god is a millennia to us. Maybe he created us in 6 of his days, which is a 2 to us.

      I personally believe that both should be taught, with an explanation of the controversy.

      --
      I take no responsibility for what I say. Even though I'm never wrong :)
    2. Re:Why must evolution and creationism be seperate? by arevos · · Score: 1

      I personally believe that both should be taught, with an explanation of the controversy. Sure, but not in the same classroom. Evolution is science; creationism is not.
    3. Re:Why must evolution and creationism be seperate? by bunratty · · Score: 1

      I personally believe that both should be taught, with an explanation of the controversy.

      Evolution is a scientific theory. It is an idea that explains the fossil and DNA evidence available to us and makes testable predictions. As such, it deserves to be taught in science classrooms and textbooks.

      There are many things that are true or may be true that are not taught in science class. History is one of them. Religion is another. There is no scientific "controversy" about evolution, so no controversy to cover in science classrooms and textbooks.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    4. Re:Why must evolution and creationism be seperate? by wizkid · · Score: 1

      I'd be inclined to agree that different classrooms accept for the controversy. That has to be handled in each class.

      --
      I take no responsibility for what I say. Even though I'm never wrong :)
    5. Re:Why must evolution and creationism be seperate? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      I would think that a thorough treatment of genesis should be mandatory. Genesis 1: God creates all animals, then creates man. Genesis 2: God creates man, then creates all animals. Discuss.

  34. Whats with the tag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    butsexwithfishsquirrels ?!

    1. Re:Whats with the tag by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 1

      Southpark reference.

      Either this episode or this one.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
  35. Everybody is right by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1, Insightful
    1. I believe in evolution.
    2. I believe in ID.
    3. I believe that the world was created in 6 days.
    4. *caveat* I believe that only the first one has any place in schools.

    I can understand how people can believe in intelligent design. Deal with an omnipotent, omniscient, future-seeing being, and I'm sure he can rig a random game of chance like evolution (or the lotto; I'm looking at you big guy).

    What I don't understand is how anyone could believe it's not a religious belief, or that somehow its incongrous(sp?) with strict creationism. After all, IIRC all strict creationism does is shrink the timeline, not alter the order of operations. And didn't some frizzy-haired guy explain that time is relative?

    When I was in school (in America, in the 90's, and yes, in the south) we had time set aside during the day for private prayers. I'm fairly religious, but I really don't want my government to interfere with my religion, nor my religion in my government. Apparently, I have discovered some secular concept of 24 hours in a day and believe that, aside from the 8 sleeping, I spent less than 8 in school and thus had plenty of time to pursue my religion (not your Southern Baptistism Principal X.) outside of the few hours a day when I'm trying to learn things that will help me seem knowledgeable latter in life.

    Of course, even when it wasn't prayer time, the teachers were horrible, so I suppose it is not that big a loss.

    --
    Your ad here. Ask me how!
    1. Re:Everybody is right by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      If you believe in both Evolution, and also that the Earth was created in 6 days, then you're an idiot, and intellectually dishonest. You're a great illustration of my point that Christians lie to themselves. I hope you don't have children, and if you do, I hope you don't lie to them too. You should be ashamed of youself if you do.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    2. Re:Everybody is right by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      I believe that the Creator (choose your version) had 6 days pass between creation of the universe and emergence of homo sapien sapien sapien (1). I don't believe time passes consistantly for all observers (2). Therefore I see it as perfectly consistant to believe in both. People more educated in theoretical physics than I agree that this is a possible interpertation, depending on the rate of expansion of the universe, and assuming that the Creator stays at the center while the earth is travelling away from it.

      Are you so narrowminded as to assume:

      • That you understand the way the universe works so well that all seemingly counter-intuitive ideas are automatically wrong.
      • All religious people are Christian (I'm not).

      For the sake of disclosure, I lie to myself quite often, but usually only about my attractiveness to the opposite sex.

      1. IIRC Congress changed the official name of man in the past few years. This is analogous to the Supreme Court ruling the tomato was a vegetable, not a fruit, in the 70's.
      2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_relativitySpe cial relativity
      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
  36. buttsexwithfishsquirrels tag` by bigkahunafish · · Score: 4, Informative

    For those unenlightened individuals wondering about the "buttsexwithfishsquirrels" tag, you may want to refer to the South Park episode dealing with evolution. You can watch the clip right here.

    --
    Eat a Chicken, You know you want to.
    1. Re:buttsexwithfishsquirrels tag` by Unlikely_Hero · · Score: 1

      Thank you.
      I am now enlightened.
      The Internet, Producing Mutant Chimeric Memes Since the Mid 1960s.

      --
      Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
  37. I think you have to be a Baha'i ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you have to be a Baha'i to believe in both Religion AND Science.

  38. No Problem by JPMaximilian · · Score: 0

    Evolution is just a theory. Just like everything else in Science, you never prove anything, you just come up with better theories. And whats wrong with questioning evolution? If it is "right" then it will stand up to questioning/criticism.

    --
    "I'll see you next time." - LeVar Burton
    1. Re:No Problem by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's nothing wrong with questioning evolution, or any scientific theory. There's something very wrong with trying to indoctrinate kids into your own brand of Biblical literalism, or trying to sneak your religion through the back door via the vapid, empty claims of Intelligent Design. In the Kansas case, they were attempting to redefine the concept of science itself. Do you think deceiving children is a good thing?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:No Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Theory" has a specific meaning in scientific literature. In this case, evolution by natural selection is one of the most significant scientific theories of all, and it can and has withstood questioning and critcism time and again.

      It's probably more correct to speak of the /fact/ of evolution and (contemporary) Darwinism as the theory which explains it.

      It's great that you want to question the world around you, and to get answers I recommend a study of mainstream evolutionary biology. Since you sound like you aren't convinced, which is good, it seems that surveying the overwhelming evidence supporting this theory would be an excellent starting point.

    3. Re:No Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The problem is that by their own definition, their own brand of Biblical literalism is the only truth.
      They really believe they're doing it for the good of the kids, and of (future) society as a whole.

      As C. S. Lewis phrased it:

      Of all tyrannies, a tyranny exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. (link)

      Applies pretty much to each fundamentalist strain, be it catholic as well as [fill in any religion].

    4. Re:No Problem by JPMaximilian · · Score: 0

      Anytime you teach someone, you're indoctrinating them into something. For example, you're indoctrinating anyone who reads your comments into thinking that intelligent design is an empty claim. Although you just threw that out there without any justification. I don't think indoctrination (or teaching) is bad, but who gets to determine what the "right" teachings are? Should students be taught that everything can be explained with science? Or that anything that can be explained can be done with science? Another question, is it freedom of religion or freedom from religion?

      --
      "I'll see you next time." - LeVar Burton
    5. Re:No Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has anyone here actually been in a Kansas biology classroom? I have. With and without shifts in wording in the education standards. And here's what has happened, every single time the words have changed:

      Nothing.

      Yes, nothing. Before our unit on evolution, the teacher tells us either that he/she believes in evolution but it's believed so learn it, or that it still can be disproved but it's believed so learn it. Nothing changes. Teachers don't bring bibles to classrooms to indoctrinate us, we don't get flunked if we claim a belief in any dogma, nothing changes.

      I'm sick of this crap. Just like the new Congress spending weeks arguing about whether or not to issue a non-binding resolution on Iraq. Non-binding. It's stupid. Or stickers in Georgia. One sticker inside the front cover of a textbook won't destroy students' science knowledge. They probably won't even notice it. It just doesn't matter.

      When I was younger I was homeschooled. As I am in a Christian household we had Christian textbooks, and not just Christian-made, these had chapters on how evolution was false. I had no trouble at all adjusting to public school biology. In fact I was sorely frustrated by their science classes. It's all biology. I mentioned how Jupiter has four moons and one has volcanoes and they all got blank faces. The best thing this country can do is leave it how it is because teachers are not robots and can educate kids.

    6. Re:No Problem by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design doesn't say what the alleged Designer(s) are. It doesn't how the alleged Designer(s) did their alleged designing. It doesn't say anything about what the alleged Designer(s) actually did. It, in fact, says only one thing "Something somewhere somehow is wrong with evolution". It's a political ploy, meant to unite everyone from theistic evolutionists to Young Earth Creationists in opposition to evolutionary theory. To do that, it has to be absolutely content-free, lest the big tent collapse under the weight of vying claims. Why the hell do you think Michael Behe was slaughtered on the stand during the Dover trial, and earned Judge Jones' particular enmity in the final ruling?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:No Problem by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It's amazing the defenses of apathy seen here. The US is slipping in the sciences, and half the folks don't think there's a problem, and other half seem to think any problem will magically disappear. How about we teach Holocaust Denial in history, because after all, no one should have any problem acclimatizing to real history when it comes down to it. Let the teacher teach any bullshit they hold dear, it can't possibly hurt, right?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  39. Full circle by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1, Informative

    The part about this story that bothers me is that a theory is being advanced by subjecting opposing views to "international ridicule" and censoring away any mention of controversy. Evolution proponents should be careful using such tactics. The notion that the prevailing dogma is beyond question and that all who doubt it must be denounced for their heresy is a concept that scientists helped us move beyond in the Renaissance, but occasionally wander dangerously close to adopting themselves. By all means, teach science, but don't become what you claim to hate in the process.

    1. Re:Full circle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your critique is fairly reasonable, but misses a major point - that evolution is a *fact*. It's Natural Selection that is the theory...

    2. Re:Full circle by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      There's no one stopping people from teaching ID or Creationism. They are, however, religious beliefs, and thus do not have a place in a secular state's science class. That was the crux of the Dover case, that the board members had practiced an enormous (and incredibly incompetent) duplicity, and were just trying to bury their religious beliefs into the school curriculum. The First Amendment is supposed to protect us from force-fed government-sanctioned religious indoctrination. That was what was brought against the Dover board members. They have every right to teach their religious beliefs, but they can't undermine a branch of the government to do it.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:Full circle by nbritton · · Score: 1


      Yea man I completely agree. My theory is that it's God that keeps us from being flung into outerspace. I mean umm, gravity is just a theory after all.

    4. Re:Full circle by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      It never ceases to amaze me that ID proponents give a vetted theory with libraries worth of observational data they same weight as a hypothesis put forth based on the say-so of a single book which said proponents argue is somehow more valid than the often radically different creation stories told by many other cultures throughout the world.

      My observational data tells me that I am made of meat and am going to die. I have no direct evidence of anything beyond that. I also know that if I were running a genetic programming simulation I have no motivation to save individuals of any given generation much less the entire generation once they've served their purpose (To demonstrate their fitness by reproducing.) The existence of an intelligent designer doesn't buy you anything in my book.

      Anyway given a choice between ceasing to exist completely and having to float around for an eternity with the self-righteous assholes who claim to speak for God, I'd much rather cease to exist. So not only do I think I will cease to exist based on all observational evidence that I have, I kind of hope this is what will happen.

      If the concept of ceasing to exist frightens you take comfort in the fact that if you divide the amount of time you existed by the amount of time you didn't exist you come up with a number close enough to zero that it may as well be zero. So your experiences now are probably an illusion as well.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    5. Re:Full circle by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      The part about this story that bothers me is that a theory is being advanced by subjecting opposing views to "international ridicule" and censoring away any mention of controversy.


      The claim that there is any significant scientific controversy regarding the validity of evolution is itself a falsehood, and has no place in teaching of science. I suppose that there might be considered to be a religious controversy between the major religious sects that accept evolution and various fundamentalist sects that do not, but that controversy belongs in a class on religion, not a class on science
  40. Dawkins said it best... by nbritton · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Dawkins said it best... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      Can't see youtube at work, but I can comment on Dawkins.

      He's worse than most evangelical fundamentalists I've met. His absolute faith in his own mind, his determined certainty that he is right and everyone else is wrong is alarming and dangerous to the scientific world. Atheists like him are why so many Christians think atheism is dangerous. He's a spiteful, bitter man who needs to take the chip off his shoulder and have a rational discussion with those who would have one rather than attacking straw man after straw man and cherry picking his targets to ensure he will win all his arguments.

      Michael Moore and Bill O'Reilly do the same things.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    2. Re:Dawkins said it best... by flynt · · Score: 1

      Perhaps your right, but think about this.

      Can you see why he's mad when in 2007, we on one hand have the scientific enterprise, which seems to me to one of the, if not the most, important thing that has advanced the human race. On the other hand, we have the most powerful world leaders, most with incredible weapons at their disposal, and *almost all* of them have the "GOD IS ON OUR SIDE" mentality.

      To me, that's scary, and it's wrong. I haven't read Dawkin's work, is he against internal, personal ideas about God and how we came to be? Or is he sick of seeing countless lives lost because "Our God is more right than your God"?

    3. Re:Dawkins said it best... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "is he against internal, personal ideas about God and how we came to be?"

      Yes.

      "Or is he sick of seeing countless lives lost because "Our God is more right than your God"?"

      And yes.

      He's a reactionary. He wants to run my life, just as the fundies do. I say they deserve each other.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    4. Re:Dawkins said it best... by Dean+Hougen · · Score: 1

      He's a reactionary. He wants to run my life...

      Please quote something he has written or said that supports this claim. With a citation, please. Thanks.

      Dean

    5. Re:Dawkins said it best... by Copid · · Score: 1

      Can't see youtube at work, but I can comment on Dawkins.
      You can comment on him, but have you actually read any of his work? I'm getting the impression that you haven't, or that you haven't read it very carefully.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  41. Here is the actual old definition by rogersc · · Score: 1
    No, you have been misled that the word 'natural' had been previously stricken from the definition. The previous definition was:

    Science is a systematic method of continuing investigation that uses observations, hypothesis testing, measurement, experimentation, logical argument and theory building to lead to more adequate explanations of natural phenomena. Science does so while maintaining strict empirical standards and healthy skepticism.
    The old definition was actually quite sensible.
  42. Re:In Soviet Kansas... by charlieo88 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Somebody actually wasted a point to mod my stupid joke down?

  43. Re:"the ultra-conservative Board "... by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So you think those good conservatives in Dover ending up costing their school board a million bucks in their laughable attempt to get ID taught was an example of good management?

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  44. ...lumping everything they disagree with... by Xodmoe · · Score: 1

    They also make the mistake of lumping everything they disagree with under the name "evolution".

    ...kinda the same way you're "lumping" the folks you disagree with together as "...the Church..." in the very first line of your post.

    "The Church" is not a unified monolithic body that you made them out to be. Also keep in mind that some people of faith are capable of reasoning as well as rational people are capable of having faith.

    Science and religion are not diametric opposites.

    1. Re:...lumping everything they disagree with... by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      I'm speaking of the Church in the Biblical sense: the body of Christ, the whole of believers. Something of which I am a member, as I indicated in my post. I do not recognize the artificial divisions we have created from differences in dogma and tradition. The church body has divided itself because interpretations of single events depicted in the book of Revelation; I have no interest in playing to those divisions. We are all one Church or we are not Christians; any divisions are of our own making and serve only to allow us to form groups of like-minded individuals for worship.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
  45. Re:"the ultra-conservative Board "... by Rycross · · Score: 1

    Yes, because we all know how well the current conservatives have managed the country. *eye roll*

  46. Re:Serious mod abuse here by adam.dorsey · · Score: 2, Funny

    The extremists have mod points, apparently.

    --
    You are still innocent until proven guilty. What's changed is what they do to innocent people. - notnAP, #26891325
  47. I live in Kansas by Intangible+Fact · · Score: 1

    Ignorance mixes with Kansas really well. The older generations in the state has been holding back science/creation in classrooms for years.

    I'm sick of it. Thats why i've been trying to move away from this state for years. The Kansas Board of Education tried to get creationism taught in a science classroom. That's just striaght bullshit. They might as well teach how Santa, Easter Bunny and Tooth Fairy are real. Life is run off of facts. Evolution is considered a fact. The Bible leans towards fiction.

    Its crazy that so many people follow a belief that lowers their IQ.

    Fear=Ignorance

  48. [Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm a Christian; that doesn't mean I merely GO to church, but I've made contact with the larger intelligence, and we have a relationship. (In case the word "saved" curls your skin.)

    I have no problem with the Big Bang. The singularity that marked the beginning with "let there be light", and the fact that the galaxies are moving away and accellerating only strenthens the argument there was a beginning, not an oscillation.

    Humans are carbon-based, and animals are, too, so we'd have food. It doesn't work the other way. I have NO PROBLEM with evolution (the change-over-time) aspect, nor do I have an issue with mankind starting as an ape-like being which one day found it's soul.

    What I *do* have a problem with, is preachers that still say mankind is only 6,000 years old, never had prototypes (apes) in his development, or that science and the Bible are at odds.

    [Delay while a hush fills the room...]

    Precisely because the Bible has room for all this stuff. It mentions giants and other creatures. It's not a play-by-play of the billion years before man. It's not a total list of all creatures ever made, though it *does* list the development of plant categories, and it matches the fossil record.

    So can we deflate a bunch of the "Evolution is wrong" arguments, at the outset?

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    1. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by man_ls · · Score: 1

      You're a credit to your religion, sir. It's a shame more people aren't as intelligent in their analysis of science and religion together as you are.

      (It's also really only American Protestantism that even has a Science-vs-Religion debate in the first place, for what that's worth.)

    2. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      Well thanks for the kind words. I see it as, "Is Copurnicous still wrong?" Relgious folk get used to an integer world-view until they find out there's more to the story...and there is.

      For example, the list of animals Noah was to gather wasn't *all* animals...it was several small categories. They woulda fit in a rowboat, FCOL. But as time goes on, we learn more about the Bible. And re-thinking what's already known only does us good.

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    3. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you suggesting that "animals" don't have a soul ?
      Do you think humans are superior to other animals ?

    4. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you've made contact with a larger intelligence it's your duty to your species to provide evidence of this intelligence.

      Otherwise, your "larger intelligence" is no more real than my imaginary friend, Larry, except that other people don't look at you weird when you talk to him.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    5. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by jamesmrankinjr · · Score: 1

      If you've made contact with a larger intelligence it's your duty to your species to provide evidence of this intelligence.

      That's your problem, not his.

      A hypothetical "larger intelligence" is under no obligation to contact you or communicate with you in any particular way you might demand. And the kind of evidence you demand may not be available, if the "larger intelligence" elects not to provide it.

      Now, you may not be obligated to take the original poster's claim at face value. But that does not necessarily translate into a duty on him to justify anything in particular to your personal satisfaction.

      Peace be with you,
      -jimbo

    6. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. Like having the cure to AIDS and keeping quiet, the cure to death is much the same. I try to find ways to share this information as much as possible (without ticking people off).

      But understand that this is different from all other scientific finds: it's an eternal quantity. If you see a unicorn, -> there it is. Take a photo, get a witness, get it notarized. Christianity is different; *you* have to go looking for him, and empirical proof isn't avaialable.

      Before Christ, it was a complicated, rigid set of rules that would gain one a happy place in the beyond. "Schoolmaster rules", I've heard it called. 640 commandments, plus the ones you know.

      Since the death/rebirth of Christ the rules are simpler- in any language (or none at all), in any place on Earth or nearby, YOU ask for him. You don't need to be a Jew or a painter, a king or a pawn. But there will never be "proof", other than a boatload of evidence. If you had proof, faith wouldn't have any meaning, now, would it?

      When you're genuine in your request you'll get three anomalies:

      1. An answer to prayer. Mine was being transferred, the next DAY to a better job.

      2. A permanent change in yourself. Mine was losing age-old depression that had me attempting suicide at age 5, trying to hang from a tree. Until recently it's been months of bad days, but now, no more.

      3. A hunger for the word. Instead of tuning past the sermons, you'll realize that there's all kinds of information there, you just need to get it.

      Some surprising (and hidden) realities of Christianity:

      1. "Prayer without Ceasing"; when you "talk to yourself", Christ wants us to talk to _Him_. Include him. Once in a while strange things happen, unless you've been in on the 'conversation'.

      2. The name Jesus Christ is more than a curse-word; it's the way to get His immediate attention. It's intended to spot anomalies- you'll learn what that's for, later.

      3. You're never "done"; you'll still screw up. No one ever is. No matter how "perfect" you may seem, it's never complete. See also: David, and tons of evangilists.

      4. People, despite bringing a message of love and acceptance will call you names, deny you jobs, censor your messages where possible, and possibly take your life. You're called all kinds of things you're not, like intolerant, blind, cruel, or whatever's popular that day.

              But it IS the completion; it IS what people go up on mountains to find. It's a peace you can't get anywhere else, and it extinguishes the desire to find "that thing"...the thing most people try to fill with booze, sex, violence, or drugs. Even my worst days are better than the good days I used to have. Chose it or don't, it's about peace and finding your place.

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    7. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And the kind of evidence you demand may not be available, if the "larger intelligence" elects not to provide it.

      Then, like my imaginary friend Larry and the Flying Spaghetti Monster and the invisible purple dinosaur in my basement and the celestial teapot, this "larger intelligence" is of no consequence to my existence.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    8. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      But understand that this is different from all other scientific finds: it's an eternal quantity. If you see a unicorn, -> there it is. Take a photo, get a witness, get it notarized. Christianity is different; *you* have to go looking for him, and empirical proof isn't available.

      But there will never be "proof", other than a boatload of evidence. If you had proof, faith wouldn't have any meaning, now, would it?

      Then I still haven't found what I'm looking for. I'm not looking for faith. I'm looking for proof. I figure that, if I find proof, then the arguments are settled, at least on that matter, and we're closer to true peace.

      An answer to prayer. Mine was being transferred, the next DAY to a better job.

      I've had prayers answered. I've had prayers not answered. Then I did an experiment and realized it was just my way of looking at things that changed when I prayed. Also, nothing out of the ordinary happened when I prayed for things out of the ordinary (like a miraculous healing for a terminally ill patient in my family). Science, however, puts out some pretty repeatable and accurate predictions. In my life, at least, god can't compete.

      A permanent change in yourself.

      I had a permanent change in myself when I gave up on the notion of God. It was liberating. The thorn in my paw of "why is there evil in the world if god supposedly loves us" was gone. The feeling of "if only I do this, good things will start happening all the time instead of some of the time" was gone. Faith was replaced with knowledge. Fear was replaced with confidence. It's not for everybody, but it's right for me.

      A hunger for the word. Instead of tuning past the sermons, you'll realize that there's all kinds of information there, you just need to get it.

      I've listened to those guys. They're mostly about "Yay God! Boo liberals! Send money!"

      It's a peace you can't get anywhere else, and it extinguishes the desire to find "that thing"...the thing most people try to fill with booze, sex, violence, or drugs.

      I'm not quite ready to have my desire extinguished, and I don't think I'll ever be. The void I feel is being filled, slowly, with information and knowledge. The kind of stuff that can be empirically measured. And also some booze and sex.

      I'm happy you've found peace, and I'm flattered you like me enough to try and help me, but I'm not a person who puts much stock in faith, and, to be honest, thinks people who think they've found the solution in an infinity are, well, wrong.

      And if you really don't want people to call you those names, try keeping your compatriots from being intolerant, cruel and blind. If the general perception of a Christian was "gentle, quiet, and humble," you wouldn't get so much flack.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    9. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound nice and all, but most of the people in the USA calling themselves Christian would disagree with your assertion that you are one too.

    10. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      Well, I've been where you are; at ages 6, 9, and 15 I made the attempts- nothing. And, like you I was disillusioned. Meanwhile, not realizing the crux of mankind's problem, I drove my life all over the road.

      Satan's problem, the "eternal point" was that:

      1. Mankind, unlike all other animals in nature has no special tools- no claws, scales, wings, etc. It's the most incapable design in the animal world. Unlike the creation of all the other animals, he wasn't going to cheer.

      'Cause Satan could just *whisper* into the man's mind and cause him to leave the operational role; animals are hard-coded into doing a certain thing.

      2. Satan said, "I'd make a better God than you". Well, that went over well, but in the end, God didn't just ZAP! him into nothingness like he was never there, he sent'im to Earth, saying "Prove it". Realize they'd surely known each other for perhaps trillions of years..

      So we live on, being given the information about what our role is, and following it leads to happiness. Not because God will snap his fingers and make everything better, but for mechanical reasons that stand alone.

      Use a gun to go grocery shopping....jail, feds, death.

      Have sex randomly...babies, disease, sex-that-means-nothing: unhappy.

      "Sin" is when we deviate from the role, that's all. When we act as if the information doesn't exist, we get ourselves in all kindsa crap.

      Now, I'm not gonna bang your head to get you to look again- you'll do that whether I want you to or not...I'm just saying, when you stop, take the time, and ask, he'll be answering.

      As to proof, you'll have to deal with one of those "body of evidence" things. Search mininova.org for "Does God Exist"; it's all in there.

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    11. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Mankind, unlike all other animals in nature has no special tools- no claws, scales, wings, etc. It's the most incapable design in the animal world. Unlike the creation of all the other animals, he wasn't going to cheer.

      You've got a rather low opinion of humanity. We're an incredibly capable design, if flawed in some cases. We've got impressive endurance even though we can't maintain more than 10mph for a few seconds. We've also got a brain that allows us to do all kinds of crazy things that animals can't fathom.

      And to say there's a natural order is inaccurate. While there are things we should or should not do, mostly for reasons of societal harmony or improving the chances of survival for our progeny, if we had stuck to our "natural order" we'd still be beating antelope to death with sticks. Every piece of technology removed us from the "natural order."

      And it doesn't make sense why God allows evil in the world if he loves us. We don't choose who gets horrible congenital diseases. There are two choices: Either God allows millions to die who haven't had the chance to do anything wrong, or he's not there and they simply got the short end of the stick and there's no God to blame for it.

      The former is far too depressing for me to consider, so I have to accept the latter.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    12. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      Yes, you see the proper view of mankind; key to the understanding is the word "fallable". The point was that, unlike the Blue Jay that must stay in the trees or be eaten by larger predators, and unlike the tiger that sleeps all the time unless it's to get meat, man isn't stuck in any one role.

      It's because of our intellect; by having no single physical advantage that we can go anywhere and do anything.

      And of course there's a natural order; it's observed in lots of anecdotal ways. Single mothers. The need for police forces. The fact that man lives only 10% of his intended time. "Sin", the deviation from our intended roles is the cause of our problems.

      We always think we'll "make it". We truly don't know the outcomes of our actions. If we did, no one would have STDs or unplanned children. Cars wouldn't have brakes, pencils no erasers.

      God didn't create _evil_; he created freedom of choice. He allows us to follow the prescribed path, and if we vary, we pay in human terms. We get to either chose to be with him, now, in our short time here, or be without him forever. It's not about "being good" or "being naughty"; it's about making the effort to connect with our maker. Being good after that is easy.

      We're broiling in our own misery- not one preferred by God. He's given us a way out, spoken in any toungue, at any time, in any place. Just make contact.

      For a view of proofs of God, scientifically, see "Does God Exist" on your favorite torrent site. John Clayton shows where science and faith intertwine, supporting each other, not fighting.

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    13. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Sorry to say it, but having a single mother doesn't preclude someone from having a good life. The standard of living for children in Scandinavian countries is significantly higher than in the US. And they've got more single parents and fewer married couples. So the data doesn't support your assertion that single motherhood is necessarily a bad thing.

      And where is your evidence that mankind is supposed to live for 800 - 1000 years?

      And my explanation of STDs (that there are microbes who take advantage of the messy way we procreate) is much better than yours. You can contract an infection from a toilet seat and pass it along to your spouse sexually, making it an STD. This is even though you've never had sex outside of your marriage. If STDs were a punishment for deviation, why would God allow people who don't deviate to get them through other means. That is, of course, unless using the wrong toilet is a condemnable sin.

      And what about congenital defects or the malaria parasite. Mankind didn't bring those things upon itself. Under your theology, God created these horrible things that kill millions of people. Is living in a place where there are mosquitoes a sin? All I'm asking is: Why do such horrible things if he supposedly loves us?

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    14. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I keep hearing the empty promise that single mothers are a wonderful thing. They must be: ask any single mother if she'd rather have a husband. Or having two dads. Or sharing a room with an albino water buffalo. It's just not the same. There are a lot of people trying to excuse themselves of their misbehaving right now. There is, has been, and always will be a method of living that has the *actual* success. (Sucess being happy, healthy, and meaningful existance for all involved.)

      But see, there was a day that those microbes didn't exist- AIDS for example. There's a lot of conjecture in this arena, but if every man had one woman, and no one screwed a monkey, there'd never be a mutation of these bugs into what we have today.

      Take sex for instance: no contraceptive is 100% sure, just abstinence.

      It all goes back to man's pride, which makes him think he's actually going to do what he plans, and it's going to go the way he intends. How many times have you PERSONALLY known this to be untrue? Ever thrown a paperwad at a basket and missed? Ever made love to a woman and...didn't?

      Adam, Noah, Moses and others lived over 900 years.

      And the idea that someone not involved gets an STD? Sometimes sin is communal. Take some benzene and pour it out. The dog drinks it, and gets lukemia. It's the same thing. Our intended life doesn't NEED benzene.

      Look at all you know; cheating on a wife...lying..."what comes around goes around"...isn't it clear almost all suffering is done at our own hands?

      We were given the choices, not locked into a single course of action. We can choose to be kind, to be faithful to a wife, to care about our children. When we do, our life is better.

      Check out that "Does God Exist" torrent that's at least on mininova.org. Good, scientific proofs of God in plain terms with equations where necessary. It's free and could improve your life.

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    15. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Adam, Noah, Moses and others lived over 900 years.

      I see the crux of our misunderstanding. You believe the Bible to be literally true. I see it as no more true than All Quiet on the Western Front or The Red Badge of Courage. It's historical fiction to me, with a heaping load of allegory from the point of view of Bronze Age shepherds.

      And the idea that someone not involved gets an STD? Sometimes sin is communal. Take some benzene and pour it out. The dog drinks it, and gets lukemia. It's the same thing. Our intended life doesn't NEED benzene.

      So we should tear down all our houses, dismantle all our cars, and return to living in roving tribes? After all, very little of what we do now is what was "intended" for us.

      Benzene is an important chemical in making plastics. Some of the plastics that are used in hospitals to saved lives. Is it a good thing then? Chlorine is used to disinfect water supplies to save millions of people from dysentery, and it has been used to gas people in wars. Is it a good thing or a bad thing? Should we stop chlorinating water supplies just because it could also be used to gas people?

      Look at all you know; cheating on a wife...lying..."what comes around goes around"...isn't it clear almost all suffering is done at our own hands?

      I'd say it's about 50/50. Earthquakes, tsunamis, diseases, and hurricanes kill millions of people every year. Thousands of children are stillborn or die because of congenital problems. My brother-in-law is wasting away because of muscular dystrophy. This is an inherited disease that cannot be controlled and there is no cure for it. God allowed it to happen. All I'm asking is why.

      I'll look up the film, if only to give me something to blog about.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    16. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      Then we're getting close to the crux of your problem: you don't read/understand/revere the Bible. It was the Bible that said "Let there be light" long before Oppenheimer/Einstein and others supposed it to be. The Greek supposed the Earth was on the shoulders of Atlas, the Bhuddists thought it was on the back of a fish. The Bible says the Earth is suspended from nothing, and the north pole points to the center of the galaxy.

      It shows LONG before the rest of the world the proportions of a sucessful sea-going vessel. It talks about surgery back in a time when surgery was considered witchcraft. And the Jews were kept alive through all their misery following the Kosher rules, which, without knowing about germs or plastics, kept them away from things that would kill them. It's just been right too many times.

      All this is in the "Does God Exist" series.

      >>So we should tear down all our houses, dismantle all our cars, and return
      >>to living in roving tribes? After all, very little of what we do now is
      >>what was "intended" for us.

            Yeah, actually. The same offer was given to the Jews in Leviticus 25; (Paraphrasing) "Follow my commandments, and the rains will always come at the right time. Follow...and you'll be reaping wheat until it's time to reap grapes. Discard my commandments and this land will puke you out like the last civilization." (After 490 years ("Seventy times Seven" in other documents) they were cast out as Titus slaughtered thousands in AD70.

      This world was intended to be Eden, and stay there...we got distracted.

      And yeah...thousands of babies die of congenital defects...that didn't used to happen. An estimated 40 MILLION have been discarded in abortions. Not even animals kill their own for convenience. Having children with problems sends a message, and if you don't cower from it, can show the power of God. (Yeah, I know- it's sounds insane, but it's true.)

      Do yourself a favor; get the "Does God Exist" series. It starts at the basics, compares other religions, and uses honest scientific techniques to show how accurate the Bible actually is. No dogma. Once you understand this (which gets past the obligatory "believe this 'cause I tell ya so" stuff the Pastor might ask of you) you'll see how everything fits in.

      Well, here's one more example.

      Ever hurt yourself painfully? I used to be johnny-hotshot on staircases because I spent so much time on one in my own home. Then one day I fell badly. Nowdays I can't step blindly onto stairs. Try as I might, either my eyes touch the step, or my feet don't.

      Same goes for getting shocked, or cut in some ways- there's a tendency for the nerve-net, not necessarily the brain, to remember the pain. It's a built-in. Even Scientologists use this as an example of life-challenging dynamics.

      A woman is born with a hymen; a virginity. The first man that violates that, tears the membrane in a painful way that's followed quickly by a new, special pleasure. This changes the way she sees THAT man, permanently. A woman never forgets her first, and will always treat him differently, even if she doesn't talk about it.

      All this is "nature". Provable. Public knowledge.

      So is the dynamic of marrying a woman that's not a virgin, and spending your life under her rule. How many comedians remark about "You were fun until we got married- now I can't see my poker buddies!"? It's a classic. It's also caused by pre-marital sex.

      This is called "The curse of Eve" and it's in Genesis.

      And how long would it take, for a monogamous couple that started as virgins, to get to the point they need a goat and a midget in the room to get off? Such weirdness only comes from being with more experienced partners leads you there.

      It's just so darned easy to see the Bible as "quaint" because that's what the media and culture are suggesting. Religious people are marked as dupes and rubes, but they're fooling themselves.

      PLEASE, find out for yourself. And mail me: Brian@Fahrlander.net, as you progress. (It'd be easier...)

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    17. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      230,000 people were killed because of the 2005 tsunami. Was this man's fault or god's fault?

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    18. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      Neither. Death isn't a punishment, it's just an end of a state. Accidents just happen.

      This is part-n-parcel of the "Why do bad things happen to good people" question, an ajunct of the idea that "God must hate us- he makes bad things happen" diversion.

      Jesus was asked about that; in one of the gospels someone said the scaffold over in Judea fell, killing a bunch of people- people who had been keeping the law. They asked, "What did those people do?" The answer is that they did nothing. Death isn't punishment. The fact they got the chance to live, and to be judged neutrally, was the benefit.

      This is the exception; most of the misery we know is our own doing. Got the video yet?

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    19. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Notice how you assumed I was talking about the people who died. Those who died, in my worldview, have ceased to be and are therefore no longer in pain. But what about their families? They're alive and in pain. What about the people who are in physical pain because of injuries suffered? What about the people who lost their homes and businesses and are now begging for food or living in refugee camps?

      I understand that sometimes we do stupid shit and we get hurt because of it. And I understand that But how can an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent being allow suffering that isn't controllable by the people who end up hurt by it?

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    20. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand the role of this reality: it's blind-testing. This isn't the reward. Things can happen here. If THIS were the best there was, what point would heaven have?

      Each person is born with no previous knowledge; they must chose his own fate. How he reacts to challenges like these is part of the equation.

      Still didn't get the video, didja? :)

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    21. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Got the video. None of it made much sense and and what did make sense I could have debunked my junior year of high school.

      Shame, really. I was hoping I could get a satisfactory answer to my question. I just got more mental gymnastics.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    22. Re:[Air clearing] A Christian view you DON'T hear by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

      None of it made sense? Watch more than one. They're sequential and the first one's kinda boring.

      --
      --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
  49. Read your bible, then talk religion by everphilski · · Score: 1

    "Faith without works is dead" - James 2:20

    1. Re:Read your bible, then talk religion by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Someone needs to read Deutoronomy 23:1

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  50. Well, try this explanation.. by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1

    First, I applaud your understanding of how faith and science need not be mutually exclusive.

    As for explaining the hostility towards evolution, or anything that contradicts a creationist viewpoint, try this: All of the attackers are stupid.

    Think about it. They are proponents of a theology that equates blind faith and acceptance with freedom. In my book, mindless obedience hardly makes one free. Nonetheless, fundamentalist types actively discourage the questioning of one's environment and its causes, which is arguably the first characteristic of intelligence. And of course, anyone who disagrees is heretical.

    It's just like Orwell's Oceania in "1984" [with my notes}:
    "war [against the heathens] is peace [or ticket to heaven anyway], freedom is slavery [or perhaps, "slavery is freedom"], ignorance is strength [no explanation needed here]".

    Nobody with a working brain believes that.

    Do they?

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  51. But what about the consequences? by paranode · · Score: 1

    Now the Flying Spaghetti Monster will be angry that he isn't getting taught in science class. The repercussions of this could be quite devastating.

  52. There are all kinds by paladinwannabe2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You know, I could replace that statement with "Most people are stupid. The ones who aren't are intellectually dishonest, perfectly willing to believe contradictory statements and lie to themselves and their children." It would be just as true.

    The Christians that make the news (as Christians) are usually the ones that are crazy psychotics trying to enforce their own morality on other people- The Jerry Fawells, Jack Thompsons, and Clinic bombers. The Christians who don't make idiotic statements, don't try to legislate morality, understand the history of their faith, are honest about the limitations of their knowledge, and continue being Christians have my respect. Yes, they are the minority of Christians- but intelligent people are in the minority of almost any group. Even on Slashdot they are hard to find.

    --
    You are reading a copy of my copyrighted post.
    1. Re:There are all kinds by mirkob · · Score: 1
      The Christians that make the news (as Christians) are usually the ones that are crazy psychotics trying to enforce their own morality on other people- The Jerry Fawells, Jack Thompsons, and Clinic bombers. The Christians who don't make idiotic statements, don't try to legislate morality, understand the history of their faith, are honest about the limitations of their knowledge, and continue being Christians have my respect.

      unfortunately the Pope and all the major players of the christian church here in Italy are part of the first group and in the last 3/4 years are trying to return to stone age.

      what is worst is that they not only speack as retarded, but actively try to steer the entire parliament in supportin their absurd thesis (where they have any and not a simple ramble about moral etc)

      and all to force a teoretically independent state to not pass laws that allow CITIZEN (not believer) to do some things if they whant, they are not certainly laws that force christians to do immoral things!

    2. Re:There are all kinds by SimHacker · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Those people who claim to be Christian, but don't believe the bible, are simply liars and self deceptive self serving fools. The Bible and the Church do not say that you get to make up your own fairy tails. They are the word of God. If Christians were allowed to arbitrarily re-interpret the bible and throw away the parts of it they didn't believe, then it would be a very different book. Christianity is very well defined, and there is no room for people who make up their own mythology. They may call themselves Christians, but they're not.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    3. Re:There are all kinds by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "Yes, they are the minority of Christians"

      I was with you until this point. I don't think that's true.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    4. Re:There are all kinds by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that without so many people running around making up their own beliefs, there wouldn't be so many denominations of christianity. It apears that doing it has a lot of historical preceedent.

      And if the church and bible is all that matters and needs to be followed, then there would be only one type of church instead of hundreds if not thousands. Sounds to me more like the infighting between denominations repeating itslef here.

    5. Re:There are all kinds by JohnFluxx · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's just silly. You have to pick and chose which parts to believe since it contradicts itself.

      Very few Christians "suffer not a witch to live" as commanded. Almost all Christians will wear "cloth of mixed fibres" and so on. Not many Christians condone slavery (in fact it was a really big deal when Catholic church when against the old testament and said slavery was wrong).

      Jesus himself said that you must not ignore "on iota" of the law of moses, so you can't even claim that the new testament supercedes the old testament.

      You have to pick and chose which parts to follow and which not to. Most of the Old Testament is not compatible with "Love thy neighbour"

    6. Re:There are all kinds by rossz · · Score: 1

      Wrong, those people do not meet YOUR definition of Christian. The last time I checked, you were not considered the final authority on who and who is not a Christian.

      --
      -- Will program for bandwidth
    7. Re:There are all kinds by Skreems · · Score: 1

      That's true, but most of the branches/churches/people who claim to believe in the bible now are twisting it to mean things that are radically different from what it actually says. For one, there's a lot of context that's been lost in the 2000 years since the stuff was written, which leads to literal and wrong interpretations.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    8. Re:There are all kinds by drinkypoo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Those people who claim to be Christian, but don't believe the bible, are simply liars and self deceptive self serving fools.

      Those people who claim to be Christian, but follow the bible blindly, are simply liars and self-deceptive, self-serving fools.

      The bible was written and repeatedly re-edited by Men. The versions that we tend to read today have been translated at least twice. The oldest known manuscripts of the Bible were destroyed when the Library of Alexandria was burned.

      These edits were made for a variety of reasons; there are simple errors in transcription, there are more complex errors in transcription where an undereducated scribe thought that a word was wrong because he simply didn't know the word, there are errors introduced when someone didn't understand a story and sought to "clarify" it, and there are errors introduced deliberately to serve a certain political goal. To accept the bible as a work is to ignore history. Also, there are many bibles! Which one is right? Only one of them can be the Word Of God. Anything else is some words of God, spoiled by some words of man.

      The Bible and the Church do not say that you get to make up your own fairy tails. They are the word of God.

      First, that's "tales". Note that there were errors like that in the bible, and sometimes one word thus misspelled was mistaken for another, then "corrected" by a scribe, thus completely changing the meaning of a passage.

      Anyone who believes that the Bible is the direct word of God is a brainwashed fool. Anyone who tells you that but doesn't believe it has an agenda and is using the religion's dogma as a system of control.

      If Christians were allowed to arbitrarily re-interpret the bible and throw away the parts of it they didn't believe, then it would be a very different book.

      What you are apparently incapable of comprehending is that the bible that you read is the result of literally hundreds of people re-interpreting the bible, throwing away what they don't believe, and even adding things they feel should be in there.

      Christianity is very well defined, and there is no room for people who make up their own mythology.

      There are many sects of Christianity. Many of them have very different views about some things. There are only a few things you have to believe to be a "Christian", like you must believe in the holy trinity, and that jesus is your salvation. But then you have the weird cult of Catholicism, in which you engage in a ritual form of cannibalism. In their belief, you must eat the body and drink the blood of Christ to be saved.

      They may call themselves Christians, but they're not.

      This raises an interesting point. The books written by Paul/Saul were written and added to the bible later in its compilation than those works from other primary authors, and they tell a very different story of Jesus' life than any of the other authors' accounts. It is only in Saul's works that Jesus performs hugely miraculous acts, and only in his books that Jesus takes on his Godhead. In no other author's works does Jesus himself ever claim to be the son of God. Thus, it is arguable that Saul himself was not really a Christian, that he co-opted the religion and turned it towards his own views (or some political purpose.)

      It's unfortunate that you are here talking about how you have to buy into the Bible when you don't actually know anything about it.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:There are all kinds by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      God is the final word, and the Bible is the word of God. If you disagree with that, you're certainly not a Christian. That's my point. Most people who call themselves "Christians" disagree with the bible. And they're intellectually dishonest idiots.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    10. Re:There are all kinds by Homr+Zodyssey · · Score: 1

      Christianity is very well defined, and there is no room for people who make up their own mythology. They may call themselves Christians, but they're not.


      [sarcasm]I guess thats why there's only one Christian faith and not several hundred.[/sarcasm]

      If you actually knew anything about the people and faiths that you are maligning, you would realize that there have been controversies and disagreements over the meanings and applications of every belief that exists in modern Christianity. Thats why we have Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox Catholics, Lutherans, Methodists, Southern Baptists, American Baptists, Primitive Baptists, Episcopaleans, Presbyterians, African Baptists, Unitarians, Quakers, Shakers, Puritans etc. etc. etc.

      I believe that you said in an earlier post something about how a person can't be a "true" Christian unless they are also a Creationist because of the definition of the word "Christian". The definition of the word 'Christian' is a person who follows the teachings of Jesus Christ. As far as the Bible tells us, Jesus never said anything about the Creation story. Jesus did, however, tell lots of parables and allegories.
    11. Re:There are all kinds by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Bible does not contradict itself any more than a compilation of ancient Greek philosophy does. The contradiction lies in the statement "The whole Bible is the inerrant, infallible word of God". No book in the Bible makes such an outrageous claim. And sure, when fundamentalists take 50 works by 500 authors over 1500 years, and try to have them all agree with each other, they look like raving idiots.

    12. Re:There are all kinds by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      What exactly is "the Church"? Not all Christians are Catholics. Several Christian denominations exist primarily because they didn't want to have to do what the Catholic Church told them to do.

    13. Re:There are all kinds by ranton · · Score: 1

      The Christians that make the news (as Christians) are usually the ones that are crazy psychotics trying to enforce their own morality on other people- The Jerry Fawells, Jack Thompsons, and Clinic bombers. The Christians who don't make idiotic statements, don't try to legislate morality, understand the history of their faith, are honest about the limitations of their knowledge, and continue being Christians have my respect. Yes, they are the minority of Christians- but intelligent people are in the minority of almost any group. Even on Slashdot they are hard to find.

      Ordinary Christians are still part of the problem. The may not be fanatics, but they lend credibility to the fundamentalists. In a world where the majority of people are not religious in any way, psychotic beliefs such as having a personal relationship with an omnipotent being would be treated as schizophrenia. But in our culture we give credibility to mear faith.

      Faith is a good thing. If I didnt have faith that my car would start without a thorough inspection each morning I would have to get up 3 hours early for work. Without faith in my parents I wouldnt be able to take a week vacation without the kids every few years.

      But faith has to be grounded in reality. My car started the last 1400 days in a row, and my parents did a good job raising me so they should be able to do the same with my kids for a week. Faith in a God that no one has ever met, and with no proof of his existance, is not grounded in reality.

      But ordinary non-fundamentalist Christians make this kind of faith a virtue. That only makes the fundamentalists feel that they are the most virtuous of all Christians because they have the strongest faith.

      Some things are okay in moderation. It is okay to drink every once in a while as long as you arent a drunk. But we do not give reverence to our ability to drink. People who do (such as some college students) are doing a disservice to those around them, and putting others in danger.

      Being an ordinary Christian is not okay just because you are not a fundamentalist. It is still dangerous.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    14. Re:There are all kinds by plunge · · Score: 1

      Actually, the idea that the Bible is be all and end all of Christianity is and always has been a minority view, and only a very recently developed one at that. Fundamentalists Christians don't seem to understand that, but that's the case.

    15. Re:There are all kinds by rossz · · Score: 1

      Ok, _which_ Christian Bible, then? There are hundreds of variations which often contradict each other in huge ways (ignoring the fact that they all contradict themselves). And to repeat what others have said here, saying the Bible is the direct word of g-d is a very new and isolated concept.

      --
      -- Will program for bandwidth
    16. Re:There are all kinds by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      So, we are in full agreement then. The bible does contradict itself. Ergo you need to pick and choose which bits to follow.

    17. Re:There are all kinds by paladinwannabe2 · · Score: 1

      I think it all depends on the area in which you live. Almost all my experience with Christians has been positive. Most of my experience with Christians has even been with intelligent, reasonable Christians- because I prefer hanging out with reasonable, intelligent people. However, I am mentioning a specific minority of Christians who have taken the time to truely understand their faith. From surveys I've seen, most self-identifying Christians have a very marginal understanding of their faith. And while statistics can lie, I see no reason to disbelieve these.


      P.S. Remember that I am going with self-identifying Christians here. We can all agree that there are plenty of people calling themselves Christians that don't act very Christ-like.

      --
      You are reading a copy of my copyrighted post.
    18. Re:There are all kinds by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I'm not really sure I follow your assertion.

      I assert (and this is, of course, colored by my own personal experience and not much data) that there are large number of Christians who are willing to live and let live, and simply try to be good people without threatening other people with hellfire/damnation/Republican presidents. I think there are a lot more tolerant, open-minded Christians than there are fundamentalist, "You're goin' to the debbil!" Christians.

      Most of them can be distinguished by how many syllables are in the name Jesus. If they say "Jesus", you're probably OK. If they say "JAY-sus-SAH!" you're probably in for a bad time.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    19. Re:There are all kinds by melikamp · · Score: 1

      Then show a "contradiction". It has to be of the kind "Do A" and "Do not A", by the same author, to the same audience. The whole of the Bible is a record of various leaders commanding things to their respective contemporaries. The entire OT is addressed to Jews. It commands nothing to a non-Jew. Many parts of NT are addressed to specific communities in the first and second century, they command nothing to the living. Bible does not say "kill the babies"; it records that Moses commanded to kill the babies on a few occasions. Likewise, the Bible as a whole does not say "homosexuality is bad", but Paul says that to his flock.

      Ergo you need to pick and choose which bits to follow.

      Uh, yeah. There are exactly two such "bits" in the Bible: either you are a Jew, and then you follow the fullness of the Jewish Law, however it is interpreted by the contemporary Rabbis, or you are a Christian, and then you follow the fullness of the Christian law, as inscribed on your heart by God.

      The Bible itself is not contradictory, but the prevalent modern interpretation of it is. It is not Paul's or Moses' fault that they were compiled into the same volume, and then interpreted as speaking to all men and women in all ages. It is indeed a contradiction to say that the Bible commands specific moral precepts to the contemporary audience. It does not, and no single holy writer makes such a claim.

    20. Re:There are all kinds by Seedy2 · · Score: 1


      [snip]
      If Christians were allowed to arbitrarily re-interpret the bible and throw away the parts of it they didn't believe, then it would be a very different book.
      [snip]



      -Don

      Some would claim that it would be exactly the book(s) we see today.
      --
      Nothing to say here... move along
  53. Please sir, can I have another? by spun · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Waste your mod points modding me down. I have more karma than God, you can't fucking touch me, bitches.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Please sir, can I have another? by npsimons · · Score: 1

      Waste your mod points modding me down. I have more karma than God, you can't fucking touch me, bitches.

      Not to mention that some of us have you marked as friend and set our preferences to "Friend +6" comment modifier, so we will always see your erudite comments, no matter how much they may be maligned by christofascist ignoramuses who have too much time and mod points on their hands.


  54. Move along... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one here on /. is going to offer any rational arguments. Instead they are going to prop up their "theory of evolution is a fact" and "religion is bad" rhetoric.

    1. Re:Move along... by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      No one here on /. is going to offer any rational arguments. Instead they are going to prop up their "theory of evolution is a fact" and "religion is bad" rhetoric.

      Except for the ones who will prop up their "what's written in the Bible are facts" and "evolution is bad" rhetoric.

  55. legalistic parsing = education by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

    am i the only one who thinks all the editing in the pdf amounts to legalistic parsing of words that has little to do with teaching on the ground ?
    however, this legalistic parsing creates "standards" which can be used to make "objective" goals which can be used to make CHEAP standardized tests, which can be used to get good grades so as to get more money from the odious, near pedophiliac law known as every child left behind

  56. Inflammatory by rumblin'rabbit · · Score: 3, Informative
    This posting seems unnecessarily inflammatory. There is no need to refer to these people as "ultra-conservative". There's a couple of reasons for my objection:
    • The term "fundamentalist Christian" is more accurate and to the point.
    • Conservativism and Christian beliefs are two quite different concepts. One can have conservative polital beliefs without being Christian, and vice versa. It's hard to see what political conservatism has to do with this event.
    • The word "ultra" suggests extremism. The reader can judge for him or herself how extreme the board members are. There is no reason for Zonk to draw conclusions for the reader.
    • Putting prefixes like "ultra" and "neo" in front of political words is often used as a disparagement, usually (I suspect) when the author has no idea what neo-conservatives or neo-liberals truly are. They just sound insulting.
    • The word "ultra" reminds one of "ultra-violence", a term from "A Clockwork Orange".
    1. Re:Inflammatory by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Conservativism and Christian beliefs are two quite different concepts. One can have conservative polital beliefs without being Christian, and vice versa. It's hard to see what political conservatism has to do with this event.

      While this is technically true, I get the feeling that you are thinking of the Progressive-Conservative axis as one purely of economics, and thus saying "conservative" when you really mean "libertarian" or "classical liberal". While it's true that the economic aspects of conservativism (belief in free markets, etc etc) has little to do with Christian beliefs, the *social* aspects of conservativism are very closely tied to religious fundamentalism, inasmuch as they (pretty much by definition) are all about the preservation of "traditional values" (i.e. the opposition to personal liberty, for the supposed benefit of the person denied said liberty). And given that America is a predominantly Christian country, anyone with a strong emphasis on "traditional values" is probably going to be a fundamentalist Christian. Thus the association of conservativism in America with Christian fundamentalism is well founded.

      Really though, the whole "Progressive-Conservative" terminology is misleading, "progressive" and "conservative" literally meaning in favor of moving ahead or in favor of holding on to the past. It's a mere historical accident that liberal and socialist ideologies emerged out of a background of statism and capitalism, and the concepts need not be paired that way or have developed in that order. I prefer "Right" and "Left" for those common names of classifications, though these terms are themselves fairly arbitrary. For the extreme corners I prefer combinations of the terms capitalism and socialism with the prefixes anarcho- and tyrano-, i.e. anarcho-capitalism (extremely libertarian), anarcho-socialism (extremely Left), tyrano-capitalism (extremely Right), and tyrano-socialism (extremely communitarian), but those terms aren't broad enough to describe the areas on the political spectrum which are merely in the direction of those extremes.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    2. Re:Inflammatory by adisakp · · Score: 1

      You're wrong on one thing. Right now the word "conservative" is used much more in the sense to describe "Fundamentalism" (christianity) more than political view.

      For example, our current president in considered by most people to be quite "conservative" while has done very little that could be considered politically conservative -- he's totally gone anti-conservative on smaller gov't, less intrusion on citizens, balanced budget & responsible fiscal policy, adherance to the constitution, states rights, separation of powers, property rights, etc. Possibly the single politically conservative act he's done in his entire tenure is to significantly lower taxes for the big business and "ultra"-rich ala trickle-down economics.

      But if it requires violence to use the word. I guess we should save the word "ultra" for the "conservatives" (again religious rather than political) that bash gays or blow-up family planning centers then.

    3. Re:Inflammatory by rumblin'rabbit · · Score: 1

      As your essay demonstrates, the common usage of political labels is so botched up these days that they hardly useful anymore. Many classic liberals are thought of as conservatives, when they are anything but.

      Just another reason to avoid the "conservative" label when a more precise description is available.

  57. Christians DISCOVERED Evolution by Flying+pig · · Score: 1
    And that is a fact (sorry for the caps.) Anybody who knows any history of science knows that the people who actually discovered, first that the Earth was much older than the Bible suggested, then how prehistory could be deduced from the fossil record, and finally how evolution could work - were mostly not just Christians, they were ordained members of the Anglican church. Because in the 19th Century, when all this happened, you had to be in Holy Orders to hold down an academic job at Oxford or Cambridge.

    What the Kansas case shows is in fact a tragedy - that the standard of education of some ministers of religion has gone backwards in the US till in some cases it is probably as poor as that of Islamic fundamentalists. As Jay Gould has observed, the Roman Catholic church is now relatively progressive compared to many Protestant churches in the US.

    I suspect the situation is just as bad in the UK, but fortunately (except in Northern Ireland) the Prot fundies don't have nearly as much influence.

    At least now the Archbishop of Canterbury has pulled back from the brink of supporting the African fundamentalists in the Anglican church.

    A particular problem in the US is that anybody, just anybody, can set up as a minister of religion. You can't set up as an electrician or a psychiatrist without proper qualifications, but you can tell people what to believe and how to live their lives on very little knowledge indeed. That's what you get when you have separation of Chuch and State.

    Meanwhile, in the UK, the Government keeps talking about training a generation of educated English speaking imams, which sounds like an excellent recipe for a long term solution to Islamic extremism.

    --
    Pining for the fjords
  58. Not necessarily by Epeeist · · Score: 1

    > were mostly not just Christians, they were ordained members of the Anglican church. Because in the 19th Century, when all this happened, you had to be in Holy Orders to hold down an academic job at Oxford or Cambridge.

    Just because you were in holy orders didn't mean you were a Christian. I suspect a number of those that wanted to stay at the University might just have learnt the 39 articles to get tenure, it doesn't mean to say they actually believed them.

  59. Re:"God Says it" - We're set up now for God Tricks by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    I never completely understand why people argue "God says it"

    Doesn't this mean that this planet is completely set up now for the first alien with a little bag of God Tricks who arrives and proclaims himself ruler of everything?

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  60. Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by Empiric · · Score: 1

    Jesus said, "Those who seek should not stop seeking until they find. When they find, they will be disturbed. When they are disturbed, they will marvel, and will reign over all."

    Jesus said, "Know what is in front of your face, and what is hidden from you will be disclosed to you. For there is nothing hidden that will not be revealed. [And there is nothing buried that will not be raised.]"

    Jesus said, "Blessed is the lion that the human will eat, so that the lion becomes human. And cursed is the human that the lion will eat, and the lion still will become human."

    The disciples said to Jesus, "Tell us, how will our end come?" Jesus said, "Have you found the beginning, then, that you are looking for the end? You see, the end will be where the beginning is. Congratulations to the one who stands at the beginning: that one will know the end and will not taste death."

    Jesus said, "Whoever has come to know the world has discovered only a carcass, and whoever has discovered a carcass, of that person the world is not worthy."

    He said, "Lord, there are many around the drinking trough, but there is nothing in the well."

    Jesus said, "Images are visible to people, but the light within them is hidden in the image of the Father's light. He will be disclosed, but his image is hidden by his light."

    Jesus said, "When you see your likeness, you are happy. But when you see your images that came into being before you and that neither die nor become visible, how much you will have to bear!"

    Jesus said, "Seek and you will find. In the past, however, I did not tell you the things about which you asked me then. Now I am willing to tell them, but you are not seeking them."

    --Gospel of Thomas


    Christianity is not lacking in references supportive of an evolutionary metaphysics, even in its earliest documents. It's well-past time that the Old Earth Creationists understand the allegorical/poetic nature of Genesis, and grasp a deeper metaphysics which, for one, the Catholic Church embraces.

    It's not trivially easy, but this conceptual integration can be done. And, it can be surprisingly rewarding in the insights doing so can provide.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    1. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Oh, come on. The Catholic Church doesn't believe in evolution: it preaches Creationism. It also preaches that thou shalt not use condoms. They also forbid women from being priests, don't allow priests to have sex, yet protect priests who molest children. What's so metaphysical about that?

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    2. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by Empiric · · Score: 1

      First point: You apparently have no clue what metaphysics means in the context of philosophy.

      Second point: I happen to be Lutheran, so trolling Catholicism probably won't result in your intended outcome. ;)

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    3. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      So you're going to heaven because what you believe is right, but the Catholics aren't, huh? How CONVENIENT.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    4. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by Empiric · · Score: 1

      It's usually better when you reply to something, if you reply to something that was said. I fully expect Catholics to go to heaven along with Lutherans, along with all Christians--there's plenty of time for correction on the finer doctrinal points. (John 3:16, John 5:24)

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    5. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like this Jesus was a righteous dude. Can you recommend any good books where I can read more about him?

    6. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      But those Jews are all going to hell, ehe? After all, they killed Jesus, which makes you and Mel Gibson so very mad. And of course all the muslims are going to hell, and so are the athiests, which makes you very happy to be Christian. Doesn't that make you feel smug and self rightious? How nice and Christian of you.

      By the way, since you know all the answers: how many miles above the surface of the earth is heaven, and how many miles below the surface of the Earth is hell?

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    7. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Assuming that wasn't sarcasm, I'd suggest starting with the book of John in the canonical bible.

      Beyond that, and with respect to the earlier Thomas references, I'd suggest "Beyond Belief" by Elaine Pagels for someone newly approaching the subject from a 21st-century postmodern mindset.

      Fair warning, the Gospel of Thomas is a source of considerable controversy in the Church right now, but at least with Pagels you'll do better than Dan Brown's thoroughly clueless interpretations. ;)

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    8. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Sine you seem to actually be having this conversation with some imaginary friend of yours rather than me, and are addressing his opinions, probably best we stop now.

      Though, as for the "location" of heaven and hell, though I don't claim certainty, I consider the dimensions postulated by M-Theory to be an interesting candidate.

      And, naturally, I lean toward the Everett Interpretation.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    9. Re:Enough science-vs-God false dichotomies by bunratty · · Score: 1

      Oh, come on. The Catholic Church doesn't believe in evolution: it preaches Creationism.
      Oh, come on yourself. See my post above where I explain that mainstream Christianity, and even Catholics right up to the Pope, agree that their faith does not exclude the possibility of evolution. This "religion vs. science" angle was started by the media, which are out to sensationalize the story to make money.
      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  61. Ghandi said it best... by Cervantes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That Ghandi dude had it right.

    "I like your Christ. I do not like your christians. They are so unlike your Christ."

    I don't think Christ would like the way people are stiffling expression and imposing their will in his name, especially with the grief he went through when he was around. I mean, seriously... "Hey everyone, be nice to each other!"... "No, we're going to nail you to a tree instead. Natch!"

    If good ole JC was around right now, I'm sure we wouldn't be having silly discussions like this...

    --
    If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
  62. only half the story by tacokill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I *almost* agree with your post, you forgot a few:

    Faith, helps a POW survive his situation even though his body has "given out". Faith, gives hope to a poor person, who through education, believes they can work their way out of poverty. Faith helps anyone, in a dire situation, deal with it in a way that they can handle. It may be feeble compared to your way but for some, its the only way they can make it through that situation.

    Faith is a tool. And like ANY tool, it can be used for good and bad.

    1. Re:only half the story by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      If it's their only tool, then I've got an obligation to them to give them a better tool.

      If I see someone trying to dig a well with a spoon, I've got an obligation to give them a shovel.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    2. Re:only half the story by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would argue that they are different kinds of faith. One is the faith taht some invisible outside magic force will save you. the other is faith in yourself and in other people that if you just keep at it you will survive and and come out ahead.
      One strikes me as being empowering, one strikes me as rendering you helpless.

      --
      All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
    3. Re:only half the story by Tesla+Tank · · Score: 1

      Stop twisting the word faith and giving it different meanings. A POW does not have "faith" that he will survive, he has "hope". Faith means you believe in something indiscriminately. If I'm in a very terrible situation, I don't BELIEVE that I will survive 100%, I HOPE that things will work out.

      So your argument is really an argument for hope, not faith.

  63. Heres one reason by tacokill · · Score: 1

    Well, I don't know the full answer but a "half answer" is fairly obvious.

    If you believe evolution, then you have to take into account the Neanderthals as well as every other human or human-like species we know about. And some of those species are a lot less "human" than they are "monkey".

    When you believe man is special (in the eyes of god), then its very difficult to bring those other species into the fold. I mean, my god man, they are *almost* animals! :)

  64. I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking? by tacokill · · Score: 2

    I'm confused here. What definition of "evolution" are we talking about here?

    Evolution, as I know it, merely means "adaptation of species". It, in no way shape or form, evaluates HOW they started (creation).

    Lots and lots of ppl (even on /.) confuse evolution with "creation". They are NOT the same. When you say you disagree with evolution, do you disagree with adaptation of species? or that evolution is the correct explanation for "how we were created". Note the distinction.


    I ask this because I just had this conversation with a very smary friend of mine. He said he doesn't buy into evolution and I thought "whoa! are you kidding me?". Well, after discussing this with him a while, I realized he was substituting "evolution" for "creation". Once we agreed that evolution meant "adaptation of species and nothing more", he agreed that he DID buy into evolution. It struck me because it appears to me a lot of people fall into this trap. Most everyone agrees with adaptation of species. But views diverge when you start discussing how it all started.

    So, be careful with definitions when you discuss evolution (I know I am not the only one discussing this subject in my free time).

  65. Re:"I say God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 2
    a) I'm not Christian, so I'm quite sure I'm not a good one.

    b) My point is not that that's exactly what God did because it's what I would do. It's that the Bible not being a word-for-word account of exactly what happened during creation does not mean that it's all a lie, there are other alternatives. I presented one of them. Also, to show that if God did create the world and man through the processes currently identified by scientists, then maybe telling ancient man exactly what he did wouldn't have been the best route.

    Of course, by what you say, those who claim to know that God created the world exactly word-for-word as it says in Genesis despite any evidence to the contrary are also not good Christians, which I would agree with.

    --
    Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
  66. It isn't wrong to question evolution. by ryepnt · · Score: 1

    Because frankly, there are a few holes, such as the entire fossil record... Where are the interevolutionary species fossils? Where is the fossil of the animal that was in between the sabertooth and the modern big felines such as lions? Or from mastadon to elephent, or ape to man even? there just really aren't a whole lot of those out there. And it isn't wrong to question evolution, it is science after all.

    "Everything they've ever "known" has been proven to be wrong. A thousand years ago everybody knew as a fact, that the earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred years ago, they knew it was flat. Fifteen minutes ago, you knew we humans were alone on it. Imagine what you'll know tomorrow." Sorry Couldn't resist. Hahaha. But my point is that shouldn't students be challenged to question the propositions placed before them? I mean that is science anyways, I mean where do you think we would be if Niels Bohr decided that the atomic model was good enough? (rant over)

    1. Re:It isn't wrong to question evolution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there are very reasonable explainations for what you are describing as "gaps" in the fossil record. I am not going to waste space here going in to it, but I will definitely recommend that you go to a palentologist or four with your questions, if you really want to know what professionals who actually seriously study these problems think.

      It's very right to question all science, but it's also very ignorant to assume that such important questions have not been seriously dealt with. You have valid questions, why not go and see if there have been any answers? Why not see why the theory of evolution is so mainstream in the face of such "holes".

    2. Re:It isn't wrong to question evolution. by bunratty · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely correct on all counts. However, Intelligent Design does not question evolution in any scientific way. It presents no evidence of a theory to compete with evolution. The best ID does is point to things that evolution does not yet answer completely and claim without evidence that some entity (God or a "designer") is needed to explain the gaps. This is called the "God of the gaps" view. The problem with this view is that as science fills in the gaps, the religion that occupied them is squeezed out.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    3. Re:It isn't wrong to question evolution. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Because frankly, there are a few holes, such as the entire fossil record... Where are the interevolutionary species fossils? Where is the fossil of the animal that was in between the sabertooth and the modern big felines such as lions? Or from mastadon to elephent, or ape to man even? there just really aren't a whole lot of those out there. And it isn't wrong to question evolution, it is science after all.


      1. Modern felines did not evolve from saber tooth tigers.

      2. Elephants did not evolve from mastadons.

      3. Got a library and get a book on human evolution. We have a rather large number of hominid fossils showing a progression from small brains to large modern ones. We're talking about biped hominids with tool using capabilities gaining modern human features and increasingly complex toolkits through time.

      4. Quit using the Flintstones as the source of your knowledge on transitional fossils.

      "Everything they've ever "known" has been proven to be wrong. A thousand years ago everybody knew as a fact, that the earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred years ago, they knew it was flat. Fifteen minutes ago, you knew we humans were alone on it. Imagine what you'll know tomorrow." Sorry Couldn't resist. Hahaha. But my point is that shouldn't students be challenged to question the propositions placed before them? I mean that is science anyways, I mean where do you think we would be if Niels Bohr decided that the atomic model was good enough? (rant over


      That our theories are not complete does not mean they cannot explain anything. Even Newtonian Mechanics, while supplanted by General RElativity, still manages to explain most of the phenomona we're ever going to see up close and personal. Going back a thousand years to show geocentrism as a false theory is a non-starter, since it was, and get ready for this, A SCIENTIFIC THEORY. Methodological naturalism didn't exist at the time, so trying to use that as an example of the overthrowing of a theory is purely stupidity.
      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:It isn't wrong to question evolution. by ryepnt · · Score: 1

      Listen I am not so foolish as to believe sabertooths are the ancestors of modern day felines, I just needed an example. calm down, And as far as the flinstones go, I think you will see as time goes on that the flinstones were more accurate in their depiction of the stone age than we ever deemed possible.

    5. Re:It isn't wrong to question evolution. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      For awfully good fossil records, check out the horse family.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:It isn't wrong to question evolution. by Copid · · Score: 1

      Because frankly, there are a few holes, such as the entire fossil record... Where are the interevolutionary species fossils?
      What's an interevolutionary species? A more interesting question is, where were all of the elephants when the mastodons were walking around? How did rabbits just poof into the fossil record after dinosaurs disappeared? Why are no rabbits buried with dinosaurs? Exactly how are you interpreting the fossil record?
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  67. Good enough for Jesus by youthoftoday · · Score: 2, Funny

    "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for me"

    --
    -1 not first post
  68. if you thought Kansas was bad... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    ...Warren Chisum, chair of the Texas House Appropriations Committee, doesn't believe the Earth orbits the sun!.

  69. Re:vote "yes" for skateparks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just as long as the public doesn't have to pay for their inevitable medical expenses...

  70. Not all staunch Christians are Against Evolution by BayaWeaver · · Score: 1

    ... my predecessor Pius XII had already stated that there was no opposition between evolution and the doctrine of the faith about man ... new knowledge has led to the recognition of the theory of evolution as more than a hypothesis ... It is indeed remarkable that this theory has been progressively accepted by researchers, following a series of discoveries in various fields of knowledge. The convergence, neither sought nor fabricated, of the results of work that was conducted independently is in itself a significant argument in favor of this theory.
    From the address of Pope John Paul II to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences
  71. Re:"I say God Says it" by TurdTapper · · Score: 1, Informative

    So, as God, you lie to the people when they are too stupid, and then when they are supposedly 'smart' enough, you let them figure it out themselves.

    I'm afraid that's an idiotic suggestion.

    --
    A man with a gun is called a citizen. A man without a gun is called a subject.
  72. Re:"I say God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Lying" and "using metaphors, analogies, and allegories" are also not synonymous.

    --
    Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
  73. Re:Serious mod abuse here by khallow · · Score: 1

    I think it's your erroneous bleating about the "ultra-religious" running the Republican party. That's clearly not true as other repliers have noted. The Republican party does a remarkably poor job of addressing the concerns of the ultra-religious. But it makes sense when you realize that Republicans don't need to care about the ultra-religious in the US. They just need to appear to be a better choice for the ultra-religious than a Democrat. Easy to do. And failing to satisfy the ultra-religious actually works in the Republicans' favor since they then can stoke long term issues that will always draw out the vote of the ultra-religious.

  74. did we consider the pratical consequences? by neverbother · · Score: 1

    Its like driving a car. Being offered the choice for a ride from Paris to Madrid, and there is one scientist who believes his car needs fuel every 1000 kilometers, and there is this other believer that just knows his car is fueled by god on time, I will settle with the scientist, not bothering the existance of god for the time being. You can believe in god or not, but i will be on time in Madrid, It's also like a person, standing before a door, suddenly considering the existance of a higher force that might have simulated the door, so it could actually not being a door, but an evil trap into hell, well I thing evolution should have selected those out already :) Sometimes there is a thin line between "faith" and mental illness.

  75. Re:"I say God Says it" by aborchers · · Score: 0

    You are obviously a most erudite and advanced scholar of this topic, so why don't you back up your BS with some citations for "Christ's definition of Christianity"? .

    --
    Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  76. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are right in saying that they're not the same, but wrong in your assertion that the Theory of Evolution does not explain the origin of species. It is very much concerned with that exact problem.

    It's great that you're expressing your views and are curious about the natural world and about scientific theory. I very much recommend that you survey what mainstream evolutionary biology has to say about the subject, as I think that you will be (hopefully pleasantly) suprised at not only what the theory of evolution by natural selection explains, but by how very well and plausibly it explains it.

    Best wishes to you.

  77. ID is/is not science by mike2R · · Score: 1
    There was a really interesting article What's wrong with intelligent design in the Christian Science Monitor (for any who don't know the publication, ignore the name, it's not what you think).

    The problem with this argument is that it requires making the case that intelligent design is not science. And the intelligibility of that task depends on the possibility of drawing a line between science and non-science. The prospects for this are dim. Twentieth-century philosophy of science is littered with the smoldering remains of attempts to do just that.

    ...

    I think there are two reasons why people shy away from this way of viewing the matter. First, if you call intelligent design "poor science," then it seems you've allowed intelligent design a foot in the door by accepting that it's science. Science versus non-science seems like a much sharper dichotomy than better versus worse science. The first holds out the prospect of an "objective" test, while the second calls for "subjective" judgment. But there is no such test, and our reliance on judgment is inescapable. We should be less proprietorial about the unhelpful moniker "science" but insist that only the best science be taught in our schools.

    It's well worth a read.

    --
    This sig all sigs devours
  78. Re:"I say God Says it" by aborchers · · Score: 1

    No less idiotic than failing to distinguish between lies and metaphors.

    --
    Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  79. Glad to hear you admit it by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    >They hate the fact that evolution justifies everything they hate,
    >from moral relativism to sexual promiscuity.

    Glad to hear you admit the linkage between evolution and justifying such stuff.

    Seriously, I appreciate it. As a creationist, I actually respect your position and honesty much more than the "no, really, there's no conflict!" position.

    1. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Thank you. Although I let some vitriol creep in to the end of my posting a bit, I really don't think that this argument has to be impolite, and the best way to find a modus vivendi is to understand the fundamentals of the opponent's position. Those fundamentals may be irreconcilable, but finding the nut of the irreconcilable differences gives the best hope of working around them.

      Belief in evolution does remove the moral force of the Bible. I don't think there should be any disagreement on that. And that _is_ a conflict, because the immediate conclusion that there is no morality leads to some rather horrifying ends.

      The question is, does evolution give rise to another moral basis? And how compatible is that moral basis with the one the Bible suggests? Without getting too far into it, I find that it does lead to a number of similar conclusions.

      I'd actually be all for posting 9 of the 10 commandments in schools. It's that first one that kind of trips me up, but on the "thou shalt not murder"/"take no vain oaths" thing I think we're in perfect agreement, if for different reasons.

    2. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      Belief in evolution does remove the moral force of the Bible. I don't think there should be any disagreement on that.

      As an atheist who believes that logic should trump dogma, I disagree. Belief in evolution doesn't automatically eliminate the possibility of a creator/deity, or the moral force of such an entity if it exists. What it does do is imply that a great deal of the content of the Christian Bible, and other religious texts, is metaphorical. That's a bit of a no-brainer, with or without evolution. But in no way does this "remove the moral force" from religious texts.

      The moral force exists for those who believe that their religious text is a divinely-inspired work, and evolution has nothing to do with that at all. Belief in evolution does not preclude belief in a creator or belief in the Bible. Your or my belief that there is no creator does not change that. From the other direction, if we're wrong in our belief, and there is some kind of creator whose moral code is represented by the Bible, that doesn't necessarily refute evolution.

      I'll try to anticipate one argument you might be thinking of: evolution postulates motives for humans that are ultimately driven by natural selection. But if one believes in a creator that is using evolution as a means to an end, then in Christian terms, those natural-selection driven motives may simply be the "original sin" which humans are supposed to overcome, by following the allegedly divine moral guidance given in the Bible.

      (Another, more trivially refuted argument is that if there were no evidence for anything like evolution, it would be strong evidence for some sort of miraculous creation event. But the fact that there is evidence for evolution doesn't preclude a creation event influenced by a deity.)

      Either way, I'd be curious to hear your argument about how "belief in evolution does remove the moral force of the Bible."

    3. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      As a creationist, I actually respect your position and honesty much more than the "no, really, there's no conflict!" position.

      My position is essentially that "no, really, there's no conflict!", and I'd really like to know why you respect that position much less than that of the other poster. I responded to the other poster with my points in this comment. Please read that comment, and I'd be interested to hear your thoughts. Briefly, it is clear that if one accepts evolution, then it refutes a literal interpretation of the creation story as given by the Bible. However, I see no connection between that and the idea that evolution "justifies" moral relativism, sexual promiscuity, etc., and I explain that in the linked comment.

    4. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by superiority · · Score: 1

      One should be careful using the word "belief" when talking about evolution. It opens one wide up to equivocation, and after a while it stops being funny and just gets annoying.
      What a naturalistic universe does is remove an independent morality. All the same old intellectual bases for morality still exist. I myself am an egoist, a contractarian (anarchist, not statist), and sort of an epicurean/hedonist, and I find that I end up with a morality that, in practical terms, is largely identical to what could be called "common-sense" morality.

    5. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

      Well, I read your comment, and I confess I'm not seeing how you address the problems.

      One purely "secular" problem is: where can morality be for evolved animals with evolved behaviors? How can a behavior be "wrong" (or "right", for that matter) if it merely arises because it provides evolutionary advantage? If replication of genes is the highest good - or rather, if there is no "good", but just "what happens", then whence morality?

      Now doctrinally, the problems are many. The events of creation are treated as real, not allegorical, by the prophets, Jesus, and the apostles. The characters of parables do not climb out of the parables and, say, father every person on Earth.

      But even more importantly, our problem as humans is that we have rebelled against God, in sinning with Adam, and God justly cursed us and all of creation. Jesus is the solution to that problem - He (though sinless) died on the cross to take the just punishment for our sins so that we can be reconciled to God.

      Doesn't make sense with the evolution-based story of human origin. In that story, humans were sinning (murder, fornication, adultery, theft, etc.) even before we were human. And if this sin is just the evolved behavior of self-replicating gene carriers, then surely we can't really be responsible for the behavior.

    6. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Either way, I'd be curious to hear your argument about how "belief in evolution does remove the moral force of the Bible."

      What I meant is that, because evolution contradicts a literal reading of Genesis, it opens the entire book up to considerably more interpretation. Simple directives like "thou shalt not murder" or "thou shalt not suffer a witch to live" no longer have the force of the absolute and immediate Word of God behind them.

      There may still be a God who left directions for us in the Bible, but contradiction of the facts gives you wide latitude on the implementation of those directions. You can choose to follow them, but you can no longer use the argument that I must follow them, because the Creator of the Universe said so.

      That's the key point here: not what you choose for yourself, but what you want others to have. Logic has a way of forcing people to believe things, whether they want to or not. The moral force of the Bible once held that same power, and evolution gives you a logical basis on which to opt out. That's a pretty considerable change for the worse in the eyes of a creationist, because other's moral choices have an effect on you.

      From my point of view, that's pretty clear on the "thou shalt not murder" thing and not at all clear on the "suffering a witch to live" thing, which is why I believe the former and not the latter. But that kind of moral relativism scares people who wonder when I'm going to stop believing in the first one too. It bugs me that I can't convince them otherwise.

    7. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by Copid · · Score: 1

      One purely "secular" problem is: where can morality be for evolved animals with evolved behaviors? How can a behavior be "wrong" (or "right", for that matter) if it merely arises because it provides evolutionary advantage? If replication of genes is the highest good - or rather, if there is no "good", but just "what happens", then whence morality?
      Likewise, what makes behavior "wrong" or "right" simply because God says so? The philosophical problem of morality runs deeper than you seem to think it does.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    8. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      The doctrinal problems you raise have all been addressed to the satisfaction of many major Christian churches, so your argument in this area is not just with atheists. See e.g. this summary of the Catholic position on the subject. For example, they address the issue of human origin with the belief that souls are created by God, independently of our physical bodies.

      My point is simply that belief in evolution does not preclude religious belief in general. It may preclude certain specific beliefs, such as the belief in a very literal interpretation of the creation story in Genesis. So if that's your issue, then I agree with you, you can't believe in evolution as well as in the creation of the Earth and humanity in six 24-hour days as we know them. But that doesn't preclude belief in a Christian God, as many Christian churches demonstrate, and it doesn't have anything to do with morality.

      As for "where can morality be for evolved animals with evolved behaviors", if I understand you correctly, that's an entirely unrelated question about the nature of morality in the absence of a deity. I'm not arguing that point; I'm saying that you can believe in a deity that lays down moral laws, and also believe in evolution, and that as you put it, "no, really, there's no conflict!" I don't see why that position should be worthy of less respect than a position which claims that belief in evolution inevitably removes all moral force from the Bible. The latter position has no logical basis that I can see.

    9. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      P.S. I realized that you may see the agument as being with people who believe in evolution in general, rather than with atheists (which was me projecting), so perhaps you believe that the Christian churches who have reconciled with evolution are somehow being deceptive when they claim that they don't see a conflict in this area. I think that would be a very strange position, but I won't argue it preemptively. If you feel like clarifying, I'd be interested.

    10. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      What I meant is that, because evolution contradicts a literal reading of Genesis, it opens the entire book up to considerably more interpretation. Simple directives like "thou shalt not murder" or "thou shalt not suffer a witch to live" no longer have the force of the absolute and immediate Word of God behind them.

      There may still be a God who left directions for us in the Bible, but contradiction of the facts gives you wide latitude on the implementation of those directions. You can choose to follow them, but you can no longer use the argument that I must follow them, because the Creator of the Universe said so.

      The contradiction of facts you mention goes far beyond the creation story, so even without belief in evolution, the Bible requires interpretation. Christian churches have been interpreting the bible almost since it was written, long before Darwin had his bright idea. Multiple churches existed before that time, reflecting multiple interpretations. Evolution doesn't change anything in that respect, and certainly doesn't "remove the moral force of the Bible."

      In particular, the creation story is one of the most obviously metaphorical stories in the Bible, and again, was treated as such by many religions before Darwin -- e.g. the idea that "seven days" did not refer to the ordinary 24-hour days we know. While some people do of course believe that it should be taken literally, the idea that it's metaphorical has never been a big surprise to most people, and doesn't in itself undermine the veracity or moral force of the Bible, if you accept that the book contains at least some metaphor and allegory (which it clearly does).

      For that matter, any text requires interpretation: consider the U.S. Constitution, for example, which has meant job security for many a judge. What did the founders mean by what they wrote? What was their intent? Since we haven't heard from the founders for a while now, do new circumstances justify a new interpretation? All of these same issues apply to the Bible. However, just as judges are treated as arbiters of the meaning of legal texts, churches and figures such as the Catholic Pope act as arbiters of the meaning of the Bible, and many of them have reconciled their interpretation of the Bible with evolution. Of course, belief in the divine inspiration of those arbiters is required, but that doesn't introduce anything new into the equation.

    11. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by jfengel · · Score: 1

      While some people do of course believe that it should be taken literally, the idea that it's metaphorical has never been a big surprise to most people, and doesn't in itself undermine the veracity or moral force of the Bible, if you accept that the book contains at least some metaphor and allegory (which it clearly does).

      You don't have to convince me. But you have to remember that "some people" in the US means somewhere between 20% and 60% of the country, depending on the question you ask. Literal belief in creationism and the Bible in general is a political fact, and just asserting that it's "clearly" metaphorical doesn't change that.

      The question is, what are we (the disbelievers) going to do? How can we get along in a society with a majority or near-majority who disagrees with us, so strongly that they vote reliably? We can try to change their minds, but they've resisted that.

      We can wait for them to die; their children are less fervent believers than they are (in general). But in the meantime, we must address them in some other way than as "you're clearly wrong", even if I'm quite certain that they are, because they believe just as fervently the other way.

      They are moral absolutists, and my moral behavior offends them so much that they wish to make it illegal. (I am not gay, but support gay causes, and am sexually promiscuous, at least relative to their code [though as a Slashdotter I should be so lucky!])

      As I said before, it's as much about power as it is about belief. I know logically that God does not justify their power over me, but since God trumps logic, we're at an impasse.

    12. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      A correction: I didn't assert that the creation story is clearly metaphorical, only that the Bible clearly contains some metaphor and allegory. The point being that the moral force of the Bible doesn't depend on whether a particular story, such as the creation story, is or is not metaphorical; belief either way doesn't affect the Bible's moral force.

      As for getting along with religious believers, I think that will be easier if we're not making overly strong claims for logic and science, otherwise it just becomes a battle of extremists against extremists -- which thanks to people like Dawkins, is already somewhat the case. But I'm happy that logic leads me to be on the same side as large, moderate churches which have reconciled their beliefs with evolution. I'm fairly sure that those churches would disagree with the idea that the Bible has lost any moral force for them as believers, and I see no justification, logical or otherwise, to take a different position on that issue.

      Moral absolutists have a problem: given that different churches interpret the Bible differently, and given that the only way to choose the "right" church (assuming one accepts that such exists) is via faith, moral absolutists have no grounds for arguing their morals outside the context of their own faith[*]. I'd remind them of that, because it points out that their problem is not just with atheists, agnostics, or other disbelievers, but in fact with every church and religion other than their own.

      [*] Except perhaps where those morals are so universal as to not be in dispute -- although even "thou shalt not kill" has its interpretive exceptions, recognized by many religions & churches.

    13. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by jfengel · · Score: 1

      [*] And except for some reason, they do. Their faith isn't just a guess, as they like to term your hypotheses and theories. Their faith comes directly from the word of God.

      It's circular, and illogical. You'd dismiss it as irrelevant, if there weren't so many of them.

    14. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      Their faith comes directly from the word of God.

      Yes, and so does the faith of countless other churches and religions who disagree with them on various things, both big & small. My response to such people is that they should take it up with the other churches and religions. Once they've sorted it out amongst themselves, then they can come and bother the rationalists. Until then, there's no point talking to people who don't acknowledge the right of others to have different beliefs, or even the fact that it's possible that their beliefs are wrong. In particular, rationalists should not be going beyond logic and science in their arguments, because that plays into the idea that scientific beliefs are equally faith-based.

      Fundamentalists, being extremists, are tempted to go after extremists on the other side, which amount to low-hanging fruit, instead of the much more threatening (to them) and less easily attackable moderate churches. It's not strategic to give them the satisfaction of playing their game. Don't engage them except where you have to, e.g. in the political arena, when fighting over school curricula (hey, Kansas just came around). Let the religions fight amongst themselves. It's not as if there's ever going to be a winner (until the Rapture comes, that is, and Stephen Colbert decides which of us is going to heaven).
    15. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by Starcub · · Score: 1

      Yes, and so does the faith of countless other churches and religions who disagree with them on various things, both big & small. My response to such people is that they should take it up with the other churches and religions. Once they've sorted it out amongst themselves, then they can come and bother the rationalists.
        Actually the Bible itself claims that 'faith is the evidence of things unseen'. This is very similar to secular science which attempts to arrive at conclusions about things unknown based upon observable data. In fact, biblical exegesis is in a sense a scientific persuit. The Church (the Catholic Church in any case) often meets in ecumenical councils to discuss faith issues. The individual bishops all have their own opinions of what the Bible has to offer in regards to a point of doctrine, or contemporary need. Resolving questions often involves analysing what they already know about the faith, and what insights the Bible might offer. By exploring a number of different ideas and avenues of understanding, certain ideas can be rejected and others persued based upon the degree to which the ideas are in harmony with the faith as it exists, and what new knowledge might have been arrived at.

      With respect to God, finding the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow often produces insight into the nature of creation itself; insight that without the proper perspective, wouldn't othwise be recognised. So Faith has the potential to be much stronger than (but in normally in harmony with) the strongest of scientific studies provided one has the eyes to see it. One of the reasons faith has proven to be so resilient throughout human history is different people at different times often see glints of 'the Faith' that give them reason to believe in something far greater than they have the ability to comprehend in and of themselves (such as was the case with Einstein). Of course there are 'fundamentalist extremists' who are in left feild, but that's normally the product of inadequate education and a faith that is blind, and I suspect in many cases, is aided by the influence of those who view religion as a threat to whatever adgendas they may have.
    16. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by alienmole · · Score: 1

      This is very similar to secular science which attempts to arrive at conclusions about things unknown based upon observable data.
      The difference is that the "observable data" in the religous case is at least in part based on individual faith, which is not subject to experiment or reliably repeatable between people of different faiths. That's precisely why the "conflict" between faith and science is really not that great: faith is personal, and by its nature, subjective. Science attempts to be impersonal and objective.

      One article of faith for rational scientists is that even if there is a deity, it would not be messing with the behavior of universal laws on a regular basis. This means that experiments can produce repeatable results, and thus a kind of objective truth can be reached. In ideal situation, this truth is agreed on by all scientists, although of course not all science is that straightforward. Problems between faith and science typically arise when those of faith insist on explanations for things that are clearly at odds with observable evidence. Literal creationists are a classic example of that.
    17. Re:Glad to hear you admit it by Starcub · · Score: 1

      One article of faith for rational scientists is that even if there is a deity, it would not be messing with the behavior of universal laws on a regular basis. Yes, and it would also reasonable to expect that that diety would leave his signature on his creation. Furthermore, I believe that the deity would want to reveal himself through evidence that would indicate both a benevolent purpose and a higher intelligence. Faith then would be a mix of both the impersonal and objective, and the personal and subjective (more than just science).
  80. Re:Serious mod abuse here by spun · · Score: 1

    It wasn't bleating, and I never claimed the ran it. I said "In large part co-opted." Meaning, the fundamentalists have managed to insert their agenda into the party. No other poster claimed it's clearly untrue, either, they said it's open for debate.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  81. Copernicus was wrong! The Bible was right! by SimHacker · · Score: 0, Troll

    According to the powerful chairman of the Texas House Appropriations Committee, Warren Chisum:

    The non-moving Earth & anti-evolution web page of The Fair Education Foundation, Inc.

    Exposing the False Science Idol of Evolutionism, and Proving the Truthfulness of the Bible from Creation to Heaven...

    Levitating Globe

    "An electromagnet and computerized sensor hidden in its display stand cause the Earth to levitate motionlessly in the air."

    Could God have engineered something like that for the real Earth?

    The Bible and all real evidence confirms that this is precisely what He did, and indeed:

    The Earth is not rotating...nor is it going around the sun.

    The universe is not one ten trillionth the size we are told.

    Today's cosmology fulfills an anti-Bible religious plan disguised as "science".

    The whole scheme from Copernicanism to Big Bangism is a factless lie.

    Those lies have planted the Truth-killing virus of evolutionism in every aspect of man's "knowledge" about the Universe, the

    Earth, and Himself.

    Take your time.

    Check it all out.

    Decide for yourself.

    The Non-Moving Earth & Anti-Evolution Web Page

    2006

    All of the evidence that is required to expose and destroy the counterfeit Copernican Model of a rotating and orbiting Earth--and the entire evolutionary paradigm resting upon that counterfeit--is set out in this book (HERE) & in scores of links on this web page.

    Those who read some or all of these links will quickly realize that this is no idle claim. Rather--as will become evident with each subject listed--there is abundant hard proof that both the Copernican Counterfeit and the Big Bang Evolutionary Paradigm that is built upon it are factless frauds from start to finish.

    Indeed, the diligent reader will be astonished at the level of demonstrable hi-tech fraud, baseless assumptions, occult mathematics, etc.,--all part of a religious conspiracy!--that has been at work over many centuries implanting the incredible evolution myth about the origin of the Universe, the Earth, and Mankind.

    On this web page the Bible is not used to prove anything scientific. Instead, the scientific facts--along with historical and religious facts-- prove the Bible to be precisely what it claims to be, namely, the infallible Word of God.

    Those who like what they read here--and are eager for more evidence in book form--will want to go HERE & HERE, and then: HERE, & HERE, and also: HERE to order The Earth Is Not Moving, The Truth About Evolution, and any of a dozen other book-length studies on Bible Doctrines.

    ***N E W! PayPal, MC/Visa now available on order links above....***

    So, welcome! Think of this as a "crash course" for people everywhere of all ages who are ready to learn how evolutionary mythology has deceived the world...and what it will mean to every living person when that deception is exposed.

    Sincerely,

    (Marshall Hall, BS. MA + 2 years:...Advanced International Studies Ph.D. Program)

    --
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    1. Re:Copernicus was wrong! The Bible was right! by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

      If I hadn't just read the xkcd about God and lisp that Fixed Earth web site would have been the funniest thing I'd read all morning.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  82. Re:Serious mod abuse here by VitrosChemistryAnaly · · Score: 1

    I think it's your erroneous bleating about the "ultra-religious" running the Republican party. That's clearly not true as other repliers have noted.
    George Bush.

    The Republican party does a remarkably poor job of addressing the concerns of the ultra-religious.
    George Bush's agenda seems to do that quite well.

    But it makes sense when you realize that Republicans don't need to care about the ultra-religious in the US.
    George Bush doesn't care about himself or his agenda? Funny.

    They just need to appear to be a better choice for the ultra-religious than a Democrat. Easy to do.
    George Bush can barely manage to do that.

    And failing to satisfy the ultra-religious actually works in the Republicans' favor since they then can stoke long term issues that will always draw out the vote of the ultra-religious.
    Like George Bush's agenda?

    So, you're a Republican? So, you're a Bush apologist? Never would have guessed it.

    It seems pretty obvious that the agenda set by industry and religious leaders and delivered to Bush is running this country into the ground. The ultra-religous and ultra-conservatives are a cancer on the earth.
    --
    "It's a tarp!" -- Dyslexic Admiral Ackbar
  83. Re:In Soviet Kansas... by Scooter's_dad · · Score: 1

    Somebody actually wasted a point to mod my stupid joke down?

    I guess he must have been either a Soviet, a Kansan, or a monkey.

    --
    The road to hell is paved with Cat 5 cable.
  84. ID is totally scientific! Seriously! by fugue · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ID is scientific. It is a theory, and it explains data.

    The problem is that it explains any data. Not only the world we live in, but any other possible world, is just as likely. A theory with so many free parameters is extremely weak: it makes all predictions, so the probability of any one of them (ie. the world we actually live in) is negligible. A theory with fewer free parameters, that only predicts what we actually see and shows alternatives to be very unlikely, is far stronger.

    So yes, ID is scientific. And provably useless.

    For more, see Jeffreys and Berger, Sharpening Ockham's Razor on a Bayesian Strop.

    --
    "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
  85. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by bunratty · · Score: 1

    Evolution means more than "adaptation of species and nothing more." It also explains the origin of new species, as explained in Darwin's original work Origin of Species.

    You are correct that the origin of life itself, as in the origin of the first species ever from which all species evolved from, is a different subject. Evolution doesn't state how that occurred, just how all other life evolved from it. It's similar to how the "big bang" theory says nothing about the big bang itself, only how the universe evolved from a hot, dense state just after the big bang to its present cold, sparse one.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  86. Re:"I say God Says it" by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

    I'd argue that when those metaphors and allegories cause misunderstandings that lead to the slaughter of millions of people that it's just as bad as lying.

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  87. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by Arba · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Adaptation of a species within itself is one thing, but most people that preach the Evolution faith, preach the gospel of species changing into other species. They also preach the dogma that Evolution is fact, when it is far from it. Anyways, as much fun as this debate is, I'm going to leave my house, which seems to have evolved out of the ground on its own, and I'm go jump into my car that has evolved from who the pile of crude oil and metals it started from, and go look after a customer now, who apparently evolved from the ocean.

  88. Re:"I say God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 1

    When you "use metaphors, analogies and allegories" to justify the persecution of gays, the stoning on women, the crusades, flying planes into buildings, manipulating people, taking their money, etc, then THAT IS A HORRIBLE LIE.

    You're just an apologist for a bunch of liars. You're just trying to perpetuate the lies. You can't nickle-and-dime the lies in the bible with apologies and half-baked self-contradictory made-up explanations.

    -Don

    --
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  89. Religious Tolerance??? by fugue · · Score: 1

    Why on earth is religious tolerance seen as good? Religious people have disabled a part of the brain dedicated to analysing and evaluating ideas: some ideas are simply off limits, not subject to challenge.

    I suppose I could draw a distinction between doctrine and philosophy: chunks of religions (especially Buddhism, but all of them to some extent) tend to be dedicated to helping people to live happily. That's worthwhile, and social and psychological research has only very recently started to provide statistical evidence and theories that can do any better.

    But people who believe that some doctrine very important to them is true (or especially that some other doctrine is false) just because someone told them so and invoked an invisible friend as the authority should be mocked, denied power, and generally marginalised (or ideally, if we fix our school-and-pop-culture delivery system, educated) until they learn to turn on their brains.

    --
    "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    1. Re:Religious Tolerance??? by plunge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just to be clear... there is a big difference between tolerating people and their right to express their ideas, and tolerating them in the sense that we don't criticize their bad ideas. The former IS laudable, the latter is not.

    2. Re:Religious Tolerance??? by Seedy2 · · Score: 1

      Ever read Richard Dawkins "The God Delusion"?
      Just finished it myself.
      I ordered the UK version, but that's just me. :)

      http://www.amazon.com/God-Delusion-Richard-Dawkins /dp/0618680004/sr=8-1/qid=1171673717/ref=pd_bbs_sr _1/103-4789113-2852618?ie=UTF8&s=books

      --
      Nothing to say here... move along
  90. It can't be allegorical by anomaly · · Score: 1, Troll

    Let me address a couple of points you raise:
    1. the reason they hate abortion has nothing to do with fetuses and everything to do with hating young, promiscuous girls
    Nope. Not even close. The issue for me, as a Bible-believing, "fundamentalist" Christian is that human life is sacred - that is - set apart and special according to God. Science teaches us that once the sperm penetrates the egg, all that is necessary for the birth of a human baby is food and shelter. All of the genetic information is present at conception, and there is no scientifically identifiable magic moment when a fetus "becomes" a person. Legally the standard is birth, but that's a legal distinction, not a scientific one. As far as I am concerned, there is no moral difference between ending the life of a fetus and me killing my six year old son. To be sure, there is a legal difference, but that does not make either morally right.

    This view has *nothing* to do with the sexual activity of girls or anyone else.

    2. Evolution complaints, near as I can tell, are about it undermining the authority of God and the Bible
    Evolutionists and hard-core creationists have the same data. We differ as to the cause of the data, but we share the same facts. There are scientific challenges to the evolutionary position, and scientific challenges to the creationist position. In the end, neither the evolutionist nor the creationist was able to observe the mechanism of speciation, and so neither has a scientifically-verifiable or testable theory about speciation. You may not like my explanation, but frankly my non-testable theory is as valid as evolution's non-testable theory.

    Standard disclaimer - of course variation and natural selection affect the characteristics of animals. This is observable - testable, and one would be a fool not to acknowledge that this is factual. Simple acknowledgment that this is a fact does not mean that speciation occurred according to the evolutionistic theory.

    It's true that I reject evolution as a means of speciation on the basis of my philosophy, but there's more than pure religious reason to reject it as well. Just because many people unquestioningly accept speciation through time natural selection and genetic mutation does not make it true. I submit to you that it's my belief that people with an a priori commitment to philosophical naturalism hang on to evolution fundamentally because they don't want to believe that there's a supernatural explanation. Evolution is essentially a terrible means of speciation, but it's more palatable than admitting that we all may have emerged through supernatural means.

    3. treat the creation story as metaphorical
    There is a view called theistic evolution which essentially does this. It does not wash from a Christian perspective. It cannot work logically. Please bear with me while I explain.

    Whether you agree with it or not, this is what Christians believe:
    a) God created the earth, animals, and two people
    b) God gave those people the opportunity to choose between obeying Him and pleasing themselves in the one area where He set a boundary for them.
    c) Those two people chose their own way rather than God's, and lost their relationship with Him because of it.
    d) God so loved the world (mankind) that He gave His only Son so that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but will have everlasting life.

    Whether or not you agree with it, the Bible is clear that mankind needed Jesus Christ to make a way to restore man's relationship with God. The relationship for all men was broken because of the sin of a literal person in a literal place. The Bible also says very clearly that death came to earth as a result of sin. The first recorded death biblically is when God killed animals to make a covering for the naked Adam and Eve. The Bible teaches that "without the shedding of blood there can be no forgiveness of sin. Evolution teaches that death preceded mankind by centuries.

    Also, if you make Eden a

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:It can't be allegorical by KKlaus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, on that abortion thing, to be fair to you I probably did over generalize. I guess it's really the anti-stem cell people that I'd be able to nail best. Anyhow, I'm still not sure that your abortion stance makes sense. I mean, fewer than 25% of zygotes become people due to entirely natural causes. I'm pretty sure that doesn't keep you awake at night. But if abortion is wrong, then we have a terrible tragedy on our hands, and more people are dying (children even) all the time than the nazis ever killed, or whoever's killing all those people in Darfur, etc. So at the very least, it's not a well thought out stance. And even ignoring my previous point, don't the zygotes die sinless, and therefore go to heaven? I'm not trying to be rude, particularly because I appreciate intelligent debate on this type of stuff. So what's your answer?

      --
      Relax I just want some peanuts.
    2. Re:It can't be allegorical by radtea · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I submit to you that it's my belief that people with an a priori commitment to philosophical naturalism hang on to evolution fundamentally because they don't want to believe that there's a supernatural explanation.

      "Supernatural explanation" is an oxymoron.

      For X to explain Y, knowing X must increase the plausibility of Y. See Jayne's "How Does the Brain Do Plausible Reasoning" if you don't understand this, but as someone concerned with the problem of explanation I'm assuming you are already familiar with the major works in the field.

      For X to increase the plausibility of Y, X must be better known than Y. By definition the "supernatural" is unknowable. It cannot be seen, communicated with, or otherwise nailed down and studied in the lab. If it could it would be "merely natural."

      So to claim that you "explain" something by invoking something that is by definition unknowable (because everything knowable is natural) is to talk nonsense.

      If a thing is knowable it is natural. If a thing is not knowable, it is not an explanation.

      Ergo, there are no supernatural explanations. The term is without meaning.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    3. Re:It can't be allegorical by Eccles · · Score: 1

      You have a major misunderstanding about one scientific concept: speciation.

      Science doesn't consider species as hard lines; they're a notational convenience, nothing more. We generally refer to tigers and lions as separate species, but ligers and tigons exist. It's not surprising a Christian might find the whole species issue to be indicative of God; such hard lines would seem to indicate that a controlling authority exists to make them.

      Consider, for example, the recent hubub about whether Pluto is a planet. For hard astronomical science, the question is irrelevant. We can define a set of criteria that would cause us to label Pluto as a planet, or not, but it's scientifically unimportant, not more important than whether we call a certain rock 90377 or Sedna.

      So when you say we haven't seen speciation, you're asking for something that science doesn't look for per se. If you're looking for it being used as nomenclature, there's a variety of mosquito found in the London Underground that has differentiated enough from the original Culex Pipiens that it could be considered a separate species.

      As for:
      Science teaches us that once the sperm penetrates the egg, all that is necessary for the birth of a human baby is food and shelter. All of the genetic information is present at conception, and there is no scientifically identifiable magic moment when a fetus "becomes" a person.

      How do we determine if someone is dead? They still have all the genetic information. If death is the shutdown of the conscious brain, shouldn't life be considered the starting of that brain? There is what could be considered a magic moment when neurons start to form in the cerebrum. Catholicism even speaks of ensoulment, when the soul enters the body (although Catholic thought does not say that abortion before ensoulment would be permissable even if it was detectable.)

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    4. Re:It can't be allegorical by AxelBoldt · · Score: 1

      Science teaches us that once the sperm penetrates the egg, all that is necessary for the birth of a human baby is food and shelter. All of the genetic information is present at conception, and there is no scientifically identifiable magic moment when a fetus "becomes" a person.
      And therefore the fetus has all the rights of a person? There is also no scientifically identifiable moment when a teenager becomes an adult, so teenagers have the same rights as adults?

      Suppose you observe a sperm swimming towards an egg, under a microscope. Just before it enters, you zap the sperm with a laser pointer. Was that murder? After all, had you waited a second longer, then placed the fertilized egg into a receptive uterus and fed the mother well, with a good bit of luck a person would have resulted. What if the sperm had already entered the egg, but not yet reached the nucleus, so that the genetic information of the new individual had not yet formed. A murder? Are you only a murderer if your destruction happens after the genetic merging has already happened? Well, you have a problem there too, because we can produce (or will soon be able to produce) persons without any genetic merging, simply by taking one of your skin cells, treating it with a couple of chemicals and electric current, and it will start to divide and become a clone of you. Which interruptions of this process count as murder in your opinion?

      If my parents had decided to abort me, I would never have felt pain, would never have a thought or an emotion, for all practical purposes I would never have existed as a person. If my parents had decided to not have sex that night, I would also never have existed as a person. The two scenarios are completely equivalent to me, and I'm morally indifferent. Obviously they had the right not to have sex, so I'm willing to give them the right to have me aborted.

    5. Re:It can't be allegorical by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      In the end, neither the evolutionist nor the creationist was able to observe the mechanism of speciation, and so neither has a scientifically-verifiable or testable theory about speciation. You may not like my explanation, but frankly my non-testable theory is as valid as evolution's non-testable theory.

      Actually, although it's not very practical to perform speciation in a lab, you might be interested in the well documented cases where speciation has been "caught red-handed", such as ring species. The wiki article is a bit light, but it will get you started.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    6. Re:It can't be allegorical by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      There is a view called theistic evolution which essentially does this. It does not wash from a Christian perspective. It cannot work logically.

      Sorry, but I do not accept literal readings of the bible. I find it much better as a metaphor and all you've said is that you believe it must be literal.

      Here's a quick metaphorical reading off the top of my head:

      There were no specfic Adam and Eve, but they represent the character of all people, which has been with us since the birth of our species (however that was). We all hold within us the dark desire to turn away from God and eat the forbidden fruit (this represents fixation with worldly success at the expense of our morals). Christ was a religious visionary who, through demonstration and leadership, showed us how to live in harmony and righteousness even in the face of temptation and the threat of violence. Whether he was literally the son of God or not depends on what you think of the first Council of Nicaea.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    7. Re:It can't be allegorical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, so Eden / Genesis / Adam and Eve is literal.

      So, Adam and Eve shagged, made Cain and Abel. Who did they shag? Eve? Surely within half a dozen generations humanity is FUBAR due to inbreeding?

    8. Re:It can't be allegorical by superiority · · Score: 1

      the Bible is clear that mankind needed Jesus Christ to make a way to restore man's relationship with God. The relationship for all men was broken because of the sin of a literal person in a literal place.
      Couldn't it be reasonably argued that the saviour dealie was needed because the evolution of consciousness and intelligence (eating of the tree of knowledge) brought sin into the world (in the sense that non-human animals don't sin and don't go to hell)?

      The Bible also says very clearly that death came to earth as a result of sin.
      Maybe "death" in this sense is equivalent to hell, as in "the wages of sin is death".
    9. Re:It can't be allegorical by plunge · · Score: 1

      "Science teaches us that once the sperm penetrates the egg, all that is necessary for the birth of a human baby is food and shelter."

      That's a pretty silly way to put it. Science also teaches us that before a man and a woman even have sex, everything that is necessary for the birth of the baby is some sex. You're still talking about potentials all the way down and there's no particular reason to pick one particular potential over another.

      Science also teaches that there is no moment of conception. Sperm and eggs do not magically and instantly fuse into anything. Even after the first cell division, their genetic material is still distinguishable. Like most things in life, we have a gradual process, not any from which unlife becomes life. As science also teaches us, a single egg is ALONE enough to simply divide and start developing into a new creature. Likewise, a single skin cell contains all the genetic information necessary to simply divide into a new being.

      It's also false to say that an embryo merely needs "food and shelter" to grow. Implantation is a complex hormonal and chemical signaling process that MAKES the zygote continue to develop in a particular way that it wouldn't without these elements. And when the vast vast majority of the raw materials for something come externally, we are talking a heck of a different realm than mere sustenance of a current being: that's a very inapt analogy. The idea that the genes are everything that a person is is a very modern and very odd idea: why not note instead that the vast majority of the elements that make up a human being are simply missing? What we know as human beings are an immensely complex set of functionalities that are constructed via a long recipe-like process. Even well-developed embryos lack this functionality: they are part of the process of building it, but they are NOT themselves it, any more than a hole in the ground with some building plans on a desk is a skyscraper.

      "All of the genetic information is present at conception, and there is no scientifically identifiable magic moment when a fetus "becomes" a person."

      While true, the fact that there is a gradient _somewhere_ does not prevent us from identifying solid white or black on either end of a spectrum before the gradient begins. Genetic information is clearly not itself either a person nor of moral value. One complete genome can split and divide and eventually develop into many people, or two genomes can fuse and develop into a single person.

      Again: genetic information is like a recipe, a series of instructions on what steps to carry out in order to, given the right conditions and all sorts of other environmental factors, construct something that we recognize as a person. But that information is not itself the completed item, nor are the early stages of construction. Once you have a nervous system at least you can make an argument that there is something of potential moral value worth protecting present, but certainly not before, and even so, what's there is clearly about as UNLIKE the human beings we give rights as something can get and still be an mammal.

      "Legally the standard is birth, but that's a legal distinction, not a scientific one. As far as I am concerned, there is no moral difference between ending the life of a fetus and me killing my six year old son."

      I hear this a lot, but I think it is too extreme to be justified. You basically imply that the equivalent of the holocaust is going on all around you, and yet all you do is complain about it? That's not how I or even I think you would react if someone systematically starting taking, say, all left-handed children in our neighborhood to be executed. Something is deeply wrong with this logic: I think you want to use the most extreme and emotionalized claim you can regardless of whether it makes sense.

  91. Re:Serious mod abuse here by khallow · · Score: 1

    Doesn't sound like a distinction worth the effort of debating. But look at the other replies and tell me that some other phrase in your post drew those comments. That's why you got modded for good or ill as "flame bait".

  92. Re:"I say God Says it" by SimHacker · · Score: 1

    If you "metaphore" is used to justify persecuting gays, teaching creationism in science classes in public schools, prosecute the crusades, and fly airplanes into buildings, then it's a bald faced LIE. Don't be such an apologist. You're just an enabler.

    -Don

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  93. HWCMM by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    Always ask yourself HWCMM: How Would Christ Moderate Me?

  94. Re:Serious mod abuse here by khallow · · Score: 1

    I get the sense that you had something you wanted to say. But all that comes out is "George Bush". I need a little more than that to go on.

  95. The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by SimHacker · · Score: 1

    Certainly! Here's what the "bible experts" have to say: Copurnicus was wrong!

    NASA's AGENDA: Promoting Copernicanism & Evolutionism

    NASA has a spiritual agenda. Yes, spiritual. It projects the image of cutting edge science opening exciting space frontiers for the good of mankind, but the facts say otherwise. Judge for yourself:

    On the Space Administration's Web Page we read: "NASA's ORIGINS PROGRAM will search for clues to help us find our cosmic roots."

    "Cosmic roots...?? Origins...???

    There are two major beliefs about the origin of mankind and all other life forms. One says God created man and everything else not very long ago. The Bible states this view over 100 times and allows for no other explanation. God created everything fully formed as part of an eternal plan, the Bible teaches. Period. The other belief says everything came to be as it is accidentally and randomly as the result of natural forces acting upon themselves and "evolving" over billions of years. Clearly, the evolutionary belief is anti-Bible, but--more to the point about NASA's goals being spiritual--it is a belief that attributes miraculous powers of creation of all that exists to a "force" or a god known as "matter" (and "gases"). Matter did it all. All hail "matter"! No God who demands recognition and accountability is needed! With "matter" as creator we can do what we want ('cause nothing matters...).

    As might be expected, a compromise belief has arisen out of these two opposites. It is called "theistic evolutionism". This view acknowledges that there has to be a God to explain the mind-blowing design that exists any which way we turn. But, says the Theistic Evolutionist, this God did not create everything fully formed but used an evolutionary process over billions of years to do the job. This evolution-dependent compromise allows a Creator God of sorts, but does not allow the Omniscient and Omnipotent Creator God Who authored the Bible. (Of note too is the fact that the Moslem Koran makes no compromise with evolution either....).

    Therefore, NASA's stated goal of searching space for clues to man's origins reveals the premise behind their taxpayer supported Origins Program. That premise is that evolution is true and the Bible (along with the Koran) is false. This premise is not secular; it is spiritual. It claims to be scientific and therefore independent of religion. It is not scientific, as we shall see. It is religious, as we shall also see. The evolutionary premise violates all known science and logic. It does not have the first piece of verifiable evidence to support the squirrely evolution myth it calls "scientific". Evolutionism embodies a single spiritual agenda, viz., disqualify and replace the Bible as the source of Truth.

    In support of its Origins Program, NASA says it will answer such questions as:

    "Are there any planets outside our solar system that are capable of supporting life?"

    "How did life originate on earth?"

    "Is there life (however primitive or evolved) outside our solar system?"

    Under the heading "ORIGINS SCIENCE" we see that NASA makes it plain that its goal of establishing extraterrestrial evolutionism is symbiotically connected to its dependency on another "scientific" hypothesis. Note this connection and the dependency upon the unproven Big Bang hypothesis that NASA is using to achieve its goal of establishing evolutionism as a "fact". From part of its Web Page we read:

    "NASA's ORIGINS PROGRAM follows the 15-billion year long chain of events from the birth of the Universe at the Big Bang, through the formation of the chemical elements, galaxies, stars, and planets, through the mixing of chemicals and energy that cradles life on Earth, to the earliest self-replicating organisms and the profusion of life."

    Seen in this statement is the unmistakable dependency of NASA's evolutionary agenda upon the Big Bang Myth.

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    1. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by aborchers · · Score: 1

      I don't see anything there about "Christ's definition of Christianity", which is what you were making claims about.

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    2. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

      At least I'm not the only person whose posts you don't bother to read before you reply to them.

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    3. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      "One says God created man and everything else not very long ago. The Bible states this view over 100 times and allows for no other explanation. God created everything fully formed as part of an eternal plan, the Bible teaches. Period." ... "Clearly, the evolutionary belief is anti-Bible."

      That's what the bible teaches. Period. If you don't believe it, you're not a Christian. You can say you're a Christian, but you're not -- you're just a cherry-picking, intellectually dishonest liar.

      -Don

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    4. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by Seedy2 · · Score: 1

      The majority of Christians would disagree with you on that one bucko.
      I don't even think it qualifies as an opinion, it's just plain wrong.

      Books don't teach ANYTHING, books are just collections of words.
      People teach stuff.
      People make books, both can be wrong.

      --
      Nothing to say here... move along
    5. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by aborchers · · Score: 1

      And you have cherry picked one example of a person calling himself Christian to make your case against all of them. A wise friend of mine once said that the one thing all Christian denominations agree on is that all the others are wrong. You obviously know nothing about Christianity if you can make such sweeping claims about its true nature or origins.

      Where I was trying to lead you, and where you stubbornly failed to follow, is that there is no definition of Christianity that comes from Christ. Christ is the invention of the followers of Jesus. Christianity per se did not even until decades after His (sic) death. Jesus was a radical Jewish reformer. What we call Christianity today is a melding of Judaism, the teachings of Jesus, and any number of other absorbed mythological systems, primarily Roman paganism.

      So don't get so high and mighty about "true" Christians. It doesn't work for them, and it works even less for you.

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    6. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Follow the link. The person I was quoting is a nut job, because they believe the bible proves the Sun orbits around the Earth. But how is that any nuttier than believing that you have to eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ to get into heaven, or that Christ was the son of God, instead of just a regular human being who had some good ideas? Or all that stuff about Xemu and DC-10 spaceships and nuclear bombs and volcanos that the Scientologists believe? Or that if you fly an airplane into the World Trade Center, you'll get a hundren virgins in heaven? They're all crazy for believing ridiculous superstitious supernatural fairy tales.

      Why didn't you simply state your argument in the first place, instead of trying to lead me somewhere then getting disappointed that I "stubbornly failed to follow" your train of though that led to your trick question?

      I'm simply taking what Christians say they believe at face value, and following it to its logical and ridiculous conclusions. Because most of them are too intellectually dishonest to perform any thought experiments or exercises in logic that would prove what they have chosen to believe to be wrong.

      Religion is a choice, not a genetically programmed mental disability that prevents you from thinking logically, nor a genetic predisposition to believe fairy tales. And it's ironic that so many of the same people who have chosen to disable their mental facilities with religion themselves, actually claim that homosexuality is a choice, not a genetic predisposition! They choose to persecute gays, and their belief that being gay is a choice happens to justify their persecution and fuel their hatred. How convenient they happen to believe that, so they can continue thinking of themselves as nice people. But why are they so sure it's a choice, in spite of the medical evidence to the contrary? Maybe it's it because they're actually gay themselves, and "choose" to not act on it like a good Christian? (That's called a "closet case", not a "heterosexual".) Ted Haggard is has now "choosen" to be completely cured of his homosexuality, isn't that nice? Do you really believe him? Maybe he was a liar before, but now that he's cured, he must be telling the truth now, right?

      The good news is that unlike homosexuality, religion really is curable!

      -Don

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    7. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by SimHacker · · Score: 1

      Follow the link and read the rest of the stuff on that web site. No I do not believe it, but I think it's as ridiculous as some of the stuff more "moderate" Christians believe. Just because the Pope claims that Evolution is compatible with Catholic doctrine, doesn't make them truly compatible. He claims a lot of other ridiculous and arrogant stuff, not the least of which is Papal Infallibility. He just said that to keep the Church from hemoraging even more members who were bright enough not to believe in the literal interpretation of the bible, but he'd certainly prefer you take it literally. So why did it take the Church so long to forgive Galileo, if it's so compatible with science?

      The foundation of Evolution is the Scientific Method: the quest for NATURAL explanations for events. Science explicitly rejects supernatural explanations. And you can't be Christian without believing in supernatural events and explanations. Certainly you can call yourself Christian but reject all the supernatural parts of the bible, but then you're just a heathen and a liar, not a Christian (and you're going to hell even if you don't believe in it, according the Pope). It's not up to you to redefine Christianity. Make up a new word.

      -Don

      --
      Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
    8. Re:The Bible Proves Copurnicus was Wrong! by aborchers · · Score: 1

      Generalization, guilt by association, straw man, ad hominem, non sequitur. You are absolutely as bad as "they" are.

      If you still persist in basing your opinion of all religious people on the ravings of a few nut jobs pushing one interpretation of the most debated text in history, then this is going nowhere. You can return your attention to the slashdot atheist choir. I'll resume conversation with my atheist friends who can have divergent opinions without being hateful bigots.

      --
      Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  96. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

    "Origin of Species" is ambiguous. It could mean the origin of individual species, or it could mean the origin of all species, ie. the origin of life. I believe Darwin intended the former meaning.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  97. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by bunratty · · Score: 1

    The theory of evolution is not faith. It is based on scientific evidence. There are fossils. There is DNA. We can see that DNA and fossils changed over time, at a rate which can be predicted by how quickly mutations occur in genes. We can tell how long ago two species diverged by measuring the differences in the DNA of the two species and the mutation rate. Evolution explains how species change and evolve, and makes testable predictions which are quite accurate.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  98. Re:"I say God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
    When you "use metaphors, analogies and allegories" to justify the persecution of gays, the stoning on women, the crusades, flying planes into buildings, manipulating people, taking their money, etc, then THAT IS A HORRIBLE LIE.

    Those are all things that people did, not God. The previous post said that God would be lying if He used allegories etc. I would also argue that that still wouldn't make the metaphor or allegory itself a lie; a simple fact stated plainly can also be misinterpreted and used in evil ways.

    Your arguments just keep getting less coherent.

    --
    Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
  99. Re:"I say God Says it" by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

    That may be true, but a plainly-stated fact can also be twisted for evil causes.

    --
    Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
  100. Re:"I say God Says it" by aborchers · · Score: 1

    I can match one-for-one any abuse of religion with great works of charity, so let's not start down that road. If you look at it objectively, what currently passes for debate is nothing more than dogmatic shrieking on both sides; two camps convinced they have The Answer about unprovable assertions and that the other side is either a bunch of brainwashed, drooling cretins or a deliberate Satanic conspiracy to undermine the authority of God.

    I am not an apologist for unscientific thinking. Neither am I an apologist for anti-religious hostility dressed up as intellectually superior atheism. I am an apologist for civil discourse, honest investigation, and recognizing the boundaries of both scientific theory and religious thought.

    (Yeah, and sometimes I'm just a troll)

    Funny, I don't recall this "enabler" thing being such a prominent theme before His Holiness Dawkins came out with his latest screed against religion. Some prior art on that is another citation I'd be interested in.

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    Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  101. Re:"I say God Says it" by antiMStroll · · Score: 1
    ""Lying" and "using metaphors, analogies, and allegories" are also not synonymous."

    Let me just say on behalf of everyone here how honoured we are to have a member of the Bush Administration contribute to this forum.

  102. Re:"God Says it" - We're set up now for God Tricks by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

    No, people would never believe. They're only interested in believing in God as long as God is an abstract thing that only impacts their lives in ways that they allow. Once "God" asked them to do something they wouldn't have done otherwise, they'd get skeptical just like the rest of us.

    --

    *sigh* back to work...
  103. Re:"I say God Says it" by aborchers · · Score: 1

    There should be a corollary of Godwin's Law for the line pursued above, namely responding to theological or semantic debates on religious/scientific matters with a bash against religion based on the misbehavior of some of its practitioners. I wonder how SimHacker would respond if pointed to the body counts of the atheist regimes of the 20th century?

    --
    Trouble making decisions? Just flip for it.
  104. Re:"I say God Says it" by apt142 · · Score: 1

    Let's face it, when we human beings get all up in arms about something, we kill people.

    Think about human history and silly things we've killed for: Sections of land small enough to walk around in a day, bad cartoons, insults, mythical WMD's. And that's just these past couple of years.

    The list is nearly endless and mindless. The problem isn't the metaphor/allegory. The problem is us. We'll kill for things we believe in, whether we're right or wrong. It's not that it's a lie or the truth, it's because some of us don't bother to question it.

    God could say "Hello" and half the world's population would try killing the other half because they weren't "worthy" to hear it. How's that God's fault?

  105. Re:"I say God Says it" by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

    It's not that it's a lie or the truth, it's because some of us don't bother to question it.

    But I thought faith was a good thing?

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  106. Fewer than 25% by anomaly · · Score: 1

    if abortion is wrong, then we have a terrible tragedy on our hands
    Yes. That is my view.

    fewer than 25% of zygotes become people
    I'm not sure that I can agree with that number, because I think it's smaller than that (something like 30% die, not 75%)- but your point is valid - it's still death.

    don't the zygotes die sinless, and therefore go to heaven
    The bible teaches that we are all sinners as a result of Adam's sin, even in the womb. As far as heaven is concerned, it's an "in-house debate" in Christian circles. On that point, my view is that God is Just, and will not do anything unjust about anyone who dies.

    Is your follow-on point that if they die and go to heaven it's no big deal, because they are in heaven?

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Fewer than 25% by KKlaus · · Score: 1

      Yeah that was basically my point. But although it's been a while since I read the bible, I know it says we are all sinners, but I don't remember that applying to pre-birth (particularly because nearly nothing does... the times). Do you know where it says that? If not, it's fine, but I'd still have to agree with you on that God is just thing (otherwise this whole discussion is pointless), so what's the big deal? What makes me so suspicous of the the anti-abortion crowd (among others) is that is seems that (perhaps excepting yourself), they haven't thought through any of these issues. It's a bit of "you mean to tell me you get that upset over abortion, but you can't be bothered to think about it at more than a first grade level?" Which suggests to me other motives.

      And also, fwiw, I'm pretty sure that the metaphorical interpretation of the creation story is more prevalent then you think. There are many Christian scientists obviously, and you can't be a scientist if you think dinosaur bones were planted to fool with us, and that carbon dating is baloney.

      --
      Relax I just want some peanuts.
    2. Re:Fewer than 25% by anomaly · · Score: 1

      I don't remember that applying to pre-birth (particularly because nearly nothing does... the times). Do you know where it says that?
      Psalm 51:5 "Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me."
      Romans 3:23 "for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God"
      Romans 5:12 "Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all men, because all sinned"

      the metaphorical interpretation of the creation story is more prevalent then you think.
      Sure, but that doesn't make it true. As I explained in my posting above, if you are an adherent to Christianity, it's not logical to make the Eden story an allegory. You have to torture the text and twist the logic to make it work.

      When Jesus was asked about marriage, he quoted Genesis. If Genesis was allegory, why would He appeal to the creation account as if it was fact? Sure, he spoke in parables sometimes, but other times He spoke in a direct way. The marriage response is NOT in the form of a parable.

      you can't be a scientist if you think dinosaur bones were planted to fool with us, and that carbon dating is baloney
      First, I think that dinosaurs lived concurrently with man. Dinosaur fossils are fact, and it would be foolish to suggest otherwise.

      Secondly, carbon dating is based on three things:
      a) the amount of C14 present today in the sample
      b) the rate of decay of C14 being constant, and
      c) the original amount of C14 in the sample

      We can be sure of a), we can frankly only estimate c) and isn't it possible that there were conditions that may have altered b) since the sample was formed?

      It's not that the process is flawed, it's that the assumptions may not be valid. Carbon dating is not infallible. Many times radically different dates are estimated for samples from the same thing. Dates that are too close to now are thrown out as error, because of the preconceived notion that the earth is REALLY old.

      Respectfully,
      Anomaly

      --
      But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    3. Re:Fewer than 25% by KKlaus · · Score: 1

      I have a mixed feeling about that passage from psalms, because the language is non-authoritative, i.e. the "surely," and also it's not coming from a prophet or from Jesus, but regardless you were right, it's there. On the dinosaur thing again though, man and dinosaur can't have lived concurrently because there aren't any cave paintings of them, nor are they mentioned in any historical texts (or even the bible itself). All other large animals come up. So metaphorical interpretation looking better and better maybe. Anyhow, either way, I'm still impressed that at least someone doesn't kneejerk and halfass their religious opinions.

      Cheers.

      --
      Relax I just want some peanuts.
    4. Re:Fewer than 25% by superiority · · Score: 1

      On that point, my view is that God is Just, and will not do anything unjust about anyone who dies.
      Now it seemse like you're just making stuff up to justify your beliefs. That doesn't sound consistent with the Bible at all. Unless you're view of justice is consonant with the biblical one, in which case sending all the little aborted souls to hell is as just as it gets.
    5. Re:Fewer than 25% by plunge · · Score: 1

      "As I explained in my posting above, if you are an adherent to Christianity, it's not logical to make the Eden story an allegory. You have to torture the text and twist the logic to make it work."

      That's assuming that you are of the minority of Christians in the world and in history who believe that the text must be read literally.

      "If Genesis was allegory, why would He appeal to the creation account as if it was fact? Sure, he spoke in parables sometimes, but other times He spoke in a direct way. The marriage response is NOT in the form of a parable."

      That's a pretty weak argument. Jesus was often cryptic and poetic. Furthermore, if you aren't a literalist in the first place, then why would you demand the recorded words of Jesus be taken literally in every respect as well?

      "Secondly, carbon dating is based on three things:
      a) the amount of C14 present today in the sample
      b) the rate of decay of C14 being constant, and
      c) the original amount of C14 in the sample"

      No, it's based on a heck of a lot more than that. The accuracy of carbon dating isn't just something we assume: we calibrate it based on a whole host of other independently derived timelines, ALL of which must match up in fine detail. I mean, what you describe is a creationist caricature of the field of radiocarbon dating. People spend their whole careers becoming experts in it. Do you REALLY think they spend all their time just repeating those three points over and over to themselves?

      I never understand these sorts of creationist arguments. They don't "get" how science works. It's NEVER just "oh, here's this set of assumptions that give us a result, la de da." There are always more and more ways to test something, over and over, from every angle, and that is EXACTLY what scientists do, constantly.

      Carbon dating is of course, not what is used for dinosaurs since carbon dating only works on recent things (this is the previous poster's mistake, not yours). With other forms of radio-isotope dating there are all sorts of neat tricks like isochron analysis that actually show, straight out, whether the assumptions you note are broken or not for a particular sample. And again, there isn't just one way of dating things: there are MANY ways. The evidence from plate movement HAS to match all the different radio-dating methods, which HAVE to match the record of magnetosphere switches which HAVE to match the record from matching rings on modern and petrified trees which HAVE to match ice-core samples, and so on and so on. All of these different independent methods have to match up with each other. And the fact that they give the SAME answer is a very powerful form of evidence. Is it possible to be in error to some degree or even a fundamental degree when using a dating method? Sure, it's possible, though very unlikely given how rigorously these things are tested for plausibility in almost every respect. But for dinos to have lived with humans, for instance, you'd have to explain not only why each and every dating method and piece of evidence points to an old earth, but why they all give the SAME ages and timelines in fine detail. Truth coordinates things in a way that error simply cannot. If you used seven different methods to calculate something, and got them all wrong, what is the likihood that all the different errors (each of which is for a totally different reason) came out with the SAME erroneous answer?

      "Carbon dating is not infallible. Many times radically different dates are estimated for samples from the same thing. Dates that are too close to now are thrown out as error, because of the preconceived notion that the earth is REALLY old."

      Again, while we've come to trust carbon dating enough that we CAN treat it that way, we've come to that trust based not on "notions" but on constant and ongoing evidence of its reliability. There are any number of known reasons for various dates to be regularly in error or for one "thing" to have carbon samples from several different times (m

  107. Re:ID is totally scientific! Seriously! by Rei · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The parent is flamebait... how?

    --
    "Who the hell is Nietzche? It's a question stupid people are asking." -- Newscaster, "Jesus Christ Supercop"
  108. article title should be changed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of "Kansas adopts new science standards", the title should read "Kansas adopts science standards".
    Drop the adjective.
    The science is not new, even though it is new to many living there, and the standards are not specifically to be applied to "new Sciences" per se. Also, The standards are not new, only complying with recognized norms in science education.

  109. not so fast by anomaly · · Score: 1

    I don't want to be pedantic or toy with semantics, but I disagree with you on your definition of supernatural.

    Dictionary.com has the following first definition for "supernatural",
    pertaining to, or being above or beyond what is natural; unexplainable by natural law or phenomena; abnormal.

    You suggest that it means "unknowable" I disagree. I believe it means not explainable through natural phenomena. Let's say that all life on this planet was "planted" here by aliens. (Some believe that this is the case.) This would be an unnatural means of speciation and arrival of life. It would be "supernatural," undetectable, and unquantifiable save finding incontrovertible evidence of that intervention.

    because everything knowable is natural
    Really? Can you measure fear, respect, love, duty, honor, trust, or contentment? Have you ever known any of them? Are they quantifiable? NO! Can they explain irrational behavior? YES!

    Not all that is knowable is quantifiable. "The heart has it's reasons which reason cannot know" Pascal, Pensees

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:not so fast by radtea · · Score: 1

      Can you measure fear, respect, love, duty, honor, trust, or contentment? Have you ever known any of them?

      You are equivocating "knowable" and "measurable". It is possible to know something without measurement. Nothing I said suggested otherwise.

      As to the dictionary definition of "supernatural" and your aliens-planted-life example, they are both irrelevant and the second depends on another equivocation.

      Dictionaries are descriptive, not prescriptive, and it in a world where the majority of people are mistaken about the possibility of "supernatural" explanations it is no surprise that a dictionary would reflect this fact.

      With regards to aliens planting life on Earth, if you believe this would constitute a "supernatural explanation" in the same sense that "God did it" is a "supernatural explanation" for the origin of species, then you are also committed to starlings in North America being a "supernatural phenomena" for which there is a "supernatural explanation."

      There are starlings in North America because some idiot let a breeding pair loose in New York in the 1800's. No one who speaks English natively would say this is a "supernatural explanation" of the presence of starlings here. You are equivocating on the meanings of "unnatural" and "supernatural".

      Equivocation is not argument, nor is the introduction of irrelevancies and poetic sentiments.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  110. Re:"I say God Says it" by apt142 · · Score: 1

    I hope you aren't under the assumption that faith implies a lack of questioning.

  111. Re:ID is totally scientific! Seriously! by plunge · · Score: 1

    "The problem is that it explains any data."

    Um: that's one of the basic characteristics for something not being science. To be science, it must make a specific claim that specifies and limits itself to a particular set of data that we can then check on. If ID is consistent with anything, then it is almost by definition not science.

  112. Kansas Fundamentalists also attacking physics by transtronics · · Score: 1

    Sadly evolution is not the only science they are after.

    Take a look at:

    http://www.gravitationalrelativity.com/

    It appears that they want to turn the clock back because science has filled in too many gaps for religion to be taken seriously as an explanation of wonders of the world.

    --
    PPPoE is evil
  113. Re:"I say God Says it" by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

    Faith is the act of accepting something without evidence. How is that any different?

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  114. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by bunratty · · Score: 1

    That's exactly correct, as I explain above. Darwin's book did not discuss the origin of life itself, only the origin of individual species.

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  115. Re:"I say God Says it" by apt142 · · Score: 1

    Faith is what happens when you don't have or don't accept the answers for those questions.

    Faith doesn't contradict with questioning. We don't come to have faith in something because we are refusing to search for the answers. We come to have faith in something because we fancy the answer we've discover or created for ourselves.

  116. Speciation by anomaly · · Score: 1

    Science doesn't consider species as hard lines; they're a notational convenience, nothing more
    And this is a distinction without a difference as far as I'm concerned.

    My point about speciation is that there are LOTS of different types of animals out there - cats, dogs, whales, etc. I know that an evolutionary world view sees them all as roughly the same - because according to evolutionary theory they all came from the original single-celled creatures. This is simply not relevant to the discussion. Regardless of the terminology used to describe the different kinds of animals we see, we DO see different types.

    I fundamentally disagree with the notion that all life emerged from soup to single-celled creatures to complex creatures. Those types emerged through some process. Conventional wisdom is that survival of the fittest traits through natural selection and mutation provided a mechanism for different expressions of animal life.

    I reject conventional wisdom on this point. Conventional wisdom has been proven wrong in the past, and I strongly believe that 100 years from now, the idea of Darwinian Evolution as the mechanism for emergence of different types of creatures will be laughable.

    How do we determine if someone is dead?
    This is an excellent question, and one that is staunchly debated both in the scientific and philosophical camps these days. With the body's reaction to hypothermia, it's quite difficult to tell if someone is revivable or not.

    There is what could be considered a magic moment when neurons start to form in the cerebrum.
    Yes, but this is a slippery slope as well. Why just when the brain formation is sufficient to create or receive impulses? Why not defer until the fetus is able to feel pain or have emotions?

    These are practically indescernable, whereas the completion of the requisite genetic information for life is a clear, hard line. Again, all it takes from that moment is shelter and food.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Speciation by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Regardless of the terminology used to describe the different kinds of animals we see, we DO see different types.

      But your initial remark is that a flaw with evolution is that we haven't seen hard boundaries (species). I quote:

      In the end, neither the evolutionist nor the creationist was able to observe the mechanism of speciation

      But science makes no claim about hard boundaries.

      I reject conventional wisdom on this point.

      Have you no knowledge of history? Prior to Darwin, yours was the conventional wisdom. Evidence for it (the DNA mechanism, fossil records and geology, etc.) has been increasing ever since.

      But no doubt in 100 years we'll also decide the sun goes around the earth again, and undo Galileo and Copernicus while we're at it.

      You do realize you'll have to convince the Catholics to revert, don't you?
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_and_the_Rom an_Catholic_Church

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  117. Re:"I say God Says it" by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

    So faith isn't about refusing to question something, it's about making shit up and then justifying your conclusion in the face of contradictory evidence.

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  118. Science Versus Religion by deleo77 · · Score: 1

    Science is complicated and religion is simple. Science says that bad things happen to you when you die and religion says that good things happen when to you when you die (but only if you agree to adhere to that religion). Most people like things simple and live in fear of death, so religion will always have the upper hand.

  119. Again, distinction without diference by anomaly · · Score: 1

    You're either playing word games, or just hung up on the fact that I used the word "speciation."

    My point is that science has NOT observed major evolutionary change - from a fish to a bird, or a dog to a cat or whatever the theory is these days. It has not been observed in the lab, we have not seen punctuated equilibrium, or any other major change. We have seen minor changes in the form of adaptation.

    Whether you have a hard boundary, use the term species, or any other distinction, it's all irrelevant to the fact that there are major differences today in the creatures who exist.

    Have you no knowledge of history? Prior to Darwin, yours was the conventional wisdom.
    I am aware of that fact, and I believe that CW will return to that point of view after this flirtation with philosophic naturalism has ended.

    Evidence for it (the DNA mechanism, fossil records and geology, etc.) has been increasing ever since.
    Interesting that you would bring that claim forward. As I said in my initial posting, creationists and evolutionists share the facts and differ in theory about the cause of the observable facts.

    DNA is phenomenally information-dense - more information-dense than anything else in the universe. This collection of ordered knowlege points to a designer as far as I'm concerned. In general we see things naturally move from order to disorder, and DNA seems opposite to what is naturally expected.

    Irreducible complexity points to simultaneous emergence of interdependent traits which seems to indicate a designer. (Retina/rods/cones/optic nerve, brain capability to interpret these signals, etc)

    The fossil record contains the cambrian explosion, which in my view is evidence for a large number of kinds/species/types/diverse life/etc which appear suddenly as if they were created simultaneously.

    Recent geologic research indicates that perhaps our understanding and interpretation of the events and mechanics of geologic change are more complex, and also perhaps simpler than expected. Was the grand canyon created through gradual erosion? Take a look at the observed events surrounding the eruption of Mt. St. Helens and the canyon formed in days that is something like 1:20 scale of the Grand Canyon. Over the next few years we saw geologic layers laid down over months rather than years, and what happened to the trees in Spirit Lake helps explain fossils which cross geologic layers. This may indicate that earth's geologic layers were laid down in substantially less time than has been imagined previously.

    The collected facts are increasing, but they don't necessarily fall in favor of evolution.

    undo Galileo and Copernicus while we're at it.
    With all due respect, I'm a proponent of GOOD science. Much of what we know today has been the product of unbiased research by men of science who were also men of faith. The official church has done bad things in the past, but Christianity is not incompatible with science. My issue is with those who demand to apply their philosophy to their scientific practice.

    You do realize you'll have to convince the Catholics to revert, don't you?
    No disrespect to Roman Catholics is intended here, but their view is irrelevant to me. If the official church position is wrong, that's their problem to solve, not mine.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Again, distinction without diference by plunge · · Score: 1

      "My point is that science has NOT observed major evolutionary change - from a fish to a bird, or a dog to a cat or whatever the theory is these days. It has not been observed in the lab, we have not seen punctuated equilibrium, or any other major change. We have seen minor changes in the form of adaptation."

      We also haven't seen the continents together in a supercontinent Pangea. That doesn't mean that we don't have clear and unequivocal evidence that they were once that way. We have large vein patterns of mineral deposits that match up on Africa and South America like jigsaw puzzles for goodness sakes.

      What you are basically asking for is that we MUST see, with eyeballs, something that takes millions of years, even though it leaves tons and tons of physical evidence. But this is silly: there is no "eyeball" rule in science. What matters in science is evidence, period. Strong physical evidence is in many respects superior to eyewitness.

      The fact that you aren't even familiar with what evolution describes as major transitions (and has described, not just "these days") certainly doesn't make you sound like you are informed enough to say that you've seen the evidence and aren't convinced. If you haven't even bothered to find out what a theory says, how can you possibly claim to find it implausible?

      "The fossil record contains the cambrian explosion, which in my view is evidence for a large number of kinds/species/types/diverse life/etc which appear suddenly as if they were created simultaneously."

      Again, this isn't the same evidence viewed differently, it's basically a caricature of the evidence, ignoring most of it.

      I don't want to insult you because you seem like a nice guy, but do you even understand what a clade is or how it factors into the descriptive system of "kinds/species/phyla" etc.? If you don't understand these concepts, then it is very easy to be fooled by sloppy arguments about terminology, such as thinking it significant that higher level groups appear all around the same time (though very far from "simultaneously"). If you understand how taxonomy works though, you then realize that this is an artifact of definition, not a significant element in and of itself about reality (simply put, it's a factor the way that clades work: new groups are _always_ defined as subsets of old groups, and we built our system based first on the classification of modern animals)

      "Regardless of the terminology used to describe the different kinds of animals we see, we DO see different types."

      So then why are all these "types" just morphological nested subsets of each other? Evolution PREDICTS isolated types, and not just any pattern of them either: a pattern in which every gene, trait, and so on in each individual all matches the same overall nested hierarchy. This pattern then for some reason is reflected in the fossil record. Which in turn paints a picture constrained by geography in a way that makes no sense for an all powerful creator: why would a creator respect, say, the influence of a mountain range or an ocean when determining what traits appear where and when? All of this is the evolutionary pattern, which is one of very specific kind, and just keeps turning up everywhere we look.

    2. Re:Again, distinction without diference by Copid · · Score: 1

      My point is that science has NOT observed major evolutionary change - from a fish to a bird, or a dog to a cat or whatever the theory is these days. It has not been observed in the lab, we have not seen punctuated equilibrium, or any other major change. We have seen minor changes in the form of adaptation.
      We've never seen Pluto orbit the sun.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  120. Damn Cosmic Magician again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only positive thing I can throw their way is that they are slowly coming to terms with being more planet friendly. At least this is what I have read and heard. Prior to this recent event their ideology would of been or, is still, that this planet was/is a temporary holding ground until they either disappear/die into heaven or, disappear/die into a burning hell into eternity.

    Me, I am happy enough to be Compost! Hopefully under a beautiful tree. Little birdies and all.

  121. Re:ID is totally scientific! Seriously! by fugue · · Score: 1

    Ok, if you like. But the Bayesian approach quantifies exactly how powerful (or "scientific") a theory is. You don't need to make the special-case argument you made, since we can show a continuum of how much of the data a theory can explain vs. how many free parameters it has. So here's a quantitative measure for the predictive power of ID is (how "scientific" it is, if you like), and a well-justified answer.

    No theory I know of makes predictions that exactly explain all data with no free parameters. At what threshold does something become "not science"? Here, though, we can prove that ID is just about the most useless and improbable theory ever proposed. I think that's more useful than just tossing it out, philosophically claiming it's not science :)

    --
    "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
  122. Subject by Legion303 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The word "New" here is unnecessary. "Kansas Adopts Science Standards" is more concise and accurate.

  123. Was Jesus a historical person? by anomaly · · Score: 1

    In your metaphorical view, was Jesus a real person? I ask because this, along with His deity is a critical question to the teachings of Christianity.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Was Jesus a historical person? by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      Well, in the interest of dicussion I'd say "yeah, probably". But I wouldn't take a firm stance on it. Do you think the teachings of the bible are less important if they didn't "really happen"? If the authors of the various books of the Bible were inspired by God to write about a Jesus who never existed, is the Bible less divine? I'm not just trying to wind you up; I hate it when discussions about religion turn into shouting matches.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
  124. Don't have to be scientifically illiterate... by SQLz · · Score: 1

    You don't have to be scientifically literate to unterstand evolution. Its happening all around you, it happens every day. All evolution is, is the fact that we pass on traits to our offspring. Denying evolution is like denying the sky is blue.

  125. Gandhi, not Ghandi by bayankaran · · Score: 1

    It is Gandhi, not Ghandi. Mahatma Gandhi on Wikipedia

    Gandhi was asked - 'what do you think of western civilization?'

    His reply - 'its a good idea'.

    --
    Tat Tvam Asi
    1. Re:Gandhi, not Ghandi by Cervantes · · Score: 1

      Good call, I always type it wrong when I'm in a rush for some reason. Same with Bhuddist / Buddhist.

      And that quote is one of my favourites. ;)

      --
      If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
  126. Naive Falsification Strikes Again by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

    science can be proven and disproven
    Science can only be disproven.

    Logically speaking, if you disprove proposition P, then you have proven the converse, ~P. "Proof" and "disproof" are symmetric opposites, and anything that constitutes a "disproof" will constitute a "proof" of something else, and vice versa. You can salvage your "science can only be disproven" (by which you presumably mean that scientific theories can only be disproven) if you limit "scientific theories" to a subset of all propositions, such that for every theory T, T is a proposition P, but ~P is not a theory. The trick is to find a reasonable way to categorise propositions like this -- and even then you have to question whether you're discerning science, or just shoehorning it into a preconceived idea that "science can only be disproven".

    The philosophy of science is a tricky business, and is over-simplified with apalling frequency on Slashdot, particularly as how this is supposed to be a hive of science-buffs.

    --
    proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
  127. Dinosaurs and Man by anomaly · · Score: 1

    You're basing your opinion on the lack of cave paintings? What about deterioration of the paintings which included them? Caves are notoriously wet.

    What about the possibility that we have not found caves with the images?

    The Bible mentions a "behemoth" like a dinosaur and "leviathan" perhaps a great monster of the sea - in Job 40 and 41. Many people feel that these are descriptions of dinosaurs. I'm not saying that I consider that to be strong evidence, but it is a possible occurrence of dinosaurs in biblical literature.

    I have also heard of fossils found (I believe in Texas, but I'm digging deep in my memory now) with human footprints inside of dinosaur footprints.

    Isn't it *possible* that man and dinosaurs were on the planet at the same time? Perhaps they were not in the same place much, and that's why literature seems to have little evidence?

    I'm not saying that my evidence is convincing, just that your case is a bit weak.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Dinosaurs and Man by plunge · · Score: 1

      "I have also heard of fossils found (I believe in Texas, but I'm digging deep in my memory now) with human footprints inside of dinosaur footprints."

      Scientists just do not find those claims to be credible. If this is the low bar for your standard of evidence, then I guess one could argue that anything is possible. I vaguely remember hearing that Alex Chiu's amazing magnet wristbands can make you immortal. I'd better buy a pair!

      "The Bible mentions a "behemoth" like a dinosaur and "leviathan" perhaps a great monster of the sea - in Job 40 and 41. Many people feel that these are descriptions of dinosaurs. I'm not saying that I consider that to be strong evidence, but it is a possible occurrence of dinosaurs in biblical literature."

      Both of these would be far more reasonably explained by other large mammals that are, in fact, alive today. And it's not like we should assume that dragons or griffins exist just because tales were once told of them.

      "Isn't it *possible* that man and dinosaurs were on the planet at the same time? Perhaps they were not in the same place much, and that's why literature seems to have little evidence?"

      No. The evidence is clear where the dinosaurs were (pretty much all over the planet, which at the time had a very different continental composure than now in a way that would be impossible to move within a few thousand years without literally ripping the upper crust of the earth apart) and that they dominated their ecosystem: one which lasted for millions and millions of years. The evidence for this is confirmed by so many different converging lines of evidence so as to be one of the most certain things we can know about anything.

    2. Re:Dinosaurs and Man by anomaly · · Score: 1

      Ha ha ha ha ha.

      so as to be one of the most certain things we can know about anything
      Science is not about the known, it's about the proposed which seems to fit the facts and has not yet been disproven. I never suggested that the information I presented above was factual - I said my information was not sufficiently credible to prove my case, but merely asked if there was another option.

      The evidence is clear where the dinosaurs were (pretty much all over the planet, which at the time had a very different continental composure than now in a way that would be impossible to move within a few thousand years without literally ripping the upper crust of the earth apart) and that they dominated their ecosystem: one which lasted for millions and millions of years.
      This is an incredibly bold statement. What evidence do you offer to support this concept?

      I believe that a few thousand years ago the earth experienced a global geological event which dramatically changed the landscape and ecosystem - perhaps even ripping the upper crust of the world apart and a worldwide flood occurred.

      --
      But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    3. Re:Dinosaurs and Man by plunge · · Score: 1

      "Science is not about the known, it's about the proposed which seems to fit the facts and has not yet been disproven."

      In a technical sense, sure. But this is true of everything, and I doubt it stops you from speaking of knowledge and facts anywhere other than where science differs from your beliefs. In the colloquial sense, it's perfectly appropriate to speak about what we know from science.

      "This is an incredibly bold statement. What evidence do you offer to support this concept?"

      It would only be bold if the evidence wasn't there. But it is. I'm not just offering some evidence. I'm offering ALL of the evidence. Every piece of evidence tells not only my story, but it's a VERY particular story that fits together in a particular way in very fine detail.

      "I believe that a few thousand years ago the earth experienced a global geological event which dramatically changed the landscape and ecosystem - perhaps even ripping the upper crust of the world apart and a worldwide flood occurred."

      Belief is one thing. The evidence says this never happened. If something like this HAD happened, it would be incredibly obvious: there are countless things that would be true about virtually every rock formation worldwide by implication that are not true. And instead, we have a very clear geological record which in all sorts of little details large and small confirms what is the basic geologic science today. No global flood: no evidence of this anywhere. Instead, a geologic column universal to the world in which fossils are laid down in patterns that only make any sense at all in the context of millions of years. No flood could lay down the highly complex and ordered patterns we see there, which bear no relation to bouyancy, but rather terrestrial geography impacting the movement and development of creatures over millions of years.

      Interestingly, the people who originally discovered this were all creationists: all the people who you say interpret things in the creationist way. They tried to establish their beliefs by science but found that the evidence said otherwise.

      To give you an example of what I mean, consider the continents of South America and Africa. The fact that they appear to fit together is no mistake: as I noted, we have large complex patterns of mineral deposits that match up with each other, now separated by thousands of miles of ocean. We know that these two continents were once joined and that they separated slowly: at a rate of not much faster than a centimeter a year. In between them is a trench from which the molten elements under the Earth's crust are welling up. This welling occurs today at a particular rate, and the plates the two continents sit on are moving away from each other at this rate. How do we know this? Let me count the ways. When the welling happens faster or slower, it shows up in the way that the rock cools and hardens underwater. If it once did move faster, we'd know by looking at the rock (as we can in places where it IS moving slower or faster elsewhere in the world). In fact we'd also know because the amount of force necessary to move the plates apart at the rate that would be needed to conform to a 6000-year old earth would litterally shatter the plates in countless places: they physically can only remain whole IF they move below a certain rate. But they are not shattered apart.

      But we're only just getting started. All of the above doesn't just suggest "old" it suggests a particular age. Every other physical chain of evidence we can think of to test this against also doesn't just say "old": it gives a particular age. The SAME age. When we radio-date the rocks near the trench, they are young. As we move away from the trench on either side, these recorded ages increase. When we reach the two continents themselves, where they match, we end up not just with some old dates, but with the same dates. You might argue that perhaps once radioactive elements decayed faster, but if that had happened, it would be obvious. You do

  128. Less important? by anomaly · · Score: 1

    The Bible contains many different literary styles - some passages are allegorical, some poetic, and some are narrative. The idea of the narrative passages being accurate is very important to me. The Bible tells the story about God and His relationship with mankind - the crown of His creation. It answers the questions:
    1. Where did we come from?
    2. What went wrong?, and
    3. How do we fix it?

    If the narrative passages are untrustworthy, then that's a major problem for me. The Bible says that Jesus lived and died for the purpose of reconciling sinful man to a perfect God. It's not about good stories or moral examples - it's about how I can personally be reconciled to my mortal enemy.

    If Jesus didn't really live, or was not resurrected from the dead, then...
    I Cor 15:16-17 "if the dead are not raised, then Christ has not been raised either. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins."

    The fact of Jesus' life, death and resurrection is fundamental to my faith.

    It's a VERY big deal.

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
  129. Re:In Soviet Kansas... by Mr.+Shotgun · · Score: 1

    In Soviet Slashdot, mods troll you?

    --
    Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the (supposed) good of its victims may be the most oppressive
  130. Ring Species by anomaly · · Score: 1

    My take on this is that it's merely an example of adaptation or "microevolution." We don't see these birds in transition to something radically different, merely to variants of the original kind - a specific kind of bird.

    As I said earlier, there's no debate about minor changes being observable. The point at which I break ranks is where people suggest that the minor changes "add up" to a completely different kind of creature. In order to do this, we'd have to rely on immense amounts of time and favorable mutation. Given the tendency of mutation to be extremely unfavorable, we have to add significantly more time to the process.

    There are lots of problems with the "huge amounts of time" solution to the problem. One has to do with the amount of kinetic energy in the universe. If the universe is eternal, why hasn't in equilibrated long ago? Another issue is the lack of graves. If human populations have been around for 100,000 years or more, where are all of the graves? The number of dead people would have to be unbelievably large, given what we know about trends in population growth.

    There are many many more unanswered questions like these as well.

    Evolution is current conventional wisdom, but I don't buy it. Intellectually there's more to it for me than "God said it. I believe it. That settles it." Although, if there's a God, and He did say it, wouldn't that be enough? :)

    Respectfully,
    Anomaly

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Ring Species by plunge · · Score: 1

      "We don't see these birds in transition to something radically different, merely to variants of the original kind - a specific kind of bird."

      This is a really important misconception. Evolution does not describe the transition of one thing into something "radically different" in a very real sense. Evolution describes descent with modification within nested categories.

      Look at humans. In terms of the significant morphological features that distinguish us from other life at each different taxonomic stage, we are STILL in virtually every respect, a part of every level of taxonomy our ancestors belonged to. What I mean by that is that our ancestors were apes, and we are still apes. Every feature you can pick out that distinguishes an ape from a non-ape within the group primate is a feature that we human beings STILL have. In the same way, we are still apes, still primates, still mammals, still tetrapods, still vertebrates, still eukaryotes, and still all the other levels in between that I skipped. What that means is that along our line of ancestry, we changed somewhat, but stayed fairly close to form in terms of all the different possible radical changes.

      We find this same pattern everywhere we look. Even the seeming exceptions only prove the rule on closer inspection. For instance, tetrapods are a group of 4-legged creatures. However, snakes and dolphins are both "still" tetrapods even though they lack, at least in an obvious sense, these features. But look a little closer and you find on both things like developmental embryonic leg buds, or atavisms that reveal legs (just like some humans are born with tails: not dolphin tales or dog tails, but distinctively primate tails: for some reason (ahem, common descent) atavisms reflect only our ancestry rather than any random old trait from anywhere in the animal kingdom), and in fact you find that their whole body structure is distinctively the halmark of a modified _tetrapod_ form, rather than of just any old vertebrate form.

      Dogs do not evolve into cats. A common ancestor carnivore evolved into both. In doing so, it's descendants did not "radically" change: instead its descendants were gradually modified in several different directions, none particularly radical, but leading steadily away from each other in their development. The result might involve many differences between the various lines, but all are distinguishable and group together with each other against all other life.

      The implication of this is important. You often hear creationists asserting that however much we breed X, we never get not-X. Well, in fact, they are correct! That is exactly what evolution suggests: they just don't understand how it works. Their statement is identical to the claim that however much we breed mammals, the result is always mammals. And it has been! Likewise for eukaryotes: all we seem to get is different types of eukaryotes (some that operate alone, some that colonize all together: a relatively minor, non-radical, difference in behavior). The same is true for fruit flies. No matter how much the descendants of fruit flies change, they will all always group together as fruit flies against all other sorts of flies.

    2. Re:Ring Species by anomaly · · Score: 1

      We could spend weeks on this - frankly even defining the terms we are using and making sure that we mean the same thing would take that much time.

      It's not that I misunderstand the mechanics of the evolutionary theory. I've done a good deal of reading on the subject and have audited an undergraduate comparative evolution class. I find the theory lacks credibility for a number of reasons. Just because it's widely accepted does not make it right.

      Their statement is identical to the claim that however much we breed mammals, the result is always mammals. And it has been!
      Precisely. This is why it is not credible to say that if we have minute changes which are favorable, and those changes occur over a long enough time frame, a new creature emerges which is fundamentally different from the creature up the chain. This is true even if you "start" with a creature that is not as complex as a mammal. To suggest that all creatures today came to be as a result of simple creatures who were modified a little at a time and got more complex in the process is.... ridiculous.

      Furthermore, punctuated equilibrium was proposed because a philosophical naturalist named Gould concluded that "philetic gradualism" "was never seen in the rocks" so he proposed that even kookier theory.

      Look. We disagree. We're not going to agree. I believe that you're smart, educated, and absolutely convinced that your worldview is correct. I just find that perspective incredible (e.g. lacking credibility.) You are entitled to your opinion, and I respect that.

      --
      But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    3. Re:Ring Species by plunge · · Score: 1

      "It's not that I misunderstand the mechanics of the evolutionary theory. "

      I think you've several times already admitted to and demonstrated not understanding them. This isn't meant as an insult, but simply an observation of the things you have said and argued.

      "I find the theory lacks credibility for a number of reasons."

      Dollars to doughnuts, those reasons are a collection of very standard arguments developed by creationists so that they sound plausible on the surface, despite them grossly misrepresenting and simply ignoring the bulk of the evidence. Again, not a slight on you, but that's been my experience, time and time again.

      You want me to agree to disagree, and maybe that's that, but I most certainly don't accept the idea that creationists are "dealing with the same evidence and interpreting it differently" or any of these other canards. Creationists are not working within the paradigm OF evidence. And that's okay, but it's neither science nor empirically sound and I object to it being presented as such.

      "Just because it's widely accepted does not make it right."

      I don't think that's a serious argument anyone is making.

      "This is why it is not credible to say that if we have minute changes which are favorable, and those changes occur over a long enough time frame, a new creature emerges which is fundamentally different from the creature up the chain."

      Not at all. You misunderstand me. A mammal is very very different from a single celled eukaryote. I don't know what "fundamentally" different would mean: fundamentally, all life related and modifications of the same core principles. However, no matter how different a mammal is from a single celled creature, it is still a SUBSET of eukaryotes, not something completely new and different. This isn't just a matter of creative definition, but a real and very important implication of the idea that all life is descended in nested categories: the pattern we find universally throughout life on earth.

      "To suggest that all creatures today came to be as a result of simple creatures who were modified a little at a time and got more complex in the process is.... ridiculous."

      I don't really understand why anyone could think so. It seems not only perfectly plausible, but given the evidence, the inevitable and unavoidable conclusion.

      "Furthermore, punctuated equilibrium was proposed because a philosophical naturalist named Gould concluded that "philetic gradualism" "was never seen in the rocks" so he proposed that even kookier theory."

      Again, I don't understand how someone who says things like this can really be claimed to be well versed in what they are criticizing. Be honest: do you even REALLY know, off the top of your head, what phyletic gradualism is or why Gould thought it was wrong? And how can Gould's explanation be kooky? His basic idea is no more kooky than the idea that the pace of morphological evolutionary change is not constant. This idea, by the way is not only not original to Gould, but was stated by Darwin many times, long before we even had a picture of the fossil record.

      "We're not going to agree. I believe that you're smart, educated, and absolutely convinced that your worldview is correct. "

      Again, while I understand the sentiment to want to agree to disagree, I ALSO fundamentally disagree on your framing of the differences. I'm not pushing a worldview outside of the idea of looking at what the evidence shows. I have next to no confidence that you are really confronting or understanding the nature of the evidence in regards to evolution.

  131. Exit Poll Results - The "God Gap" Widens by SimHacker · · Score: 0

    Exit Poll Results - The "God Gap" Widens

    In recent years, some have asked whether the Democratic Party has a serious "God problem" - an inability to appeal to evangelicals and other highly religious Americans. But the results of this year's election raise the parallel question of whether the Republican Party can appeal to non-Christians and less religious voters. Exit polls find that the Democrats' gains were concentrated among non-Christians and secular voters, indicating an even larger political divide between highly religious voters and the rest of American society.

    The GOP held on to voters who attend religious services more than once a week, 60% of whom voted Republican compared with 61% in 2002. A majority (53%) of those who attend church at least once a week also supported Republicans. But less frequent churchgoers were much more supportive of Democrats than they were four years ago. Among those who attend church a few times a year, for instance, 60% voted Democratic, compared with 50% in 2002. And among those who never go to church, 67% voted Democratic; four years ago, only 55% did so. As a result, the gap in Democratic support between those who attend church more than once a week and those who never attend church has grown from 18 percentage points in 2002 to 29 points today.

    ...

    Though white evangelical voters have been the bedrock of the GOP throughout this decade, many wondered in the days leading up to the election if the party's troubles this year would hurt their prospects with this key voter group. But the GOP actually did very well among white evangelicals in 2006: 72% voted Republican in races for the U.S. House nationwide, and they gave strong support -- about two-thirds or more -- to Republican Senate candidates in several key states, including Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Missouri and Virginia. These levels of support are comparable to those registered by evangelicals in 2004, when approximately 75% voted for Republican congressional candidates.

    ...

    Most Americans (60%) - including majorities of white mainline Protestants (56%), black Protestants (84%), white Catholics (60%) and seculars (72%) -- say they are happy that the Democrats won the election. Only among white evangelicals did as many express unhappiness as happiness with the Democrats' victory (41% each).

    Similarly, by a 50%-21% margin, Americans say they approve of Democratic congressional leaders' policies and plans for the future. Nearly half of white mainline Protestants (48%) and majorities of black Protestants, white Catholics and seculars express approval of the Democratic agenda. White evangelicals express much lower approval for the Democrats' plans, but nearly as many evangelicals express approval (32%) as disapproval (37%). And majorities of all religious groups, including 57% of evangelicals, expect the Democrats to be successful in getting their programs passed into law.

    --
    Take a look and feel free: http://www.PieMenu.com
  132. DNA trees by DrYak · · Score: 1

    I think that the facts do not support a monkey->ape->human evolutionary path, but that all of them share a common ancestor in the distant past.


    That was whaat was though for a long time.
    But today, we live in a time where we have the complete genome sequence humans and several animals, and when we could sequence genes from unknown genome without too much difficulty.
    In these circumstances, you can build trees by counting the mutations and the "distance" between genoms in terms of DNA content change.
    And then some strange things start to appear : we are much more closer to chimps than we though before. It looks like that the chimpazee was an almost direct ancestror of us. They happened to find a nice niche in which they stabilised, where we descent from overpopulation of the chimps. We don't look having as much descended from the tree as actually being kicked out of it because it was over crowded, and we mutate much more in order to adapt ourselves to the new environment... ...and then, a couple of million years later, we came back with wood cutting machine and did some kind of genetic-memory pay-back time to those who kicked us out of the tree.

    Next time you refuse access to your peer due to overpopulation, think twice. You never know who they're going to come back in a few millions years.
    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  133. All you do... by anomaly · · Score: 1

    I mean no disrespect, but your argument is absurd. It's not a genetic recipe, it's the creation of a person - a unique person - as long as food and shelter are present, a BABY is born. To suggest otherwise is written smoke and mirrors. While you throw around scientific terms, the information above is inaccurate and misleading.

    You basically imply that the equivalent of the holocaust is going on all around you, and yet all you do is complain about it?
    Well, since you don't know me, you don't know if that's all I do.

    FWIW, I put my money where my mouth is.

    I advocate good parenting, foster care and adoption, even traveling internationally to teach on these topics. I provide financial support to women in "crisis pregnancy" and strongly encourage people to adopt unwanted children. I provide financial and emotional support to communities internationally where I am legally prevented from adopting orphans, but I can send money and send hope.

    I have supported my family members as they have adopted children. There are over 100 million orphans worldwide, with many parents dying daily, and it's a crisis that people are not caring for these kids. In the future I plan to be a foster parent and may also adopt children. Presently I have five biological kids six and under, so my plate is a little full, but when my kids get bigger, there will be more I can do.

    I financially support organizations that provide education about the horror of abortion, and counseling for the women and men who have made that choice.

    You will note that I don't take any action against women who have abortions, nor do I intervene in so-called clinics which leave one dead and one wounded. At this time, this practice, while horrible, is legal in this country and the majority of Americans want it to continue to be legal. I can educate others and hope to win enough hearts to my way of thinking that this practice is changed, but there are limits to what one can legally do, even if there are millions of murders occurring around me.

    So, before you go shooting off your mouth about topics on which you are ignorant, you might consider that there are people who are passionate on these topics *and* who take action. The kind of activism I engage in doesn't make the news like when kooks shoot doctors, but it does make a difference in the lives of women, men and children.

    Just because some people talk and do nothing does not mean that people who disagree with you are thoughtless and lazy.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:All you do... by plunge · · Score: 1

      "I mean no disrespect, but your argument is absurd. It's not a genetic recipe,"

      As I explained, that's exactly what it very literally is. Calling it absurd is not the same thing as arguing otherwise.

      "it's the creation of a person - a unique person - as long as food and shelter are present, a BABY is born."

      As long as two people meet and try to have kids, a BABY is born: it's the same thing: a potential, not an actuality.

      What is unique about a person is a particular unique _existence_, not a unique set of genes. Genes are just instructions on how to go about building a person a certain way: how to GET to that point. The fact that they are unique or not is irrelevant. Twins and clones are no less people in every sense. Human Chimeras are not two people, even though two different genomes fuse in utero to create them.

      And again, calling it "food and shelter" is not only inapt but emotionally overwrought. The vast majority of everything we know as a person simply isn't there yet.

      "To suggest otherwise is written smoke and mirrors. While you throw around scientific terms, the information above is inaccurate and misleading."

      Again, saying so isn't the same thing as arguing so or showing why it is.

      "Well, since you don't know me, you don't know if that's all I do."

      The only appropriate response to a holocaust going on in your neighborhood is armed resistance. I can't imagine any other response being even close to appropriate. I don't think you are thoughtless and lazy: I think you are using rhetoric way out of proportion to what is reasonable given the situation. The idea that simply from the moment of conception there is something of moral value breaks just about every convention of what morality is supposed to be ABOUT that I can think of. I think intuitively most people know this, which is why given the choice between saving a baby from a fire at a fertility clinic or saving a vat of up to even an infinite number of fertilized eggs (or unfertilized! It doesn't matter because fertilization isn't fundamentally necessary to start the process), almost everyone would save the baby, no matter what their rhetoric on the issue of abortion or stem cell research.

  134. Re:I'm confused - which "evolution" are we talking by Arba · · Score: 0

    The gaps in your so-called scientific evidence are far larger than you are willing to accept, hence my equating belief in evolution to "faith". Once again, there never has been verified proof of one species turning into another, there has mearly been a lot of speculation that this is the case. Given your faith in evolution, I assume that the archealogicial ruins give you adequate testimony on how today's skysrapers came to be as well.

  135. Re:"I say God Says it" by apt142 · · Score: 1

    Considering that "God", "Allah", "Buddha"... can not be proven or disproven, the contradictory evidence thing is not applicable. And considering that these ideals have been passed down from generation to generation wholey preserved, I wouldn't say "making shit up" either. Today's followers have little power to change the core beliefs of their religions.

    Most people go into a religious faith for the purposes of finding an answer or explanation to some personal question in their life. It's really no different than any scientist's curiousity and search into the natural world with the soul exception of methodology. Scientist must make limits in their work methods so their conclusions are univerally applicable.

    So... no, it's not about making shit up and justifying the conclusions. To make that comment suggests some gross presumptions of behavior.