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Creationism Museum Opening in Kentucky

Noel Linback writes "A new creationism-espousing museum is opening in the state of Kentucky. According to a New York Times article the museum depicts humans and dinosaurs living together in traditional 'diorama' style exhibit. 'Whether you are willing to grant the premises of this museum almost becomes irrelevant as you are drawn into its mixture of spectacle and narrative. Its 60,000 square feet of exhibits are often stunningly designed by Patrick Marsh, who, like the entire museum staff, declares adherence to the ministry's views; he evidently also knows the lure of secular sensations, since he designed the Jaws and King Kong attractions at Universal Studios in Florida. For the skeptic the wonder is at a strange universe shaped by elaborate arguments, strong convictions and intermittent invocations of scientific principle. For the believer, it seems, this museum provides a kind of relief: Finally the world is being shown as it really is, without the distortions of secularism and natural selection. '"

1,166 comments

  1. On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon. by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Funny

    I mean, the whiskey has to count for SOMETHING, right?

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  2. The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    And they rested on the seventh, but that was due to union regulations.

    1. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "And they rested on the seventh, but that was due to union regulations."

      You think they'd hire such liberal leftists to build something so important? No, the workers worked all seven days, after which they were dropped back off at the Home Depot parking lot where they were found.

    2. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Teppic_52 · · Score: 1

      They weren't resting, they were signing on. 6 days; the job must have been a terrible one, they were clearly all cowboys and got fired.

    3. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by mclaincausey · · Score: 4, Funny

      Bill Hicks:

      You ever noticed how people who believe in evolution look a little bit less evolved?

      "I b'lieve Gawd created me in 6 days!"

      "Yeah, it looks like he might've rushed it..."

      --
      (%i1) factor(777353);
      (%o1) 777353
    4. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by mobby_6kl · · Score: 5, Funny

      Since you mentioned Bill Hicks, there's another appropriate quote:

      You know the world is 12,000 years old and dinosaurs existed, they existed in that time, you'd think it would have been mentioned in the fucking Bible at some point.

      "And lo Jesus and the disciples walked to Nazareth. But the trail was blocked by a giant brontosaurus... with a splinter in his paw. And O the disciples did run a shriekin': 'What a big fucking lizard, Lord!' But Jesus was unafraid and he took the splinter from the brontosaurus's paw and the big lizard became his friend.

      "And Jesus sent him to Scotland where he lived in a loch for O so many years inviting thousands of American tourists to bring their fat fucking families and their fat dollar bills.

      "And oh Scotland did praise the Lord. Thank you Lord, thank you Lord. Thank you Lord."

      Here's a video

    5. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by solafide · · Score: 2, Informative
      But the word dinosaur was coined in the 1800s, while the KJV was translated in the 1600s. So it would be impossible to use words that would be coined in the future.

      On the other hand, the KJV does make mention of dragons, and the descriptions given of dragons do, I believe, fit that of dinosaurs.

    6. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Actually from what I remember there are some (respectable) hypthosis's that man's built in fear of dragons are from large flying dinosaurs - i.e. birds. (A bird is, after all, descended ). It is plausible that some of the larger flying dinosaurs did survive the mass extinction, as well as the small birds. If these larger birds survived until man arrived, then it's quite possible that man would gain a built-in genetic fear of flying birds. Which is where dragons come from.

    7. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by maspatra · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's pretty well established that the large flying dinosaurs were long extinct before the dawn of human beings; remember it took a long time since the extinction of dinosaurs before anything even remotely resembling homonids started appearing.

      What's more likely is that tales of dragons grew out of another animal--namely pre-existing reptiles, snakes and crocodilians. All primates have an innate, instinctual fear of snakes--in fact it's been argued that primate eyes evolved the way they did because of snakes. (Do a google search on "primate evolution snakes"--there's some interesting stuff to be read) As for fear of the crocodilians, that's a no-brainer--they're big, hungry, and can tear off your leg. While I don't know about western dragons, I read an article several years ago that argued quite well that stories of Chinese dragons grew out of crocodiles.

      But it makes sense--you want to think up a scary animal, make a big honking version of an animal that people are already instinctually afraid of--snakes. And make 'em fly too for good measure.

    8. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > man's built in fear of dragons

      The Chinese have more dragon myths than anyone, and in virtually none of them are the dragons these evils snarling rapacious beasts. More like powerful tricksters.

      Pteradons simply didn't exist when humans were kicking around -- probably not even when lemurs were the closest thing to us.

    9. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Xenographic · · Score: 1

      > What's more likely is that tales of dragons grew out of another animal--namely pre-existing reptiles, snakes and crocodilians.

      I personally always figured that someone found some fossils, say a nice big T-Rex skull or similar and the legends grew from there. Mind you, I have no proof, but that's what I've always conjectured.

      I mean, a T-Rex looks a LOT more like a dragon to me than a crocodile, but that's just me.

    10. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by bogjobber · · Score: 1

      It's also been suggested that dragons legends came from finding cave bear skulls. In many places marked "here be dragons" or some variant in Europe there have been cave bear skulls found. The Native Americans of the northern plains also had dragon legends based off of exposed fossils.

    11. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the word dinosaur was coined in the 1800s, while the KJV was translated in the 1600s. So it would be impossible to use words that would be coined in the future.

      On the other hand, the KJV does make mention of dragons, and the descriptions given of dragons do, I believe, fit that of dinosaurs.
      Sure, but if it's the freakin' word of god (or whatever), shouldn't you know?

      I mean, for something that supposedly accounts stuff about omniscient beings, the bible is full of rubbish.
    12. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by bgspence · · Score: 1

      So, if God created the heaven and earth in 6 days and on the 7th day he rested, why do we go back to work on Monday?

    13. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by dvice_null · · Score: 1

      > What's more likely is that tales of dragons grew out of another animal

      I bulieve that tales grew out from volcanos.

      People see a volcano. Mostly when they have seen a moving object, it has been an animal, so at first, they suspect that moving is caused by an animal. They start wondering what kind of an animal could live in a big mountain like and the appearance of a dragon starts to build up.

    14. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      . All primates have an innate, instinctual fear of snakes--in fact it's been argued that primate eyes evolved the way they did because of snakes.
      Well yeah, what do you expect after that snake tricked Adam and Eve into eating the bad fruit?
    15. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Of course, if you base your exegesis on an outdated translation like the KJV, then you deserve all the ridicule you get.

      Given the level of debate I see on the topics of religion in the United States, it's dead heat who's dumber, the fundamentalist Atheists or the fundamentalist Christians.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    16. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Um, I think it was *dinosaur fossils*. Otherwise there'd be stories of giant wombats & chipmunks, don't you think?

      You see a 6 foot T-Rex skull in a cave and you figure there are dragons inside. And you stay the hell away from that cave.

    17. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by blippy · · Score: 1

      You know the world is 12,000 years old and dinosaurs existed, they existed in that time, you'd think it would have been mentioned in the fucking Bible at some point.

      Let us suppose that dinosaurs did exists, and Jesus rode a velociraptor, if you like. Doesn't the mere fact that they no longer exist validate at least some of Darwin's claims? Seems to me, as soon as creationists acknowledge the existence of dinosaurs, their theories are already pretty much screwed.

    18. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Our school bible (went to a private, religious school) mentioned in a verse about the Leviathan that it probably describes a crocodile. The words snake and dragon are used interchangeably throughout the Bible and related texts.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    19. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let us suppose that dinosaurs did exists, and Jesus rode a velociraptor, if you like. Doesn't the mere fact that they no longer exist validate at least some of Darwin's claims?

      No, they're gone the way of the dodo bird and the red gazelle: another of God's great creations hunted to extinction by Fallen Man. It's very possible that the reason "civilization" developed in the mid-East, which now appears to be an inhospitable desert, is because of the rich abundance of dinosaur herds that provided an ample food supply, stout bones which could be used to build shelters, and thick skin for making hardy leather shoes.

      It's not clear why we haven't found any buildings with dinosaur bones for rafters, but I'm sure it's just a matter of time.

    20. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction (you had that first joke backwards):

      "Do you ever notice how people who believe in creationism look really un-evolved."

      The quote is at the four minute mark of this clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qmglGWMsdk

    21. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by maspatra · · Score: 1

      A couple problems with that: Fossils aren't that common, and to the layman they might not even look like bones. (since what they really are are bone-shaped rocks) Reconstructions of entire skeletons wasn't something that was done since until very recently. Contrary to what you see in cartoons and the like, fossils don't look like "big skeletons intact in the wall," they're usually mass jumbles of bones strewn over large areas of space. Ancient people might (and I stress the word "might") have been able to tell from a fossilized bone in the ground that it was a reptile-like animal, but not being able to reconstruct the skeleton, they would have had to have used a referent of an animal they already knew of when guessing what it looked like. (ie snakes/crocodiles)

      Basically it's very unlikely that even if they were a factor, fossilized dinosaurs alone are responsible for dragon myths. They're too rare, and were too hard to identify to be the deciding factor.

    22. Re:The museum was built in 6 days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll see your Bill Hicks, and raise you a Lewis Black.

      "There are people, who believe, that dinosaurs and men, lived together. That they roamed the earth at the same time. There are museums that children go to, in which they build dioramas, to show them this. And what this is, purely and simply, is a clinical, psychotic reaction. They are crazy. They are stone, cold, f***, nuts. I can't be kind about this. Because these people are watching the Flintstones as if it were a documentary."

  3. Heading off at the pass by conigs · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just remember: not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago. Some of us actually believe in evolution. (Well, us non-fundies anyway.)

    --
    Slashdot: where repeating an article in a post is "+5 Insightful"
    1. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ice+Wewe · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wait... wait... wait. You're telling me that some Christians believe in evolution? Hmm, so if you're willing to compromise on evolution, why not gay marriage?
      That's it, I'm starting the Homosexual Creationism Museum which honors homosexual Neanderthals and dinosaurs.
      I think that's a fair compromise.

    2. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess, then, that you define fundamentalist as "someone who believes the bible"? If you're unsure of the start, what makes you sure of the end?

    3. Re:Heading off at the pass by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 2, Funny

      Agreed

      "The other catastrophe, in the museum's view, is of more recent vintage: the abandonment of the Bible by church figures who began to treat the story of creation as if it were merely metaphorical, and by Enlightenment philosophers, who chipped away at biblical authority"

      As a poet, I'm offended by the phrase "merely" metaphorical.

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    4. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note: I am about the least Christian person that you will ever meet.

      That being said, I think when a Christian demonstrates the ability to not think in black and white and exercise a bit of common sense, they should be applauded instead of attacked.

    5. Re:Heading off at the pass by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 0, Troll

      Just remember: not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago. Some of us actually believe in evolution. (Well, us non-fundies anyway.)

      Right, but you still need to believe in the Big Sky Daddy -- just as ridiculous.

      Rich.

    6. Re:Heading off at the pass by mustafap · · Score: 1

      >Just remember: not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago

      Only the ones who do not know the word "allegory"

      Evidently there is at least one such person but I suspect the vast silent majority of C/c's do.

      --
      Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
    7. Re:Heading off at the pass by mustafap · · Score: 1

      damm. Didn't hit the preview button first. Someone put me out of my misery and mod me out of existance.

      --
      Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
    8. Re:Heading off at the pass by catbutt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well the whole thing about God being perfect, but making humans flawed, blaming humans for being flawed, and then punishing someone else to make up for those flaws .....that seems a tad silly as well.

      Or do you just consider Christianity the idea that we should be nice to each other? Because I don't think Jesus invented that concept.

    9. Re:Heading off at the pass by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      Didn't hit the preview button first.

      I take it you meant the opposite of what you wrote.

    10. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      If you do not believe what you read in the bible, then by what right do you call yourself a Christian? It sounds to me like you are a "Christian" by name only, enough to assuage your guilty liberal conscience but no more.

    11. Re:Heading off at the pass by conigs · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I normally don't respond to ACs, but here goes:
      In its broadest sense, a fundamentalist is someone who believes that unvarying principles must apply to all people or every situation, in this case, the Bible as absolute truth. So, if someone believes every word of the Bible is absolute truth and nothing is metaphorical, simplified in terms that the people of the time would understand, and was completely accurate in its translation from language to language, then that would qualify them as a fundamentalist in my mind. In general, there is nothing wrong with that. I see no problem with believing what you believe. It's when you force that belief on other people that causes problems. Open discussion of beliefs on the other hand, is good for everyone involved.
      Now, what do I believe? I am a Christian, but I believe there is one problem with the Bible: it was physically written be humans. This means two primary things to me:
      1. It could only be written in terms that the person writing it could understand. This could lead to simplification of concepts. For example, in the story of creation, seven days may not necessarily equate to seven 24-hour periods. It could just mean seven stages, where each stage could take years, centuries, millenniums, etc.
      2. Because humans are flawed, some of those who physically wrote the Bible may have injected their views of the world into it. It then becomes a problem to decipher what may have been written by a human voice and not God's. This can only be done through self reflection which will be different for each person.
      This is just what I believe and I have no expectations of other people to accept or adhere to this belief. This is where I depart from fundamentalists.
      --
      Slashdot: where repeating an article in a post is "+5 Insightful"
    12. Re:Heading off at the pass by conigs · · Score: 1

      See my post above for clarification on this issue.

      --
      Slashdot: where repeating an article in a post is "+5 Insightful"
    13. Re:Heading off at the pass by nattt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The logic and reasoning that points to the earth not being 4000 years old, and the logic and reasoning that points to evolution being what actually happened, also allow us to see through the charade that is christianity though. Now, if you were a deist, I could amost accept that, but christianity is just a bunch of made up stories. At least the fundies take their holy book by it's word. If you pick and choose from the Bible, you're demonstrating that you yourself have a much better sense of morals than the god you worship. If you've ditched the nasty bits of the Bible already, why not go the whole distance and ditch the rest. You know you want to!

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    14. Re:Heading off at the pass by mustafap · · Score: 1

      No, because if I had I would have realised I'd miss-read the post I was criticising.

      --
      Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
    15. Re:Heading off at the pass by conigs · · Score: 1

      See my reply to an AC for further clarification on how I view the Bible.

      I'll be the first to admit that the primary reason I am Christian is because I was raised that way. Are there other religions out there that may be correct? Definitely. However, because of my personal history (which I am not about to poorly summarize on a /. post), I am still sticking with Christianity. Religion is a deeply personal topic, and the discussion of it can offend/enrage people very easily, so I'm trying to keep this light.

      What I will say, though, is that religion itself was created be humans. Humans are inherently flawed. Therefor religion may be flawed as well.*


      *I believe faith, on the other hand, is what is created by God. Will these words come back to bite me in the ass? Probably. But it's what I believe, and beliefs are difficult to explain or concretely prove.

      --
      Slashdot: where repeating an article in a post is "+5 Insightful"
    16. Re:Heading off at the pass by Belacgod · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Very well said. Furthermore, the arguments presented in the Bible are not logical arguments, which would lose their force if combined with shoddy reasoning. The Bible is a series of stories that advocate particular moral choices, and seek to make those moral choices attractive. If you find those moral choices attractive, it doesn't matter that the imperative to do them doesn't come coherently from the text, because the imperative to do them comes from yourself, and the Bible is only a way to encourage yourself to follow them, inspiration rather than command. Some may find the Bible inspiring enough to change their actions and principles to coincide with it, but they're not being convinced by any sort of logic--they're being convinced by the emotional attractiveness of the Bible's principles. That's what religion is--a set of explanations of the world and moral principles that derive their force by making us feel good when we follow them. It's not necessary to accept every part of your chosen religion to get the benefit of it--you just have to like it enough to be inspired to act accordingly. Clearly the Creationist Museum operators have taken a very different part of Christianity to heart than Conigs has.

    17. Re:Heading off at the pass by brezel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Read the bible before trying to dispute it, you might learn something. You don't even have to read far to see that God created man in His image (i.e. perfect). Their disobedience caused their fall which brought on death and corruption. if humans had been perfect they wouldn't have disobeyed in the first place.
      -> god is not perfect.
      discussing with christians is just too easy. anybody with half a brain should see that statements like that can't even withstand a simple logical test.
    18. Re:Heading off at the pass by Belial6 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Hey now, you neglect the possibility that disobeying was the perfect thing to do, and hence god is punishing humans for behaving perfectly. Which leads to the simple logical conclusion that God is evil.

    19. Re:Heading off at the pass by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 2, Insightful
      OK, I see the jkorz has already replied, but I'm going to do so as well...but hopefully less inflammatory.

      Well the whole thing about God being perfect, but making humans flawed, blaming humans for being flawed, and then punishing someone else to make up for those flaws .....that seems a tad silly as well.


      Yes, that chain of four ideas does seem rather silly. What religion are you referring to? Christians don't believe God made humans sinful. He made us capable of making moral choices, but we're not punished for being able to sin--we're punished for sin.

      Nor do Christians believe that God punished "someone else". Jesus was God incarnate. God taking on the punishment for the evil we choose is rather different than God "punishing someone else to make up for those flaws".

      So...What religion were you talking about, again?
    20. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there is a creator of the universe, do you really think that he would be bound by human logic? Of course not.

    21. Re:Heading off at the pass by Lomacar · · Score: 0

      If God made us unable to disobey him then we would simply be automatons, no different then the many mindless forces and systems in the universe. God gave us free will which is part of the "in his image" deal.

    22. Re:Heading off at the pass by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Well the whole thing about God being perfect, but making humans flawed, blaming humans for being flawed, and then punishing someone else to make up for those flaws .....that seems a tad silly as well.

      Some religions believe that this life is a *test*. Exams give you trials and tribulations.

    23. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "if humans had been perfect they wouldn't have disobeyed in the first place."

      But how could a perfect human be considered perfect without the freewill to choose right or wrong?

    24. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, faith can be a wonderful thing. As long as people don't make a religion out of it...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    25. Re:Heading off at the pass by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Just remember: not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago. Some of us actually believe in evolution. (Well, us non-fundies anyway.)

      But why do you let nutballs damage the reputation of Christianity with little or no challenge? It is not doing any good for your group.

    26. Re:Heading off at the pass by localman · · Score: 1

      I actually think that's the key -- somewhere along the line people got the idea that "mere" metaphor and myth were somehow inferior to science and fact. That thinking set the stage for the sad extremist dichotomy we see now. As far as I can tell they are all of them required for a full human experience and understanding. My love of science doesn't prevent me from recognizing the beauty, the usefulness, and indeed the "truth" embodied in myths. I believe the bible to be wholly the work of man, but I also think that it is a book that offers great insight into the human condition -- not in spite of its obvious flaws, but because of them: it shows us the tormented neediness we experience, enough to create a "god" so insecure he seems to desperately needs our approval, the absurd idea of a chosen people to justify our crimes against each other, the nonsensical idea that one man's death can somehow absolve us of our own wrongdoing... it's so ridiculous and so terrifically human.

      Okay, I'm babbling now, but it's been on my mind. Continue on with your poetry :)

    27. Re:Heading off at the pass by brezel · · Score: 1

      If God made us unable to disobey him then we would simply be automatons, no different then the many mindless forces and systems in the universe. God gave us free will which is part of the "in his image" deal. the same ridiculous argument again. i have heard that a million times. if he gave us a free will he cannot punish us for our decisions. (= kick us out of paradise). do you religious guys actually ever think something through? the fact that in the bible god punishes mankind which is assumed to be perfect directly contradicts that god is infallible.

    28. Re:Heading off at the pass by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1
      First...

      God created man in His image (i.e. perfect).


      And then....

      Their disobedience caused their fall which brought on death and corruption.


      Disobedience is a flaw, hence God is flawed?

      But nevertheless, why should "death and corruption" of all of creation be the result of a single impulsive decision of an individual thousands of generations ago? The whole concept is flawed and stems from a stern paternal model that forms the foundation of many bronze-age religions.

      Further when you examine nature you see clearly that the "red in tooth and claw" component is a required consequence of natural selection not the consequence of "disobedience". For example nearly 40 percent of life is parasitic with life cycles that are very attuned to their hosts. Are you suggesting that "perfect" organism like the guinea worm had some other helpful purpose and then after "the fall" evolved to its present horrendous mode of making a living?
    29. Re:Heading off at the pass by brezel · · Score: 1

      > "if humans had been perfect they wouldn't have disobeyed in the first place."

      But how could a perfect human be considered perfect without the freewill to choose right or wrong? why not? how does having a free will relate to being perfect? right! it doesn't.
    30. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Funny enough, seven "stages" would be even closer to the original text than "days". The problem is that it can be interpreted both ways, and that "night fell and the day broke" (which, again, offers quite a bit of room for interpretation, becuase it could just as well be translated as "God ended the day and got up after rest") between those "stages/days" kinda tilted the interpretation towards day.

      I'm not sure, but if someone who wrote that book could come back to life and see what happened to it through the millenia, he might comment "A cool story. But I thought you wanted to show me what I wrote?"

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    31. Re:Heading off at the pass by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 1

      if he gave us a free will he cannot punish us for our decisions. (= kick us out of paradise). do you religious guys actually ever think something through?

      Eh? This is bizarre. I really can't see what you think that follows. Could you present your argument, instead of simply asserting your conclusion?

      I.e., if I have a free will, and I choose to rape a woman...Exactly how does my free will lessen my responsibility? Usually people argue that if we don't have free will, we shouldn't be punished for our choices. (Maybe put down like a rabid dog, or isolated from the rest of society, or (if possible) rehabilitated till we're safe, but not punished.)

    32. Re:Heading off at the pass by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

      This arguement is a complete copout.

      One can have free will without the propensity to "disobedience".

      And one can have the propensity for disobedience without having free will.

    33. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I already have troubles with another part of the Genesis. Since God is omniscient and transcends space and time, he must have known that Adam and Eve will eat from the forbidden fruit of knowledge. Why did he punish them for something he must have known all along? Why did he let it happen first of all? Why did he put the trees into the garden of Eden, it would have been in his power (remember, omnipotent) to put them somewhere else so they could not reach it.

      Personally, I think God framed the humans. And such a God I should worship? I'd rather say, he wanted to kick the nudists out and needed some reason. But then I wonder, what reason would God need to do what he pleases? Who does he have to report to?

      Somehow, it doesn't add up.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    34. Re:Heading off at the pass by NMerriam · · Score: 4, Informative

      He made us capable of making moral choices, but we're not punished for being able to sin--we're punished for sin.


      What sin? She ate a fruit when it was offered to her, by a being that God _allowed_ into the Garden. Yes, she was told not to eat the fruit, but was never told why or what the consequences were, despite God being omniscient enough to know he had created man with curiosity.

      Leaving completely ignorant and unsophisticated children alone with the greatest predator in the universe does not seem like a wise parenting decision.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    35. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disobedience isn't a flaw? So did god make a mistake?

    36. Re:Heading off at the pass by phildawg · · Score: 1

      Since when does Christianity say that the world is only 4000 years old? I don't know if anybody has thrown out an exact date but people in the old testament lived to be 800 years... There were a lot of generations before Christ. You, my friend may not be as far off fundamentally as you think. The fundamental Christian just believes the world became only shortly before the existence of humanity. It's incredibly hard to grasp 100s of millions of years, this is where Fundamental Christianity differs on the age of the world... not running around ignorant acting like it's only 4,000 years old... Just that it's not 100s of millions of years old.

    37. Re:Heading off at the pass by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 1

      Or, they consciously, deliberately, knowingly rejected the one command given to them. They turned their back on God's authority; they turned their back on the sufficiency of God's provision, in a prideful, selfish grasping at the one thing God had warned them against. They decided they didn't want what God gave them...and so they got their way.

    38. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "Well the whole thing about God being perfect, but making humans flawed, blaming humans for being flawed, and then punishing someone else to make up for those flaws .....that seems a tad silly as well."

      "Silly" is just the way you understand. If by "perfect human" you mean a "human without choice" then a perfect human would be pretty much like a robot/software. I don't know about you, but I would not like to be such a "perfect human" then. And it certainly wouldn't be an interesting creation!

      God created human perfectly according to his desire, not according to our notion of what perfection is. Besides, if the original human chose to be imperfect (different from what the creator desired), then all of his descendants would naturally not understand what the original purpose was.

      If your father gives you the freedom to drive a car and to drink whatever you want, is he being illogical? If you choose to get drunk and drive, will he be blaming you after you crash the car? Isn't he just explaining you what your choice has caused? Has he punished you with the accident or are you just receiving on yourself the consequences of your bad choice? Was his decision, to give you the choice, flawed in the first place?

    39. Re:Heading off at the pass by Frostalicious · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In general, there is nothing wrong with that. I see no problem with believing what you believe. It's when you force that belief on other people that causes problems.

      I think the main problem is that if you are a fundamentalist, then that neccesitates that you either try to force those beliefs onto others, or kill all nonbelievers. If you are absolutely certain that your belief system is correct, and inherent in your belief system is that all other belief systems are evil, then it follows that you want everyone to have your belief system. At that point things like secular government and religious tolerance just dissapear. How can you state that the Bible is the direct infallible word of God, and in the same breath say that we aren't going to use this in government, and we are OK with the fact others don't believe what God is saying?

    40. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      apparently, since god "incarnate" was punished on our behalf, we were to be spared, but if you believe your god to be omnipotent control freak, the dude has been kicking our butts before, while, and after the jew got nailed, hasn't he?

      yeah, the dude works in mysterious way, eh.

    41. Re:Heading off at the pass by PenisLands · · Score: 0

      Hello,

      I don't mean any offense to you, but if you believe that there definitely are other correct religions out there, then that's not true Christianity.
      Jesus said in John 14:6: "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father, except through me."

      Just wanted to bring this to your attention. I hope you think about this. And BTW, you might find thebereancall.org to be a very interesting site.

      Good luck.

    42. Re:Heading off at the pass by nattt · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, your cleverly presented argument relies upon human logic, and is hence, by your own argument, invalid. Have a nice day.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    43. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Too bad, this god didn't send his door-to-door salesmen out to all the alleys to pass the memo.

      Anyway, your god, being omniscient, knew what would happen, and did what he did anyway, in effect fixing the result in advance. So that's how "god gave us free will?"

    44. Re:Heading off at the pass by bccomm · · Score: 1

      Why is this on slashdot in the first place?

      Really, why?

    45. Re:Heading off at the pass by nattt · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your most honest and thoughtful reply. My only argument against you being Christian, is your allegiance to that religion gives weight to fundementalists who also say they belong to that religion. Sounds like you are very un-fundie though, and as I say, by ditching the nasty bits of the Bible, you've shown yourself to be morally superior to the god character in that book, and to the fundies.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    46. Re:Heading off at the pass by tiffany98121 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You still believe in the unsupported theory that there is a supernatural being that created the universe and everything in it though. This position is just as unlikely to be true as the young earth theory.

    47. Re:Heading off at the pass by Empiric · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to explicate this fully, because your statement is pretty far off-base as to what the Church has taught regarding sin, but I will note that at minimum you'd have to de-oversimplify your notion of "flawed" with respect to the notions of responsibility here.

      As a simple analogous example, take the war in Iraq. Few individual Americans have "direct blame" for the Iraq situation, yet it can be reasonably asserted that as an American, I retain a broad responsibility for the situation which I can be called upon to make effort to correct.

      If you want to argue the Church's stance, at least let's start from what that stance -is-, which I think you'd find pretty well elaborated here.

      I'd start with the part stating...

      "There can be no sin that is not voluntary, the learned and the ignorant admit this evident truth", writes St. Augustine (De vera relig., xiv, 27).

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    48. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could only be written in terms that the person writing it could understand. This could lead to simplification of concepts. For example, in the story of creation, seven days may not necessarily equate to seven 24-hour periods.

      Time to break out the Occam's razor on this one: why do you cling to your belief structure even to the point of thinking God would bend time and space just so that he could write that it took 7 days to make the universe? Doesn't that just seem like grasping at straws to you.

      To put it another way: I liked Lord of the Rings. I don't think it is true though, or even that "well it is kinda true"

    49. Re:Heading off at the pass by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      Okay, but how is that a moral choice or a sin or a decision to reject what God gave them? You can say it was a mistake or a bad choice, but unless you simply assume the tautology "God==Moral==Good", there was no reason whatsoever for man to believe he was doing anything more complex than eating a fruit. He was not informed of the consequences, nor of the nature of the challenge, nor of the fact that it even was a challenge, nor that the universe's most powerful and persuasive predator was lurking nearby and had all eternity in which to tempt.

      It seems to me that God was being colossally dickish if the story is to be taken literally. It would be like locking an immortal six year old in a prison for immortal pedophiles and then telling him never to let them touch him in any way for all eternity, but they're allowed to do anything they like to change his mind and you won't lift a finger to stop them.

      As a metaphor, of course, it works wonderfully as a way to describe the complexity of human life as we grew into self-aware, curious beings and abandoned our animal innocence and simplicity of life.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    50. Re:Heading off at the pass by jcr · · Score: 1

      Read the bible before trying to dispute it, you might learn something.

      Or you might just be wasting your time with a moribund mythology.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    51. Re:Heading off at the pass by Goaway · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It could only be written in terms that the person writing it could understand. This could lead to simplification of concepts. For example, in the story of creation, seven days may not necessarily equate to seven 24-hour periods. It could just mean seven stages, where each stage could take years, centuries, millenniums, etc.

      You know, even 4000 years ago, people did understand the concept of periods of time longer than a day.

    52. Re:Heading off at the pass by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The book of Daniel is about a man who commits genocide because god tells him so. Period. How is that ever an attractive moral story?

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    53. Re:Heading off at the pass by tftp · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Personally, I think God framed the humans.

      Here is another example. Let's assume I am programming my new robotic dog. I explicitly code a statement that says to not bark. Then I run the code. The dog runs around and then barks. What options do I have now?

      1. Throw the dog out of the window, declare that it knowingly offended and denied me, and make a law that all dogs of this type must be manufactured with intentionally built-in defects, from now and forever, as a punishment for the sin of this specific dog that I built myself from the ground up.
      2. Admit that my code has a bug, find the problem, fix it and rerun the code to see if it now works properly.

      A secondary test is to tell which action fits a wise man and which action fits a spoiled brat.

    54. Re:Heading off at the pass by IdleTime · · Score: 1

      Baahh.. You are an atheist just like me, it's just that I believe in 1 less god than you do. You are atheist when it comes to every god except the christian god.

      Maybe you can tell me why God hates amputees? There is not a single amputee who had had a limb regrown after prayer even though your bible says you can pray for anything and you will get it, ANYTHING!

      --
      If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
    55. Re:Heading off at the pass by alexhard · · Score: 1

      Logic is not "human", it is intrinsically universal.

      --
      Infinite time means everything that can happen, will. You being you is absolutely incidental. You do not exist.
    56. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone knows it was created just over 6000 years ago. 4004 BC. On Sunday 21st October, to be precise. At 9am, give or take quarter of an hour.

      Or was it noon on the 23rd October?

    57. Re:Heading off at the pass by Belacgod · · Score: 1

      Obviously you don't find that part of the Bible morally inspiring. Neither do I. The point I was making is that the Bible is not a series of logical arguments, which hang together and if you accept one you should accept the rest. It's a set of moral stories which, if you agree with the morals, inspires you to act according to those morals.

    58. Re:Heading off at the pass by Danny+Rathjens · · Score: 1
      To be pedantic, no one believes it was created 4,000 years ago. The 4,000 number comes from 4,000 years B.C. (Before Christ, which was 2,000 years ago.) So they believe the earth (and universe) was created 6,000 years ago. I think the 4,004 B.C estimate came from some arch-bishop in england a couple centuries ago. ah, here it is:

      The Ussher chronology is a 17th-century chronology of the history of the world formulated from an interpretative reading of the Bible by James Ussher, the Anglican Archbishop of Armagh ... Ussher deduced that the first day of Creation began at nightfall preceding Sunday October 23, 4004 BC
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ussher_chronology(The article also shows there were other famous estimates of 3929 BC, 3952 BC, and 3949 BC, which explains the rounding off to 4000 BC)
    59. Re:Heading off at the pass by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      For that matter, is there anything in the Bible that even implies that the seven days are contiguous? Hypothetically speaking, could they not be seven "work periods" spread over several billion years?

      I'm no believer, but I do sometimes think that people on both sides take the whole "7 days" thing far too literally.

    60. Re:Heading off at the pass by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Troll

      i hate to break it to you, but god is as real as the tooth fairy ok. if he isn't STRIKE ME DOWN!!!! i'm still typing so looks like i'm right and your wrong, thanks for playing

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    61. Re:Heading off at the pass by moz25 · · Score: 1

      Based on what you're saying, it sounds like you're cherry-picking the parts of the bible you like and ignoring the parts you don't. People just read into it whatever they already believe. In that sense, it cannot act as a sole basis for morality without external reference, which is odd as people are advocating it as the sole reference.

    62. Re:Heading off at the pass by HungSoLow · · Score: 1

      But you must consider yourself to be the "perfect coder" for the analogy to be valid. If you made a mistake you wouldn't be the perfect software designer that you must inherently be!

    63. Re:Heading off at the pass by bdjacobson · · Score: 1

      He made us capable of making moral choices, but we're not punished for being able to sin--we're punished for sin.


      What sin? She ate a fruit when it was offered to her, by a being that God _allowed_ into the Garden. Yes, she was told not to eat the fruit, but was never told why or what the consequences were, despite God being omniscient enough to know he had created man with curiosity.

      Leaving completely ignorant and unsophisticated children alone with the greatest predator in the universe does not seem like a wise parenting decision. I bet if he hadn't let Satan into the garden there would be plenty of people complaining that he didn't give us free will. People just don't like thinking that they are going to be accountable for their actions; that's the only problem.
    64. Re:Heading off at the pass by Mspangler · · Score: 0

      "Which leads to the simple logical conclusion that God is evil."

      Ah, Catharism. The God of the old testament is "evil God", the God that Jesus spoke of in the New testament is the good God.

      That got a whole lot of people burned at the stake in the south of France. Pope "Innocent" cleaned that sect right out, because clearly Jesus said "Slaughter all who believe in multiple gods." Well, He must have said it somewhere, a Pope can not be wrong.

      By the way, your Indulgence money is late. Your ancestors will be burning in Hell shortly. (Another Pope Approved Message from your God.)

    65. Re:Heading off at the pass by brian0918 · · Score: 1

      You still believe in fantasies unsupported by reality. This makes it easier for the whackos to believe what they do, and the fundamentalists to act on their beliefs. Your acceptance of blind faith condones the same blind faith that leads to violence and murder.

    66. Re:Heading off at the pass by dbIII · · Score: 1
      That is a good point. Step back a little and you'll see the "monkey trial" and other bits of foolishness are just offshoots of Christianity getting authortiy by challenging other authorities. First they challenged the idea of educated clergy and now that they have acheived that they are challenging the idea of secular education - evolution just looks like the weak point to them becuase nobody wants to be portayed as a dirty ape.

      It really was the same when some of these radical groups that call themselves conservative demonised black people (and set up all those white only bible colleges) and then after that homosexuals - they need somebody to hate, and for some of those groups it really is all about money. The number of US based cults in the Pacific that just funnel money taken from poor Pacific Islanders and funnel it back the the USA is suprising - creationism is big business for some merchants in the temple.

    67. Re:Heading off at the pass by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Try to follow along, this isn't that complicated. It has been stated in this thread that:
        - "...God created man in His image (i.e. perfect)."
        - "God gave us free will which is part of the "in his image" deal"

      If we have free will, and we are perfect, then all our choices will be perfect. Is the decision to rape someone perfect? I don't think so, so that is a red herring.

      Anyway, god did not punish Adam and Eve for raping anyone, he punished them for eating a fruit. Now if they where perfect before sin, how could they have made a choice deserving of punishment by God? That is what doesn't make sense.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    68. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As a practicing Flying Spaghetti Monsterist FSM. I can explain that the FSM does like pirates, and given such an affinity would be entirely unwilling to cure a peg leg as it just adds character to the planet..

      ...ducks...

    69. Re:Heading off at the pass by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Well said!

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    70. Re:Heading off at the pass by wrf3 · · Score: 1

      Frostalicious wrote: I think the main problem is that if you are a fundamentalist, then that neccesitates that you either try to force those beliefs onto others, or kill all nonbelievers.

      There's a germ of truth in this, but it isn't the whole story. It is true that the only thing one can do with an enemy is to kill them or convert them. That's why there is a heaven and a hell. But there are two missing parts to your statement. First, Christianity is first and foremost about right belief, one of the central tenets being that Jesus physically rose from the dead. Not only must this be freely believed, I don't know of any way to force someone into believing this. I suppose that someone can be forced to say it, but one must really mean it. Therefore, in Christianity, a forced conversion is no conversion at all (and, yes, I'm aware that this hasn't always been followed. Not all Christians are right.) Second, your statement assumes that we get to be the judge. The parable of the "wheat and the tares" (e.g. Mt 13:24-30) shows that this isn't the case. In particular, God commands us to "Let both of them [believers and nonbelievers] grow together until the harvest; and at harvest time I will tell the reapers, Collect the weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my barn."

    71. Re:Heading off at the pass by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Which leads to the simple logical conclusion that God is evil.

      That's how some of these cults portray it - it's all about smiting. For example the idiot that declared that God was punishing the USA with 9/11 due to lesbians. I believe the same idiot put a Fatwah on a South American President. He's dead but there are a lot more of those nasty Ayotallah's out there preaching that God wants some more evil done ASAP. It's often not about Christianity (these people would preach that Christ stoned prostitutes to death and not that he halted the stoning) or Islam but money and politics.

    72. Re:Heading off at the pass by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      there would be plenty of people complaining that he didn't give us free will


      I thought both we and the garden were perfect, why would anyone complain about anything? And how is it a matter of taking responsibility for our own actions? I wasn't in the garden, Adam and Eve were. Original sin only corrupted the whole race in perpetuity because that's the rule God made. God certainly had the power to pull the fertilized eggs from Eve's womb before they were born and have them grow up in the Garden and make their own choices. Satan's betrayal didn't condemn all the other angels, why did our race (which was supposed to be in His own image, no less!) get such a lousy deal? It's God's choice to be such an egotistical, prideful and vindictive jerk that we're all suffering for. Even us lowly imperfect humans eventually figured out it was unfair to make children pay for the mistakes of their parents.

      It just doesn't make any sense except as a metaphor or morality tale, which is of course how the Jews always interpreted it until some fundamentalist Christian came along and decided retroactively that it was supposed to be literally about a garden and a serpent.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    73. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there is only one God, and He was evil in the Old Testament, but good in the New Testament, then clearly He underwent some self-improvement.

      Now, as God, He only reached this point of self-improvement two thousand years ago, so punishing Man for not yet doing the same is somewhat hypocritical, I think. In fact, it suggests that He hasn't actually reached the point He'd like us to think he has... God is probably deluding Himself and is just punishing Man for His own failings.

    74. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm guessing because the editors wanted to post it, and being the editors of slashdot they have that right.

    75. Re:Heading off at the pass by dbIII · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Another thing is leading fundamantalists beleive the book is absolute but don't bother to learn the languages it was written in to discuss what it says like the Biblical scholars of other groups have been doing for centuries. Even worse - they are actively anti-intellectual, which is really what the creation vs evolution thing is about and why it's really a US only thing. It isn't the main issue that is just how it manifests there.

    76. Re:Heading off at the pass by tftp · · Score: 1
      You sound like if there are programmers who do not consider themselves (and only themselves) perfect coders :-)

      But on the subject of your comment - this is indeed a tough case when an omnipotent being fails in doing something. It's either you are not omnipotent, after all, or you haven't failed. You can't blame the tools because then you acknowledge your lack of skill in using them. And definitely you can't blame the product that you made because it was you who made it in its entirety; if the product failed then it's because you made it this way, so it's your own fault again. It's tough to be all-powerful and all-knowing, it might bite you somewhere.

      I remember reading about the troubles those omni-qualities of the God caused to early religions. Basically, one of them could be told as this:

      • Can God create his own identical clone? (answer YES or else God is not omnipotent.)
      • Can then Gods fight and defeat each other?
        • YES: one or both die: then the defeated God was not omnipotent because he failed to win.
        • NO: then God is not omnipotent because he failed to overcome the opponent.

      This pretty much illustrates logical impossibility of omnipotence, and kicks a major stone out of the foundation of many religions. Even Q, however powerful they were, could not deal with many aspects of themselves.

    77. Re:Heading off at the pass by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      As for those who don't, a rogues gallery...

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    78. Re:Heading off at the pass by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      if I have a free will, and I choose to rape a woman

      Then you weren't perfect to start with. Being perfect would imply that you would never want to do something imperfect, even if you had the ability to do it. In other words, wanting to rape implies imperfection.

    79. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phoobarnvaz · · Score: 1

      not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago. Some of us actually believe in evolution. (Well, us non-fundies anyway.)

      Having gone at one time to a liberal arts (ie...christian) college...had the major idiot during the 1980's come to speak to the student body in the chapel. Not only was he laughed at by said conservative student body...but those like myself...attempted to show him the errors of his ways. Unlike a normal rational human being...this person could not be swayed by showing him the partial knowledge he used showed the complete opposite information when he put everything together. For some reason...he couldn't tell me anything about dragons or unicorns...but was so sure about the universe being only 6000 years old.

      Now...not so amazed...especially since an idiot(s) who does know the difference between symbolism & non-symbolism in literature is meant to be misled by anyone or anything which says I am right. When your premise is wrong at the outset...you keep believing a lie & do everything in your power to perpetuate that lie.

      --
      Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia. - Charles M. Schulz
    80. Re:Heading off at the pass by Firethorn · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, I actually encountered a guy like this - He said that the bible was infallible, I asked him about translation errors, and he said even the translation was perfect - so I asked which translation he read. He didn't even know that there are dozens of translations into english alone. He couldn't even name which one it was. But it was still infallible - written by god, Yessir.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    81. Re:Heading off at the pass by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1
      That was a really good analogy! It is hard for us humans with our limited minds to understand and comprehend certain things. Especially when confronted with such seemingly conflicting characteristics of God as Him being 'just' and 'loving'.

      I too, find it better to think in terms of a parent-child analogy. A parent wants their child to do the right thing, which means sometimes (or rather, quite often) not letting the child do the thing she or he wants and thus making the child upset and hearing stuff from them like "I hate you daddy!". The child does not realize their limitation and cannot predict the outcome of their actions but a parent can.

    82. Re:Heading off at the pass by Nephilium · · Score: 1

      First of all... I say we all meet in a bar and hold this discussion, I'm sure it would be much more fun... :)

      Now... as to the idea of hell as punishment. One thought is that hell is experiencing everything that you have done, but with perfect clarity, so you fully appreciate the consequences of your actions. Another thought is that hell is merely being cut off from God (in which there are multiple thoughts as well, one of them being you experience God, and get more hooked on that feeling then a heroin junkie, then get cut off). A third is that hell is just a true anarchy, do whatever you want to, and realize that Bubba next door will do whatever he wants, and to whomever he wants to. Then there's the people who believe you actually get a nice bath in fire and sulphur...

      And of course... these are just a sampling of Christian beliefs...

      Nephilium... just an Agnostic who loves discussing various mythological belief systems...

    83. Re:Heading off at the pass by brezel · · Score: 1

      I.e., if I have a free will, and I choose to rape a woman...Exactly how does my free will lessen my responsibility? it doesn't. but a perfect individual would never make a wrong decision. (meaning a decision that would enrage their creator)

    84. Re:Heading off at the pass by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      So, if someone believes every word of the Bible is absolute truth and nothing is metaphorical, simplified in terms that the people of the time would understand, and was completely accurate in its translation from language to language, then that would qualify them as a fundamentalist in my mind. In general, there is nothing wrong with that.

      What, are you kidding? In general, of course there's something wrong with that! It means that person is terminally naive, has zero understanding of history or human nature, and is generally too fucking stupid to be a functioning member of enlightened society. Such willful ignorance is not only wrong, but also downright dangerous to the rest of us.

      I'm sorry, but that's just the way it is.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    85. Re:Heading off at the pass by glomph · · Score: 1

      i hate to break it to you, but god is as real as the tooth fairy ok. if he isn't STRIKE ME DOWN!!!! i'm still typing so looks like i'm right and your wrong, thanks for playing

      She will, just be patient.
    86. Re:Heading off at the pass by mad.frog · · Score: 1

      In fact, it's quite famous that James Ussher examined those lives in the Bible and by backwards counting came to the conclusion that the world was created on October 23, 4004 BC.

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

    87. Re:Heading off at the pass by brezel · · Score: 1

      The God of the old testament is "evil God", the God that Jesus spoke of in the New testament is the good God. another contradiction of a perfect god. if god was perfect, why did he have to change? :D

      seriously, the more i think about it the more ridiculous all this gets for me. i wonder how people can actually believe all this.
    88. Re:Heading off at the pass by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      Exactly! I've gained something from every religion and philosophy I've learned about, from Jesus to Ayn Rand. All of the stories and perspectives help me to understand what it is to be human and why people are the way they are.

      On the other hand, I'm still an atheist because I don't think any of our myths should be taken literally. To look for Noah's Ark is just like looking for the talking animals from Aesop's fables - it's not just crazy, but it also shows that you've missed the real point of what you were reading. And I can't imagine anything sadder that taking something as deeply meaningful as a whole religion and reducing it to a mere sequence of events to be taken as literal facts.

    89. Re:Heading off at the pass by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "I think the main problem is that if you are a fundamentalist, then that neccesitates that you either try to force those beliefs onto others, or kill all nonbelievers."

      Just like the fundamentalist Socialists and Communists, who have killed more people than all the "fundamentalist" religious types. And they were .... atheists.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    90. Re:Heading off at the pass by nattt · · Score: 1

      Ah, but in Luke Jesus also says slaves should be beaten with many stripes.

      The fact is, there's no contempory evidence for Jesus. All words attributed to him were written many many years later, and indeed, the books that make up the Bible were picked and chosen from the many available gospels.

      And think about this, what could be a worse hell than living in the joys of a heaven, knowing that friends, relatives, loved ones, human beings, babies, mothers, children, fathers are being tormented in hell fire because your god is so bloody stupid he couldn't convince anyone with even modest intelligence of his own existance. Think about it. Think hard, because that's cruel and unjust.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    91. Re:Heading off at the pass by Frostalicious · · Score: 1

      OK that's interesting. So basically you can believe in the literal truth of the Bible, but the nonbelievers are God's concern, not yours. So are missionaries behaving improperly? Is one supposed to spontaneously discover Christ unprompted?

    92. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people base their beliefs on evidence. Assuming you want to do that, then you do have to believe in evolution, just like gravity and quantum physics.

    93. Re:Heading off at the pass by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 1
      am, I was not responding to an argument about how Adam and Eve could have fallen. brezel said, "if he gave us a free will he cannot punish us for our decisions." He was not talking about what you're talking about! I asked him to explain why he thinks that little syllogism follows.

      My example about choosing to rape was not supposed to be a parallel to Adam and Eve, or to how the Fall could happen; it was an example to probe the bizarre reasoning that if God gave us freedom, he can't blame us for abusing that freedom. The question you're talking about--how the Fall could happen if mankind was perfect--wasn't in view. (If that's what brezel was getting at in his last sentence, I didn't see it. If it was, my reply was mis-aimed. Honestly, I can barely make sense out of that sentence.)

      Now, to respond to your question/argument:

      - "...God created man in His image (i.e. perfect)." - "God gave us free will which is part of the "in his image" deal" If we have free will, and we are perfect, then all our choices will be perfect. Is the decision to rape someone perfect? I don't think so, so that is a red herring.
      I understand why that makes sense to you; the reason I don't agree is the meaning you're assigning to the word "perfect". It's not a meaning relevant to what the Bible says about the creation of man.

      First, the Bible nowhere (that I know of) says that mankind was created "perfect". It says in Genesis 1 that they were made in God's image, but it nowhere unpacks that as implying any sense of the word "perfection". (The person you quoted was wrong--or at least imprecise.) They had not sinned, and they had no inherent bent toward sin/pride/malice/selfishness/etc, but that does not imply an inability to sin. I'm not aware of any biblical teaching about man's nature before the Fall that would justify your premise.

      If you think I'm wrong, please, tell me where you get it in the Bible.

      Second, neither the Hebrew ("tamin") nor the Greek ("telios") words we translate "perfect" mean quite what you seem to be meaning by "perfect". Neither is an abstract concept of being ideal, some lofty, pervasive "perfection", in the sense of being unable to go bad. Both are sometimes translated "complete", or "full". Tamin is also translated "without blemish" and "upright". But even though Adam and Eve are not described as "perfect", we can say they had no sin or inherent predilection toward sin.

      Just reading this as ancient Hebrew literature, I see no justification for your apparent belief that the Bible presents an understanding of man's initial state as being "perfect" in the sense of unable to sin. Nor do I see anything in the Hebrew concept of perfection that would imply that if God made mankind without blemish, this implies they couldn't be led astray into a perverted, sinful desire.
    94. Re:Heading off at the pass by Belacgod · · Score: 1
      I'm saying that everyone cherry-picks the parts of whatever religious source they use and ignores the parts they don't, and that's OK because religious texts are meant for piecemeal inspiration, not as a logical basis for action.

      Saying "I'm a Christian, let me look to the Bible for guidance," and going to, say, the story of the Good Samaritan and saying "That sounds good, next time I find myself tempted to ignore someone because I don't know them, I'll remember this example and help them instead," or recalling to mind the story of the Hebrews who built the golden calf at a time when you're tempted to be impatient, and relying on that example being patient longer, is using the Bible for inspiration.

      Saying "I'm a Christian, let me look to the Bible for absolute truth," and going to, say, the beginning of Genesis and saying "Hey, this proves that evolution is false," or to the battle of Jericho and saying "Hey, this proves that the sun goes around the earth," is using the Bible for reasoning and logic about the external world.

      The former is using the Bible for its intended purpose, the latter is dragging it into a usage it's not meant for.

      Of course, one can go to certain parts of Leviticus and say "Hey, here it says homosexuals are an abomination in the eye of the Lord, let me not be friends with that gay guy," and still be using the Bible for inspiration. I'm not arguing that it's impossible to draw bad ideas about one's conduct from the Bible, I'm arguing that it's incorrect to use the Bible as a link in a chain of logical reasoning a la young-earth creationism.

    95. Re:Heading off at the pass by ashayh · · Score: 1

      Great analogy!

    96. Re:Heading off at the pass by anilg · · Score: 1

      Yeah in the same sense that a guy agrees to allow 10*50 to be 550 rather than 60 billion.

      "Hey, atleast he's getting closer to the truth"

      --
      http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
    97. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      In both ways, as a translation lapse and an allegoric interpretation, seven "work units" (which is maybe even closer to the original meaning) makes more sense. I didn't quite figure out why a "day" would have any meaning for God. Since time as we know it has no relevance to a being transcending time, why should a day's work have any?

      I think that seven days or seven billion years isn't really important. What difference does it make? Is God less powerful when he needed more than 6 days to create the world? It ain't like we could repeat that feat in whatever time, does it lessen his omnipotence?

      Personally, I think faith doesn't have to rely on pseudoscience. Faith and science are by definition incompatible. Faith states how things are and you have to accept that, because that's what believing is about. Accepting something as fact because God or his Prophet said so. You are explicitly not to test and try God (I'd have to look it up, but actually the Bible says quite bluntly so).

      Science is nothing but doubting, testing and trying. Nothing is set in stone, nothing is ever proven as the one truth, everything is to be challenged, you are actually encourage to falsify anything and everything anyone claimed as true.

      How should they come together?

      In medieval times, "science" was actually conducted to "prove" the Bible, much like the Creationists try today. They were not trying the written word, for that would have been strictly forbidden, instead they observed nature and tried to fit what they saw into the writing of the Bible. But, seriously, that's the wrong way 'round. Sure, you can postulate a theory and try to find matching results, that's been done time and again. A lot of recent physical revelations were only brought to light because someone postulated the existance of a certain particle or predicted a certain behaviour of substances, and the test results proved it right.

      But there is a huge problem with this kind of "research": When you get too involved with your theory (or, in the case of the Bible, your "reality"), you start to neglect results that don't match your prediction. In this way, scientists are not far from believers. They want their experiment to produce the results they predicted.

      This is one of the reasons why a scientific result has to be reproducable. Another scientist, maybe someone opposing your theory, has to be able to reproduce your results. If there is no experiment (sorry, my other Earth is in the laundry...), at the very least he has to have the right to come up with another theory that explains the results, and as a scientist, you have to sit down with him and discuss what speaks for your and what for his theory, and you have to weigh the facts to see which one is more likely. Maybe there are other tests and other observations that can support either theory?

      This is how science works. Taking something as given and trying to match your results to your theory is more religion than science.

      That also implies that some scientists can be quite religious when it comes to their pet theories...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    98. Re:Heading off at the pass by wrf3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Frostalicious remarked So basically you believe in the literal truth of the Bible...
      I don't think you know me well enough to really know what I believe. For the record, however, I hold that parts of the Bible are literal, parts are metaphor, parts are allegory. I might even allow that parts are fiction, i.e. a story used to communicate some truth about God and/or man.

      So are missionaries behaving improperly?
      Depends on their behavior. But to the question I think you're asking, all Christians are commanded to share the Gospel (literally "good news"), just as we are commanded to leave the results up to God.

      Is one supposed to spontaneously discover Christ unprompted?
      Well, this assumes that the only way someone can discover Christ is through human agency. It's certainly one way, but God is quite capable of speaking for Himself. I have friends who work in the Middle East. God is doing things there that they couldn't possibly do via direct revelation of His Son.

    99. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Fallacy: You are not omniscient, and thus prone to making mistakes. God cannot make a mistake unless he wants to make one.

      You can't take the parts of the Bible you like and ignore the rest. Either accept that the book is the truth in every single letter or admit that it is not. And as a believer, you cannot admit the latter, because it begs the question that, well, when it's wrong in one part, why can't it be in another?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    100. Re:Heading off at the pass by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 1

      That's the main problem with religions. They've got more plot holes than a Michael Bay film.

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    101. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Usually this argument gives me the ammo for the death blow in a religious debate: When the scriptures were dictated or at least invented by God, who is omniscient, then how can there be a plot hole? Did He err? And we should forgive him? :)

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    102. Re:Heading off at the pass by tftp · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You can't take the parts of the Bible you like and ignore the rest.

      You must be kidding - the whole religion is based on selective quoting.

      God cannot make a mistake unless he wants to make one.

      In other words, God knew all the time that Eve will fail because He intentionally built her this way, fallible. Then why all the fuss? She performed as designed.

      But if God did not know how she will perform, then He is not omniscient, regardless of his creative intent.

      Is God omniscient or not? If He is then He indeed set her up, giving her no choice in the matter, and likely intentionally building her to succumb to the sin, unless God is not omnipotent either.

    103. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This hits the same nail as the question "Can God create a stone so heavy that he himself can't lift it?" And there is even an answer to both, this and your question, that does not contracdict the omni- qualities of God.

      Since God is a singular entity (at least in monotheistic religions), there cannot be two. So if God created an identical clone of himself, both clones would immediately become one again, since both of them would be omnipresent, thus everywhere, taking up the same metaphysical "room" and become identical. Thus it becomes impossible for God to fight his clone, simply by the fact that he is himself, even in all possible fractions and instances.

      It's hard to explain it in English, but I hope it makes sense.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    104. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You must be kidding - the whole religion is based on selective quoting.

      (grin) And people ask me why I enjoy getting a visit from Jehova's Witnesses...

      Of course, that's why discussions with Bible fanatics is a favorite pastime of mine! After about 30 minutes on average, I get to ask the question "Well, if THIS section is not to be taken literal, then who says that THAT section should be?"

      The reactions range from violently aggressive to curling-in-a-ball whimpering.

      (...)He indeed set her up, giving her no choice in the matter, and likely intentionally building her to succumb to the sin

      When you read the Bible, you get a fairly good idea that God is a sexist.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    105. Re:Heading off at the pass by tftp · · Score: 1
      I understand - God can't make a copy of himself. Then He is not omnipotent as we define that word. I don't need to know why, but your explanation looks like God's Makers made it so that "there cannot be two" in this "metaphysical room". I wonder what happens in other metaphysical rooms, but probably our local God doesn't know that either.

      But I checked the other answers to the original question, and found that they answer it by redefining words. That's a non-answer in my book. But that's the only way people can still use the word.

    106. Re:Heading off at the pass by Frostalicious · · Score: 1

      Frostalicious remarked So basically you believe in the literal truth of the Bible...
      I don't think you know me well enough to really know what I believe.


      And I didn't assume otherwise. Of course when you misquoted me by redacting a word out of my sentence, it certainly looked that way. But thanks for your other answers, they were informative.

    107. Re:Heading off at the pass by dantheman82 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is an interesting question, and one that has been asked before...I refer to things that could be based upon the Bible (I could quote references if desired). Of course if you throw out bits and pieces, it will become a tad difficult to argue.

      Men (and women) were made in God's image. Mankind was created with knowledge, righteousness, and holiness. And a free will, even as God Himself. All creation was good, as God had said. Mankind was also perfectly good. So, God presented the choice, which was not a malicious one. One tree, the "Knowledge of Good and Evil", was where Adam and Eve could (as the tree is self-described) know about evil as well as good. They had perfectly good trees throughout that garden to eat from, and thus the choice was not difficult really. Should they listen to the God they walked with every day? Or trust someone or something else...

      So, why would God, who knows all, allow this possibility? Because He wanted mankind to freely serve Him. Robots can be trained, people or animals can be "beaten into submission", but that is not the willing and free service of the Creator by the creature. And Luke's geneology refers to Adam as God's son, as he was created in God's image. So, as a parent, would you force your kid to always listen and totally protect them from every having any possibility of disobedience? Wouldn't that make you a tyrant?

      But why would God allow this, especially as a Father who knew His children would rebel in such a way? Because He had a plan for this that would bring even more glory to Himself (no matter if His children remained in their sin or returned to His loving arms), as well as bringing greater glory to the creatures who repent and return to Him than even if they never fell.

      God has chosen to have creatures made in His image (mankind) serve Him freely and willingly and perfectly. It was done before the fall, and can be done only in heaven for those who return to His loving arms and embrace His son Jesus Christ.

      I can't say that people naturally will like this concept of God much, who designs mankind in His image in order to serve Him freely and joyfully. People also hate the concept that those who do not do so but rebel against His fatherly care realize the miserable consequences here (to some degree) and in the afterlife.

      I guess if you've ever been a parent, and believe you should have some authority in molding your child in a moral and right way, you will understand a little what God the Father is like. If you have been a parent, and see the seeds of rebellion being sown and your good counsel being openly flaunted, you will realize in a very small way what it felt like to God. Some may wish their children to turn into little robots who always say "Yes sir" and "No sir" to their demands, and are never given the freedom to choose any wrong thing, and never are harmed or experience any negative consequences for anything. But then, to expect a spontaneous and free declaration of love from those children is impossible...

      --
      This sig donated to Pater. Long live /.
    108. Re:Heading off at the pass by Spectra72 · · Score: 1

      That only pokes holes in the notion that the Bible (choosing one of the major ones) is indeed the literal word of God passed down unerringly through man from Him.

      God could still exist, it just the Bible is not unerring due to man's interference and fallibility. Certainly puts a lot of fundies on shaky ground, but most moderate religions could cope.

      Your "argument" might be useful against the ignorant bible-thumper at a PTA meeting, but wouldn't hold up against any real religious scholar.

    109. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Oh, he can copy himself, but he immediately reunites with the copy. It's a bit like mathematical infinity problems. :)

      The same works for the too heavy stone. When he creates it, it is too heavy, but when he lifts it, he wills it to be liftable.

      Logic? No, we're talking religion here, logic is in the next room.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    110. Re:Heading off at the pass by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Just like the fundamentalist Socialists and Communists, who have killed more people than all the "fundamentalist" religious types. And they were .... atheists.

      Personality cults are not atheistic. They are nothing but churches with a little less tolerance for competition than most.

    111. Re:Heading off at the pass by tftp · · Score: 1

      Oh, now I understand, thanks! I'll be in the next room if you need me :-)

    112. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This was probably the best answer for the problem to date. Thank you.

      So God wants us to choose. Him or not him. Freely. There is no force involved, he wants us to choose his path, of course, but he would rather see us choose the wrong path than force us on the right one.

      Could someone please tell the fundamentalists?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    113. Re:Heading off at the pass by wrf3 · · Score: 1

      Frostalicious wrote Of course when you misquoted me ...

      You're right, I did. I missed the word "can". My apologies and thanks for pointing it out.

    114. Re:Heading off at the pass by rustalot42684 · · Score: 1

      I'm being a bit of a pedant, but I'd like to remind people that serpent != Satan. The connection between the serpent and Satan (and then later Satan as the evil, devil-type being we know and love) took place hundreds of years later and was never mentioned in the pentateuch (the first five books of the Bible).

    115. Re:Heading off at the pass by Tomfrh · · Score: 1

      But do you believe in evolution by natural selection?

    116. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just remember: not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago. Some of us actually believe in evolution.

      Do you know what double think is? You saying you believe in God, yet you believe in evolution. This is conflict of terms if you understood fully both sides. Simply put, how can you say you believe the Bible, when you don't doubt the first verse? Are you lacking the faith in the Bible or cowardly trying to appease both side of the issues?

      To find the truth, we must want to follow the truth, not our friends. If what they teach us in school is true, why do we find T-Rex bones with flexible veins? Cave painting of dinosaurs? Figures of dinosaurs? Tracks of humans and dinosaurs? Why does the Bible speak of in Job? Why do we find dinosaurs bones above horses, pig, human tools, and other things? And there are many others. You just have to go searching for them.

      Also, the theory of evolution was loved by materialists to promote materialism (the belief that physical matter is the only reality). Marx loved the Darwin and the theory of evolution. He credited Darwin work in providing a basis for his ideas. His godless ideas brought the death of millions. Darwin himself was very out spoken about God. The basis of macro evolution is based on the lowest levels of proof.

    117. Re:Heading off at the pass by brezel · · Score: 1

      am, I was not responding to an argument about how Adam and Eve could have fallen. brezel said, "if he gave us a free will he cannot punish us for our decisions." He was not talking about what you're talking about! yes i was. i probably wasn't clear enough so i responded to your posting but the gist of my posting was exactly that.
    118. Re:Heading off at the pass by Morkano · · Score: 1

      I'm agnostic, but I'll just throw this in here:

      It's possible that in order to to build things the way god wanted, it required a period of "evil god" to shape us a certain way, followed by where we are now, a period of "good god".

      Or fucking around being "evil" was fun for a while, but now it's time be "good" and get things done.

      *shrugs*

      --
      Victory or awesome!
    119. Re:Heading off at the pass by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      >>So, if someone believes every word of the Bible is absolute truth and nothing is metaphorical, simplified in terms that the people of the time would understand, and was completely accurate in its translation from language to language, then that would qualify them as a fundamentalist in my mind. In general, there is nothing wrong with that.

      Fundamentalism that doesn't have the inclination to worry whether evolution occurred any more than it worries about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin because it is too focused on, for example, the family dealing with an abusive father- I agree with you that there is nothing wrong with this fundamentalism. However, the fundamentalism that offers biblical literalism as a seductively easy answer to life's ambiguities, to be ordered and slurped down like the proverbial happy meal so that its customer can go back to focusing on his American Idol episode- this I do have a problem with. When coming to terms with the big religious questions that we all struggle with, there is nothing wrong with being simple, but fundamentalism seems to me to often be used as an excuse to be lazy.

    120. Re:Heading off at the pass by plasmoidia · · Score: 1
      First off, let me say that I do not intend to be argumentative (in the raised-voice, angry sort of sense). But I would like to point out a couple of things and express what I believe to be true.

      In its broadest sense, a fundamentalist is someone who believes that unvarying principles must apply to all people or every situation, in this case, the Bible as absolute truth. So, if someone believes every word of the Bible is absolute truth and nothing is metaphorical, simplified in terms that the people of the time would understand, and was completely accurate in its translation from language to language, then that would qualify them as a fundamentalist in my mind.

      The Bible being absolute truth does not necessitate all those things that you expand it to in the second sentence. Of course some things are metaphorical (though a literal interpretation should always be considered where possible). Of course translations can be erroneous. Neither of these takes away from the veracity of the Bible.

      In general, there is nothing wrong with that. I see no problem with believing what you believe. It's when you force that belief on other people that causes problems. Open discussion of beliefs on the other hand, is good for everyone involved.

      How did we get to forcing beliefs on other people? By vary nature of the thing, you cannot force someone to believe anything. One can merely present his beliefs and the reasoning behind them and offer someone the choice of believing as they do. Anyone with a proper understanding of the Bible would agree that attempting to force anyone to believe the Bible is not only foolish, but dangerous, as coerced belief is no belief at all.

      Now, what do I believe? I am a Christian, but I believe there is one problem with the Bible: it was physically written be humans.

      On what do you base your assertion that you are a Christian? That is, what does "being a Christian" mean to you? I find it very odd that you claim to be a Christian, yet openly question the veracity of the Bible, the very basis of the foundation of the Christian faith.

      This means two primary things to me:

      1. It could only be written in terms that the person writing it could understand. This could lead to simplification of concepts. For example, in the story of creation, seven days may not necessarily equate to seven 24-hour periods. It could just mean seven stages, where each stage could take years, centuries, millenniums, etc.
      2. Because humans are flawed, some of those who physically wrote the Bible may have injected their views of the world into it. It then becomes a problem to decipher what may have been written by a human voice and not God's. This can only be done through self reflection which will be different for each person.

      Let me see if I can show you where these ideas lead. In making these statements, you are limiting God and saying that He is not capable of perfectly inspiring the writers of the Bible to write His word as He intended it. If God is all powerful, all knowing, and everything that Christians normally believe He is, then why could He not direct people to correctly record His word so that people could know Him? 2 Timothy 3:16 states that "All scripture is God-breathed" (NIV) or "inspired by God" (NASB). There are other very strong assertions that the Bible as a whole is the very word of God. It should be noted that the Bible never claims to be a scientific book.

      The issue with questioning parts of the Bible is that, if parts of it are erroneous, then how can any of it be trusted? Then you end up with every variation of belief from some throwing out different parts of the Bible that they think have errors. Why, then, even associate your beliefs with the Bible?

      This is just what I believe and I have no expectations of other pe

    121. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should try Islam :)

    122. Re:Heading off at the pass by njriley · · Score: 1

      Hey - I've been around long enough that I know what kind of response you'll probably get here, but I want to thank you and your friends. I'm an atheist myself (and a physics grad student, so I have minimal scientific credentials), and we need more of you guys. I know people give you shit, but please keep talking if you don't mind. I think we're more on the same wavelength than a lot of people thnk, if we can both get some of the crazy elements out of the press.

    123. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      The Bible is a series of stories that advocate particular moral choices, and seek to make those moral choices attractive. It sounds like there are some pretty large chunks of the Bible you haven't read.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    124. Re:Heading off at the pass by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      You have grossly misstated what the teachings of Jesus were. Jesus was not teaching people to just be "nice". He was teaching love. Not love in the generic American context. I "love" cars, I "love" chocolate, but the self-sacrificing love. The Greek word "agape" was used in the original texts to describe this type of love. "Agape" love is choosing to put another's well-being ahead of yours regardless of cost or sacrifice, without preconditions, expectations, or reward. This type of love is rare, but can you imagine the world this would be if everyone practiced it?

      Often individuals say "yes I love so and so, I would die for them". Well, dieing for someone is easy. It's over immediately without any further possibility of concious objections to the state of death. However trying "dieing" for someone every day. Putting them first, without regard to your own well-being. Not so easy is it? This is what Jesus taught, this self-less love that would literally transform this world if practiced properly. It is against our sinful nature to love this way. That is why is has to be a choice and cannot be forced.

    125. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Of course, one can go to certain parts of Leviticus and say "Hey, here it says homosexuals are an abomination in the eye of the Lord, let me not be friends with that gay guy," and still be using the Bible for inspiration. Anyone who says that is definitely cherry-picking. Consider what kinds of people Jesus wanted to be friends with: prostitutes and corrupt tax collectors.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    126. Re:Heading off at the pass by Belacgod · · Score: 1

      You're referring, I take it, to Leviticus and its ilk?

    127. Re:Heading off at the pass by Belacgod · · Score: 1

      Have I argued otherwise? Cherry-picking is not what I'm arguing against.

    128. Re:Heading off at the pass by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      Before you criticize arguments you should step back and think.

      Your definition of perfection is probably the same as my definition. "Flawless", might be a good definition.

      However, consider this, creating Humans with the ability to choose and have a free will IS part of a PERFECT human.

      You said "if humans had been perfect they wouldn't have disobeyed in the first place."

      Who said disobeying God was imperfection? According to the Bible, God gave us free will, the right to choose. How is it imperfection to make a choice, to exercise an ability?

      Besides, the perfection stated may have been physical, spiritual, emotional, and not intellectual. Why would there be a tree of knowledge from which they could not eat if we were intellectually perfect?


      You said "discussing with christians is just too easy. anybody with half a brain should see that statements like that can't even withstand a simple logical test."

      I find this laughable considering a hole in your argument was easily bored. Also what simple logical test would you have applied?

    129. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'm becoming increasingly persuaded that not everyone can know God. Apparently, God has chosen certain people - "the elect" - to become Christians, and the rest of you are pretty much screwed. So, trying to force our beliefs on you isn't going to accomplish anything. We still need to share the Gospel, because doing so glorifies God (and because we have no way of knowing whether you're a member of the elect or not, and of course because God has commanded us to do it), but it has to stop there.

      See John 6:44 and 6:65, for starters.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    130. Re:Heading off at the pass by revengebomber · · Score: 1

      How can you state that the Bible is the direct infallible word of God, and in the same breath say that we aren't going to use this in government, and we are OK with the fact others don't believe what God is saying? Because God doesn't want us to use His word in the government, nor does He want everyone to believe what He says.

      That was easy.
      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
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    131. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Not only must this be freely believed, I don't know of any way to force someone into believing this. I suppose that someone can be forced to say it, but one must really mean it. For reference:

      "That if you confess with your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord,' and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." - Romans 10:9 (NIV), emphasis added
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
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    132. Re:Heading off at the pass by kripkenstein · · Score: 1

      What sin? She ate a fruit when it was offered to her, by a being that God _allowed_ into the Garden. Yes, she was told not to eat the fruit, but was never told why or what the consequences were, despite God being omniscient enough to know he had created man with curiosity.
      I have to correct you here: God did tell them what the consequences were: he said that if they ate from the tree they would die. Pretty straightforward. Actually ironic though, because the end of the story of the Garden of Eden is with God (in the odd plural) saying that should Adam&Eve eat from the tree of Life (and not just of Knowledge) then they would live forever. So it seems that they would die anyhow, whether they eat from the tree of Knowledge or not.

      Genesis 1 to 3 is really a peculiar thing to read.
    133. Re:Heading off at the pass by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      How is this comment "informative"? You modded up a sarcastic response? Wise choice...

    134. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Read Matthew 23 for a pretty good idea of what Jesus thought of these people.

      --
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    135. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Informative

      but was never told why or what the consequences were "You will surely die" wasn't specific enough?
      --
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    136. Re:Heading off at the pass by Frostalicious · · Score: 1

      Is one supposed to spontaneously discover Christ unprompted? Well, this assumes that the only way someone can discover Christ is through human agency. It's certainly one way, but God is quite capable of speaking for Himself.

      Ok I would like to understand this more. I understood that fundamentalist christians believe that you need to accept Christ as your personal saviour in order to be saved. I understood this as to be a test of faith. You have free will so you have to choose to accept Christ. Your last sentence suggests it may actually be God who chooses. God may come to you, or not. Am I misunderstanding?

    137. Re:Heading off at the pass by DreadHarn · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually the more you "think" about it, the less you actually think and the more you listen to everyone else. Study the Bible and you will see that the God of the old testament is pre-covenant. With the sacrifice of Jesus, a covenant was made that all the actions God had to take prior to Jesus would not be needed anymore.

      You have to understand that God saw humans as unredeemable before Jesus made His sacrifice. Thus the justification for destroying tribes and having plagues etc. The definition of evil is the exact opposite of God. Thus God can never be evil.

      The way you are approaching the idea of good and evil is as if darkness is only black when someone say's it is dark. When in fact the color black is the absence of white light. The same with God, evil is the absence of God's goodness. Whatever action God takes is always considered the correct action. A moral absolute.

    138. Re:Heading off at the pass by Tanuki64 · · Score: 1

      "You will surely die" wasn't specific enough?
      At that time? I would have expected a question like "what is the meaning of the word 'die'".
    139. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      I thought both we and the garden were perfect, why would anyone complain about anything? Apparently we're only perfect when we're not being tempted not to be.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    140. Re:Heading off at the pass by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

      You can't take the parts of the Bible you like and ignore the rest


      So you have no problems with the parts demanding Genocide (including women, infants and the unborn) and specifically condoning child rape and slavery?

      Numbers 31: Now kill all the boys and all the women who have slept with a man. Only the young girls who are virgins may live; you may keep them for yourselves.

      Deuteronomy 20: As you approach a town to attack it, first offer its people terms for peace. If they accept your terms and open the gates to you, then all the people inside will serve you in forced labor. But if they refuse to make peace and prepare to fight, you must attack the town. When the LORD your God hands it over to you, kill every man in the town. But you may keep for yourselves all the women, children, livestock, and other plunder. You may enjoy the spoils of your enemies that the LORD your God has given you.

    141. Re:Heading off at the pass by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      Also (since this topic has had a fair amount of ID bashing), if there was a perfect argument to prove His existence and compel someone to believe. It would go against his purpose of creating a loving family. So no matter how convincing a believer (including myself) thinks their argument is. A non-believer can *always* find a reason to ignore it or invent a plausible naturalistic explanation if they choose to. Otherwise they would effectively have no free will.

      While I think it's useful to point out flaws in scientific theories, doing so will usually have no effect on a persons beliefs. As an earlier poster mentioned, if you only consider naturalistic explanations as scientific. You are no longer searching for truth, but for the most credible naturalistic explanation. Even if it might be false.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    142. Re:Heading off at the pass by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      I have to correct you here: God did tell them what the consequences were: he said that if they ate from the tree they would die. Pretty straightforward. Actually ironic though, because the end of the story of the Garden of Eden is with God (in the odd plural) saying that should Adam&Eve eat from the tree of Life (and not just of Knowledge) then they would live forever. So it seems that they would die anyhow, whether they eat from the tree of Knowledge or not.


      Well, no, while "you will surely die" is literally correct since it meant they would become mortal, it in no way even remotely approached the level of true consequences of the action. God didn't say "you will condemn a million generations of your offspring to torment and punishment, separating them from me and having them wither of old age, suffer from illness, violence, childbirth, etc", he said "you will surely die", which arguably was as meaningless to Adam and Eve as the word "day" before the sun and earth existed. Assuming the Bible is literally correct, they would have no notion of death since nothing in the universe had ever died, much less would they understand any of the arguably much greater but more far-reaching consequences. God might as well have spoken gibberish to them and punished them for not understanding.

      And I have been eternally baffled why the knowledge of Good and Evil would lead Adam and Eve to cover their nudity. If God made them naked, and everything was perfect, how was nudity evil? And if it was evil, then why did God let them run around naked in the first place? I keep hearing how morality is not relative, yet in the very first important story of the Bible, the morality of a situation changes completely just because of human perception of the situation. Presumably God did not change his mind about the morality of nudity in the ten seconds after they ate the fruit.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    143. Re:Heading off at the pass by NMerriam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "You will surely die" wasn't specific enough?


      Assuming the Bible is literally true, nothing in the universe had ever died when he gave this warning.

      And while "you will surely die" is literally correct since it meant they would become mortal, it in no way even remotely approached the level of true consequences of the action. God didn't say "you will condemn a million generations of your offspring to torment and punishment, separating them from me and having them wither of old age, suffer from illness, violence, childbirth, etc", he said "you will surely die", which arguably was as meaningless to Adam and Eve as the word "day" before the sun and earth existed.

      It would be like warning a child not to detonate an atomic bomb because then he wouldn't be able to ride his bike after school. Literally true, but not really the appropriate warning for the situation.

      Just think, if God had the common sense of your average teenage unwed mother and put dangerous things where the kids couldn't get at it, the whole universe would be different.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    144. Re:Heading off at the pass by okmijnuhb · · Score: 1

      Those are a whole lot of beliefs.
      Where are the facts that substantiate all that?
      Facts lead to knowledge, faith only lead to beliefs.

    145. Re:Heading off at the pass by kripkenstein · · Score: 1

      You make some very good points. Indeed, Genesis 1-3 really doesn't make too much sense when read directly. When contrasted with the myths of other peoples in the area at the time it does become a little clearer (e.g. the plural form, corresponding to polytheism; the assumptions of a specific morality, corresponding to the norms of the period, etc.). It's a fascinating cultural product, IMO.

    146. Re:Heading off at the pass by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      And at what point does the parent rain brimstone upon the child, or turn it into salt, or drown it in 40 days of rain? Is that when the child doesn't clean their room for a whole week?

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    147. Re:Heading off at the pass by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      a few problems with this idea:
      god defines what the right path and the wrong path is.
      god would be free to install in us a different moral imperative more fitting to his definition of right.
      god tries to coerce us into doing what he has defined as good by threatening us with hell.

      all in all, it's just one huge logical mess.

    148. Re:Heading off at the pass by laejoh · · Score: 0

      us non-fundies

      As in U.S. non-fundies?

    149. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "Satan's betrayal didn't condemn all the other angels, why did our race (which was supposed to be in His own image, no less!) get such a lousy deal?"

      Simple: because Satan is not the father of all the other angels. Because God blessed man with the ability to generate children and produce descendants. We not only enjoy our inheritance but also suffer the consequences of bads choices of our ancestors.

      Since you think God is unfair because we suffer the consequences of the choice of one man, I recommend you read Romans 5:12-20. Here's one verse:

      5:18: "Consequently, just as the result of one trespass was condemnation for all men, so also the result of one act of righteousness was justification that brings life for all men."
      5:19: "For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous."

    150. Re:Heading off at the pass by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      Men (and women) were made in God's image. Mankind was created with knowledge, righteousness, and holiness. And a free will, even as God Himself. All creation was good, as God had said. Mankind was also perfectly good. So, God presented the choice, which was not a malicious one. One tree, the "Knowledge of Good and Evil", was where Adam and Eve could (as the tree is self-described) know about evil as well as good. They had perfectly good trees throughout that garden to eat from, and thus the choice was not difficult really. Should they listen to the God they walked with every day? Or trust someone or something else...

      Here's the problem. If humans were created perfect, that implies that there could be no imperfections in them. As such, every decision they made must also be perfect. There is no way to introduce imperfection into a perfect system, unless you want to fiddle with the definition of perfection. Therefore, the decision to disobey God can be seen only as a consequence of the way people were created. If you want to push the blame onto Satan, then who created Satan with the possibility of going bad, apparently with omniscient foreknowledge of the whole thing?

      I have no problem with a God who creates a universe, sticks two trees in it, and tells the people he creates to only eat from the Good Tree. I can identify with such a God, because it is precisely the method scientists use with rats when they give them two bowls of water, one laced with Morphine or some other drug and the other pure. They introduce the plain water first as a way of saying "Here you go little Rat, drink the Good Water", and then they drop the drugged water in and see what happens. I have no problem with God as Scientist, because it's probably what I would do given infinite power. The problem is that Christianity paints no such picture. Instead it's Love this, or Hell that, with absolutely no scientific value whatsoever. If it were clearly laid out in a "Do X, Y, and Z and you shall suffer consequences A and B with a 97% likelihood as demonstrated with the following experiment..." I would have no problem with it. It would be logical, helpful, and accurate.

      God has chosen to have creatures made in His image (mankind) serve Him freely and willingly and perfectly. It was done before the fall, and can be done only in heaven for those who return to His loving arms and embrace His son Jesus Christ.

      So do we get brainwashed to forget the whole Knowledge of Good and Evil thing too? If not, why do we have to wait for heaven to be happy? Or maybe it's just the laws of thermodynamics in this universe that make it fallen? I'd love to see the physics of how eating a fruit could fundamentally alter the structure of the entire universe...

      I guess if you've ever been a parent, and believe you should have some authority in molding your child in a moral and right way, you will understand a little what God the Father is like. If you have been a parent, and see the seeds of rebellion being sown and your good counsel being openly flaunted, you will realize in a very small way what it felt like to God. Some may wish their children to turn into little robots who always say "Yes sir" and "No sir" to their demands, and are never given the freedom to choose any wrong thing, and never are harmed or experience any negative consequences for anything. But then, to expect a spontaneous and free declaration of love from those children is impossible...

      I have *never* sent my children to hell for disobeying me.

    151. Re:Heading off at the pass by __aailob1448 · · Score: 1

      As someone who struggles to have faith, I find some of your assertions interesting. I would like to chat with you sometime.

      gozu at h-o-t-m-a-i-l dot com is my messenger account.

    152. Re:Heading off at the pass by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      I think the main problem is that if you are a fundamentalist, then that neccesitates that you either try to force those beliefs onto others, or kill all nonbelievers. If you are absolutely certain that your belief system is correct, and inherent in your belief system is that all other belief systems are evil, then it follows that you want everyone to have your belief system. At that point things like secular government and religious tolerance just dissapear. How can you state that the Bible is the direct infallible word of God, and in the same breath say that we aren't going to use this in government, and we are OK with the fact others don't believe what God is saying?

      The proper response is the same that science takes: Dispense with self-belief. It's all well and good to believe in an orderly, naturalistic world or a biblical fundamentalist one. The problem comes when you trust your own judgment and interpretation implicitly. If I were a fundamentalist Christian, I can only hope I would retain the sense of my own fallibility. I could not force others to do or believe anything without running the risk of accidentally enforcing my own will instead of God's. It would be foolish to think I could understand every nuance of God's will. I think the ultimate problem with hardline fundamentalism is the lack of self doubt.

    153. Re:Heading off at the pass by l0cust · · Score: 1

      If there is only one God, and He was evil in the Old Testament, but good in the New Testament, then clearly He underwent some self-improvement.
      Maybe he Evolved. Oh my God! I mean.. goddammit! My head is asploding!
      --
      Politicians and Pedophiles: Two groups of exploitive bastards who are most dangerous when they're thinking of children.
    154. Re:Heading off at the pass by Endo13 · · Score: 1
      I know your questions were directed primarily at wrf3 and I do not presume to speak for him, however these are the answers to the best of my understanding.

      I understood this as to be a test of faith. You have free will so you have to choose to accept Christ. It's not so much a test of faith as it is a question of whether or not you want to have a relationship with God. Just as you must choose whether or not you wish to have an intimate relationship with any particular human. But yes, you must do the choosing.

      Your last sentence suggests it may actually be God who chooses. God may come to you, or not. Am I misunderstanding? God is omnipresent. He's everywhere. That means he's always there with you, waiting for you to choose. God "comes" to everybody; he doesn't pick and choose certain people. Some people are more sensitive and receptive to God, and these people may not need a human messenger to bring the Gospel to them.
      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    155. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      No, there's no logical mess. Replace right and wrong, good and evil by "God's nature" and "not God's nature".

      God has identity, personality and freewill. Therefore, there are things that he likes and things that he hates. Because He created human in his image (or in his nature), human also had identity, personality and freewill pretty much like God.

      Man chose to do what God disliked, therefore changing his identity completely, separating himself from his creator. There was no coercion and no threatening to the humankind. Hell is just the state of complete separation.

      The right and wrong, good and evil as we perceive with our corrupted understanding is not necessarily the true nature of God, but gives us some clues of what it is. The sacrificial death of Christ on the cross is the most clear message of God's nature.

      You still have a choice. If you are a person open to ideas beyond science, why don't you temporarily assume that Jesus's death on the cross is an attempt of God to reestablish contact with you and sincerely ask your creator to reveal himself to you. Then, after a reasonable amount of time, if you don't truly experience an intelligent living God, then you go back to science to get your answers. What have you to loose?

    156. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      No, I was referring to the parts of the Bible that aren't stories. The Epistles, for example, which often attempt to correct misunderstandings that people still misunderstand today.

      --
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    157. Re:Heading off at the pass by sir_montag · · Score: 1

      I always wondered how it could ever be free will with a stick like Hell behind it.

      To expand, you've got a deity that says "Serve me, but only out of your free will. Aaaannnnd if you don't, you'll suffer for all eternity. Just saying."

      I've gotta say, for a guy who theoretically is all for free will, he stacks the deck to the point where free will no longer exists.

    158. Re:Heading off at the pass by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      So I'm supposed to feel better that God is unfair because millennia later he offers an equally unfair deal to fix his original unfairness? Even the most backwards societies on Earth no longer visit the sins of the father upon the son. It makes no sense to any thinking being. Why should I care if God offers to "forgive" me for something I didn't do?

      If my next door neighbor treated his dog the way the literal Biblical God treated Man I'd call the SPCA and report him.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    159. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just remember: not everyone who partakes in Christianity (big C or little c) believes the world was created 4,000 years ago. Some of us actually believe in evolution. (Well, us non-fundies anyway.)
      hmmmm...... more like ~6000 years.

      Ok, if you are a christian who believes in evolution (as in common descent), was there death in the Garden of Eden before the fall? Quick grab your concordance.
    160. Re:Heading off at the pass by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      You still have a choice. If you are a person open to ideas beyond science, why don't you temporarily assume that wearing a tinfoil hat will stop the evil vena (waht was their name again) overlord from controlling your brain and ask your creator, l. ron hubbard, to reveal himself to you. Then, after a reasonable amount of time, if you don't truly experience an intelligent living God, then you go back to science to get your answers. What have you to loose?

      there, fixed it for you.

      what i have to lose? how about my intellectual honesty? look at the ridiculous loops you're jumping through! god now has a "nature". god created everything, including the things which were against "god's nature". god hates certain things for no apparent reason. strangely his creation, "human" does not inherit his nature, although you say that human "inherited identity, peronsonality and freewill pretty much like god". now "man" chose to do something which was presumably against "his nature" (whoever "his nature" may refer to, man or god) so separating himself from the creator (i though the creator was omni-present?). god at the same time lets it be known that if man does do something against "his nature" (whoever "his nature" may refer to), man will burn in hell for an eternity. this is however not an example of coercion and it is not a threat (?!). we have however from god been given a corrupted understanding of good and evil. good and evil are of course the true nature of god. we can see god's true nature in the way he tortured and killed his own son.

      i think i got that right. now go away and think about it before replying again.

    161. Re:Heading off at the pass by master_p · · Score: 1

      The fact of applying the terms 'before' and 'after' for God implies that God lives in a spacetime continuum where the principle of causality is the same as in this universe. And this has tremendous philosophical implications: God is not infinite to his universe, and therefore someone else must have created him.

      One other point that is very important but no one seems to address it is that God evolved. God regretted the flood, as it says in the Bible, and so he sent Jesus to lead the way to a sinless life. But if God was infinite in all sides, quantities and qualities, how can he evolve? what's the measurement for his change?

      All the philosophical talk about God proves how human the concept is: a God that has 'before' and 'after' states, a God which creates, a God which regrets.

      We humans don't know anything about the universe yet. We don't even know why matter does not manifest itself until it is observed (see quantum mechanics for that). We are puzzled from the pictures of a nearby planet (Mars), and we can't even tell if global warming is real or not! How can we reach a definitive conclusion about who or what created the universe? it's absurd!

    162. Re:Heading off at the pass by master_p · · Score: 1

      Because He wanted

      I don't understand the concept of 'God' wants. Why does an infinite being want anything? the mere concept of 'wanting' means God is incomplete, and therefore not infinite.

      I guess if you've ever been a parent

      But my parents have not forced me into anything. They have let me chosen my own path to life, giving me some directions at first so I don't get in trouble. On the other hand, if you don't serve God, hell awaits you. It seems parental love is a better kind of love than God's love!

    163. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only that, but when accused of their crime against God's authority, they both were very quick to try and pass the buck...

    164. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disobeying _was_ the right thing to do, however, rules are rules. And a perfect God must follow the rules perfectly. The rule was don't eat this or you get kicked out. Nothing evil about it.

    165. Re:Heading off at the pass by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, your cleverly presented argument relies upon human logic, and is hence, by your own argument, invalid. Have a nice day.

      Unfortunately, your conclusion that an argument that invalidates logic invalidates itself is also based on human logic, and is therefore not a valid counterargument for that argument, since that argument argued that human logic doesn't hold, so any counteragument based on logic rely on the initial argument being false, making them circular arguments ("the previous argument is false if it is false"). The same is true of this argument too, and any rebuttal anyone could make for it.

      More specifically, as soon as you assume that God is absolutely omnipotent and therefore even above logic ("not bound by human logic"), it becomes impossible to have any kind of meaningful discussion or debate. Logic simply can't handle things which are not bound by its rules.

      Of course, one could go for below-the-belt punch approach and point out that saying "God is not bound by logic" is equivalent to saying "God is illogical" or "God is insane". That should take care of this brand of pseudo-philosophical nonsense arguments.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    166. Re:Heading off at the pass by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Actually the more you "think" about it, the less you actually think and the more you listen to everyone else.

      If this is intended to mean that the more you pretend to think about it, the more you end up listening to everyone else? If so, I'd have to agree, but that is true of anything.

      Personally, I'd rather think for myself, and not listen to everyone else. These conclusions are my own. I encourage you to do the same in your response, if you can.

      Study the Bible and you will see that the God of the old testament is pre-covenant.

      You're going to have to be more specific than that. God made at least two covenants with Noah (starting on Genesis 6:18, 9:9), and one with Abram/Abraham (Genesis 17:2)... I could go on. A quick shell script (one-liner) I hacked together shows 15 verses in Genesis alone which mention a "covenant".

      With the sacrifice of Jesus, a covenant was made that all the actions God had to take prior to Jesus would not be needed anymore.

      Speaking of that covenant with Noah, didn't God try making the same kind of promise there? Basically, "I won't destroy the world with a flood anymore, I promise."

      Anyway, what was this particular covenant you're talking about? I'm sorry, it's a bit too late at night (early in the morning, too) for me to go re-read the New Testament, so I tried Googling this one. My search for "Jesus covenant" leads me to quite a few pages which, where they do cite the relevant verses, are providing quotes which have no mention of the word "covenant".

      I take this to mean the "Jesus died for our sins" myth. I say "myth" because if you accept that Jesus died for our sins, you must reject the idea of an omnipotent God. Or perhaps you can explain to me why God needs a blood sacrifice of ANY kind as a response to sin? Or to absolve us of sin?

      For that matter, if God is also omniscient, why did the "pre-covenant" world exist at all? Why didn't God create Jesus first, kill him, and then create Adam?

      You have to understand that God saw humans as unredeemable before Jesus made His sacrifice.

      Yet again, in that sentence, you disprove God, as we commonly define him. Either you're saying he's not omnipotent -- he couldn't redeem anyone before Jesus made that sacrifice -- or he's not omniscient -- he didn't know humans were redeemable before Jesus made that sacrifice.

      Thus the justification for destroying tribes and having plagues etc.

      Since when does God need a justification, and a faulty one at that?

      The definition of evil is the exact opposite of God. Thus God can never be evil.

      See, this really sucks. Imagine for a second that God demands something that we mortals consider atrocious. For instance, suppose God demands baby-raping. By your definition, baby-raping is now good, and letting a child grow up without being molested is bad, because God says so.

      Unless you're ready to accept that kind of bullshit, you must reject the above argument. And let's remember, God has already done things we consider atrocious, from genocide to total global annihilation.

      Really, think about what you're saying: Genocide is OK, because it's God doing it.

      The way you are approaching the idea of good and evil is as if darkness is only black when someone say's it is dark. When in fact the color black is the absence of white light.

      That's not a bad analogy, to start with.

      The same with God, evil is the absence of God's goodness.

      And here we have problems. It works if you say "evil is the absence of good", except that, for all we know, good is the absence of evil. And the problem is, the way your argument is written, unless you have evidence to the contrary, it also works like this:

      The same with Satan, g

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    167. Re:Heading off at the pass by AchiestDragon · · Score: 1

      i think you need to referance more than christianaty to get the full story
      like the numorus accounts of noa and the ark

      the story of adam and eve date back and seem to be linked to the story of babilon

      bablilon was a place in etheopia , when the aria was lush and plentiful , the king
      (who at that time would of been also concideded a god) had a dispute with one of his close
      friends , the outcome was that he exiled all his subjects from the land

      the story does appear in a lot of cultures , the fact that the cristian version has only adam
      and eve (beeing not king/god) and having only 2 sons , seems that only there story of there
      endevers survives , but not the others who also had to leave with them

      again if the litaral terms of the bible where followed then all of the human population came from there 2 sons
      now as one was killed by the other , how did he manage it without any other woman than eve his mum , this again is not open to
      debate as its only what is written that matters in the bible if you ask

      interestingly genetics also traces the whole human dna to a group of 500 humans who interestingly also originated from africa and close to the area of ethiopia at that , so not just adam and eve but around 498 others at the same time

      unfortunatly although the god there was a tirent king not the god as the church would want you to beleve , but the story would of already have been well known of by the average man before they tried to convert to christianty , and was old enough to be legend where the true identaty of the god was as a figure in the shape of man

      the bit about man in the image of god , ie god must look like man came about later , this was to put an end to the worship of animal gods , and is also wrong as to what god may look like

      evolution well isn't that the way "god" uses to create animals and the other creations ?
      just a minute , it does state in genisis that he created them , but does not say how
      so if thats the case how can they say that evloution was not how he did it ,
      rather than just deny the theory as canot be , when it gives no explanation other than he did it somehow

      the failing is that for there view it must of been instant and seperate , not a subtle process that
      in its own way like dna itself is the program for life's shape form and function , then the program itself
      should know what works and what fails , and a program for life that adapts to the environment , a system that works
      in the randomless meaningles un-predictabilaty of the universe and environment , "god" created dna , therefor all life , so they deny that he could of
      because there interpritation states it could not be , but by the same token does not give an explanation of how , or do they still think the earth is flat and the center of the universe and the sun orbits the earth

      as to genisis well replace day with era , like the correct translation should have been from the original hebrew and its not so bad
      it actualy also stops the bible from looking so distroted from the truth , and although it fails to explain how he create things , it sort of
      follows how you could describe the big bang theory to the masses , in a way that they would tend to grasp

      the truth of the cristian releigion , as jesus says in the bible " beware of those that profess to speak in my name" well thats the current christian faith , that would and during there history have persicuted people for not beleaving it even tortured to death for questioning it ,
      no matter what the cost , or if right or wrong and even when it preaches love and forgivness , the failing of all religions , its not the morrals , there good , its the way they turn a blind eye to failing the morrals if you confess , but persicute and punish if you question what is written

      its the attitudes like the topic subject that shows how far removed thease people are , shows they are basicaly a sect that by there interpritation of the bible , can only attempt t

    168. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stop the evil vena (waht was their name again) overlord

      Xenu.

    169. Re:Heading off at the pass by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      What little or no challenge? Have missed the bloody Pope himself coming out and saying that the Roman Catholic Church, merely the largest single Christian denomination worldwide, has no problem at all with Darwinistic Evolution?

      The nutballs are an almost exclusively American group. Deal with it in America, and stop blaming others for your problems.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    170. Re:Heading off at the pass by Caspian · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but the parenthood analogy falls flat on its face. If your children don't believe what you tell them, do you send them to a torture chamber for all eternity? If God is a parent, then he should be held to the same standards of decency as a good parent. God sends people to Hell for disbelieving in the story of Jesus. That is an infinite punishment for a finite "sin" (if, indeed, disbelieving a supernatural myth can be called a "sin"). If God is a "parent", he is a parent who throws his children into an oven if they stay up past their bedtime.

      --
      With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
    171. Re:Heading off at the pass by phaunt · · Score: 1

      already have troubles with another part of the Genesis. Since God is omniscient and transcends space and time, he must have known that Adam and Eve will eat from the forbidden fruit of knowledge. Why did he punish them for something he must have known all along? Why did he let it happen first of all? Why did he put the trees into the garden of Eden, it would have been in his power (remember, omnipotent) to put them somewhere else so they could not reach it. Personally, I think God framed the humans. So did Ford Prefect. Chapter 30 of The restaurant at the end of the universe, talking with Arthur Dent:

      "Your God person puts an apple in the middle of a garden and says, do what you like guys, oh, but don't eat the apple. Surprise surprise, they eat it and he leaps out from behind a bush shouting 'Gotcha.' It wouldn't have made any difference if they hadn't eaten it."
      "Why not?"
      "Because if you're dealing with somebody who has the sort of mentality which likes leaving hats on the pavement with bricks under them you know perfectly well they won't give up. They'll get you in the end."
      "What are you talking about?"
      "Never mind, eat the fruit."
      "You know, this place almost looks like the Garden of Eden."
      "Eat the fruit."
      "Sounds quite like it too."
      Arthur took a bite from the thing which looked like a pear.
      "It's a pear," he said.
    172. Re:Heading off at the pass by wrf3 · · Score: 1

      Frostalicious wrote I understood that fundamentalist christians believe that you need to accept Christ as your personal saviour in order to be saved.
      That's what most Christians (fundamentalist or not) would say. However, I'm not sure they know what they mean. "Accept" has at least 7 different shades of meaning in my on-line dictionary and I'm fuzzy on what the concept of "personal saviour" entrails. Is that like a "personal trainer"? It's almost as vacuous as the "ask Jesus into your heart" formulation. The core tenet is "He died for our sins, He rose from the dead." Those two parts pack quite a wallop.

      I understood this as to be a test of faith.
      I suppose it could be, but I've never really viewed it this way. All of us have faith -- the atheist just as much as the theist. We all have "self-evident" truths which require no proof. It's just that some of these self-evident truths are wrong. So the Gospel is more like God calling us to Truth.

      You have free will so you have to choose to accept Christ.
      I happen to be in the Reformed camp (i.e. a Calvinist), so I don't hold to the notion that man has free will.

      Your last sentence suggests it may actually be God who chooses.
      And so it is. "For he says to Moses, 'I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion.' So it depends not on human will or exertion, but on God who shows mercy. ... So then he has mercy on whomever he chooses, and he hardens the heart of whomever he chooses." [Romans 9:15,16,18]. Of course, these are some of the most hotly contested passages in all of Scripture.

      Am I misunderstanding?
      Not at all.

    173. Re:Heading off at the pass by moz25 · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I appreciate that you're honest and reasonable about it. The problem is that too many people don't realize or care to realize that they're cherry-picking. Debating with such a person is rather frustrating for me, because they solidify their biases into an absolute truth.

      I think the whole fuss about homosexuality is a good example of this: the idea of "homosexuality is ewww!!" is a common (and natural?) bias that's isn't necessarily religious in origin. Then again: since such a bias has been around for thousands of years, it would be no surprise if/that they became part of religious texts since the authors themselves were human too.

      The former is using the Bible for its intended purpose, the latter is dragging it into a usage it's not meant for.

      Isn't this another example of picking the interpretation that suits what you feel is right? The bible puts forward the idea of a deity whose intentions or ideas cannot be grasped by us humans, so opinions on the bible's intentions and interpretations practically form different religions in and of themselves.

      That being said: I do agree that there are good portions in the bible, but it cannot be used as a sole source of morals without an external reference to judge which parts should be picked or dismissed. Then again, you could of course just say that your gut feeling of right vs. wrong is directly controlled by God, etc :-)

    174. Re:Heading off at the pass by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The same works for the too heavy stone. When he creates it, it is too heavy, but when he lifts it, he wills it to be liftable.
      The alternative I personally prefer is that "a stone too heavy for God to lift" simply does not denote anything meaningful. Asking God to produce any such would be the same as asking him to produce a square circle - he can't do either, not because he is not omnipotent, but because the one asking himself does not properly understand what he wants. This plays slightly better together with logic, IMO.
    175. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Of course God gets to set the "rules" of good and evil. He is, provided you follow the christian theology, the "landlord" of the universe, he sets the moral codex to follow if you want to be on his side.

      But installing a different moral imperative would kinda go against the "logic" of godly existance. When you force your subjects to believe in you, they don't really believe but rather just work to spec. Now, I don't claim to understand the necessity of faith in the good vs. evil game between God and Satan, but the free will of a person appearantly has some greater meaning for either. Both can force you onto their way, but for some reason it's more "valuable" if you, the mere human, choose to follow either willingly.

      Maybe this whole existance is supposedly a huge election campaign with both sides trying to lure you into casting your vote for them.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    176. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, if free will is the reason behind the Apple Incident, proving the existance of God would be a serious blow to his plan of letting you choose based on faith. I don't have to have faith in a hammer falling to the ground when I drop it. It will do that, no matter whether I believe in it doing it or not. It's proven to work that way. If you could prove the existance of God and make him work "reliably", i.e. you pray X hours and you get Y out of it, faith is eliminated.

      And if that interpretation is right, the whole game between God and Satan is about faith and choosing one side out of belief, not because logic dictates it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    177. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1
      god knows everything in advance == you have no choice in anything AT ALL.

      there is absolutely no logically consistent way to disagree with that statement.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    178. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Of course not. And it can be very inspiring and interesting to discuss Bible matters with someone who has actually understood the Bible and not just learned it by heart.

      I'm not trying to "disprove" God. How? Saying he doesn't exist because some parts of the Bible don't add up puts me on the same level as the creationist zealots who claim that evolution is bollocks because some parts are still missing.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    179. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If animals don't have free will, does that mean the snake's actions were the will of god?

    180. Re:Heading off at the pass by Fafnir43 · · Score: 1

      Well, 'pure' omnipotence of the type you describe isn't logically possible. It's not just God who can't make a stone so heavy he can't lift it, it's any omnipotent being that could ever exist. So since that type of omnipotence is impossible, it does kinda make sense to define a new type of omnipotence that reflects the highest level of power that could concievably exist and apply that to God - the ability to do anything logically possible. I mean, face it, it's not exactly a huge restriction.

      Of course, then you run into problems like "Can God sin?", "Can God die?" and "Can God lose his divinity?". You can try to fill the gaps by saying that this would be logically impossible as God is a perfect being, but then you realise that an imperfect omnipotent being is therefore more powerful that a perfect omnipotent being. And then you're stuffed... So there are flaws in the idea of omnipotence, but AFAICS they only arise from trying to apply the concept to most (if not all) religions.

      --
      To know recursion, you must first know recursion.
    181. Re:Heading off at the pass by nattt · · Score: 1

      Well said! Probably above the head of the original poster though....

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    182. Re:Heading off at the pass by Fafnir43 · · Score: 1
      That idea has two major problems with it. First, the presence of the snake. The Bible's pretty explicit on the fact that only humans have free will. That implies that the snake does not have free will. That implies that either God is fallible, or that God put the snake there as a test. If God put the snake there as a test, then... Well, frankly he's not fit to be a father. It's not even as though there was anything else around that would prompt Adam and Eve to disobey.


      Secondly, that father-son relationship existed with Adam and Eve. So, ignoring the snake for now, maybe he has a right to punish them. And who knows - maybe death is even a fair punishment (although we're stretching the bounds of fairness a bit here). But death and suffering for every single one of their descendants? I mean, even post-Christ, we have to suffer through this life before the afterlife. Frankly, that is the act of a sociopath. I've never even met God, and yet he's punishing me for something I didn't even do?

      I don't buy it. As a metaphorical account, it makes at least some degree of sense. As a literal account, it casts God as a monster.

      --
      To know recursion, you must first know recursion.
    183. Re:Heading off at the pass by dodobh · · Score: 1

      Of course not. She didn't know what death was. See the problem?

      --
      I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
    184. Re:Heading off at the pass by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      At least the fundies take their holy book by it's word.

      Or at least those parts of it that survived the Council of Nicea.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    185. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Because He had a plan for this that would bring even more glory to Himself"

      Why would God want glory?

    186. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm posting AC because arguing theology on the internet (on slasdhot in particular) is like a three-legged race in the Special Olympics where all contestants are paraplegic. Nobody will ever acquiesce, just as no progress is ever made. QED.

      The ONLY reason I bother to reply is to point out the nature of free will. To choose God by force of God's design is a huge flaw. You must want to know God, to know God. To choose something other than God is your free choice to make. And you have the chutzpah to blame God for your ability to make that decision? You call it an "imperfection?"

      Would you really prefer that this decision be hard-wired into your mindset?

      I wouldn't.

    187. Re:Heading off at the pass by Pandamonium · · Score: 1

      How about this one: how could Eve have known it realy was a bad thing to do, eating this apple? God may have told them that eating from the tree of "Knowledge of Good and Evil" had dire consequences but they couldn't have known if that was a 'Good' thing or a 'Bad' thing, right? For that to happen they had to eat the fruit of..."Knowledge of Good and Evil"

      --
      Time...line? Time isn't made of lines! It is made of circles. That is why clocks are round.
      -- Caboose
    188. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh for fuck's sake...

      Can we please all stop talking about the story of Genesis as if we were children?
      If you want to be taken seriously, stop mentioning talking snakes and a delicious piece of fruit that instantly gave humanity shame and guilt. Talk about what the story is actually about: an awakening of sexuality within "Eve", "Adam's" inability to not bury his hard-on repeatedly inside her when she offers herself to him and the la petite mort that followed.

      Look, I understand that all those years in the Christian church have made you uncomfortable with the idea of discussing sex openly and it's now easier for you to talk about it in children's stories rather than say the word "erection", but don't make everyone else suffer through your neuroses.
      Or perhaps you believe so strongly in the works of people from 4000 years ago who were in a constant state of ergot-induced delusion that you honestly think there is some angel holding a flaming sword in front of a tree for the rest of eternity in case anyone else feels peckish?

      This wasn't intended as a troll - I'm doing this so I can read responses from all sides without instantly writing the poster off as mentally defective. Excuse the last paragraph - it is the product of a building rage for the past half hour.

    189. Re:Heading off at the pass by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >Or, they consciously, deliberately, knowingly rejected the one command given to them.

      So what? Without the knowledge of good and evil, they could not have known it was wrong to disobey god.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    190. Re:Heading off at the pass by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      Interesting points. The word "fundamentalist" is a loaded word, kind of like "hacker". Stripped down, it simply means someone who believes that the Bible is the word of God. In reality, it carries the connotation of someone who has intolerant religious views and who tries to force them upon others by means of political influence.

      The ID movement is the latter. The so-called TheoCons are the latter. Most of the protestant churches are the latter and the new, ultra-commercialized mega-churches are most definitely of the latter class.

      As for the former definition...As someone whom you could call a fundamentalist (the first definition), I can tell you this: My belief in the Bible 1) does NOT make me feel as though I am superior to others, 2) does NOT make me feel as though I am justified in using some political process to force others to be subject to my beliefs (creationism in schools, etc), 3) does NOT justify judging or hating anyone who disagrees with me. I bristle at the way the word "fundamentalist" is used here and elsewhere, just as I do when I read about "hackers" committing cybercrime.

      The Bible does teach that some things are wrong. The Bible teaches that not all religions are right. That does NOT justify intolerance. There are a lot of intelligent people here on /. Does anyone else see the difference between disagreeing with someone and being intolerant of them? I certainly hope so.

      Personally, I believe that there is benefit in following the Bible's teachings. I have seen it firsthand in my own life. The Bible teaches us about a loving God, despite what religions have incorrectly taught (for their own political gain, I must add). I appreciate science and love learning; and yet I feel like the more we learn about the world around us the more it implies a designer. If my children are taught all about evolution in school, that's fine with me. The concept of evolution is demonstrably true. I think evolution as a means for the origin of life is full of holes and absolutely untrue. I hope that my children are able to critically evaluate things for themselves and I hope that they come to what I feel is the right conclusion.

      If everyone thought exactly like I do, then how would I ever stand out? In fact, even if everyone believed what I believe in terms of religious viewpoints, then guess what? There is still room for personal opinion on an array of matters. Intolerance can exist there too. So the key here is that we (Christians and non-Christians alike) have to cultivate respect for one another. Some people make it harder to do than others, of course.

      I expect to be attacked for expressing my viewpoint here (I have in the past, so don't waste your time, I'll just ignore you if you are childish), and I most certainly expect my Karma to take a hit. Whatever. But I am so sick and tired of all the polarizing that takes place here and everywhere else. Slashdot is in many ways a good microcosm of the world when it comes to topics like this. You have blind religious zealots and so-called scientific atheists engaging in a yelling match, with little actually being said. This is like middle school or prison: you have to choose sides or else get pounded into the pavement. There is no middle ground. Why does it have to be that way? Why can't we tolerate someone else's viewpoints (religious or otherwise) without resulting to ad-hominem? It's not as though belief in God is demonstrably false. It's not as though atheists hold the patent on being reasonable, rational, or intelligent. And it's not as though just because a religious person doesn't want to kill everyone of a different belief system that he is lacking in conviction.

      --
      blah blah blah
    191. Re:Heading off at the pass by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Not really. Not at all. At the very worst, it's like respecting the kid who got a B+ on a math test over somebody who failed it, when you yourself get As. But even that is more condescending than I really want to agree with. I'd say he's allowing 10*50 to be 500 rather than 60 billion, but still asserting that infinity is a number in the reals (or that 0.999999999999999999999999... != 1). It may seem astoundingly wrong to us, but at the same time, it's really innocuous and you should never allow yourself to get worked up over it. They can multiply, and that's what's important.

    192. Re:Heading off at the pass by sohare · · Score: 1
      The skeptic (non-believer as you call them) is not finding a reason to IGNORE or invent a counter-explanation, they are just NOT making those hops and skips to come to the same conclusion you are. Both you and a non-believer are presented with the same basic information. Granted, a true believer's mystic experience usually has the aesthetics of whatever culture they were raised, and it is this aesthetic appearance that forms anecdotal "evidence" that non-believers conveniently never can see. So the non-believer just sees an event, it is the believer that paints a grander picture through their faith (i.e., leaps in logic).

      By the way, science by definition and the way it operates can only understand the naturalistic. It's not a choice what we call scientific. Of course, fundies would love to redefine science to include their mysticism. Why? Maybe because it adds an air of credibility. Funny, that. What a double standard.

    193. Re:Heading off at the pass by the+pickle · · Score: 1

      You're telling me that some Christians believe in evolution? Hmm, so if you're willing to compromise on evolution, why not gay marriage?

      Some Christians -- in my experience, those who believe that evolution is a perfectly valid explanation for how we got here -- are also willing to compromise on gay marriage. Those who are unwilling to compromise on evolution are also generally those unwilling to tolerate the concept of "marriage" involving two *people* who agree to love each other unconditionally and without end, without specifying the genders of the people involved.

      This seems like a very bad strawman argument thrown out for marginal comedic effect, which is fine if that's all it is, but if you're serious, you didn't think it through very well. I hate to ruin the joke, but I had to say something.

      p

    194. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      I'm becoming increasingly persuaded that not everyone can know God. I wish you'd make your mind up, or at least stop contradicting the bible:

      "That if you confess with your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord,' and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." - Romans 10:9 (NIV), emphasis added

      BTW, you do know that the NIV is a dishonest translation of the bible? Get a good scholarly one based on the original Greek instead.

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    195. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      God commands us to "Let both of them [believers and nonbelievers] grow together until the harvest; and at harvest time I will tell the reapers, Collect the weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my barn."

      I wish you'd show this passage to the evangelicals, doesn't "the weeds first" bit contradict their bizarre 'Rapture' doctrine?

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    196. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1
      They were also *gasp* Foreigners! Aargh! Beware those genocidal Foreigners! Being Foreign must cause moral corruption!

      So, we can excuse the Christians for the atrocities of the Inquisition, the witch burnings, the Crusades, the Heretic burnings, etc, etc, because those weren't the actions of "True Christians" (TM), but if fanatical scum with an ideology that isn't overly religious start slaughtering people it is a natural consequence of atheism?

      Oh you also left fundamentalist Nazis out of your catalogue of Evil Atheist Ideologies.

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    197. Re:Heading off at the pass by raoul666 · · Score: 1

      It's also possible that a mistranslation occurred at some point over the last 4000 years. 7 "stages" or "time periods" or "ages" or whatever could become "days" easily enough, when you're going from one language to another.

      --
      When cryptography is outlawed, bayl bhgynjf jvyy unir cevinpl
    198. Re:Heading off at the pass by wrf3 · · Score: 1

      Ian wrote: I wish you'd show this passage to the evangelicals, doesn't "the weeds first" bit contradict their bizarre 'Rapture' doctrine?

      That's a good question. I'd have to answer "not necessarily." I assume you're referring to the end-time view popularized by the awful "Left Behind" series by LaHaye and Jenkins which is technically known as pre-tribulational pre-millennialism. In this view, the "rapture" occurs, where Christians are "caught up" to be with Christ [1], followed by a 7 year period of worldwide tribulation which culminates in the defeat of the Anti-Christ and the physical return of Christ to the earth. Then Christ begins His 1,000 year reign. At the end of the millennium there is a final battle between God and His opponents. Then comes the eternal state.

      So, if one holds to this sequence of events [2], then one could argue that the separation of the wheat from the chaff occurs at the end of the millennial reign after the final battle and right before the eternal state.

      -----
      [1] The term "rapture" comes from the Latin translation of 1 Thessalonians 4:17 [NRSV]: "Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up in the clouds together with them to meet the Lord in the air; and so we will be with the Lord forever." I'm told that the Latin for "caught up" gives us the English word "rapture".
      [2] In the interest of full disclosure, I don't. I used to, but I've since moved on to amillennialism with partial preterist leanings.

    199. Re:Heading off at the pass by Copid · · Score: 1

      As an earlier poster mentioned, if you only consider naturalistic explanations as scientific. You are no longer searching for truth, but for the most credible naturalistic explanation. Even if it might be false.
      I think that the fundamental point is that science can only handle naturalistic explanations. If the real explanation is supernatural, science is basically sunk. Some tools are only good for certain jobs. As it happens, the scientific method does an insanely good job of getting us to the core of most practical matters, so I see no reason to abandon it just yet. I also hasten to point out that the fact that something can't be investigated scientifically doesn't mean that it's necessarily wrong. Conversely, the fact that an idea may be correct doesn't make it a scientifically valid hypothesis.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    200. Re:Heading off at the pass by BillEGoat · · Score: 1

      I'm a Fundie, and the faith you describe is not the faith I believe God asks of me. In fact, the hammer analogy is a good depiction of the type of faith I subscribe to. I'm unaware of any part of the Bible that claims salvation is based on belief without evidence. Quite the contrary, Christ's authority to teach was "proven" (fundie speak - "testified to") by performing physical miracles for all present to see. Not feeling the need to go into great detail here (it's late and I'm tired), but suffice it to say that God is the creator of reason, proof, evidence and is not afraid to use any of it. For someone seemingly as engaged in the debate as you are, it could make for an interesting intellectual study to read up on the biblical concept of faith.

      If you disbelieve it, that's fine. But know what you're making a decision about. Don't willingly choose to disbelieve a caricature.

    201. Re:Heading off at the pass by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      No, actually afaik the Bible only claims that salvation is dependent on belief, for whatever reason. Evidence, though, is in the eye of the beholder if there is no way to "prove" it today.

      I may choose to believe that the miracles described in the Bible or other texts happened or not. I have no way to verify them. I also have no way to subject them to "scientific" tests, reproduce the environment and get the same results. Can't work by their very nature. If I could, they wouldn't be miracles anymore, because a human can repeat them.

      I do actually enjoy a good discussion with someone who does believe and knows the Bible. The reason why I stress it, you would be quite surprised how many people prefer the concept of "blind" faith, i.e. putting their faith into something without even knowing about it. And a discussion about it with them is no fun at all, any kind of argument is immediately blocked with "Bible says so. Hush up!". That's no basis for a discussion.

      The problem with the proof you offer is that I would have to rely on texts that someone wrote at the very least 1800 years ago. And I do follow the logic that technology, if sufficiently advanced, is indistinguishable from magic. Or divine intervention.

      Now, this isn't meant to mean that some "alien technology" was involved. Some of the miracles can actually be explained. Unfortunately, there is no way to determine whether certain events occured the way they were recorded, or whether parts have been exaggerated, misinterpreted or outright invented.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    202. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      pre-tribulational pre-millennialism

      Ah. I see. Hmm, too much information. I am glad my life is not so complicated.

      Thank you for your considered and detailed [1] response.
      ---
      [1]Always did like a proper Latin Mass.

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    203. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      I'm becoming increasingly persuaded that not everyone can know God. I wish you'd make your mind up, or at least stop contradicting the bible:

      "That if you confess with your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord,' and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." - Romans 10:9 (NIV), emphasis added I'm talking about the idea that unless you've been chosen in advance by God, you're not capable of believing that. If you've been chosen, and then you believe and confess, then you are saved. That's not a contradiction. I need to learn more about this issue, though.

      BTW, you do know that the NIV is a dishonest translation of the bible? Get a good scholarly one based on the original Greek instead. Of course I know that; I quoted it because it's the most commonly used modern translation. But don't take the NIV's word for it! I gave you the reference; look it up yourself. Try this and this. If you think the meaning of the original Greek text differs significantly from the NIV in this particular passage, please feel free to suggest a better translation; otherwise there's not much point in complaining about it.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    204. Re:Heading off at the pass by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1

      And at what point does the parent rain brimstone upon the child?

      Hmm... maybe the point when the child kills someone? A little brimstone would be too bad...

      Or let me guess, you are the parent who tells their children they are grounded for 2 days if they happen to kill someone?

      -- Billy, no more decapitating your friends! You are grounded young man, no Playstation for you this evening!

    205. Re:Heading off at the pass by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      "You will surely die" wasn't specific enough?

      God says you will surely die. The snake says you will not die, but will become wise like God.

      If you don't already have knowledge of good and evil, how are you meant to choose?

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    206. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's when you force that belief on other people that causes problems

      I don't see how opening a theme park/museum is forcing a belief on you. No one is forcing you to go there. No one is forcing your kids to you there. Let them open their silly theme park. Start your complaints when public schools start forcing kids to go.

    207. Re:Heading off at the pass by I+am+Jack's+username · · Score: 1

      Leaving completely ignorant and unsophisticated children alone with the greatest predator in the universe does not seem like a wise parenting decision.
      So is sacrificing your only child after having him tortured because you made one of your creations do things you didn't want them to. Scaring your children with the zombies (Matthew 27:52-53) is also not a very fatherly thing to do. Oh, and that whole flood thing could've been handled better...
    208. Re:Heading off at the pass by wingwing · · Score: 1

      God knew all the time that Eve will fail because He intentionally built her this way, fallible. Then why all the fuss? She performed as designed.

      Of course God knew she would fail. Why should He punish her? Because he needs to correct the behaviour. If and when you have kids, you should realize that they are not perfect and will make mistakes. Why all the fuss? Because as a parent you need to help the child understand the mistakes and errors they make. Children need to learn from them and make better decisions in the future.

      You must be kidding - the whole religion is based on selective quoting.

      Of course there is selective quoting. You select quotes that are relevant to the topic being discussed.

    209. Re:Heading off at the pass by wingwing · · Score: 1

      But my parents have not forced me into anything

      So you've never been punished by your parents for doing something wrong? Disobeying your parents? Skipping school? Playing with matches? You've never been in trouble? God doesn't force either, but he does punish (as most parent do).

      It seems parental love is a better kind of love than God's love

      You're kidding right? Not all parents have love for their children. Parents can hurt their children in many selfish ways, parents can betray their kids. On the otherhand, God loves all people whether or not you believe in him. It is unconditional. Because of this, He gives you the choice of going to heaven or hell. Some parents on the other hand don't give their children a chance for anything in life.

    210. Re:Heading off at the pass by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      Both can force you onto their way, but for some reason it's more "valuable" if you, the mere human, choose to follow either willingly. I think the more correct term would be "Satan can't, God won't." Satan's interested in collecting bodies, God's interested in collecting hearts. The thing is, God sets the rules, and Satan only gets to play as long as God lets him. The game's over when everyone has a reasonable chance to pick sides.
      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    211. Re:Heading off at the pass by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      wrf3, I think you have done a nice job of explaining yourself here, and in most cases took the words out of my mouth. I too hate those vapid platitudes that people use like "Accept Jesus as your personal Saviour" and "Get saved". The Bible has real substance whether most people here appreciate that or not, and when people reduce it to feel-good sayings they do the gospel a great disservice. Intelligent people can see right through such empty devotion, and rightfully so. Anyhow, you seem "always ready to make a defense".

      Just one thing I want to ask you about: you say you do not believe in free will? Really?

      What then, in God's eyes, is the value of our worship if were pre-programmed already to serve him (or not to)? Isn't that like receiving a gift that someone was forced to give you? Conversely, why did his law to Israel condemn murderers (for example)? Because without free will, don't you remove accountability? Or are you able to somehow reconcile lack of free will and personal accountability? I am interested in your answer...

      --
      blah blah blah
    212. Re:Heading off at the pass by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "So, we can excuse the Christians for the atrocities of the Inquisition, the witch burnings, the Crusades, the Heretic burnings"

      No. It is inexcusable under any circumstances. But people tend to remember fanatical religious types of 500 + years ago, while ignoring the recent radical leftists of today. They still exist today. It is easy to cast stones at people you hate or disagree with. It is harder to cast stones at people you kind of, sort of, agree with (Socialists, Nazis, Fascists, and Communists). Which is why people like Rosie and Alec Baldwin are more scared of the "crazy christians" than say the crazy dictators of Iran and North Korea.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    213. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      Ah but you didn't originally characterise them as 'leftist' or 'radicals', you characterised them as 'atheist'. This is a misleading and unfair implication as atheism was not the dominant ideology of these groups.

      The fundamental (pun intended) similarity between the Inquisition, Al Qaeda, Stalinists, the Red Brigades, National Socialists and other dangerous sects is an intolerant and extremist ideology. All extremists are dangerous to lovers of freedom.

      The reason some Americans are scared of the "crazy christians" is that there is a brand of Christianity very close to home that is a threat to personal freedom and security and is at least as dangerous as any Nazi, fascist, leftist or Islamic dictatorship.

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    214. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about the idea that unless you've been chosen in advance by God, you're not capable of believing that. If you've been chosen, and then you believe and confess, then you are saved. That's not a contradiction. I need to learn more about this issue, though.

      Yes it is a contradiction, because the idea of Predestination is a) unbiblical and b) totally contrary to the concept of Free Will. If you read a little more theology you might come across the idea that logical conclusion of the doctrine of Predestination implies that God is not Benevolent.

      Also, even if it is from the NIV version and is written by that loony Paul, the text is pretty clear, there is no qualification about 'being chosen in advance'. I also believe Jesus is pretty clear on the fact that salvation is available to *anyone*, but it has been awhile since I read the bible.

      Of course I know that; I quoted it because it's the most commonly used modern translation. This I don't understand. If you believe that the bible is the word of God shouldn't you be *extremely* angry at the idea of a distorted version being circulated? Rather than quoting it shouldn't you be condemning it?

      otherwise there's not much point in complaining about it. I'm not complaining about the NIV version of Romans, I'm complaining about *you* trying to quote that passage while also proposing the unchristian "greed is good" doctrine of Predestination.
      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    215. Re:Heading off at the pass by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Atheism and Socialism/Communism often go hand in hand. It did in Soviet Union, it does in China, it does in North Korea etc. In fact, many would argue that Socialism has the State replacing God for the all powerful entity to exact obedience to. If one has a god, then the state is not 'all powerful' enough, which is why they tend to want to remove god from the culture.

      Moving to "fundamental" problems, I'm a "fundamentalist" in the most hard core way. If you don't have a set of "fundamental" core beliefs, then you are not opposed to anything at all. Do you really want to belong to a society where there is NOTHING immoral?

      Who is to say then that slavery is bad/evil if "everything goes". What if it is part of my "culture"? Who are you to say it is wrong? The moment you say it is, you've moved over to the "fundamentalist" side of things, willing to imprison me, or kill me to enforce your fundamental viewpoint.

      As for some Americans being scared of "crazy christians", those same people you label "crazy" are also very scared of those that belong to the "everything goes". They don't want their kids exposed (pun intended) to Pornography at every corner, "Smiling Bob" commercials on TV, Britney, Paris or Lindsay.

      While you may not see anything wrong with these things, some people do.

      Personally, I'm one of the rare types of "fundamentalists", that is both libertarian, and by your standards would be even "crazier" than your crazy Christian. But I'm also rare in that I have a brain which is used to ponder these deep and philosophical discussions without knee-jerking.

      I hate those types.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    216. Re:Heading off at the pass by schotty · · Score: 1

      Actually the Catholic Church did the hell stuff. That along with four different words getting translated to "hell" makes things murkier here.

      --
      Sigs are nice guns ...
    217. Re:Heading off at the pass by master_p · · Score: 1

      So you've never been punished by your parents for doing something wrong?

      I have been punished, but not eternally!

      God loves all people whether or not you believe in him. It is unconditional.

      It's not unconditional. The christian religion requires someone to live the christian's life, according to the holy books: you have to go to church, you have to love something you have never seen, you have to agree with something that goes against all logic, you have to say no to what your body tells you to do, and if you don't do all these things, you go to hell!

    218. Re:Heading off at the pass by wrf3 · · Score: 1

      hobo sapiens asked: Just one thing I want to ask you about: you say you do not believe in free will? Really?
      Yes. /. probably isn't the best place for a course in Reformed soteriology; if you're familiar with the five points of Calvinism, the T (total depravity) and U (unconditional election) imply no free will when it comes to salvation.

      What then, in God's eyes, is the value of our worship if were pre-programmed already to serve him (or not to?)
      "Programming", in this sense, is nothing more than the nature of a thing. My golden retriever delights in being with me because it is her nature to do so. I don't discount her affection because of this. We were created to acknowledge God's worth (which is what worship is). When we don't do so it simply demonstrates how broken we are. When we do so, it is a reflection of the new nature that God gives to those who believe.

      Isn't that like receiving a gift that someone was forced to give you?
      I think you mean to say, "isn't that like receiving a gift that you were forced to take?" (i.e., the receiver is forced, not the giver. Nobody forces God). To this I would say that "force" isn't the right metaphor. God no more "forces" people than an author "forces" his characters, or one's eyes "force" one to see when the lights are turned on in a pitch black room, or Lazarus was "forced" to come alive.

      Conversely, why did his law to Israel condemn murderers (for example)?
      Law (whether the Decalogue, the entire 613 commandments, or a secular law) condemns everyone, not just murderers. As Paul states in Romans, the purpose of (the) Law is to condemn (e.g. Rom 3:18-19) and, in fact, increases sin (Rom 5:20a).

      Because without free will, don't you remove accountability? Or are you able to somehow reconcile lack of free will and personal accountability?
      Most people claim that free will is necessary for God to hold man accountable for sin. I don't agree with this position. IMO, we are accountable by divine fiat, i.e. we are accountable because God says that we are. This, of course, results in the "but that's not fair" response, which takes us down the rabbit hole of just what "fair" is and who gets to define it. I claim that God's notion of fairness is not our notion. But that's a whole different long topic.

    219. Re:Heading off at the pass by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      I am curious, where in there does it say you may, or should rape a child? Or do you beleive the Earth was made in 7 days?

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    220. Re:Heading off at the pass by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      There are those of Us that also believe that the God of the Old Test was simply a worker tasked by the real God to make the World. He is known as the Demiurge The real God who is merciful and kind sent his son to clear up the mistakes of the Demiurge.

      Seraphim

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    221. Re:Heading off at the pass by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      ...or that a mote appeared for no reason in a space that had no reason for it to be there, exploded into may trillions of its mass into stars and planets. Yeah, that makes sense too.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    222. Re:Heading off at the pass by tiffany98121 · · Score: 1

      just because we don't understand why the big bang happened doesn't mean that we should deny the evidence that it happened.

    223. Re:Heading off at the pass by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      That is Faith, not Science.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    224. Re:Heading off at the pass by tiffany98121 · · Score: 1

      oh bs. the galaxies are moving away from each other. we can tell this by analyzing the red\blue shift of the light that has reached earth. you oughtta do a little research before you spout such nonsense

    225. Re:Heading off at the pass by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      My question was deeper than that though, and you missed the reference. The bigger question is 'Why'. If there was a big bang, why not many? Why not historical ones?

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    226. Re:Heading off at the pass by tiffany98121 · · Score: 1

      the answer to "why" is because the laws of physics are the way they are

    227. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      Atheism and Socialism/Communism often go hand in hand. It did in Soviet Union, it does in China, it does in North Korea etc. In fact, many would argue that Socialism has the State replacing God for the all powerful entity to exact obedience to. If one has a god, then the state is not 'all powerful' enough, which is why they tend to want to remove god from the culture.

      And now we are back to the first topic again. I largely agree with your statements here, the one party state does not tolerate rival ideologies, it seems obvious. The problem is that you persist in insisting that Socialism == Atheism and that Atheism is why leftist totalitarian states behave badly. The atrocities committed by Stalin or Mao were motivated by political and social agendas, eliminating rivals or the middleclass or the bourgeoisie, rather than specifically targeting religion. Where is the Atheist agenda? Is it valid to claim that the reason Ferraris go faster than Toyotas is because they are painted red?

      Also note that Mussolini, Franco and Hitler reached accommodations with the Christian church which then supported their regimes. It's not like they were paragons of virtue.

      Moving to "fundamental" problems, I'm a "fundamentalist" in the most hard core way. If you don't have a set of "fundamental" core beliefs, then you are not opposed to anything at all. Do you really want to belong to a society where there is NOTHING immoral?

      You seem like a fairly intelligent and reasoning person so I don't understand why you have to resort to such an obvious and flimsy false dichotomy. Are you really saying that without a "fundamental" belief system (which you appear to equate with Christianity) there is no possibility of moral behaviour? This would come as a surprise to the ancient Greek philosophers.

      Who is to say then that slavery is bad/evil if "everything goes". What if it is part of my "culture"? Who are you to say it is wrong? The moment you say it is, you've moved over to the "fundamentalist" side of things, willing to imprison me, or kill me to enforce your fundamental viewpoint.

      Having your morality ordained by a religious code does not resolve this problem. It just becomes an argument about which religion is 'right'. Many Christians in the United States of the early 1800s had no problem with slavery. The very Christian British Empire did not embrace slavery but did not outlaw it until the 1830s, they then enforced the ban pretty actively. The Islamic world has been tolerant of slavery throughout its history. So which of these groups is to be most admired for their consistent and "fundamental" morality?

      As for some Americans being scared of "crazy Christians", those same people you label "crazy" are also very scared of those that belong to the "everything goes". They don't want their kids exposed (pun intended) to Pornography at every corner, "Smiling Bob" commercials on TV, Britney, Paris or Lindsay.

      Please note "crazy Christians" is your term not mine. You used it while characterising and demonising leftist celebrity types as supporters of "(Socialists, Nazis, Fascists, and Communists)". I can't see how the corruption of your country's culture has anything to do with lack of Christianity, America is the most religiously observant of the western democracies by a long way. Perhaps unfettered commercialism, material greed and corporate malfeasance have more to do with it than lack of belief. I also find it ironic that you include Britney Spears, the self-proclaimed virgin Christian, in your examples of degeneracy.

      While you may not see anything wrong with these things, some people do.

      I see. If you wish to project your insecurities and prejudices onto anyone who does not adhere to your religious beliefs then so be it. Understand this however, your imputation is unfounded, cowardly, dishonest and intellectually lazy. Perhaps this is the reason "fundamentalists" h

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    228. Re:Heading off at the pass by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "You seem like a fairly intelligent and reasoning person so I don't understand why you have to resort to such an obvious and flimsy false dichotomy. Are you really saying that without a "fundamental" belief system (which you appear to equate with Christianity) there is no possibility of moral behaviour? This would come as a surprise to the ancient Greek philosophers."

      There is no false dichotomy. Read my statement carefully. I said if one doesn't have any (zero) core beliefs, they necessarily have to belong to the "anything goes" group. If you have any core, you have fundamentals to which you hold, and are willing to impose on others. My slavery example is a extreme example of a fundamental belief (either right or wrong). I'm making no value judgments on anyones core beliefs, just pointing out that most people have a "core" set of beliefs they are willing to impose on others.

      A good example is the whole gay marriage thing. Most people argue that if two people are committed to a loving relationship that they should be allowed to marry. How about brother to brother (siblings), Brother to sister? Mother to son? If you are willing to draw a line between any of those, then why can't I draw a line between a man and woman and all the those others?

      But as a Libertarian, I don't care what two people do, whomever they are. If Bob and Steve want to be "married", and there are people out there that wish to honor that, fine. But I don't have to, and the moment you try and make me, you have violated my first ammendment rights. Everyone is free to do what they want, as long as it doesn't impose upon others.

      There is a Hotel in Australia that has been petitioned and granted the right to exclude females and straight people (only gay men allowed), because to allow those others makes them feel "uncomfortable". Fine, I don't care about that, just don't have a cow when I demand the same "rights" for my place of business. The problem is, that I can't exclude them, but they can me. That is not equal.

      "Britney Spears, the self-proclaimed virgin Christian,"

      Yeah well. Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.

      Just because someone says it, doesn't make it so. Just because Al Gore claims to be "carbon neutral" with his big huge house that uses more natural gas in a month than the average house uses in a year, doesn't mean he is. Lots of hypocrites out there, everywhere on the social/political spectrum. I'm just saying, her actions defy her protestations to the contrary.

      "Again you seem to be make some pretty broad and stereotypical assumptions about my standards."

      Actually, it wasn't a broad or stereotypical assumption of anything of yours. Trust me, I am crazy by most people's standards, even some of those "crazy" christians that I readily admit are out there. Trust me on this, I'm not normal by anyone's standards.

      "Otherwise go back and read my words and confine yourself to addressing my actual statements. By the way, I wish you luck in defending your libertarianism from the Dominion Theology folk."

      Oh, I can hold my own against them. They usually run away after denying the one they claim to believe.

      "Then you should try harder not to behave like them."

      I'm not behaving like them, because I don't want to ban certain types of views, burn people at the stake, hang the infadels or kill people who disagree with me. On the other hand, I expect people to respect me the way they want to be respected. If gay people want to be left alone, great fine, dandy. How about the same for me? Will they leave me and mine alone? I doubt it, instead they'll label me a "homophobe" and a hater. I don't tell them they don't have a clue what they are saying, knowing that my own brother was gay.

      "I am concerned that I have now well and truely highjacked this thread and am now just perpetuating noise on Slashdot. You are welcome to the right of reply to my post but I do not think I will clutter up the thread any further. Thank you for your time."

      Thank you. At least you were polite.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    229. Re:Heading off at the pass by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

      Numbers 31: Now kill all the boys and all the women who have slept with a man. Only the young girls who are virgins may live; you may keep them for yourselves.


      What do you think "keep them for yourselves" mean.
    230. Re:Heading off at the pass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually you have to understand that to Calvin-influenced Christians -- this is most U.S. evangelical denominations -- the concept of unconditional election is both extremely important and extremely narrow.

      Essentially, the idea is that from eternity their god chose a select few for salvation, for his own reasons and purposes, and without the requirement of these elect to meet any conditions on their own.

      Calvinists who hold closely to this concept of unconditional election also hold to the concept of irresistable grace, and the two combine to the rather interesting moral position that no matter what depravity one of the elect chooses to fall into, he or she shall be saved because the will of god is infinitely stronger than the will of the sinner, even if he or she is an outright enemy of the faith.

      Neat, huh?

      Wikipedia has more of this under Calvinism, and I think a quick skim will help you realize what you're up against when arguing with people brought up in religions closely related to it.

      The major split among Calvinists is over the question of who is elect, whether this can be known, and what one should do about those who you believe are elect versus those who you do not. This has waxed and waned as an issue and the dominant branches have generally taken the line that all people are elect, it's just that some people are too stupid to be overwhelmed by the grace and majesty of the bible, so they need some help.

      Really, though, "poor stupid superstitious people" paternalism is a pretty common human mindset, even in people from regions that were spared from much exposure to Christianity and European thinking, and even among secular and even atheist types.

    231. Re:Heading off at the pass by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Of course I know that; I quoted it because it's the most commonly used modern translation. This I don't understand. If you believe that the bible is the word of God shouldn't you be *extremely* angry at the idea of a distorted version being circulated? Rather than quoting it shouldn't you be condemning it? I wasn't really serious when I agreed with you about the NIV. I'm aware of the criticism, but I don't personally consider the NIV to be significantly more distorted than any other translation. It's simply not possible to translate from one language to another completely different language, conveying the same meaning that the original intended while simultaneously remaining literally accurate to the actual text. The NASB sometimes errs on the side of translating the literal text (at the expense of making the meaning less clear), while the NIV sometimes errs on the side of getting the meaning across (at the expense of literal accuracy). Taken to an extreme is The Message, which attempts to convey the meaning with very little regard for the actual text, which would be a decent idea if it weren't for all the parts that are actually harder to read than the more literal translations (GOD-OF-THE-ANGEL-ARMIES and all that). Going to the opposite extreme, I have a copy of the New Testament with the text in Greek, with an English translation underneath it (and the KJV in fine print in the margin for reference).

      My point was, if you don't like the translation I picked, feel free to look it up in another one.

      I'm not complaining about the NIV version of Romans, I'm complaining about *you* trying to quote that passage while also proposing the unchristian "greed is good" doctrine of Predestination. What is your interpretation of John 6:65?

      "And He was saying, 'For this reason I have said to you, that no one can come to Me unless it has been granted him from the Father.'" (NASB)

      "And he said, 'Because of this I have said to you - No one is able to come unto me, if it may not have been given him from my Father.'" (YLT)

      Again, please feel free to use whatever translation you like, or go straight to the Greek if you're able to do so.

      Also, what did you mean by calling Predestination a "greed is good" doctrine?
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    232. Re:Heading off at the pass by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      I wasn't really serious when I agreed with you about the NIV. I'm aware of the criticism, but I don't personally consider the NIV to be significantly more distorted than any other translation. It's simply not possible to translate from one language to another completely different language, conveying the same meaning that the original intended while simultaneously remaining literally accurate to the actual text. Fair enough, but there is a difference between making trade-offs for a clearer translation and re-interpreting the text to suit oneself.

      What is your interpretation of John 6:65? In this particular case all the (few) passages quoted to support predestination that I have read seem, to me, to be emphasising that God is in charge, human activities alone are not sufficient to assure salvation. Overall the meaning I get is: 'God Decides'. Additional interpolation does not seem of much use.

      My general feeling is that sifting individual passages of the bible to find 'hidden' meanings is a dangerous practice. You can't assess the meaning of the bible in a series of selective and disjointed quotes. I believe there is a quote somewhere about the Devil quoting the scriptures.

      For example, how do you interpret John 6:45:
      "It is written in the Prophets: 'They will all be taught by God.' Everyone who listens to the Father and learns from him comes to me."
      Note use of all.

      and John 6:54?:
      "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day."

      And whoever. Looks like the Catholics are right after all.

      Also, what did you mean by calling Predestination a "greed is good" doctrine? Once you have convinced yourself that only some people are going to be saved (the 'Elect') your next question is "How do I know if I am one of them?". This results in another selective reading of individual passages which comes up with something along the lines of 'By their works/fruit/etc shall ye know them'. Historically this has led Predestination believers to emphasise the importance of seeking signs of God's favour to determine if someone is 'Elect' or not. Unsurprisingly, evidence of God's Favour is often defined in terms of material wealth. Thus the richer you are the more obvious it is that you are Predestined to heaven. Hence Greed is Good.
      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    233. Re:Heading off at the pass by moz25 · · Score: 1

      A little fast-forwarding over such uncomfortable passages solves a lot, I guess :-)

  4. As long as it's private. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Or in other words: I really don't care about this "museum", but get the fuck out of our public education!

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:As long as it's private. by User+956 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What I don't get is, why do creationists have such an obvious hatred for science, and yet they have a compulsion to explain their own beliefs using scientific-sounding words and scientific-looking venues?

      That's what's so absurd about this whole thing. Nearly everything in that museum is owed to real science. From the depictions of ancient creatures and people, to the actual robotics and materials used in their construction.

      You can't pick and choose which parts of science you like, and which parts of science you don't like. Talk about the ultimate hypocrisy.

      --
      The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    2. Re:As long as it's private. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "why do creationists have such an obvious hatred for science"

      same old slashdot users ..... with their unbelievable assertions..

      Assert
      "creationists don't hate science."

      Support
      Well you could google for creationist scientists ..
      but even better if you want to expand your mind how about reading some of the works of Johnathan Edwards ( and don't give up because of the 'funny' english style).

      Or you could just continue behaving unsciectificaly .. as so many people do ... which is and would be a massive shame..

    3. Re:As long as it's private. by jkorz · · Score: 0, Troll

      Creationists love science. We object to lies. In particular, the one that tells our children that even though nobody has ever observed it (observation = science) life came about on its own. Your evolutionist religion takes more faith to believe in than mine! Science is only science when someone can perform an experiment and observe results that coincide with their hypothesis. This experiment must be able to be repeated by other scientists. Evolution is not scientific as none of it has EVER been observed (other than changes in a particular kind of animal over time, which is adaptation, not evolution), it is a matter of faith. Creation takes faith too, but at least we don't make up lies (gill slits, geologic column, "missing links") to support our faith and erase the line between theory and fact. We definitely don't use your tax dollars to support our faith either!

      In short, evolution is NOT science, it is a feeble theory surviving on tax dollars made up and supported by people who want to justify their wicked lifestyles. Christians hate LIES, we love science.

    4. Re:As long as it's private. by CommunistHamster · · Score: 1

      I disagree. There is a place for creationism in schools - in the Religious Education lessons. Here in Britain, Religious Education is compulsory to some degree up to the age of 16. The lessons teach pupils about various religious traditions and histories, treating each religion equally. I've heard this should be instituted in the States because it prompts pupils to examine their own religion in the light that it is "just another religion among many", with nothing making it the Absolute Truth.

    5. Re:As long as it's private. by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 1

      >What I don't get is, why do creationists have such an obvious hatred for science, and yet they have a compulsion to explain their own beliefs using scientific-sounding words and scientific-looking venues?

      The short answer is Argument From Authority. Fundamentalists in particular are taught not to think for themselves; to accept the teaching of the preacher. Although they claim to be "Bible based," it is the authority of the preacher that tells the fundamentalist congregant what the bible means. This creates a problem with scientific authority.

      The solution, for these folks, is to try to create an alternative argument from scientific authority, hence the oxymoronic "creation science." Look at how many of these charlatans sport cereal box "doctorates" from diploma mills. A good example is Kent Hovind, Dr.Dino. Other examples abound.

      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    6. Re:As long as it's private. by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Your evolutionist religion takes more faith to believe in than mine!

      Really? Even though ours works, and yours doesn't? Interesting.

    7. Re:As long as it's private. by EonBlueApocalypse · · Score: 1

      This was a joke right?...

    8. Re:As long as it's private. by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      even though nobody has ever observed it (observation = science) life came about on its own.


      Um, you should probably read a bit about evolution before deciding to disbelieve it. The Theory of Evolution makes no statements about abiogenesis, and anyone saying it does is someone who doesn't understand evolution. A supernatural creator endowing life on unliving matter is perfectly compatible with evolution as taught in any science curriculum. The mechanisms of Evolution are easily repeatable in any experiment, and the larger theory provides numerous predictions that have all proven correct. That's science, and that is all that is taught in anything below advanced college-level science courses.

      There are many theories about both abiogenesis and the creation of the universe. Its unlikely we'll ever know with any significant scientific certainty which theories are correct (though we'll certainly narrow down which ones are possible). It may be appropriate for a science text to talk about those theories which are being most closely studied (the man versions of the Big Bang, for example), but it would be incorrect for any student to be told "the universe started with a Big Bang". It is 100% scientifically correct to tell a student that Evolution is as proven as Gravity or the speed of light.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    9. Re:As long as it's private. by SEMW · · Score: 1

      Evolution is not scientific as none of it has EVER been observed (other than changes in a particular kind of animal over time, which is adaptation, not evolution), it is a matter of faith. Oh dear...

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

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence_of_evolution
      --
      What's purple and commutes? An Abelian grape.
    10. Re:As long as it's private. by fermion · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Well, it is not really private. Churches are primarily a way to shelter tax money from the government. For instance, a person that tithes 10% net, no more than 7 gross, is allowed to take that money off the taxes, and keep that money. In the end the person actually only tithes perhaps 5%, and gets to keep a fistfull of money, money that is used to buy fancy cars and sunday clothes rather than buy critical kit for the military.

      So, if the museum was funded through the church scam, and cost 27 million, at an average tax rate of 20%, it cost our fighting force over 5 million dollars. Talk about not supporting our troops. Well, I guess if we pray that our god's children kill all their god's children first, it will all work out. Or even worse, 5 million for education so our kids will be smart enough to avoid the bullet, and museum, all together.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    11. Re:As long as it's private. by malsdavis · · Score: 1

      Either that or the guy's just really, really stupid.

    12. Re:As long as it's private. by maxume · · Score: 1

      mxyzptlk.

      Speciation has been observed; it goes beyond simple, as you call it, adaptation(so, literally, a particular moth has given rise to another particular moth that will not interbreed with moths that its parents will interbreed with).

      And don't tell scientists that rigorous documentation and speculative explanation of observed phenomena is not science, they will be might disappointed(vis a vis CMBR and the like).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    13. Re:As long as it's private. by jkorz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Here's a challenge then. Refute one of Dr. Hovind's claims with actual scientific proof. Or you might want to watch his debates where he takes on your evolutionist leaders (the ones who get paid to spread this bull). I guess though that it is easier for you to just take cheap shots at the man rather than actually try to do some research and prove that something he said is untrue.

    14. Re:As long as it's private. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assertion: "Creationists hate science"

      Proof: Creationists call themselves "scientists", when they reject even the most fundamental aspects of science, such as the scientific method. If they can successfully confuse people as to what science actually is, then they will succeed in harming it.

      (Case in point: They've already successfully confused the public as to what "theory" means in a scientific context.)

    15. Re:As long as it's private. by malsdavis · · Score: 1

      "...it is a feeble theory surviving on tax dollars made up and supported by people who want to justify their wicked lifestyles."

      Are you referring to evolution or Christianity?

      Because that's a pretty darn accurate summary of the last 2000 years of Christianity!

    16. Re:As long as it's private. by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Science is only science when someone can perform an experiment and observe results that coincide with their hypothesis. This experiment must be able to be repeated by other scientists. Evolution is not scientific as none of it has EVER been observed (other than changes in a particular kind of animal over time, which is adaptation, not evolution), it is a matter of faith. It is as much science as many other fields of science. Hypotheses have been proposed, and confirmations of those hypotheses have been found. The hypotheses range from predictions of particular kinds of fossil forms (to be found in particular strata) to be transitional; through to predictions of comparative genetic similarity between organisms. Hell, even the existence of genes and DNA was a prediction of evolution, which posited that there must be a mechanism for traits to be inherited.

      And then, as you note, there is the fact that there have been plenty of observations of adaptation, ranging from the small, through to observed speciation. We've even seen new kinds of biological process generated (nylon eating bacteria). You seem to want to dismiss all this evidence by saying it is "just adaptation", however, each such adaptation is a step, and we've certainly seen adaptations that result in organisms that are every bit as viable as their predecessors. Such small adaptations add up, and the result is evolution.

      I might claim that I can get from a point here, to some point "over there" by walking. You might claim this is impossible. If I can take a step away from where I am now, however, and be just as capable of taking a step as before, then that is strong evidence that, despite "over there" being quite a distance away, I can probably get there. By saying that taking one step after another will never allow me to get there, however, you are saying that somewhere along the journey I will meet some obstacle that will confound me taking any further steps in the desired direction. You aren't giving any reasons why such an obstacle exists, however, nor any evidence that it does. You are simply asserting that it must be there because you dislike the conclusion. Give me a reason why the distance can never be covered by a sequence of steps and I might listen.
    17. Re:As long as it's private. by User+956 · · Score: 1

      They don't, unless you assume that evolution is scientific fact. Evolution is a _theory_

      I do not think that word means what you think it means.

      Heliocentrism is also a theory. Are you next going to argue against the idea that the earth revolves around the sun?

      --
      The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    18. Re:As long as it's private. by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1, Troll

      Have you thought about believing in Creation without. Have you considered that the Bible does not really support creationism, not any more than slavery?

      --
      No data, no cry
    19. Re:As long as it's private. by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      There is a place for creationism in schools - in the Religious Education lessons.


      Unfortunately here in the States the idea of comparative religion below college level is very controversial, precisely because our vocal evangelical minority considers the very existence of other faiths and exposure to them to be morally troublesome. Which is a shame, because I've yet to meet more than a handful of people who've ever taken a comparative religion class and didn't find it fascinating and enjoyable.

      Even those of strong faith who took classes generally found it strengthened their devotion, as they understand God seems to have spoken to every society in a different way, but with a surprisingly common message once you remove the cultural and historical traditions that seem to indicate some great theological or philosophical gulf.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    20. Re:As long as it's private. by jkorz · · Score: 0, Troll

      The only thing that has ever been observed is minor changes within a kind of animal over time: adaptation. I agree that zebras, horses and donkeys all most likely had a common ancestor, but they can all interbreed as well: same kind of animal. No real evidence has ever been discovered (or much less reproduced) that one kind of animal can bring forth an animal of a different kind: i.e. a fish giving birth to a frog. The idea that a complicated organism can "evolve" one part at a time is just idiotic, no matter how many people believe it. Everybody used to think that the earth was flat and that everything revolved around the sun. The bible clearly contradicted both of these theories and later science caught up with the bible. Same thing with sanitation.

      Evolution is based on the "geologic column". Do some reading and see where the geologic column came from. You might also want to read how the fossils and rock layers are dated (spoiler: they are used to date each other... circular reasoning).

      By the way, would you mind going on record by defining the evolution that is supposedly as true as gravity or the speed of light? I agree with the observable fact that kinds of animals change over time (like the zebra, horse, donkey thing above). I think it is ludicrous for people to actually believe that this observable fact some how correlates to proof that a single cell organism can evolve into a complex being like a human though. This is especially true when you look into what bones from the "missing links" were used to reconstruct them. In some cases it is like a jawbone and a tooth that they build the rest off of.

    21. Re:As long as it's private. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They don't, unless you assume that evolution is scientific fact. Evolution is a _theory_, and fortunately science consists of more than theories"

      Actually... it doesn't.

      Any time you hear of a scientific "law", it's just a theory, too. Gravity? That's just the best theory around so far to explain why the apple falls. Maybe at some point they'll find something that disproves Gravity, at which point that theory is thrown out. Many, many, many scientific theories have been thrown out over the years. All science can do is say when something isn't right based on observed phenomena. They then make theories that match up with what they've seen so far, but are prepared to throw them out if/when they find evidence that they were wrong.

      So, yes. Evolution is "just" a theory. So is gravity.

    22. Re:As long as it's private. by Wavicle · · Score: 2, Informative

      Okay, here's one of Hovind's arguments against the Pangea theory:

      "I bet they never told ya they shrank Africa 40% to make it fit."

      I'm not going to waste much space here, but it doesn't take a genius to figure out this is incorrect. What Hovind did is fail at the map maker's dilemma. There is no way to draw a proportion-correct spherical surface onto a flat surface. Africa wasn't shrunk except in that its projection onto a flat screen had to be distorted to fit. Cartographers have multiple projections for this depending on what they are trying to express (space-filling, equal area, etc.).

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    23. Re:As long as it's private. by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      >Refute one of Dr. Hovind's claims with actual scientific proof

      From http://www.drdino.com/articles.php?spec=79
      For example, consider that it is essentially accepted that an antediluvian water canopy existed surrounding the earth;

      How about he support some of his claims?

    24. Re:As long as it's private. by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      >Refute one of Dr. Hovind's claims with actual scientific proof From http://www.drdino.com/articles.php?spec=79 [drdino.com] For example, consider that it is essentially accepted that an antediluvian water canopy existed surrounding the earth; How about he support some of his claims?

    25. Re:As long as it's private. by localman · · Score: 1

      Bah! I say bring it right into the heart of public education. Make a cirriculum. Put it on PBS. Require it as a major from K-12. Then, like math and science, it will become incredibly uncool and kids won't have any interest in it and they'll rebel against the idea as they get older. In 20 years we'd see a massive dropoff in church enrollment.

      There seems to me no better way to ensure a complete disinterest in something than to teach it in school.

    26. Re:As long as it's private. by maxume · · Score: 1

      When you say something as assertive as 'ludicrous for people to actually believe that this observable fact some how correlates to proof that a single cell organism can evolve into a complex being like a human', you are drastically overestimating the ability of your brain to cope with 1 billion years.

      No one who supports evolution knows how the first multicellular organism arose(speculation would have you believe that two dissimilar groups of single cell organisms crashed into each other in a vast soup of life, and of the trillions of members of each group, the occasional pairs of individuals found it advantageous to work together), but saying it couldn't have happened demands at least as much explanation as saying it could have happened.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    27. Re:As long as it's private. by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      Creationists love science. We object to lies.

      Oh BULL SHIT. I have argued with enough creationists to know they absolutely love to lie. When you point out what they are saying isn't true, they say "Oh, we weren't lying, we just didn't know." Then a week later you will catch them telling THE SAME DAMNED LIE.

      Case in point: Nebraska Man.

      Nebraska man wasn't even a hoax. It was wishful thinking that was rejected by all scientists looking at it EXCEPT for one scientist who was hoping to make a name for himself by finding a new hominid. The "drawings" of Nebraska man were never represented as anything but a "possibility" and was stated up front it was a commissioned piece of artwork based on nothing. All that was available for Nebraska man was a tooth (which turned out to belong to an extinct pig). Science did not accept Nebraska Man because the evidence for his existence was, well, essentially non-existent.

      Do you want me to list how many main stream creationists attacking evolution have brought up Nebraska Man? Hovind, Ray Comfort, Ken Hamm... they just love to point out Nebraska Man even though everything they say about it is essentially a tale they made up themselves.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    28. Re:As long as it's private. by interiot · · Score: 1

      why do creationists have such an obvious hatred for science, and yet they have a compulsion to explain their own beliefs using scientific-sounding words and scientific-looking venues?

      Because they see that science is coming up with evidence that either contradicts what's stated in the Bible, or more often contradicts what religious people think the Bible implies (eg. nowhere does the Bible address whether condoms reduce the transmission of AIDS, but there's a lot of pseudoscience about that). And the problem is that potential recruits sometimes believe science's evidence and conclusions, so religion feels the need to try to come up with an an alternative explanation for the evidence that isn't directly incompatible with their existing beliefs, and they try to do it in a way that will convince the average guy on the street.

    29. Re:As long as it's private. by Coryoth · · Score: 2, Informative

      No real evidence has ever been discovered (or much less reproduced) that one kind of animal can bring forth an animal of a different kind: i.e. a fish giving birth to a frog. This is, of course, a straw-man, since evolution suggests no such thing. Evolution claims that if enough small steps are made, the result can be that the accumulated change is large. Your suggestion that no-one has ever observed a fish giving birth to a frog is akin to arguing that a journey of a mile can't be made, because no-one has observed anyone teleporting over that distance.

      Perhaps you are hoping for something akin to the "prime mammal" fallacy though? That argument runs as follows: clearly only a mammal can give birth to a mammal, thus there can have been no "prime mammal" to give birth to the first mammal, because it couldn't have been a mammal itself! It sounds good at first, but it is really just playing with semantics. Our classifications are simply an oder that we impose upon a world that has no such order. And often that imposed order isn't terribly good -- for example, genetically the difference between humans and chimps (which are in separate species) is smaller than the difference between subspecies of certain birds. We carve out arbitrary lines through nature that exist only in our own minds. In nature the lines are not crisp, but instead blurred. See, for example, ring species, which provide a continuous range between two separate species. Such continuous ranges stretch back through time as well, over many generations. Moving backwards we would see creatures that were less and less easily identifiable as mammals until the line begins to blur. We would see animals that we would not be able to class an mammals, yet we could neither (using out current definitions) really class them as "not mammals".* Thus there is no "prime mammal" not because mammals don't exist, but because the line blurs, and nature tramples over our artificially imposed order -- there is simply no clear point where some arbitrary threshold (which ultimately exists only in our minds) is crossed, thus no "prime mammal".

      I would suggest that what you need to provide to support your argument, is some evidence that an accumulation of change cannot continue indefinitely. What you need to provide is some reason why generation after generation of small changes must, for some reason, result in change stopping, or reversing. Without such an argument simple induction on small changes is a perfectly reasonable argument to justify eventual large changes being the result.

      * This is the sort of place where intuitionistic logic, which doesn't accept the law of excluded middle, starts to make a lot of sense.
    30. Re:As long as it's private. by Wavicle · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Everybody used to think that the earth was flat and that everything revolved around the sun.

      No, the educated have for thousands of years known the earth was a sphere.

      The bible clearly contradicted both of these theories and later science caught up with the bible.

      So how high was that mountain in Matthew 4:8 where all the kingdoms of the world could be seen? I'd think that a little difficult if the earth were a sphere.

      Same thing with sanitation.

      Oh you mean the one that says if you have an STD wash in running water, but otherwise use stagnant water? (You should really be careful about reading literal translations of Hebrew euphemisms.)

      No real evidence has ever been discovered (or much less reproduced) that one kind of animal can bring forth an animal of a different kind: i.e. a fish giving birth to a frog.

      Wow, you're fond of lying, aren't you? You must hate yourself. Not only has speciation been observed, but evolution doesn't say that a fish would give birth to a frog.

      You might also want to read how the fossils and rock layers are dated (spoiler: they are used to date each other... circular reasoning).

      I thought you just said you hated lying... And yet you just did it, again, right there. (Spoiler: Geological dating has gold standards. Reference fossils always depend on radiometric geological dating.)

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    31. Re:As long as it's private. by Secrity · · Score: 1

      The fundies have had LOTS of practice in picking and choosing what they want to believe and follow from the bible. Picking and choosing from science is no more difficult than picking and choosing from the bible.

    32. Re:As long as it's private. by NMerriam · · Score: 2, Informative

      No real evidence ... i.e. a fish giving birth to a frog

      Such an event would, in fact, completely disprove evolutionary theory, so I can only assume you've been mislead as to what Evolutionary Theory really is. There are literally trillions of billions of events that would disprove Evolution as a theory beyond any capability of repair, yet none of those things has happened.

      Evolution would be the simplest thing in the universe to disprove if it were untrue, since reproduction is one of the few things that happens whether scientists are starting the experiment or not. Think how easy it would be to disprove gravity if it had turned out to only be a local phenomena to our planet or galaxy -- the instant we had good telescopes and launched spacecraft we would have seen how wrong we were. Evolution is even easier -- there are species that reproduce in minutes, where you can fit billions of them in a container in your hand. The planet is running quadrillions of experiments every hour of every day and has been for thousands of times longer than man has walked upright, and you only have to stumble across ONE of them that disproves evolution and it would be completely discredited.

      Everything you claim impossible has in fact been seen, measured, and reproduced. Speciation has occurred and been documented many times in laboratories and the wild. Sorry that mammalian evolution has not been observed, that's simply the nature of our lifespans. It's far more convenient to observe firsthand things that reproduce quickly. Locking 4,000 cats in a lab for a few centuries just is not as practical as it sounds (though no doubt it would be damn entertaining).

      When you're discussing geological timescales and massive changes, all we can go on is the geological record. Note for the record, my mom is a geologist so I have more than a casual acquaintance with geology, and your dismissal of the science of dating is laughingly incorrect. The idea that it is circular logic to correlate multiple pieces of evidence to build confidence is absurd. We have written documentation of the ages of some locations, we have experimental proof of the decay of every element and every common material used by human civilizations, we have independent physical evidence of the age of major strata, we have experimental proof of the timespans required for geological and chemical actions taking place, if every one of those things agrees across multiple experiments then you've proven as well as anything can be proven that geological dating is reliable. It predicts where things will be well before we ever start digging or drilling, so if it is mistaken, it is mistaken in a bizarrely consistent manner.

      Most importantly, like evolution, nothing has ever been discovered in a geological dig that showed such dating techniques were wrong. Again, this would be a simple thing to disprove, you just find a single iron axe that is 6,000 years old buried in stable rock from 20,000,000 years ago and geology as a science would have a MAJOR problem.

      By your "circular" reasoning, both gravity and the speed of light are suspect because we use each to verify measurements of the other in many cosmological experiments.

      "Missing links"? I don't even know what that is supposed to refer to. There is no such thing as a "missing link" except in Creationist books. In real science there are simply different species, and they all change over time, the greater the timespan, the greater the change. I find it is simpler to imagine evolution working vast change over vast time than it is to imagine why so many species would be so morphologically similar, so genetically similar, and yet have no actual commonality.

      I appreciate the sincerity of your belief, but it really does appear to be based in large part on either a misunderstanding of what evolution is and says, or a misunderstanding of what the state and practice of science is. Unfortunately there are a great many people out there pub

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    33. Re:As long as it's private. by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      Science is only science when someone can perform an experiment and observe results that coincide with their hypothesis.

      Er... no. Or rather, yes, but with the caveat that "experiment" doesn't necessarily mean "something done in a lab". One proposes a hypothesis that can explain existing observations. That hypothesis is then tested, by using it to make predictions about future observations (which may or may not be produced by an experiment in the lab). If the predictions are found to be correct, then the hypothesis gains credence (but isn't considered "proved"). If at any point new observations are found which contradict the hypothesis, then it is discarded or revised.

      As an example of science that does not involve lab experiments, consider Kepler's laws of orbital motion. Kepler hypothesized his "laws" based on the excruciatingly detailed observations of Tycho Brahe. Obviously, performing a lab experiment to confirm the laws is rather difficult (hard to fit even Mercury in the lab, let alone the Sun). Instead, Kepler used his "laws" to make predictions about the future motion of the planets. Later observations bore out his hypothesis, and the "laws" gained credence. Note that Kepler's laws are now widely accepted (Google for "Keplerian orbit"), but have never been tested via laboratory experiment. The closest we've come to "experimental" verification is the launch of artificial satellites, starting in the 1950s. But Kepler's laws were commonly accepted long before then, on the basis of observations of planetary motion (and later, as the result of Newton's demonstration that an inverse square gravitational force would result in Keplerian orbits).

      Evolution is much the same. A large number of observations (both fossil records, and studies of existing flora and fauna) pointed to some kind of evolution occurring. Darwin's big contribution was to develop an explanation for the mechanism by which evolution occurs (i.e. natural selection) - a contribution more akin to Newton's development of gravitational theory than to Kepler's purely descriptive laws of orbital motion. Darwin's theories were lent credence as a result of both later field and fossil observations, which were found to follow the pattern predicted by Darwin's theory. Of course, like Newton, it was eventually found that the original version of Darwin's theory wasn't perfect, and evolutionary theory has...well...evolved, in much the same way that Newtonian mechanics has given way to relativistic mechanics. But evolutionary theory is on as firm a scientific footing as any other branch of science (and firmer than some).

    34. Re:As long as it's private. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We object to lies. In particular, the one that tells our children that even though nobody has ever observed it (observation = science) life came about on its

      Are you talking about science or creationism? I'll make my point by paraphrasing you:

      We object to lies. In particular, the one that tells our children that even though nobody has ever observed it life came about in a few days, at God's will.

    35. Re:As long as it's private. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Evolution is not scientific as none of it has EVER been observed

      Others have already given you significant observations, but I just thought I'd add something here:

      Do you believe in atoms?

      Why?

      No atom has EVER been observed, has it? Certainly not a proton, or a neutron? Does the Bible say anything about them?

      Yet, our modern chemistry is pretty much entirely built around atomic theory, and it seems to work. Because although atoms are a "theory" which has "never been observed", we do have sufficient evidence to support it that it seems insane to be looking for another explanation.

      So I'll tell you what: You come up with a more plausible theory with better evidence than our current theories about atoms and quantum mechanics, and I'll believe yours instead. It might even be String Theory (though I doubt it). Until then, I'll believe in atoms.

      And the same goes for evolution. You provide something more plausible, with more supporting evidence, and I'll believe that instead.

      I'm not entirely sure why I'm responding, though. It's obvious that you're at best misinformed, and probably deluded. WTF is this:

      We object to lies. In particular, the one that tells our children that even though nobody has ever observed it (observation = science) life came about on its own.

      Evolution doesn't claim that. For all we know, God came down and touched some primordial steaming pool of mud and created the first single-celled organism.

      Your evolutionist religion takes more faith to believe in than mine!

      I don't see how it would, given that your religion takes exactly as much faith to believe in as Pastafarianism. In fact, the only religion I can think of that would require more faith is P=NP, because that actually requires abandoning logic.

      (Christianity, even Fundamentalist Christianity, does not always abandon logic. Sometimes, it uses entirely valid arguments based on unprovable or provably false axioms. Thus, valid, but untrue.)

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    36. Re:As long as it's private. by jellie · · Score: 1

      Well, things might get worse. Kenneth R. Williard, who was a member of the Kansas Board of Education (yes, you probably remember that) is running unopposed to be the president of the National Association of State Boards of Education, a non-profit organization of state school boards.

      Apparently, when he was on the Kansas board, the board was looking for a replacement for the education commissioner, and hired the NASBE, the group he wants to lead - and fired it.

    37. Re:As long as it's private. by H0D_G · · Score: 1

      Nicely said!

      --
      Kids! Bringing about Armageddon can be dangerous. Do not attempt it in your home!
    38. Re:As long as it's private. by 75th+Trombone · · Score: 1

      You can't pick and choose which parts of science you like, and which parts of science you don't like.

      I dunno. I don't think you're too crazy if you like the "guessing at the causes of testable, observable stuff that happens today" part of science more than the "guessing at the causes of untestable, unobservable stuff that happened way back in the past" part.

      --
      The United States of America: We do what we must because we can.
    39. Re:As long as it's private. by Eideewt · · Score: 1

      One more important point to make is that the only reason the word "law" is used to refer to Kepler's achievement while "theory" is used for Darwin's is historical. We don't call things laws any more. If Kepler came up with his theory now, we would call it just that (and then ask where he's been for the last 400 years... orbits are old news).

    40. Re:As long as it's private. by HeroreV · · Score: 1

      You can't pick and choose which parts of science you like, and which parts of science you don't like. Talk about the ultimate hypocrisy.
      Ultimate? The people right above you are crying that they should be praised for picking and choosing pieces of the Bible.

      It's bad enough to entirely base all your beliefs on the Bible, but it's even worse when you know it doesn't make any sense, and instead of giving it up, you just chunk out the most ridiculous parts to make believing easier. If you have the mental capacity to see that the Bible is bullshit, but you go along with it anyway, you are worse than the fundamentalists who believe everything! At least they have the willpower to accept the entire Bible instead of just ignoring whatever is too difficult to swallow!

      The people who choose to believe just the parts of the Bible they want to believe are making an explicit choice to believe what they know is wrong.
    41. Re:As long as it's private. by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      This is insightful? Who is making this judgement? I challenge all those who modded this comment to 5 to define the insight into the article or any argument this person has supposedly provided.

    42. Re:As long as it's private. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      There are mosquitoes in the London Underground which are a seperate species to ones above ground. Clearly the London Underground wasn't around when God pulled the universe out of his ass a few thousand years ago, so we have observed seperation of species. Not that you are able to change your mind on such things. That makes God angry.

    43. Re:As long as it's private. by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      No real evidence has ever been discovered (or much less reproduced) that one kind of animal can bring forth an animal of a different kind: i.e. a fish giving birth to a frog.

      Evolution doesn't predict that, but call Ripley if you come across this.

      However, perhaps you might consider that frogs DO give birth to fish (i.e. tadpoles). What was God thinking when he made that up? Obviously He was testing our faith by suggesting that frogs evolved from fish.

      I realise that recapitulation theory doesn't prove anything conclusively, but it is highly suggestive of an animal's (and our) genetic heritage.

    44. Re:As long as it's private. by MeltUp · · Score: 1

      The idea that a complicated organism can "evolve" one part at a time is just idiotic, no matter how many people believe it.
      So, take us humans as a complicated organism. We where created in one piece by God, I guess.
      But God seems to have created us with major genetic defects (cancer, allergic reactions, hereditary diseases, ...)! Those do not only hit "sinners", but also "innocent children".
      Did the all-powerful-and-all-knowing-God make a big mistake? One that can't be corrected? Or is he just a sadist? (And don't say it's a test, that only makes him more of a sadist.)

      With all our defects, it's clear humans are the result of pure chaos and evolution on our DNA code. It's idiotic not to see that, no matter how many people don't believe it.
      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. -- Pablo Picasso
    45. Re:As long as it's private. by wingwing · · Score: 1

      Churches are primarily a way to shelter tax money from the government
      Oh yes! Those church folk... all a bunch of crooks and mobsters, laundering money, etc...

      Of course, churches don't do any good right? Like feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, giving opportunity to the poor. A friend of mine is on her way to South America with a missions team. They are going there on their own expense in order to provide medical and dental care, teach english and spread the word of Christ.

      Tell me, do you think it is better if they cashed in their plane tickets and donated the cash to our gun-toting soldiers?

    46. Re:As long as it's private. by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      The short answer is Argument From Authority.
      Yet the unwashed scientific community does the same. At the time of the publishing of Einstein's work it was said that there might be three people that understood it. Yet, how many believed in it because of these three 'Prophets'?

      Sera
      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    47. Re:As long as it's private. by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      ...and Science does the same. Are Dinosaurs warm or cold blooded this week? How many Mesons are there this week? Is Butter good for you...or bad? Lets face it, the popular media has ruined scientific research. And 'Science' is its worst enemy here.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
  5. I do think this answers one question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That slashdot needs more pageviews ATM.
    Be back tomorrow!!!

  6. So where are the cave drawings? by arthurpaliden · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We have lots of cave drawings of man with impressive animals like wooly mamoths and the like. So why are there not cave drawings of man with really impressive animals like the dinasaurs. I mean I I was impressed enought to paint the large elephant like creature you would think that a 20' high meat eating moster would at least reate a few pictures.

  7. One question about this story: by NickCatal · · Score: 1

    Why is the dinosaur eating a golf ball?

    --
    -nick
    1. Re:One question about this story: by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Since God gave man dominion over the earth, it wouldn't look right if a dinosaur was eating a man. If the museum flops, it can always be turned into a minature golf course.

    2. Re:One question about this story: by Sporkinum · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, my mod points just expired today. That is a putt-putt course I'd make a pilgrimage to.

      --
      "He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
    3. Re:One question about this story: by Alsee · · Score: 1

      If the museum flops, it can always be turned into a minature golf course.

      I'm not quite sure why, but I can't help imagining all the golf balls being little tiny earths.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  8. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Sunburnt · · Score: 5, Funny

    We have lots of cave drawings of man with impressive animals like wooly mamoths and the like. So why are there not cave drawings of man with really impressive animals like the dinasaurs.

    Satan.

    See, isn't this easier than thinking?

    --
    Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
  9. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1, Funny
    Again, not to worry, this is just entertainment. Disneyland North, if you will.

    Designed by a former Universal Studios exhibit director, this state-of-the-art 60,000 square foot museum brings the pages of the Bible to life. A fully engaging, sensory experience for guests. Murals and realistic scenery, computer-generated visual effects, over fifty exotic animals, life-sized people and dinosaur animatronics, and a special-effects theater complete with misty sea breezes and rumbling seats. These are just some of the impressive exhibits that everyone in your family will enjoy.

    If having state-of-the-art special effects and fake sea breezes makes you happy, then go for it. Probably would be cheaper and more effective to just down a fifth of bourbon, but this is for the whole family.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  10. My favourite quote by toby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "It's a great place for children who are in public school and haven't really decided what to believe yet."

    Who ya gonna believe! GOD or some hairy liberal professor!

    Welcome to the 21st Century, America!

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:My favourite quote by Icarus1919 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The past is the future. Ignorance is strength.

    2. Re:My favourite quote by soundhack · · Score: 1

      Pretty soon they will be believing whatever their overlords the Chinese want them to believe. If they thought liberal professors espousing natural selection was bad, think what the Commies would have them believe, that it was Mao that created humanity or somesuch.

    3. Re:My favourite quote by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The one that really exists. Like any sane person.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:My favourite quote by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      Dammit, I thought that link was going to be to a picture! :D

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
  11. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Icarus1919 · · Score: 5, Funny

    The dinosaurs wouldn't uh... stand still long enough. Cave-men drawn pictures are time-exposed shots.

  12. Pastafarian Objections. by twitter · · Score: 0

    Great, but did they get the FSM right? If not, they must be cast into the great pot.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  13. Anybody else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just wish the muslims and christians would start fighting each other again and get it over with? Just leave all of us with a clue out of it. I guess not many people realize the muslims still owe them over 200 years of opression, what with the crusades being shown in the typical WASP fashion.

    1. Re:Anybody else by jtn · · Score: 1

      Who says certain governments haven't already pushed things down this path? You could swear that some Western elements are simply OBSESSED with the middle east...

  14. Contractors might disagree by Lurker2288 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Some of the contractors might tell you it actually took a lot longer, but Satan just sent them here to deceive us.

  15. Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've had this before, the bellman impatiently said. New article perhaps, but same content.

  16. Not going there by gone.fishing · · Score: 1

    I'll let these folks have their museum, they (like me) have the right to free speach and can exercise it as they wish. I just hope that no public money was used in the building of this shrine.

    I'm not positive that science has everything right but as far as I know, humans are a much later development than the dinosaurs. Mixing the two seems sort of cartoonish at best and ignorant at worst. Based on this, I do not think that the museum will win any "converts" that had been sitting on the fence. The propoganda is too easily disproven.

    1. Re:Not going there by Tony · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not positive that science has everything right. . .

      That's the great thing about science: neither do scientists! They don't know what they have right, either. Isn't that a fucking hoot?

      What they know is what *makes sense* based on observed facts. The epistemology of science is simple: if your explanation is contradicted by observation, it is not true. Otherwise, it *might* be true.

      That's it. Nothing is ever "proven." It's just that some things only have one current explanation, and so we use those as our working assumptions. If another explanation comes around that isn't contradicted by the *observable facts*, that explanation is also considered.

      Human nature makes us sure of ourselves-- sometimes *too* sure. But, for the most part, the scientific method, and the knowledge gained from that method, are self-correcting.

      And that is why this museum can never win any converts from those who understand science. Their explanations do not cover the observable facts.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    2. Re:Not going there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      important point.

      someone should mod up parent.

    3. Re:Not going there by swansontec · · Score: 0

      This is a refreshingly level-headed post. One thing I can't stand is blind faith, on either side. Believing something "because pastor Bob says so" is just as bad as believing something "because a scientist says so." The *only* way to form a belief is to rely on observable facts, whether you are a creationist or an evolutionist.

      Unfortunately, I am not sure the observable facts line up with the evolutionary theory. Here are some problems I see:

      * Fossils - If evolution is a continuous process, were are the intermediate forms? The only fossils we find belong to recognizable species. There are a lot of species that no longer exist, such as dinosaurs, but even these fit into well-defined categories. If evolution were true, we would expect to a continuous spectrum of fossils between individual species, rather than only the starting species and the ending species.

      * Non-decomposable structures - According to Darwin, his theory would only work if every biological structure could be derived from some other, simpler biological structure. You can't evolve a complex system in a single step. Unfortunately, there are many biological structures, such as winged flight, eyes, and the cellular machinery for reproducing DNA, which cannot be derived from simpler biological structures. Consider DNA reproduction. Without this basic mechanism, the first DNA-based life form in a prehistoric ocean would not have been able to reproduce and pass on its "invention." Reproducing DNA, however, is a complicated process that requires the right building-blocks (G, A, C, T), and a protein enzyme that can unwind the original DNA strand and copy it onto the new one. Thus, the first DNA-based organism would have needed three complicated things *at the same time*: an original DNA strand, the protein enzyme, and a concentration of free building-blocks. In addition, these things would have had to create an evolutionary advantage in their first iteration. What are the odds of that happening? The fact that we observe DNA-based reproduction in all creatures on earth seems to rule out evolution as the origin of the first life-form.

      There are plenty of smart people here on Slashdot, and I'm sure someone has an answer to these observations. All I'm trying to say is the the creationists do have a point - observable facts are not 100% in favor of either theory, and there is room for additional research. As long as the discussion stays focused on facts and not faith, there is no reason to ridicule the creationists. Ridicule is the mark of blind faith, and people who claim to hold a "scientific" belief should not resort to it.

    4. Re:Not going there by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      And of course, if you're writing up your final year dissertation, you can pretty much guarantee it's not right in the grand scheme, regardless of what your results may suggest.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    5. Re:Not going there by Listen+Up · · Score: 1

      That's it. Nothing is ever "proven."

      No, that's is not true. There are absolutes in the universe and the universe exists by a finite set of absolute physical laws. To be more specific, the universe exists by Mathematical laws. When a Mathematical absolute is proven, then it is absolutely true. It is through applied Mathematics, Physics, where modeling of existing observation and prediction of future observation are created using Mathematics. The models can lead to situations where a model is correct for the observation but needs refinement to be correct universally. This is the exact point of the scientific process...to test, verify, retest and refine until a Mathematical model can be defined as an law. Through this method, all absolute physical laws of the universe will eventually be known.

    6. Re:Not going there by John+Newman · · Score: 1

      That's the great thing about science: neither do scientists! They don't know what they have right, either. Isn't that a fucking hoot?
      Or, as my former PhD advisor likes to say about his lectures to undergrads, "Half of what we teach is wrong. We just don't know which half yet."
    7. Re:Not going there by maxume · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Fossils: geological processes are not always conducive to exhaustive records(some gaps just be). Adaptations that confer advantages often confer massive advantages; I'm not an expert, so I don't have reasonable figures, but there is some truth to the idea that successful creatures are *very* successful. Strong environmental stresses will lead to strong expression of phenotypic traits in a population; simply put, a tendency for long legs will exist in a population long before it becomes an advantage; when it becomes an advantage, it will overwhelm other traits very quickly.

      Sophisticated DNA: There is a good chance that DNA based life was preceded by simpler self replicating protein like molecules. Trillions and trillions of them. The first DNA based organism wasn't born into ooze, it was born into ooze that it was able to exploit, in that it could replicate itself while expending much less energy than the somewhat similar molecules around it. It defies explanation, but it isn't surprising that a highly successful replication strategy managed to become very pervasive(there could have even been a 'necking' incident where there were dozens of extant replication strategies, and then some environmental factor changed such that only one of them persisted, to much benefit).

      If you consider it in terms of information persistence and replication, with different molecular strategies having different rates of success in different molecular and energy environments, it isn't so crazy that a stable and successful strategy emerged, or that graduated improvements occurred.

      Finally, creationism doesn't rely on facts. A creator could have done whatever he damn well pleased. No research can ever reveal that which is stated to be beyond research.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    8. Re:Not going there by Slothy · · Score: 1

      is it asking soo much off peeple to speel 'speech' corectly?

    9. Re:Not going there by swansontec · · Score: 1

      > Sophisticated DNA: There is a good chance that...

      Careful! You are slipping into faith-based pseudo-scientific speculation here. Until somebody proposes an exact theory about how this happened and *runs the experiment*, the origin of DNA will remain an unexplained scientific mystery. One that the creation theory perfectly accounts for (although the creation theory has other problems of its own).

      > Finally, creationism doesn't rely on facts.

      Not so. Creation scientists hypothesize that an intelligent being created the universe, and then ask, "What are the implications of that?" They then gather facts to either confirm or deny those implications, the same as any scientist does. Their assumption may be wrong, but at least they play by the rules when it comes to scientific evidence (Well, the ones I've read play by the rules. There are always exceptions).

    10. Re:Not going there by maxume · · Score: 1

      Careful! You are slipping into faith-based pseudo-scientific speculation here. Until somebody proposes an exact theory about how this happened and *runs the experiment*, the origin of DNA will remain an unexplained scientific mystery. One that the creation theory perfectly accounts for (although the creation theory has other problems of its own).

      Sort of. 'And then they agglomerated' is kind of hard to construe as more incredible than 'And thus they were'; personally, I'd be willing to make it a test for reasonable.

      Some portion of what we collectively think exists will always defy explanation; I have no concerns about its particular historical distance from me.

      As far as creationism and implications, the only way they can claim to be relying on facts is if they come up with a positive test; that is, they need to come up with something that can *only* be explained by creation, not merely probably or maybe explained by creation. Until they meet that standard, they aren't even playing the same game(in my eyes anyway, as I find a universe that is more acceptable than a being beyond the universe that is).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    11. Re:Not going there by king-manic · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, that's is not true. There are absolutes in the universe and the universe exists by a finite set of absolute physical laws. To be more specific, the universe exists by Mathematical laws. When a Mathematical absolute is proven, then it is absolutely true. It is through applied Mathematics, Physics, where modeling of existing observation and prediction of future observation are created using Mathematics. The models can lead to situations where a model is correct for the observation but needs refinement to be correct universally. This is the exact point of the scientific process...to test, verify, retest and refine until a Mathematical model can be defined as an law. Through this method, all absolute physical laws of the universe will eventually be known. Actually, NO. Mathematics gives us a tool to define self consistent systems that approximate reality. There is always doubt and margin for error (see the law of gravity's refinement). The difference between a scientific "law" and a scientific "theory" is not the amount of proof or iterations it is simply "laws" are more terse then theories and tend to be called laws simply because people got used to calling it such. Moore's law is terse, and throughly unscientific, while the theory of radiocarbon dating has a lot of scientific back up.
      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    12. Re:Not going there by Cerebus · · Score: 1

      > Non-decomposable structures

      Google "irreducible complexity" as that's what "creation scientists" like to call it. The counter-argument is simple; such a system could simply have evolved from *more* complex system, or even a system that served a wholly different purpose.

      Arguments based on irreducible complexity stem from a flawed understanding of evolution. Evolution does *not* posit that development is in the direction of more complexity.

      --
      -- Cerebus
    13. Re:Not going there by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      According to evolution, every fossil is an intermediate form between what it was and what it will be. The whole "where are the intermediate forms?" question is based on a gross misunderstanding of evolution. To find an intermediate form you need: conditions conducive to forming a fossil (usually volcanic activity), an animal needs to die then get buried before scavengers find his corpse, that location needs to remain buried until the present day and we need to be looking at the right place. We should be thankful we get as many fossils as we do. Pretty amazing to think that those bones have sat in one place, undisturbed, for 100 million years.

      If you really want to see an intermediate form, there are several. Turn your attention to Archaeopteryx. He has features that are decidedly in between a reptile and a bird. We also have Ambulocetans which is between a land-lubber and a cetacean. And there are also plenty of examples of mammal-like reptiles (or are they reptile-like mammals?)

      You can't evolve a complex system in a single step. Unfortunately, there are many biological structures, such as winged flight, eyes, and the cellular machinery for reproducing DNA, which cannot be derived from simpler biological structures.

      Considering the plethora of primitive eyes in extant species, it sure seems like there is a step-wise mechanism to get from point A to point B.

      Reproducing DNA, however, is a complicated process that requires the right building-blocks (G, A, C, T), and a protein enzyme that can unwind the original DNA strand and copy it onto the new one.

      It would also seem as if early life would have needed to be composed of something other than DNA. Rather than two intertwined helices, maybe something with only one. Let's call it "RNA" just for kicks.

      All I'm trying to say is the the creationists do have a point - observable facts are not 100% in favor of either theory, and there is room for additional research.

      For instance? I'm willing to consider whatever you have to offer, but please do some research and keep the discussion away from abiogenesis.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    14. Re:Not going there by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Fossils - If evolution is a continuous process, were are the intermediate forms?

      The entire fossil record is nothing but a huge collection of intermediate forms, but rather than cite the great reptile->mammal transition series we have or any number of others, I want to go with one example that is absolutely perfect and absolutely continuous. An example that is a scientist's wet-dream come true.

      There is an entire family of life called foraminifera. They are tiny animals that live in the ocean. They grow intricate cage-like mineral shells around themselves. As they die, those shells slowly and steadily rain down to the bottom of the ocean. Every single day probably a million perfect fossil shells raining down to the sea floor, settling into the accumulating sediment. All you have to do is ram a pipe down into the seabed and pull up a sediment core filled with continuous layers of sediment and the continuous layers of daily foraminifera fossils. A limitless supply of millions and millions of foraminifera fossils. So many that they supplement their usual manual fossil analysis with automated computerized image analysis of thousands and thousands of foraminifera fossils from any one sediment core. An absolutely perfect absolutely continuous almost day-by-day record of tens if not hundreds of millions of years of evolution.

      An absolutely perfect complete continuous record of the evolution of hundreds of species of family foraminifera. Not merely a sequence of individual species-fossils from the ancient to the modern, but a limitless supply of fossils perfectly and continuously documenting the flow from each species to the next, and each splitting of a species into two or more child species. Perfectly documenting the family foraminifera branching into classes, and classes branching into orders, and orders branching into genus, and genus branching into species.

      As I said, this record is a scientist's wet dream. They can look back and see exactly where various mass extinctions occurred, and "watch" the record of evolution in action and see exactly evolution happens and see exactly how evolution reacts to things like mass extinction events, can measure the speed of change and the rate of speciation. After a mass extinction event the rate of diversification and speciation goes into overdrive. There are fewer different species to compete with... there are ecological niches left vacant. Without that competition squeezing the population of each species, the species more quickly diversifies into those now empty directions. The range of difference across a population of one species increases, and as they start getting more and more different, the middle of the population starts to drop out. Like having poodles and great danes.... and then getting rid of the mid-size dogs. Poodles and great danes would no longer be in a connected breeding population, they would continue to drift further and further apart as separate species.

      We have a perfect record drawing a perfectly continuous branching tree running through hundreds of species with the limitless supply of fossils of family foraminifera. The rest of the fossil record, fish, lizards, dinosaurs, birds, mammals, whales, cats, apes, everything.... it also draws out a tree of intermediate forms. It's just that it's pot luck finding fossils and some parts of that tree are filled in in great detail and other parts of the picture we only have a few spotty fossil sample points. The critical point is that evolution PREDICTS that each fossil find will fit into that strict tree structure. And they all do. We have a strict tree structure drawn out dot by dot fossil by fossil, some gaps are bigger than others, but new fossil finds always fit right onto that tree, each point on the tree intermediate between the dot before it and the dot after it. Chains of dots like pearls on a necklace. One trait or just a few traits changing at a time in perfect sequence.

      DNA analysis can map out the family tree between species with just as much absolute certaint

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    15. Re:Not going there by swansontec · · Score: 1

      > There are plenty of smart people here on Slashdot, and I'm sure someone has an answer to these observations.

      Wow! And they have. Thank you for the top-notch post. You have put these concerns well to rest, especially with the discussion of foraminifera.

    16. Re:Not going there by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I hope I didn't let a harsh or otherwise negative tone slip into my post. If I did I'm sorry. I've had too many... ahhh... bad experiences... in the past on the subject. I tend to get a dread feeling in my gut that I'm wasting my time writing, that it's probably going to fall on the deaf ears of some anti-evolution headcase. I really appreciate your 'wow' and compliment. It's a huge relief when someone honestly and reasonably questions evolution.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  17. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is what happened.. back then, man was Lonely. It was hard to tell Woman from Man due to the beards everyone sported. And everyone likes to snuggle up to something warm at night. The Mammoth was a docile creature, if a little on the large side.. but still, they rarely complained, and always put out. Man grew fond of the Mammoth, and in time-honoured tradition, painted and carved lovers' symbols on rocks and walls. Now.. whilst the larger Meat Eating dinosaurs were around, they were _ugly_.. and they had rotten breath too. No-one wanted to admit to sleeping with them, so they conducted clandestine affairs, and never drew pictures of them. The End.

  18. what I find odd by nanosquid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What I find odd is that the same people that promote this unscientific kind of bullshit still want the benefits of science and technology.

    1. Re:what I find odd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Unscientific bullshit? I saw film of Raquel Welch proving the co-existence of man and dinosaurs years ago so it must be true.

    2. Re:what I find odd by microsoft_hater · · Score: 1

      Pfft, Raquel Welch? Try some Dino Adventure Land on for size! http://www.dinosauradventureland.com/

    3. Re:what I find odd by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What's odd about it? Wanting to Have the cake and eat it, too, is common practice today.

      Why shouldn't conservative religious zealots not jump on the zeitgeist from time to time?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:what I find odd by pimpimpim · · Score: 1
      fitting cartoon on the miscellanea series.

      Also, this 'news' was pretty familiar to me:

      Creation(ist) museum to be opened in Kentucky Wednesday August 09, @06:03PM Rejected

      August 2006, that is... Apparently, this museum took a bit more than 7 days to build!

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
  19. the Real Jesus... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    most non-christians and even many christians don't really know the real Jesus. There's a perception that he's gentle and kind and meek...but that isn't the savior you get to know when you really get up to the higher tiers of a REAL Christian church. We know our Jesus. He was ripped, aggressive, a take-no-prisoners-in-your-face kind of guy. And why not? He was god, he had the truth, can't argue with that! Yes, you non-believers (or unenlighted faux-believers) can wallow in your ineffectual caricature of our Christ, being "charitable" to the lazy and satanic poor, and promoting hellish pacifism...but we'll be down at our Kentucky museum observing truth, smashing whiskey bottles on the Devil's head, cuttin down some trees to burn some scientific lies, and paving an extra-wide thoroughfare to heaven for us and our kids!...Have fun taking the rutty dirt path to hell...sinners.

    1. Re:the Real Jesus... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't tell them about Jesus's machine gun...not until they pay several thousand for a soul audit

    2. Re:the Real Jesus... by HeroreV · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that he's definitely white. Very very pale. Christianity doesn't encourage people to be biased against other people, of course. It's just a fact that Jesus was white, and there's nothing those nig- I mean, sand mon- I mean, atheists can do to disprove that.

  20. God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by microsoft_hater · · Score: 1

    I always wondered why God had to rest... Maybe I need to go down to Kentucky and find out! Also, I never understood why "sea creatures and birds" required their own separate day... But hell, once you start asking these questions, it's just endless so I'll stop now and go watch some Finches evolve while the Kreationist Kentuckians struggle to maintain consciousness....

    1. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by Tony · · Score: 1

      I always wondered why God had to rest...

      Ob Bill Hicks:

      "There it is, my creation, perfect and holy in all ways. Now, I can rest."

      (pause)

      "Oh, my me. I left fucking pot everywhere. I should never have smoked that joint on the third day. Shit! If I leave pot everywhere that's gonna to give people the impression they're supposed to *use* it."

      (pause)

      "Now I have to create Republicans."

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    2. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by microsoft_hater · · Score: 1

      Nice. Bill Hicks was absolutely brilliant, relentless and utterly unrestrained. He would surely squeeze a brutal joke out of this new, "wonderful" museum, if he were still around... RIP

    3. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by anomaly · · Score: 1

      It's not that He *needed* to rest, it's that He chose to rest.

      Most of the way that culture works was established in Genesis. God rested on the 7th day to set a pattern for humans. He knew that we worked best with a day of rest per week, and by establishing a Sabbath (day of rest) He showed us what we should do.

      FWIW - "fundies" as you may refer to someone who believes as I do - believe that creatures adapt, and that favorable traits are preserved. We *don't* believe that evolution is a viable means of speciation - that all extant species were modified versions of previously existing species.

      --
      But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    4. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by al_fruitbat · · Score: 1

      FWIW - "fundies" as you may refer to someone who believes as I do - believe that creatures adapt, and that favorable traits are preserved.

      How do these creatures adapt except via evolution? How are these favourable traits preserved, except via genetic selection?

      You're not talking about the Blacksmith's Arm example are you? (people noted that blacksmiths have much bigger arms, due to adapting thanks to weilding hammers. Few of these people then went on to note that the children of blacksmiths did not have larger arms. Even fewer went on to ask why the blacksmith's arm was getting bigger due to increased use - oh, look - it's an evolved survival mechanism to make muscles bigger when they're used a lot)

      We *don't* believe that evolution is a viable means of speciation - that all extant species were modified versions of previously existing species.

      You don't? But that's just stupid. Evolution is clearly demonstrable as a viable means of speciation in bacteria.
      Tell me, what did the T-Rex get modified into, or did it go extinct? How do you guys explain modern birds arising from the reptiles without the dinosaurs being involved?

    5. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by maxume · · Score: 1

      The pretty insects, they are confused:

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5080298. stm

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by Tancred · · Score: 1

      We *don't* believe that evolution is a viable means of speciation

      So you're willfully ignorant of the science? Why not admit it but say there's an exception for homo sapiens? And the rest happened according to evolution as set in place by god. Neat, tidy, doesn't require any evidence and isn't directly contradicted by facts.
    7. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by Tanuki64 · · Score: 1

      God rested on the 7th day to set a pattern for humans. He knew that we worked best with a day of rest per week, and by establishing a Sabbath (day of rest) He showed us what we should do.
      Work? What work? In paradise? You mean he knew about the apple before it happened? All was only an act to impose some guilt on mankind? God is such an asshole.
    8. Re:God rested from creating (Gen 2:1-3) by SocietyoftheFist · · Score: 1

      Do people that believe as you do acknowledge that religion existed before the bible was written and the texts the compose the bible were not the first religious texts written by man?

  21. It's not a compromise by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 1

    Your post was funny, but it's not a "compromise" position. Some christians believe that the bible contains the truths necessary for salvation, but a theory of the origin of biological diversity is not among those.

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    1. Re:It's not a compromise by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Some christians believe that the bible contains the truths necessary for salvation

      If there is a salvation to be had, here is the secret: Be kind to each other.
      What else could possibly matter?

      Any God that cares if you worshipped him doesn't deserve the position.

    2. Re:It's not a compromise by dn15 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Any God that cares if you worshipped him doesn't deserve the position.
      Bravo! I find it inconceivable that a being as omniscient and all-knowing as a "god" would be so petty as to consider one set of dogmatic beliefs to be right or wrong. It would judge people (if it chooses to judge them at all) by their actions and the intentions behind them, not details of which creation story they chose to believe in. In fact, I say such a god would see right through the people who treated others like crap but went to church every sunday because they thought that's what is necessary for salvation. And this is one of the reasons I myself am not religious. I see no reason to seek validation by any being who would actually care whether I attend church or not.
    3. Re:It's not a compromise by Aequo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I really can't believe this debate (and the same "yeah, me too!") still comes up and gets modded insightful all the time. The point is not that Christianity's God wants you to worship him through his own insecurity, but that the bible says that the natural state for humans is to worship him -- that humans are happiest when they do so.

    4. Re:It's not a compromise by DarkSarin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unless, of course, said deity saw that, if done correctly, attending regular worship services could help people to be nicer to each other--and said deity also knew that it would only do that if those worship services were teaching certain specific bits of information. Furthermore, if the deity was really smart, said deity might also want people to know about its true nature before it revealed itself to them. So, there just might be a reason to be religious after all.

      Oh, and perhaps there are some other reasons for going to church that you just haven't thought of. One of the neat things about postulating an omniscient being is that it is smarter than you are.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    5. Re:It's not a compromise by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      nice revisionism, but it seems to contradict some list I heard of that had a load of commands in it, plus the entire freaking history of christianity. unless I've misunderstood you and the reason you claim people are happier worshipping the bible's god is that historically if you didn't you'd be persecuted and/or tortured and/or killed.

      religious morality (specifically christianity) is all about what makes god happy. it has never cared about whether humans are happy or not because it claims that we are all just evil sinners anyway.

    6. Re:It's not a compromise by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      Any God that cares if you worshipped him doesn't deserve the position.

      As an auto-theist I assure you that worship is not what I seek.
      He who renders mod points unto me shall know eternal bliss.

    7. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Unless, of course, said deity saw that, if done correctly, attending regular worship services could help people to be nicer to each other

      That would simply be a means to the end. The point was if there's any judging to be done it would be on the end itself. It may or may not be true that worship would help, but that is beside the point.

    8. Re:It's not a compromise by aliasrush · · Score: 1

      You know what I find humorous; how everyone tries to place their preconceived notions on who GOD is... do you really think that GOD would fit the form of our notions of who he is? Do you really think that if GOD exists... that this GOD would fit our preformed views? How would that help us in finding the truth. I think we all too often miss the big picture as a result of our vanity... that truth is supposed to conform to our ever changing views of this world which we would call science... science cannot bring absolute truth save an evolutionary changing viewpoint; I mean do we really believe that what we know today has anything to do with what we discover tomorrow? Absolutely not! I know one thing to be true... man is no where close to infinite knowledge... if that is so, then how can we even begin to speculate that we know truth? For truth cannot be actually defined by an ever changing science... as far as I know...good science is based on the principle that with the discovery of new knowledge we change and form our previous ideas or theories to fit the newly discovered evidence of what we know today. With that being said; does anyone truly believe that science brings us truth?

    9. Re:It's not a compromise by morcheeba · · Score: 2, Funny

      I almost modded you up for the Bill S. Preston, Esq. quote, but you didn't get it quite right.
      It is: Be excellent to each other. (from here)

      And then, of course, Ted says ... Party on, dudes!

    10. Re:It's not a compromise by anilg · · Score: 1

      I really can't believe this debate (and the same "yeah, me too!") still comes up and gets modded insightful all the time. The point is not that Christianity's God wants you to worship him through his own insecurity, but that the bible says that the natural state for humans is to worship him -- that humans are happiest when they do so.

      There, do you see where the logic went wrong?

      --
      http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
    11. Re:It's not a compromise by lxw56 · · Score: 1

      Bravo! I find it inconceivable that a being as omniscient and all-knowing as a "god" would be so petty as to consider one set of dogmatic beliefs to be right or wrong. Why should God conform to your expectations?
    12. Re:It's not a compromise by Cstryon · · Score: 1, Informative

      Well said.
      I myself am LDS. Though I'm not really practicing, I have a pretty good idea of how Gods plan goes, and why it's important to attend church (At least from the LDS view).
      It's ok to just be nice. Do good deeds, live a decent life with out looking to a God/Gods for the OK or to give you reason. We believe that to go to heaven, that's just it.
      Although, if your goal is to live Gods life, to become a your own with spiritual children of your own. Than you need to follow the commands and attend sacrament. That's gods plan. Live a good life, get paradise. Live according to the plan, get Gods life.

      Grand-Parent Poster: You should read the Doctrine and Covenants. Basically will explain everything that LDS members believe.

      --
      Indoctrinate : to instruct especially in fundamentals or rudiments Educate : to develop mentally, morally, or aestheti
    13. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly - why God would conform to what is written in the Bible?

    14. Re:It's not a compromise by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      "Any God that cares if you worshipped him doesn't deserve the position." This is funny considering: A) The presumption in this context is that "God made the universe" B) Define "kind". You may think kind is giving up the last slice of pizza. While in some parts of Africa, kind and good is giving up the last few pieces of food to a parentless child knowing you will go without food for days AGAIN. What is "good enough"? Some things to think about: A) When was the last time you made a universe, a plant, or anything from nothing? If it is the case that God made the universe from nothing then He does deserve to be worshipped. B) When was the last time you were "kind"? Kind doesn't count if it serves yourself.

    15. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In all the years I was dragged to Church (and envied those kids who weren't), never was my happiness factored into the equation. Church bored me silly. If there is an upside, it is that I do have more patience now and can mentally keep myself occupied if not amused without any external stimuli.

    16. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's basically the message in the new testament of the bible. Whether or not Jesus Christ is divine, his message is simple and the same as yours, "Love one another." The same word is often used to describe God's relationship with us.

      Back on topic, it seems to me that the more illogical beliefs of some religious groups derive mostly from the old testament, something better suited for an earlier time. Anyone who cannot understand that it's symbolic (how do you explain evolution to someone who, 4000 years ago, wouldn't even know what a dinosaur is) should probably not even read it.

    17. Re:It's not a compromise by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      Grand-Parent Poster: You should read the Doctrine and Covenants. Basically will explain everything that LDS members believe.

      All I know about LDS I got from South Park. Did Smith really read the gold plates out of a hat?
      So presuming I manage to get to Paradise, there's no chance of further promotion from there? If not, why not?

    18. Re:It's not a compromise by coaxial · · Score: 1

      How do you reconcile that position with "Remember the Sabaath and keep it holy" and "Have no other gods before me?" The god of the Old Testament is a petty, vindictive, son of a bitch.

      While the idea that worship is the "natual state" may be the initial motivation, but it's lost in vast majority of the Bible and the actions of the assorted churches. It all about making sure you show up at least once a week (twice a week for some denominations). Making sure you give at least 10%, otherwise you don't love baby Jesus enough. If you don't worship, bad things will happen to you, or at least good things won't happen to you.

    19. Re:It's not a compromise by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ. Any god would be a determinist, an "aw, fuck it" kind of guy/gal. Anything you do is inconsequential and beyond the purview of any concept of "free will" ergo why would he/she care about anyone's "actions and the intentions behind them"?

    20. Re:It's not a compromise by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      I almost modded you up for the Bill S. Preston, Esq. quote, but you didn't get it quite right.

      :-)
      I think there was also something similar in Oh God.

    21. Re:It's not a compromise by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 1

      You know what I find humorous; how everyone tries to place their preconceived notions on who GOD is... do you really think that GOD would fit the form of our notions of who he is? Do you really think that if GOD exists... that this GOD would fit our preformed views?

      The way I like to put it:

      Man created God in his own image :-)

      --
      iSKUNK!
    22. Re:It's not a compromise by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      If it is the case that God made the universe from nothing then He does deserve to be worshipped.

      He might deserve it, but why would he care if you didn't? Do you really think it'll be "So, I see you treated people well and lived a good life. People loved you, and you loved too. Go ahead on....Hang on just a second. You didn't tell Me how wonderful I was? I'm sorry, but you can't go in. I'm going to have to set you on fire instead."

    23. Re:It's not a compromise by physicsphairy · · Score: 2, Informative

      If there is a salvation to be had, here is the secret: Be kind to each other. What else could possibly matter?

      That is indeed the crux of Christianity, although it is stated a bit more strongly than that: (this is just one verse of many)
      My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.
      and even
      But I say unto you whi hear: Love you enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, and pray for those which spitefully use you.

      If you can obey that wholeheartedly, welcome to heaven.

      The problem happens when you decide you are going to be selfish and step from the path of the redeemed to the path of the sinner. Suddenly, you have crossed the chasm which leads to imperfection, and we're left with two big questions, (1) How can an infinitely just God forgive the trangression when justice requires that it be punished? (2) How is it possible to unite a wayward, sinful creature, which has chosen selfishness, with a perfect and Holy God?

      The Christian answer to both of these questions is the same: Jesus Christ. In regard to question (1) God remains just because he doesn't forgive the penalty of the sin... he pays it himself on our behalf. In regard to question (2) because God has paid our penalty we are able be spiritually reborn through our faith and acceptance of God's offering of free grace.

      The big catch which you appear to take issue with is that freewill is still in the equation. Before you chose to be selfish, and so God paved the way for a second chance, but you still have to choose to accept God's offer. And you have to do so sincerely. (Which is to say, if you have what Christians call "faith" you will try to fulfill God's commandments--embodied wholly in showing love to one another--even knowing that you're now covered for mistakes. Just saying the words 'I am a Christian' doesn't prove anything to anybody, least of all God.)

      This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins. Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.

    24. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You believe god is a car?

    25. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 0

      nice revisionism, but it seems to contradict some list I heard of that had a load of commands in it, That list was only given because people are stupid, and "just love everybody" wasn't specific enough.

      plus the entire freaking history of christianity. unless I've misunderstood you and the reason you claim people are happier worshipping the bible's god is that historically if you didn't you'd be persecuted and/or tortured and/or killed. No, that's not what he meant - that stuff sucks. You're supposed to worship God because of love, not because of fear. Yes, we're sinners, but we're also God's creation, and He loves us anyway, even though our sin precludes an intimate relationship.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    26. Re:It's not a compromise by code_nerd · · Score: 1

      Well, if he is gonna send me to hell simply for not groveling to him, then I can at least say that he is a jackass. I'd say the same of any random stranger who tortured me simply for not doing what he said.

    27. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      It's ok to just be nice. Do good deeds, live a decent life with out looking to a God/Gods for the OK or to give you reason. We believe that to go to heaven, that's just it. Here's why you're wrong:

      "Therefore no one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin. But now a righteousness from God, apart from law, has been made known, to which the Law and the Prophets testify. This righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. There is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus." - Romans 3:20-23 (NIV)

      "For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God - not by works, so that no one can boast." - Ephesians 2:8-9 (NIV)

      You cannot earn your way into Heaven. You have sinned; you deserve death (spiritual death, eternal separation from God, i.e. Hell). Nothing you can do can possibly make up for that. No one will be declared righteous by observing the law. It's pretty clear. The ONLY way to Salvation is to accept the free Gift that has been offered.

      "That if you confess with your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord,' and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." - Romans 10:9 (NIV)

      "Jesus answered, 'I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.'" - John 14:6 (NIV)

      Hope this helps!
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    28. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      A theology student recently told me about a question that a professor asked a class:

      What is God like?

      Various students tried to suggest answers to this question, but the professor's response was something like this:

      God isn't like anything. Nothing else can compare to God. Don't try to put God in a box. Don't try to limit God. God is bigger than that.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    29. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      God doesn't conform to anything but God. God's nature is constant and unchanging: He has always been, and always will be. God's Word is a reflection of the nature of God, revealed to us. The mistake many people make is expecting God to conform to their own flawed interpretation of the Bible. If you can interpret it correctly (rarely easy, and not always possible), it fits God perfectly.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    30. Re:It's not a compromise by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      "So, I see you treated people well and lived a good life. People loved you, and you loved too. Go ahead on....Hang on just a second. You didn't tell Me how wonderful I was? I'm sorry, but you can't go in. I'm going to have to set you on fire instead."

      It seems you have a misunderstanding of some of the core beliefs of a Christian "salvation". The Christian salvation is based upon accepting the idea that Jesus the Christ was persecuted and ultimately sentenced to death and bore the burden of the world's sin, past, present, and future. Acting upon this belief and living your life accordingly (being "Christ-like") earns your entrance into heaven to be with the creator, God. Basically it is accepting a gift of sacrifice knowing that one could never be "good enough" to compare to God's perfection and be in His presence (which is what heaven is described as).

      Okay so now say that you do believe this and have lived in this belief. It is understood that realizing and grasping this sacrifice would not only draw you closer to Him, but also give you the desire to worship His perfection and existence.

      I am not aware of any place in the Bible where it says that someone would be committed to hell because they did not worship God.

      I am not trying to be mean but it seems like you do not understand the beliefs of core Christianity.

      Oh by the way, hell is not a placed of "fire". Analogies are often used in the Christian Bible. Hell is a place where the presence of God has been withdrawn. With the presumption that God is all good, and everything desireable and good comes from God's presence, obviously hell would be the opposite of good.

      Fire is simply a way to relate spiritual suffering to physical suffering induced by being away from God for eternity.

    31. Re:It's not a compromise by DreadHarn · · Score: 0

      Actually to correct your skewed perspective:


      "It all about making sure you show up at least once a week (twice a week for some denominations)."

      Gathering in a physical location is based upon a Biblical principal of fellowship. People gather to reinforce each other in their beliefs and to correct the straying. Just like people gather on slashdot and correct each other when they get facts wrong. Posting on slashdot is a form of fellowship.


      "Making sure you give at least 10%, otherwise you don't love baby Jesus enough."

      I know you like to mock Christian ideas, it seems to be the sport around here. But you could atleast be accurate and not sound like a fool.
      Tithing (tithe old English meaning 1/10) is based on honoring God. Christians and Jews alike recognize God as the source of our life, income, skills, intellect etc. Any gifts He has bestowed are due honor while we use them. Any blessings (a blessing being something postive beyond the ordinary) are to be honored as well by investing 1/10 of that increase back into the establishment that teaches the system of belief that is Christianity. It is not so hard to understand. It's about supporting an institution financially. It says in the Bible to give with a cheerful heart. God doesn't want you to give if you don't want to. He certainly doesn't need your money. People give out of reverence for God.


      "If you don't worship, bad things will happen to you, or at least good things won't happen to you."

      This is another ridiculous statement in troll-like behaviour. It does not say in the new testament that God will curse you for not worshipping Him. Good things happen to evil people. Look at Hitler, he had great success in war. He would consider that a good thing to happen. This doesn't mean God did it for him.

    32. Re:It's not a compromise by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

      that humans are happiest when they do so.


      The bible does not say that. Nice soft sell.

      The principle explicit message of the bible is believe in this invisible being and be rewarded with heavenly bliss or don't and experience pain and suffering for an eternity.

      Evidently a very good meme to add to a religion.

    33. Re:It's not a compromise by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1

      Unless the omnipotent being is just a projection of yourself, along with all your vanity, megalomania, narrow-mindedness, and judgemental nature writ large and freed from the restraints suffered by fininte beings. That might explain the existence of hell, that you only get saved from it by worshiping that one god, and so forth. In other words, just about everything in the bible other than the Sermon on the Mount--meaning all that about 75% of Christians dwell so lovingly on.

      The first paragraph of your post looks like it was written by someone in complete ignorance in the thousands-of-years-old role of church-based religion in fomenting discord, prejudice, intolerance, and bigotry. Yes, there were abolotionist Christians, and many Christians who wanted to preserve slavery, as well. Even today, how many Evangelicals think that torture is okay, and that the best way to help the poor is to do nothing for them, lest you undermine their initiative?

    34. Re:It's not a compromise by coaxial · · Score: 1

      [Tithing] is not so hard to understand. It's about supporting an institution financially.

      Bingo. It's about an organization trying to get it's cut from the hardwork and reward of someone else. The whole idea that it's given "with cheerful heart" is absurd when you consider the lifelong indoctrination and social pressure to give.

      Religious heirarchies the world over always make sure that they're at the top of the social order. There's no more higher calling than them. Now support us materialistically.

      This is another ridiculous statement in troll-like behaviour. It does not say in the new testament that God will curse you for not worshipping Him.

      You go to hell, if you don't worship god. That's a curse. Anyway, there's two parts to my statement. If your pray, good things happen to you. Do you deny that God helps those that ask for his help, and so those that ask for his help are more successful than those who don't?

      Good things happen to evil people. Look at Hitler, he had great success in war. He would consider that a good thing to happen. This doesn't mean God did it for him.

      Epicurus had it right, when he said, "Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?"

    35. Re:It's not a compromise by master_p · · Score: 1

      It's amazing how all of you can talk about a deity that exists outside of time and space as we know it. This alone proves that there is no deity at all.

    36. Re:It's not a compromise by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      All this would be nice if you disregard some 400+ years of theology since John Calvin. This sounds like the fundamentalist sort of Calvinism that we got rid of by exporting its proponents to the colonies. Oh wait...

      Here's a hint: modern Protestant Christianity has a lot of trouble accepting the authority of Paul's letters. Both because the original texts may indicate more than one author, and because some of his preaching is a little hard to reconcile with the Gospels and sometimes even the Old Testament. This movement started by first revising the meaning of the letters to be specific to the communities they were sent to, and not globally applicable, but lately Paul has been losing a lot more authority. And rightly so, you can't have it both ways: Paul proclaiming no man is without sin, yet accepting his letters as unchallengable divinely inspired doctrine.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    37. Re:It's not a compromise by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      so why did god create sin if all it does is get in the way of us hooking up with him?

      plus, I take issue with your "just love everybody" interpretation - it's nice and it SHOULD be the rule, but it never was for christianity. god said "thou shalf not kill", yet the first thing moses did when he got back was slaughter a couple of thousand people for not believing in HIS god. and when Jesus said "love thy neighbour" he literally meant other Jews who live close to you (and not the "hippie love fest" interpretation) - he wasn't concerned with non-Jews, that was Paul's (the first pope) idea.

      back then, they knew not to kill people, they just didn't consider "different people" to be "real people". and how can you blame them? just 100 years ago women, blacks etc. were treated as inferior to "real people" (and still are in some countries), so what chance of tolerance would you expect 2000 years ago?

      100 years from now, christianity will probably still be around but watered down even more so that most christians will probably accept gays and look back to today as we look back on the witch burnings etc.

      so I have great hope that the future will be better, but by moving AWAY from the ORIGINAL message of christianity which was completely horrific and only honoured today by the "earth created in 6 days, fags burn in hell, and if you deny the existence of the holy ghost you will never ever be forgiven" crowd (btw, I maintain I have nothing to be forgiven for except the pain I cause other people, which is THEIR choice not god's).

    38. Re:It's not a compromise by Fafnir43 · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but as an atheist who knows a bit about Christian doctrine I just need to step in here to correct a couple of points. First off, the commandment "Do not kill" was actually a mistranslation from "Do not murder" (citation here). That doesn't excuse all the acts of genocide and torture committed by God's disciples in the Old Testament by any means, but it makes the contradictions slightly less glaring by implying that necessary killing is OK.


      Secondly, "love thy neighbour" in the New Testament was definitely concerned with gentiles as well as Jews. It only meant Jews in the Old Testament (where it originated), though, so I can see where the confusion comes in. But if you actually read the Parable of the Good Samaritan, where Jesus is specifically asked who the "neighbour" is, gave an example in which the neighbour was a Samaritan. Around that time, the Samaritans were hated almost as much as the Romans, and definitely viewed as gentiles.

      And finally, a significant proportion of Christians already accept gays and so on - even those who look on homosexuality as a sin. From what I've seen, the US seems to be anomalous in that it still has quite a lot of fundamentalist loonies, but over in Europe Christians tend to be pretty nice people. In England, for example, the debates over homosexuality tend to be focused more over whether or not they should be allowed to be clergymen within specific sects (by the sects themselves, not by law) rather than whether or not they should be allowed to exist.

      I'm not saying Christianity is accurate, but I don't like seeing bad arguments against it either - it perpetuates the belief that all arguments against Christianity's truth are bad.

      --
      To know recursion, you must first know recursion.
    39. Re:It's not a compromise by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      i remember there being a passage in the bible where god himself states quite clearly that he is a jealous god. then he gives us a commandment not to covet. do as i say, not as i do.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    40. Re:It's not a compromise by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      cool, I appreciate your comments.

      I agree with the comment about kill/murder - but once again it comes down to defintion of who is a "person". look at the glaring islamic contradiction from the Danish issue "Islam is peaceful, death to anyone who claims otherwise". when you can define infidels as not real people the quote can start making a kind of self-consistent sense. this is not just christianity or religion though - the U.S. defined blacks as worth something like 3/5 of a white person for census purposes, and the existence of slavery itself went against the idea of equality.

      I'm also reminded of the Star Trek quote about our concept of "human rights" being intrinsically racist. we won't have to deal with aliens any time soon but hopefully people in the future will be ashamed of our behaviour because they will be even better. just like we are better than the generations before us (not because god favours us but simply because we can learn from their mistakes and successes).

      I didn't mean to imply most christians are intolerant of gays. I live in the UK where things are relatively moderate. I'm more talking about the idea of "moral judgement" that is inherent in the very concept of sin.

      saying "gays are sinners, but we all are" is FAR better than "gays are sinners and must be punished". but I find the concept of sin itself offensive and I think morality should be about actual pain inflicted in humans (who actually exist and can experience it).

      the fact that many christian authorities (and many individuals) are so concerned with what other people do in private with mutual consent and no (demonstratable) harm caused to others is what upsets me.

    41. Re:It's not a compromise by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but if you believe that worship services encourage people to be nicer to one another, you've obviously not been to a church in many years. One of the primary reasons I stopped attending church is because of the petty, snide and generally foul attitudes of most of the patrons. I tried several different churches and found that generally the people who attended those churches were exactly the kind of people I wanted to be far away from.

      Generally I find they tend to believe that they and only they know the true path to salvation, and that any differing opinion that you hold automatically brands you as an heretic.

    42. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I have a pretty good idea of how Gods plan goes" ... ...
      BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH *gasp* HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH *gasp* HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH *gasp* *sputter* Heheheheh! Oh man! *reads again* HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH *wheeze* hahaha *wheeze* hahahaha *wheeze* hahaha *pant* hehehehe...

      HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAH HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

    43. Re:It's not a compromise by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Regardles of the knowledge of said deity, I'm sure such an omniscient benevolent diety would hardly be the type to endorse murder, rape, war, and other atrocities.

      http://www.evilbible.com/

      Ooops. Looks like said diety isn't such a nice guy after all.

      ~X~

      --
      ~X~
    44. Re:It's not a compromise by dukerobillard · · Score: 1

      What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor. This is the whole Torah; all the rest is commentary. Go and learn it. - Hillel, Talmud, Shabbath 31a

    45. Re:It's not a compromise by dn15 · · Score: 1

      Bravo! I find it inconceivable that a being as omniscient and all-knowing as a "god" would be so petty as to consider one set of dogmatic beliefs to be right or wrong.
      Why should God conform to your expectations?
      Because the commonly held perspective seems unreasonable and is based only on the "because the bible says so" line of reasoning that only makes sense if you already believe the bible is an authoritative religious text.
    46. Re:It's not a compromise by dn15 · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ. Any god would be a determinist, an "aw, fuck it" kind of guy/gal. Anything you do is inconsequential and beyond the purview of any concept of "free will" ergo why would he/she care about anyone's "actions and the intentions behind them"?
      I can't argue with that, which is why I said I expect that's how a god would judge us if it chose to do so. :) I don't necessarily believe it even would -- but my point is that if there were some omniscient being judging us I'm sure it would not be based on what church you went to and whether you took any religious text literally.
    47. Re:It's not a compromise by dn15 · · Score: 1

      I really can't believe this debate (and the same "yeah, me too!") still comes up and gets modded insightful all the time. The point is not that Christianity's God wants you to worship him through his own insecurity, but that the bible says that the natural state for humans is to worship him -- that humans are happiest when they do so.
      People have already replied but I feel like I should since you were responding to my message.

      The above assumes you have a belief in the Christian God and the authority of the bible. Even if we assume humans are happier worshiping him, it certainly isn't the only way to be happy and doesn't necessitate being judged based on it.
    48. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmm, did you ever stop and think that the word "jealous" could have different meanings?

    49. Re:It's not a compromise by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      only in the sense that christians have redefine the meanings of perfectly straightforward words in order to rationalise away the ludicrous crap spouted in the bible.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    50. Re:It's not a compromise by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      I just had to point that out ;) No argument against you. Every discussion along these lines inevitably leads to assertions which assume free will. It would be equally ridiculous for a God to judge us based on our actions as it would be to judge us based on our acceptance of his dead kid as our saviour. If God created us, he made us the way we are: beings, of which some make bad decisions, regardless of whether we are deterministic or have Free Will. Given the available choices to reject his son or be evil or whatever else have you, wouldn't he have to assume that some of us would make the "wrong" choice? What is the point then? God knew he would have to condemn people into a lake of fire and thus created us anyway (what a swell guy!). And we're supposed to believe that Jesus loves us? Its all bollocks if you ask me.

    51. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "modern Protestant Christianity has a lot of trouble accepting the authority of Paul's letters"

      Yes, and it's so obvious that THEY got things right. I mean, it's not like mainstream protestant churches were supporters of slavery, the KKK, WWI and WWII, the notion that God supports the US and the resulting arrogance worldview of US leaders, and countless car bombings etc in N Ireland (along with the catholics, of course; there's plenty of blame to spread). Right? WRONG!

      Modern Protestant churches (Baptist, Pentecostal, Lutheran, Methodist, Anglican, etc) belie their own claims to be Christian. They should just call it what it is: warm-fuzzy feel-good psychology, social gospel, and rule by fear. Jesus did not meddle in political affairs and yet protestant churches are at the forefront of this in modern times.

    52. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then explain what is really meant and how God is not being hypocritical?

      One thing that really bugs me about religions is that if God exists and wants us to worship Him, why doesn't he intervene and make sure his religion has a consistent message so everyone clearly knows what is the true word of God? That is opposed to there being many different interpretations in Christianity alone and on top of that all the other religions who believe that their faith is the correct one.

    53. Re:It's not a compromise by Draek · · Score: 1

      in an ideal world, you would've been modded down -1, Redundant for saying about the same thing that Jesus said two thousands years ago, "do unto others..." and all that, but sadly we live in a world that has to be reminded that religions do think "nice guys > sheep" from time to time. Ohh, and you don't have to go to church every Sunday to be a religious person, too, Catholicism is only one branch of Christianity and there *are* other religions in the world too.

      and if you're wondering, I'm an atheist but for very different reasons than yours.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    54. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless, of course, said deity saw that, if done correctly, attending regular worship services could help people to be nicer to each other--and said deity also knew that it would only do that if those worship services were teaching certain specific bits of information.

      Yeah, teachings about stories where that supposed deity pushed people to the edge just to see how strong their faith in it was. Like telling a person to kill their son. Very "nice" educational stories to be sure. Yeah, imagine how "nice" people would be if they took those teachings literally and decided to practice the levels of torture on other people that this supposed deity practiced on it's creations. Teachings to the effect that it is ok to kill and mame if you are among the righteous.

      And appearantly this supposed deity isn't all that smart. It must have messed up in creating things pretty bad the first time around, if it felt the need to flood the entire freak'n earth and destroy most of what it created essentialy as punishment for "not working correctly". Gee, seems to me an all knowing all powerful deity would have gotten things right the first time around... And wow, the pure levels of evil this supposed deity is capable of! Honestly, I see very little difference between the characters satan and god in that story, they almost seem to be the same character. This supposed deity creates these imperfect beings when it supposedly has the power to create perfect ones. The fact that these beings are impefrect is therefore this deitys own fault. Yet through out the story it continues to punish these beings for being impefect, as if they had any choice or control in how they where designed. Basically what the story tells us is that this supposed deity is getting angry that it cannot get it's creation to work correctly and is taking it's anger out on it's creation. This sort of childish behavior is not generaly associated with extreme intelligence. Sorry, but this sort of childish attitude is NOT something I would want to teach and promote to others!

      No, I see no positive role for religion in society, especially not religions based on that sick and twisted book known as the bible. When it comes down to it there are little to no positive effects from religion and a VERY large number of negative effects. We would all be MUCH better off proclaiming to just be individuals, deciding what is right and wrong on our own terms and openly debating these issues. Religions just tend to churn out sheeple, by teaching people that they should just beleive what they are being told with out questioning it. That is a HORRIBLE thing to teach to any one, espeically young children! Infact I would almost go so far as to say bible school for children is tantemount to physcological torture and mistreatment!

      The world is never going to be a perfect place, but I am willing to bet it would be MUCH nicer today than it is now if we didn't have so many large groups of easily led sheeple!!

    55. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      you can't have it both ways: Paul proclaiming no man is without sin, yet accepting his letters as unchallengable divinely inspired doctrine. Are you suggesting that if Paul is not without sin, his writings cannot be divinely inspired? Obviously if that's the case, you can't accept the authority of any part of the Bible, since the whole thing was written by sinful men. Or are you suggesting that some men are completely without sin? I don't buy it.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    56. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      saying "gays are sinners, but we all are" is FAR better than "gays are sinners and must be punished". I completely agree. The idea that Christians should crusade against homosexuality is completely counter to Jesus' teachings. Why should we treat gays worse than we treat people who violate the Ten Commandments? Adultery isn't generally considered acceptable by most people, but nobody rants and raves about how adulterers are going to burn in hell. If you're going to rank sins in order of severity (which I believe is a mistake anyway), surely breaking any of the Ten Commandments should rank up there pretty high, with gay sex somewhere down toward the bottom of the list, a little bit above wearing cotton/polyester blends.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    57. Re:It's not a compromise by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      No, I am suggesting that because Paul is human, his writings are not unchallengable. Learn to fucking read.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    58. Re:It's not a compromise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If one regards religion as a Dawkins-esque "mind virus" or meme, the purpose of attending church services is to renew virus code in your mind, with the help of a pastor who in turn receives it from a virus library in backing store (e.g. Bible), or from a hierarchy of other clerics. This is necessary because human memory may lose or distort information. The survival of the virus code and its integrity against rogue mutations requires it to be periodically refreshed.

      A better question is: what is the purpose of the religion virus in the first place? Was it invented by humans aeons ago? Or was it introduced by some sort of deity? Who can say for certain.

    59. Re:It's not a compromise by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      nice revisionism, but it seems to contradict some list I heard of that had a load of commands in it, That list was only given because people are stupid, and "just love everybody" wasn't specific enough. Close, but you've got it backwards. That list was given because of various Jewish beliefs about their god. Christ came along later and did preach "just love everybody;" the only trouble is that everybody took what he said and shoehorned it into the old Jewish religion just because Jesus was a Jew, and then a bunch of other dudes (Paul and his crew) had their own ideas that involved a lot more rules than "just love everybody." Centuries of small deviations from Jesus' actual message (somebody say "evolution"?) have given us the First Mainstream Church of America, the one that preaches love and practices hatred at worst, and a sickeningly merit-based kind of counterfeit love at best. Here I am speaking of the organization as a whole; I know individuals within the establishment that do truly care for and love others; it pains me to see them held back by their dogma.

      I hope that within my lifetime I get to see more people become actual followers of Christ, actual bearers of his message (the one about love, not the one about avoiding hell). I have a feeling that, as in Jesus' own time, their most vocal opponents will be the established religion that shapes their culture.

      This whole thing is a bit off-topic I know, so feel free to mod appropriately. Sometimes I think what I have to say is important, so I take the soapboxes I can get.
    60. Re:It's not a compromise by ambiguous+kasey · · Score: 1

      Smart deity that confuses correlation with causation!

    61. Re:It's not a compromise by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      No, I am suggesting that because Paul is human, his writings are not unchallengable. Learn to fucking read. Were not the other writers of the Bible similarly human?
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  22. Almost funny... by John3 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ken Ham (President of Answers in Genesis, sponsor of the museum) would be amusing to watch if he wasn't so scary. There was a segment in the documentary "Friends of God" which showed Ken speaking to a group of children about dinosaurs and evolution. His logical argument to the children was that since scientists weren't around 4,000 years ago but god was then we have to believe god and not the scientists.

    "Intelligent Design" groups have been running tours through legitimate museums, providing their own narrative in order to dispute the information provided by the museum displays. Maybe after this museum opens some atheist tour group so do the same thing...take tours through Ken's "museum" and provide scientific narrative to dispute his biblical nonsense.

    --
    "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    1. Re:Almost funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can prove scientists exist.

    2. Re:Almost funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Intelligent Design" groups have been running tours through legitimate museums, providing their own narrative in order to dispute the information provided by the museum displays. Maybe after this museum opens some atheist tour group so do the same thing...take tours through Ken's "museum" and provide scientific narrative to dispute his biblical nonsense.

      I find both those scenarios acceptable -- the museums have the ability to kick anyone out at any time (provided they're not publicly-owned). Freedom to believe what you want doesn't mean you have to adhere to facts. You'll simply do so naturally if you're rational.

      Finally -- I can't help but pick on you for this -- since when did you have to be an atheist to disregard creationism as nonsense?

    3. Re:Almost funny... by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Maybe after this museum opens some atheist tour group so do the same thing...take tours through Ken's "museum" and provide scientific narrative to dispute his biblical nonsense.


      Intelligent Design groups get way with their propaganda because the museums believe in free speech, and allow them to have their say. Do you really think that these fundamentalists will allow pro-evolution groups to spread their propaganda in the Creationist Museum? To them, free speech only applies when it's in their favor, not their opponents.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    4. Re:Almost funny... by John3 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I wasn't really intending to say you had to be atheist to object to their theories of creationism. I was thinking that an atheist group would just tick them off a bit more. However, it might be funnier if a Christian group went through a ridiculed their theories. :)

      --
      "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    5. Re:Almost funny... by tftp · · Score: 1
      His logical argument to the children was that since scientists weren't around 4,000 years ago but god was

      1. He knows that God was not a scientist?
      2. He knows what God was or is, and whether He was right here exactly 4,000 years ago?

      I thought that one of God's attributes is being unknowable. Unless, of course, Ken Ham is asserting that he is a God himself, and above that other God to boot. This statement, and the fact that he hadn't been smitten yet, suggest that the original God does not exist, and so the rest of his talk is irrelevant. I am unsure, though, that Ken intended to prove absence of God. But that's what he did.

    6. Re:Almost funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I *almost* don't care what morons believe so long as they stay out of the field. Ie. don't work in science or biotech if you believe in Creationism.

      The reason is that those fields are selective, in theory, and if you apply for a job or publish a scientific paper, then anyone who references the bible in their work will be laughed out of lectures, seminars, and job interviews.

      There are good arguments why a banker or hairdresser should believe in evolution, but realistically it doesn't matter too much. Ignorance is an absolute right, so long as we're willing to pay for it.

    7. Re:Almost funny... by nuzak · · Score: 1

      > He knows that God was not a scientist?

      Being omniscient does tend to take a lot out of that whole "tireless search to expand the boundaries of knowledge" thing.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    8. Re:Almost funny... by tftp · · Score: 1
      God did not know that Eve will fail, so obviously He is not omniscient:

      KJB, Gen.3:
      [8] And they heard the voice of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day: and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God amongst the trees of the garden.
      [9] And the LORD God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou?

      Hardly practical for an omniscient being to ask where his creature is, and very surprising that God even knows how to ask questions (he'd have no need for that.) In fact, God performs quite poorly in this test, being unable to locate his goal just within Adam's hearing radius. People do better than that today with wild animals who roam the whole country (a moose, a collar, a satellite ...)

    9. Re:Almost funny... by noamsml · · Score: 1

      I'm an atheist, but I've got to note that in that specific quote God is clearly asking Adam even though he knows, as some rhetorical device of sorts.

  23. Re:About the Bible by arthurpaliden · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You are aware of course that the Bible, as we know it today, was a govenment project........

  24. Irrational arguments will always win by unlametheweak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For every argument made against irrationality, there will always be irrational arguments made to contest the rational. There is no way of winning against the irrational. So it goes. Religion will always win so long as the human mind is irrational.

    1. Re:Irrational arguments will always win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we can prove Ken is sqrt(2), then we can prove he is irrational, using proof by contradiction !

    2. Re:Irrational arguments will always win by mclaincausey · · Score: 1

      Good point. The mind is irrational, but the brain is not necessarily irrational. We just need a rational program to run on the hardware, which is sufficient.

      --
      (%i1) factor(777353);
      (%o1) 777353
    3. Re:Irrational arguments will always win by bmo · · Score: 1

      "Those who invalidate reason ought seriously to consider whether they argue against reason with or without reason; if with reason, then they establish the principle they are laboring to dethrone: but if they argue without reason (which, in order to be consistent with themselves they must do), they are out of reach of rational conviction, nor do they deserve a rational argument."

      Ethan Allen

      --
      BMO

    4. Re:Irrational arguments will always win by Plutonite · · Score: 1

      The human mind is not irrational. It is however, capable of accepting irrationality in favor of emotional satisfaction of the ego..etc. That is why people have arguments. Good scientists do not have "heated" debates, because emotion is understood and recognized as irrelevant. They talk only in heated mathematics. If what you say is true, then it is either provably true under axiomatic premises or it is not. In the first case there is no room for argument; in the second we need to go back and know more, and all parties must thus agree. In some cases, our uncertainty is itself provable, and nothing changes in the model of scientific discourse.

      Religious arguments cannot fall under this category - a concrete answer would defeat the purpose of most doctrines. It would not make sense for a God to prove himself with mathematical certainty, lots of philosophical problems arise..etc. What you have instead is a matter of possibilities. Weighed chances. Instincts. This is not irrational discourse, in fact it's the only way that it can be done. You can choose not to be part of this discourse (like me!) or you can go on and on, down dark paths in which rationality and the lack of it become intertwined.

      "Indeed the Human was of most things willing to argue" - Holy Quraan.

    5. Re:Irrational arguments will always win by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      You don't *have* to be crazy to live in Kentucky, but I'm sure it helps a lot.

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  25. Theme Park by Ksevio · · Score: 1

    So it's sort of like Disneyland with a Old Testament theme going on?

    1. Re:Theme Park by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It being America... I wonder if someone is gonna try to sue 'em for false advertising. It isn't really a museum... if you look-up the definition.

  26. funding by rasputin465 · · Score: 1

    How, exactly, did these nutjobs scrape together the heaps of money that must have been required to build this carnival side-show?

    Or... maybe I underestimate the spending power of the evangelicals.

    1. Re:funding by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Have you ever seen their TV shows? A lot of them spend a lot of time begging for money. Dial 1-800-GOD-BOOK to give to this ministry! In the 80's Jim Bakker and his wife had a lot of money from the "ministry" and lived extravagently. To give an example, I think their dog house was air-conditioned.

    2. Re:funding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to America, where attitudes to science and rational thought is more closely aligned with the middle-east than with the rest of the western world.

    3. Re:funding by maxume · · Score: 1

      Jack Van Impe rocks Detroit. Watching more than about 25 seconds of it is nearly impossible, as actually trying to make sense of it results in blacking out. "If it weren't for my horse" and so forth.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:funding by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "How, exactly, did these nutjobs scrape together the heaps of money that must have been required to build this carnival side-show?"

      There are many of them, and superstition does not exclude the ability to function effectively in the economy.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    5. Re:funding by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Just look at the amount of money the US spends fighting latter day crusades in the Middle East. Yeah I know they came over here and picked the fight, but there is no shortage of money in the churches.

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    6. Re:funding by bruce_garrett · · Score: 2, Informative

      Grassroots donations, but also a few very friendly right wing billionares, like Howard Ahmanson. He's been a big friend to creationist organizations like The Discovery Institute. I expect some of the other usual names (Scaife, Olin, Bradley, Coors, and so forth) are sending a little money their way too, via one cash teat or another.

  27. Thats extreamist for you.... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    ...if there is anything as real evidence of there being anything to creationism, its the exhibit itself.

    See, we can create things that we can imagine!

    And sometime in the distant future, if man doesn't destroy himself first, we may just come to understand physics enough and develop such technology that enables us to create a new galaxy and live long enough to see it evolve and even influence it and the life in it.

    But Why? Survival instinct of conscious beings! What else could it be?
    Today we play on the fence of whether or not we get past the self destructive waring mentality....

    If the universe exist and no one is there to see it, does it matter?

    1. Re:Thats extreamist for you.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to believe one day we will be able to engineer our own universes.

      Once you get past the idea that creating a universe is possable
      how much harder would it be to create one in a pre-designed state.

      I'm more suprised the number of people that believe in both GOD and evolution.

    2. Re:Thats extreamist for you.... by 3seas · · Score: 1

      "I'm more suprised the number of people that believe in both GOD and evolution."

      And what do you suppose we would be in the eyes of creatures and early conscious being that evolve in a universe we create? And at that point would we not have enough in hindsight of our own evolution to know what to think of the actions of such primitive, to us, beings? Wouldn't we have a much different perspective and understanding of that stage of life?

  28. There is the *REAL* problem by zappepcs · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "...and by Enlightenment philosophers, who chipped away at biblical authority" - emphasis mine

    I always question that phrase; who gave the bible authority? I'm reasonably certain of my history, and in this case, it was mankind who gave the bible any authority at all, if it really has any.

    That question is more important than the question of what truth's if any, does it hold.

  29. It's a shame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How come all of these out of state fucks had to bring this here?

  30. Re:About the Bible by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That would explain why all the prophets were put to death for criticizing the government of their day.

  31. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by jimicus · · Score: 1

    Maybe they were too busy running away to get a good look at it?

  32. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Tatisimo · · Score: 2, Funny

    You'd think that being the master of deception he'd at least be able to draw more than rough stick figures and such. Satan needs art classes. Or maybe it's because he was younger and less experienced back then...

    --
    Give Kashyyyk back to the Wookies
  33. Big tobacco tactics? by ushering05401 · · Score: 1

    Models of kids are apparently interspersed with friendly looking dinos at the museum... kinda like cigarette companies used to use friendly cartoon animals to promote their agendas to young minds.

    Which leads me to wonder...

    How similar will the agenda at this high profile (Google News front page, Slashdot front page, BBC front page) museum be? Will there be attempts to assault the scientific data for evolution, or will there be an innocent theme park feel to the whole thing?

    Are we looking at religious people expressing their beliefs or a group beginning a new phase of the ongoing war for the minds of American children ala big tobacco through the middle of last century.

    Regards.

  34. Even though it's not accurate by sokoban · · Score: 1

    You know, even though this museum isn't scientifically accurate, it looked pretty cool on the news tonight. They have one exhibit with a human and a dinosaur hanging out together.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 is the magic number.
  35. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    heh. Did you see the "dragon hall" ?
    dragon hall

    I guess the dragons didn't make it to the ark because they followed the unicorns.

  36. In 6 months by GregPK · · Score: 1

    In other news the controversial creationism musuem in Kentucky has closed due to lack of interest. While being replaced with a new evolution museum paid for by scientists around the country. Due to open in the fall of 08. :)

  37. Reverse Tithing by edwardpickman · · Score: 1

    Another fine tradition, fleecing the flock. Just how much of this is pushing a religious agenda and how much is a money making scheme? Overall if your faith in religion is based on something that defies not only science but common sense I'd re-examine your religous beliefs. If all the evidence says you are wrong it's not faith it's delusion.

    1. Re:Reverse Tithing by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Another fine tradition, fleecing the flock."

        Religion is entertainment, for which they are paying. IMO they deserve to be milked by anyone sharp enough to do so.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  38. If you divorce your wife in Kentucky... by ismism · · Score: 1

    ...is she still your sister?

    1. Re:If you divorce your wife in Kentucky... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH DAMN! I LOLED!

  39. Creationism Explained, by Gary Larson by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 4, Funny
    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
  40. Now *that is a fascinating topic by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 1

    I disagree that the acquisition of authority by the bible, or any text, can be simplified as a "gift" by mankind. Now, the most pernicious abuses of the bible were in cases where it was the authority of the sword (convert or die) that was spreading its ... "adoption" as an authority.

    To get more particular, one must divide up the question: whence its authority *to *speak *on __________ ?

    On scientific issues, it acquires authority insofar as its statements are intersubjectively confirmable, falsifiable, and corroborated by other disinterested stories. e.g. there are plenty of historical statements that are verifiable through other means. But the Young Earth hypothesis doesn't really pass this test (the Young Earth hypothesis, btw, is a relatively recent addition to christian thought).

    On moral issues, I think it acquires authority insofar as its statements ring true with human experience. The golden Rule has got legs and is mirrored in almost every moral tradition. The stuff about sequestering women as "unclean" during their menstrual emmissions, not so much...

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    1. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by maxume · · Score: 1

      So I should be down with anything I agree with(this is a reasonable interpretation of both 'verifiable' historical statements and 'ring true with human experience)?

      http://www.rationalrevolution.net/articles/jesus_m yth_history.htm

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    2. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by jkorz · · Score: 1

      Young earth hypothesis is a recent addition to Christian thought?

      Would you mind citing your source?

      The young earth "hypothesis" has been around approximately 6000 years? How old is evolutionism again?

    3. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 1

      I should have said "to mainstream christian thought". Surely there were always people who took those 6 days literally, but IIRC most "official" medieval biblical scholarship did not.

      The wik says "the majority of the early Church Fathers including Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Origen, Augustine, Eusebius, and Basil did not believe the Genesis account depicted ordinary solar days."

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    4. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 1

      "So I should be down with anything I agree with(this is a reasonable interpretation of both 'verifiable' historical statements and 'ring true with human experience)?"

      That is one way of interpreting it. But I'd caution you about something you seem to imply by phrasing it this way, namely: that by 'human experience' I just mean *yours. Alas humans report different things. Cf. the blind men all touching different parts of an elephant. Pluralism, and a moral theory of tolerance, means coming up with the elephant-sized explanations of the aggregate experiences.

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    5. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by maxume · · Score: 1

      Right. I take your caution and raise you my caution: sufficiently broad statements are almost always true, but in the process, they become meaningless.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, they've been wrong for 6000 years. Just like they were wrong for 5600 years about the earth being the center of the universe. Oops. That's what happens when people blindly accept what the establishment feeds them.

    7. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      The catholic church is NOT mainstream Christian thought

      Umm... How do you figure that, given: 1) there are at least twice as many Catholics as all other denominations of Christianity, combined, and 2) the Catholic Church is one of the oldest Christian churches?

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    8. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by NMerriam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The catholic church is NOT mainstream Christian thought. The catholic church on many occasions killed anyone who opposed them, their teachings are not Christian and aren't considered so by anyone other than themselves.


      You do realize that the vast majority of Christians outside the USA are Catholic, right? They're not exactly some obscure sect of Christianity. Protestantism is, by any reasonable definition of "mainstream", NOT mainstream Christian except in the USA and a few other places.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    9. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by jcr · · Score: 1

      The catholic church is NOT mainstream Christian thought.

      They outnumber you; that makes them the mainstream by definition.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    10. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      The Catholic church isn't maintream? What are you smoking? I want some of that.

      The Catholic church is the foundation of Christianity. All other Christian churches split off from the Catholic church, mostly for political reasons. The schisms between protestant denominations is far greater than the differences between some protestant churches and the Holy Mother Church. The difference between the Episcopal Church and the Catholic Church pales compared to the huge schism between the Christian Church and the Church of Christ (two protestant churches).

      The various Orthodox churches (the second largest Christian religion, second only to Catholicism) are very nearly identical to the Catholic church in their beliefs. The Anglican and Episcopal Churches (all protestant) are all reasonably close; many even believe in transubstantiation, though it is not universally held in these faiths. The Lutheran and Methodist Churches are also mostly theologically compatible with the Catholic Church, with the exception of transubstantiation, and in fact, some have joked that in many ways, the Lutheran church is more Catholic than the Catholic Church, as it has stayed closer to its roots through the years.

      Thus, even if you ignore the Catholics, there are still considerably more people whose beliefs are similar to Catholicism than there are people with more extreme protestant beliefs. I would, therefore, contend that it is your religious belief that is non-mainstream.

      Don't get me wrong---I'm not saying that the Catholic Church hasn't done some bad things in the distant past (the wars you mention, for example), but those are the failings of men, not of the Church itself, in much the same way that modern-day suicide bombings are the failings of men, not of the Muslim faith. Do not make the mistake of believing that Catholics are a bunch of nuts with guns in their basements who plan to take over the world. I've heard such foolishness from the occasional protestant over the years (and I won't mention their particular denomination because it is a bizarre, non-mainstream minority view even among the denomination in question). The only word that came to my mind upon hearing that was "moron." It just isn't so.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    11. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      The wik says "the majority of the early Church Fathers including Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Origen, Augustine, Eusebius, and Basil did not believe the Genesis account depicted ordinary solar days."
      It would have been pretty hard to have solar days before the sun existed, which wasn't until the fourth day.
    12. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by wrf3 · · Score: 1

      jkorz wrote: This is talking about the catholic church. The catholic church is NOT mainstream Christian thought.

      First, you meant to say "the Roman Catholic church". "catholic" means universal; all Christians are members of the "universal church". Second, what do you hold to be "mainstream" Christian thought? As a Protestant who has read the Catechism of the RCC, I would say that I agree with probably 70% of it. And both groups agree on what St. Paul wrote: "For I handed on to you as of first importance what I in turn had received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures, and that he was buried, and that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. ..."

    13. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by nattt · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Indeed, Hitler was Catholic and supported and aided by the Pope at the time and the Catholic Church. Why do you think he killed Jewish people? Catholic doctrine was that the whole of the Jewish people were guilty of killing their god, Jesus!

      Catholic priest bugger little boys, and the Catholic church covers this up, moving on the priests to new locations with new young boys to bugger.

      The Catholic church is guilty of these and many more crimes against humanity.

      If you're a Catholic and feel that Nazism, killing Jews and buggering young boys is wrong you owe it upon yourself to leave and denounce the Catholic church. Nothing less is moral for you to do.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    14. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 1

      "If you're a Catholic and feel that Nazism, killing Jews and buggering young boys is wrong you owe it upon yourself to leave and denounce the Catholic church. Nothing less is moral for you to do."

      Hm.. I'm also a male and feel that those things are wrong. Do I need to get an operation?

      --
      My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    15. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by king-manic · · Score: 1

      Hitler was basically like me, a lapsed catholic. He milked his catholic background for PR but he didn't attend church very much. Hitler was not supported by the catholic church and many instances of catholic priests aiding the escape of Jews are documented. The Pedophilia is indeed troubling and the "cover up" is more so. But your first assertion about Nazi's and catholics is outright moronic. There are enough legitimate concerns with the organization without inventing stuff.

      As for the pedophilia in the clergy. It's a consequence of the guilt heaped on homosexual catholics. They feel the need to atone for being gay and thus jump into the clergy. However you can't really suppress sex drive. It's a natural drive of humanity and the attempt to do so in the clergy only works for some. If they would allow priests to marry it would indeed greatly reduce this problem. The whole celibacy of the clergy is basically a "optional" practice turned mandatory for various reasons. I don't feel it is the right choice for the faith.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    16. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by CrankyOldBastard · · Score: 1

      I have to point out that the Celtic Church had a history independent of the Roman Church, and saved the Roman Church through its missionary efforts. It was merged with the roman church in the 5th century in order to take advantage of Rome's better marketing arm.

    17. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The Catholic church is the foundation of Christianity. All other Christian churches split off from the Catholic church, mostly for political reasons.
      This is debatable. The Great Schism wasn't the Eastern churches "splitting off" the Catholic Church, but rather, it was the (nominally) single Church splitting in two parts of roughly the same size.
    18. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by nattt · · Score: 1

      Certainly was NOT a lapsed Catholic. He was very much into his religion, held it dearly as his own words show. And what about the Catholic church in Rwanda? There they on the very same genocide mission as before.

      --
      -- oldthinkers unbellyfeel ingsoc
    19. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet you think Bush does too. Don't believe everything a politician tells you, especially when it sounds like "I have a lot in common with you, the large voting block!"

    20. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by ccp · · Score: 1

      The catholic church is NOT mainstream Christian thought.

      And the award to the dumbest comment of the year goes to...jkorz!

    21. Re:Now *that is a fascinating topic by OfficialReverendStev · · Score: 1

      So then, O Wise One, just who IS that on the crucifix?

      --
      A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything. - Neitzsche
  41. Best Protest by moehoward · · Score: 4, Interesting


    The best way to protest this is to get a couple thousand people to show up there and laugh for 5 minutes on queue. I recall a similar protest was done in India some years ago and it is brilliant.

    Just laugh as hard as you can at them for 5 minutes. Rinse. Repeat.

    --
    "If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." - Epictetus
    1. Re:Best Protest by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Actually, the best protest is simply not to go to the museum.

      I mean, we all know the Scientologists are a bunch of wackos, too, but you don't go laugh for five minutes outside Tom Cruise's house, do you?

    2. Re:Best Protest by maxume · · Score: 1

      I don't purposefully watch his movies. I'll watch em on cable or whatever, but I won't pay for them at the theater, watch them on pay per view, rent them or buy them on DVD. All because he is a wack-a-job. If I thought I was a Nielson house, I would have to take things even further.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:Best Protest by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      Not being a "grammar nazi", but I'm trying to get the right image in my head.

      Are you talking about "laughing on queue", as in, you all line up to go in, and start laughing while reading their literature out front, thus not giving them money?
      Or are you talking about "laughing on cue", as in, someone gives a sign, and you all start laughing?

  42. So, what exactly is wrong with it? by guruevi · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't see any problem with this museum, at least not worthy of /. main page. I can probably expect a lot of -1 Trolls on this post, but my +1 Insightful view on it is this:

    They basically take evolutionism, replace big bang with God orderly putting everything in place, selection of species and some bacteria turning into apes with orderly creating everything. There you have it, creationism. It's not all that different and neither of them can be proven wrong. You can't prove God does (not) exist and did all that work over billions of years nor can you prove that the big bang was (not) a big explosion. The main questions you're going to remain with is: where does God come from? or where did that mass of stuff exploding come from?

    I say, let's peacefully co-exist, I don't care whether you teach it or not in schools, but don't teach creationism nor evolutionism as an exact science and don't teach creationism nor evolutionism as the only true religion. I see a lot of atheists that hang on to evolution and the big bang theory as a religion, something that has to be and is true, no matter what other people think or say. Why? Because you feel the need to be religious about something? What if I come up with a scientific theory that better fits the bill? You're going to massively change then? Or am I going to be incorrect.

    Nobody said that the world was made in 7 24h days. Just think about it, let's say the Bible is the book of God and it specified God created everything in 7 days. Before God created our planet and our sun etc., there were no 24 hour days, there was nothing, how would you (or God) then calculate 24 hour days. What if God resided on Mars or Jupiter on that occasion? Would you still say that God's day was 24 hours? The only religion that teaches that as far as I know is catholicism and maybe some other offspring religions in Christendom. Heck, talk to a Jehovah's Witness or a Mormon (they're easy to come by, they even come to you every so often (I don't want to offend anyone, just a joke)), they'll tell you that those 'days' are unspecified in length, could be millions of years.

    I hate that people keep putting their personal religion to the front as a fact that can have no objection, there are thousands of believes on any type of subject, I have my own, open your own museum if you want, but don't teach my kids your view on how we got here as a fact. Unless you have a camera or scientific undeniable proof that it happened that way (as in exact, not a theory) I probably will think my own way about it.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Lurker2288 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that most 'true believers' aren't just content to hold their own beliefs, and to indoctrinate their kids while they're young and accepting. All the born-agains I know says that it's also god's will for them to convert others and "bring us to Christ's truth." That's not tolerance, and if the rational people of the world refuse to make a stand against this kind of ancient bullshit, then religious mania will take us over. Just look at the 'moral majority' of the 70s carrying Reagan into office, or our current situation with George Bush.

      And it's ridiculous to put religious belief on par with scientific explanations for how things came to be. Science generates hypotheses; those hypotheses are tested with observation and experiment, and the ones that hold up become theories, which will be amended or rejected when contradictory evidence is found. When science doesn't know an answer, it speculates, but it does not proclaim. Contrast this with religion, which tells us god made everything, and our brains can't comprehend the awesomeness of it all. What proof do they offer for these extraordinary claims? Oh, no proof, see, because it's all about faith--believing DESPITE the fact that all they really have to back it up is a book, and the words of 'holy men' who, of course, have a vested interest in keep the sheeple flocking in one direction.

      Religion is poison to rationality, and we lose sight of that at our own peril.

    2. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by The+Living+Fractal · · Score: 1

      You know what's really scary? God evolved.

      TLF

      --
      I do not respond to cowards. Especially anonymous ones.
    3. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad to hear that 7 days could be millions of years. Now if you would also 'think about' everything else creationism is saying and make it match the scientific theory, *then* both could co-exist.

    4. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where does God come from?
      God has no beginning or end, he simply "is". The closest thing that can be described using language to it is the notion of an uncountably large set.
    5. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by mushadv · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You can't prove God does (not) exist

      Nor can I disprove the existence of unicorns living in Venus's core. So as long as we can't put cameras there, we might as well just accept that we'll never know, right?

      don't teach creationism nor evolutionism as an exact science

      And why in the hell not? Evolution is a scientific theory, and a widely accepted one at that. There's no reason it shouldn't be taught. Creationism on the other hand is religion and nothing more.

      I see a lot of atheists that hang on to evolution and the big bang theory as a religion, something that has to be and is true, no matter what other people think or say. Why? Because you feel the need to be religious about something? What if I come up with a scientific theory that better fits the bill? You're going to massively change then? Or am I going to be incorrect.

      Hey, feel free to try. If it has significant basis in fact and mountains of evidence behind it like evolution before it, then sure, we'll "massively change." You seem to think this is some kind of a game, evolutionists vs. creationists. In reality, the "debate" doesn't exist. Evolution is scientific theory and is based on facts. Creationism is based on a book, and on no facts whatsoever. Game over.

    6. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by gibodean · · Score: 1

      I don't care whether you teach it or not in schools, but don't teach creationism nor evolutionism as an exact science and don't teach creationism nor evolutionism as the only true religion.
      Evolution isn't a religion, or based on one, so that's fine. Creation is based on a religion, and I agree that it shouldn't be taught as true. Now, about not teaching evolution as an exact science...... It is as exact a science as there is. It's an exact a science as the one that says there's a hunk of rock called the "moon" orbiting the earth. As exact as the theory of gravity. It's a fact that we evolved. You can argue about some of the exact details that are unknown, but if you aren't aware that we share a recent common ancestor with chimps and bonobos, and ancestors with 99-100% of all other life on earth, then you are an idiot. If you think there's a problem with teaching this in school as a fact, you're an idiot I don't want anywhere near my kids.
    7. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by bertok · · Score: 2

      nor can you prove that the big bang was (not) a big explosion.

      Don't confuse science with religion - the big bang theory is not taken on faith. It is a falsifiable scientific theory like any other. It most certainly can be proved wrong, if evidence is found that is not consistent with the model of the universe expanding from a denser state. Scientists spend a lot of time and money looking for such evidence, for example, the WMAP probe, which measures the properties of the cosmic microwave background to test the big bang theory. So far, the theory has checked out, but it would be dropped like a ton of bricks if we found, for example, stars much older than the expected age of the universe.

      Science is about verifying and testing our theories, not about saying "why don't we just agree to disagree" so that we can all feel fuzzy and warm in our ignorance.

      PS: While we're at it, I love the way creationists can't tell the difference between the big bang theory of the universe, and the evolution theory of biological life. Is schooling in America that bad that supposedly 'educated' people are having trouble differentiating between galaxies and animals?

    8. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by james_gnz · · Score: 1

      You can't prove God does (not) exist

      Nor can I disprove the existence of unicorns living in Venus's core. So as long as we can't put cameras there, we might as well just accept that we'll never know, right?

      I'll thank you not to associate the Faith of the Venus Core Unicorns with Abrahamicism. It's demeaning.

      Brother James, Priest of the V.C. 'Tween Temple Horn

    9. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by jtn · · Score: 1

      The typical counter-argument to this is: "If has no beginning or end, why can't our universe exist under the same condition?"

      So please try again.

    10. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by localman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree 100% with your "let's peacefully co-exist". I am content to let everyone believe what they want and to express what they like as long as they do the same for others. So don't take my expression below to be an attempt to convert or insult yours or anyone elses beliefs, but rather as an expression of my view.

      I am an athiest and I believe natural selection to be the orgin of the species, as it were. The big bang is too abstract for me to seriously consider, but it might as well be true as it doesn't say much practical to current existence. But in response to your claim, I really don't think that many people "hang on to evolution ... as a religion". If someone came up with a better explanation I would most certainly consider it; that's why science is not a religion: it adapts. The bible is purportedly unchanging, and for that reason alone it is of limited usefulness as it can't take into account new discoveries. Science can. Sure, there are some scientists who hang on to pet theories in spite of evidence to the contrary, but fundamentally science is an endless exploration of what is, and it allows for error. Ptolomy was overturned by Copernicus. Newton was overturned by Einstein. It's amazing how non religious science is, given that it's coming from people, an inherintly religious tending breed of creature.

      I don't discount the usefulness of myth (and I use that term entirely non-pejorativly). Myth is an important part of the human experience, and can help us discover truths about ourselves on which science has nothing to say.

    11. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why CAN'T our universe exist under the same condition (no beginning or end)?

      In theory, no particular reason at all.

      Except that it doesn't. It's a hypothetical scenario that doesn't fit the observed evidence.

      The universe is clearly aging, with all indications being that it had its start some 13.7 billion years ago.

      So nope... sorry. That counter-argument doesn't really work.

    12. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by ndogg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Evolution has nothing to do with religion. I don't care if you're Hindu, Voodoo, Greek (pagan), Seikh, Muslim, Wiccan, or Catholic--evolution has nothing to do with religion.

      If you decide to ignore all the evidence out there that supports evolution (including its laboratory use, and as a basis for creating new technology), that's your choice, but realize you lose credibility with everyone else that decides not to ignore the evidence.

      Also, Catholicism supports theistic evolution. Even Pope Benedict's more recent comments on the situation weren't actually against evolution in spite of what many have said, but rather the use of evolution to push atheism.

      Peacefully co-exist? Sure, but you and everyone else that says evolution isn't science should just be honest and say that you don't really believe in science, instead of hiding behind some pseudo-science like ID.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    13. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      PS: While we're at it, I love the way creationists can't tell the difference between the big bang theory of the universe, and the evolution theory of biological life. Is schooling in America that bad that supposedly 'educated' people are having trouble differentiating between galaxies and animals?

      Because the biblical explaination covers both creation of the galaxies (or rather, of all the stars in the universe) and animals, and thus people who believe there is an inherent contradiction between science and religion pit the two alternating theories as: genesis vs. big bang and evolution.

      Of course, this brings us to people who believe there is an inherent contradiction. Heck, no one is going to be swayed by a comment on slashdot, so I'll leave it at that.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    14. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Sminch · · Score: 1

      I try to think of how to respond to this question and prove that I have no desire to reduce myself to angry invective, as such is not my intention at all. First of all, I will at least "expose" myself to be a Roman Catholic so that you know where I am coming from in general as I respond to your post. As for indoctrination, I agree with you entirely up until the point of attributing child-rearing as a practice in indoctrination. In and of itself, Truth demands Freedom, for if there be a grounding to the world, it must be conformable to reason. However, a dissociation of humanity flows from a lack of desire to rear our children in those experiences which we vouch (with life and practice) to be true. However, I will agree that an essential element of child-rearing also requires the formation of a truly-questioning mind.

      The Fathers of the Church viewed Christianity as more akin to philosophy than the religions of the day. Since the Gospel is primarily about an encounter with the Truth (although with personal dimension in Jesus Christ), it remains, in the final analysis, in the category of philosophy than it does in "religion," although it holds within it the dynamism toward re-ligation of humanity with the Truth. While the specifics of this may be contested, I am not trying to give a comprehensive view of doctrine or convince its validity. Instead, it is my desire to show you that, viewed as a branch of philosophy (although with a cultural-historical component which makes it somewhat different), Christianity is not an effort of believers to indoctrinate into the Truth. Instead, it is the higher (and true) calling of the Christian to be a light for the world through living in accord with that Truth. In so many ways, Christian groups try to reduce the end of Christian life to nothing more than political activism. In its essence it is not that at all but is instead an offering of encounter with Love in the lives of the believing community. These acts of love, supported by the Love of Christ, are to be part of the ongoing exodus in which the believers not only act positively but also come upon the limitations of themselves and their reason, continually moving forward in dialogue with the world, while remaining distinct from those portions of life which, by their nature, destroy the dialogical character of man.

      With respect to your last comment, I would say this: Undialogical religion is a poison to rationality but philosophical thinking and morality are necessary components of a complete rationality. Without direction, materialistic thinking becomes utilitarian and is thus necessarily placed at the feet of power for its direction. Each century has shown us how any group (Christians included) ultimately destroy themselves and many others when power becomes the measure of action. Truth is the final end of all good science, just as it is the end of all true religion. Philosophy/Morality/Personal-encounter are part of the same complex of rationality of which materialistic science is also a member. The two mutually support each other and most definitely do not abrogate the other's raison d'etre.

      I hope that this was not read in a spirit of anger because that is far from my desire. Dialogue is man's highest goal, and I merely mean to enter into dialogue.

    15. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by ControlAltDelete · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Show me one religion that hasn't changed or "adapted" over the years. I don't think you can say that, because science adapts, that excludes it from being a religion (not to say that science is a religion, but to contest your apparent requirement that, in order for something to be a religion, it must not adapt or change).

    16. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by ControlAltDelete · · Score: 1

      I think that, unfortunately, many of the "rational" people in America have come to believe that religion is necessarily a poison to rationality. They sit in a festering pool of evangelical sludge, so it's not hard to see why they might come to that conclusion, but it's not true. Religion and rationality don't have to be mutually exclusive. One might have religious beliefs due to religious experience, for instance, but still maintain a rational fallibilism by which he acknowledges that his religious standpoint on existence is not necessarily true, and that his religious experience - while convincing - may be caused by explicable, physical phenomena rather than something spiritual. That would not make religion a poison to rationality, for the believer is maintaining a rational frame of mind by keeping a degree of agnosticism regarding his or her spiritual side. Religion only becomes a poison to rationality when it becomes insane and people start holding infallibilistic doctrines that cause them to assert their beliefs as unquestionably correct despite any new evidence to the contrary. That is insane, but it is not representative of all religion. So, while the creationists and the intelligent designers are obviously off their rockers, don't extrapolate from these (albeit too common) instances into a universal claim that all religion is a poison to rationality. It can be a very beautiful thing. It's kind of like a paintbrush - in the right hands, it can do amazing things. In the wrong hands, it produces nothing worth noticing. In the REALLY wrong hands, it gets sharpened down into a weapon and someone ends up with it embedded in his braincase.

    17. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by localman · · Score: 1

      You're right, religeon adapts for sure. Humans will adapt and modify anything they get their hands on. But by declaring a particular book "sacred", be it the bible, the koran, or whatever, they are stuck with certain things that don't make sense any more. Like stoning to death adulterers and disobedient children. Most modern Christians adapt by ignoring large portions of the bible, which is fine with me (and highly beneficial for them), but most still claim the book is infallable. Even though they find rationalizations for their selective reading, they believe the ancient books are sacred. Sacred in the sense that they cannot be questioned.

      In contrast, science is fundamentally based on the premise that nothing is too sacred to be questioned. And this has proven itself a very practical and useful thing.

      I actually think that before the advent of the printing press, religion worked much better. Via oral tradition the "sacred" teachings could adapt over time as people left out bits that became unpallatable, or added bits of new wisdom that seemed to fit things better. The idea that it was set in stone was good, but the fact that it wasn't literally set in stone was also good. But once it was we got stuck with an old version of mankind's wisdom, which only partly applies to modern life.

    18. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by ControlAltDelete · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, it's one thing to criticize infallibilistic dogma, and it's another to criticize religion. I'm all for the former, since the former is clearly insane. It just bothers me when people claim that they're one and the same.

    19. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that most 'true believers' aren't just content to hold their own beliefs, and to indoctrinate their kids while they're young and accepting. All the born-agains I know says that it's also god's will for them to convert others and "bring us to Christ's truth."

      Yeah, but that's just the natural tendency everyone has to show cool stuff to their friends. Don't you tell your friends the "have to read" the great book you just finished? Don't you offer your friends beer & coffee, if you're a beer or coffee drinker? Don't married people encourage their single friends to find the right person? The proselytizers have just found their own little religous exstasy, and they want everyone else to feel just as good.

    20. Re:So, what exactly is wrong with it? by Copid · · Score: 1

      What if I come up with a scientific theory that better fits the bill? You're going to massively change then? Or am I going to be incorrect.
      If you can come up with the evidence to support it, I suspect that you'd probably win a Nobel Prize among other things. If you know something that the rest of us don't, don't hold back.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  43. And on the Seventh Day... by Findeton · · Score: 3, Funny

    And on the Seventh Day... god rested by switching off the creationists brains!

    1. Re:And on the Seventh Day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh... your grammatical ineptitude is what makes that statement teh funnay.

    2. Re:And on the Seventh Day... by wboelen · · Score: 1

      And on the Seventh Day... god rested by switching off the creationists brains!
      I can hear Him already: "Hey! If you continue that stupid praying I'm going to shut down your brains! I'm serious! Leave me the hell alone!".
  44. Science is by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The process of observing the world and drawing a logical set of self consistent conclusions. All sciences, especially the soft sciences, have bias, or systematic error, We will tend the local world view on situations that far removed in time or space. Such errors can be corrected by future research and a more diversified group of scientists. There is no attack on faith, as faith is what we believe, not what we use when we need to model a natural process.

    This museum, while attempting to provide a self consistent set of conclusions, fails to limit itself to observable and verifiable fact. In fact I feel it mocks Christianity by further limiting the power of the creator. Limiting such power has always been popular in the sinful human population that wishes to transfer power from the creator to itself. Just look at catholicism and the belief that certain religious leaders can speak for the almighty. For example, when I was growing up it was quite a popular belief that the creator put fossils and likes on earth as a test of fate. Those that continue to believe the bible even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary are those with sufficient faith to be saved. Now these sinful humans are trying to rewrite the bible and limit the power of the almighty by saying that dinosaurs existed and the grand canyon and the fossils were caused by the flood. You know, if the creator wanted a grand canyon, or fossils, or dinosaurs, or floods, or whatever, there is nothing to stop the desire becoming a reality, no matter what greedy and corrupt humans have to say.

    I wonder if the future will see this museum as an artifact of a time in Christianity when the leaders were more concerned with wealth and personal power than serving the almighty. If, perhaps, someone like Martin Luther will emerge to blog 123 ways that the christian church is corrupt, and call for a post-christian movement.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:Science is by The+Living+Fractal · · Score: 1

      The process of observing the world and drawing a logical set of self consistent conclusions. All sciences, especially the soft sciences, have bias, or systematic error.
      No, sorry. Science seeks only to disprove through experimentation. Thus through inference we can hope that what we haven't disproven so far remains so, so we can use it to some logical and useful application. True, pure Science has no bias or error. It simply exists as a method. This method has been laid out for us already, it is called the Scientific Method. It is a set of steps which one may follow that utilizes rational thinking to eliminate possibilities via experiment. Science can never provide an aboslute. This is because no human is able to consider the absolute set of all circumstances in any experiment. Only God, providing God exists, can perform that feat. Science can only hope to provide extremely accurate approximations to the truth.

      There is no attack on faith, as faith is what we believe, not what we use when we need to model a natural process.
      Faith, as a belief in something that cannot be proven or disproven (i.e. God) is impervious to attack because it has no substance. The belief in something which cannot be proven or disproven cannot provide any degree of logical foundation upon which one could mount an attack. Thus, no, one cannot attack faith, because faith is irrational. This relegates faith to the blurry realm of pyschology. Does having faith mean you as an individual have chosen to have it, and have a certain perspective because of that choice, or does it work the opposite way, meaning faith is generated based on some deeper, uncontrollable and unconcsious physiological trait? So far, we cannot prove or disprove this either. Which leaves faith in a relatively safe position. And leaves people who think that God created the universe in a likewise safe position. The same can be said for people who believe there is no god.

      The clear fact of the matter is that the Universe exists. Most people think that means it had to be created by something. This is because humans naturally evolved understanding beginning and end. The concept that something may have neither is so alien that, I think for many people, it's simply easier to think something created it. And what do many people think is responsible for that? None other than God. But they will argue day and night that God has no beginning or end.

      People like me, we don't claim to know. We can accept that the universe has been around forever. Just like other people think God has been around forever. At this point, God and the Universe begin to look awfully similar. So if you choose to support creationism over evolution, that's your choice, and I respect that. But if you choose to abandon logic, rational thought, and start to draw absolutes, then I have a problem with you. If you tell people that Science is something it is not, I especially have a problem with you. And I think I'm right in it.

      TLF
      --
      I do not respond to cowards. Especially anonymous ones.
    2. Re:Science is by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I wonder if the future will see this museum as an artifact of a time in Christianity when the leaders were more concerned with wealth and personal power than serving the almighty. If, perhaps, someone like Martin Luther will emerge to blog 123 ways that the christian church is corrupt, and call for a post-christian movement.

      Isn't there already something about Jesus and the merchants in the Temple?

      Perhaps it's just time to write off 300 million people and let the world move on as the USA either self destructs or doesn't.

  45. Priorities by florescent_beige · · Score: 1, Insightful

    16,000 children under the age of 5 died yesterday because they didn't have enough to eat. This church, along with the rest of us, will have to answer some pointed questions in the afterlife about priorities.

    --
    Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    1. Re:Priorities by CaffeineAddict2001 · · Score: 1

      We have to answer for it? We aren't the ones who designed the world to operate in such a manner.
      If there is a god, human suffering was clearly a priority on his agenda.

    2. Re:Priorities by florescent_beige · · Score: 1

      Any interpretation of God that adheres to the basic tenets of sanity proscribes that He created free will along with everything else. Life, then, is some kind of test of our fitness for the afterlife, whatever that might be.

      However, you don't have to believe in God to believe that right and wrong exist. Atheists too, have morals and ethical systems to implement them. People call it "having a conscience."

      A person can choose to accept the suffering of others and do nothing, but to say that one must do so, well, I'd like to see the reasoning behind that.

      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    3. Re:Priorities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well then, what the fuck are you doing wasting your precious time here? Obviously you would rather children starve than go a day without Slashdot. Also, how do you know they're not giving money or time to that cause (or any of a number of other causes)?

      Typical Slashbottery, resorting to ad hominem attacks.

    4. Re:Priorities by CaffeineAddict2001 · · Score: 1

      The reasoning behind it is that you do not have the power to end the world's suffering. You either accept it and get on with your life or allow your pity to increase the worlds suffering.

    5. Re:Priorities by florescent_beige · · Score: 1

      Individuals make their own choices, such is freedom, and it's a fine thing.

      However, a Christian church founded upon the teachings of Jesus, the guy who said that thing about camels, needles, rich people, and heaven, using it's extra money for such an ignorant thing as this, it's hypocritical.

      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    6. Re:Priorities by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that God is going to punish us for having children? But, didn't he say to "be fruitful and multiply"?

      Seriously, if the mortality rate in the developing world weren't so high, we would have out-bred the food production capabilities of the planet ages ago. So, there's your dilemma - feed those 16,000 and, assuming an average of 5 births per family (which is considered low in many nations), they'll live to give birth to another 40,000 or so. Feed those 40,000, and they'll live to give birth to another 100,000. And we're talking about just the children which you want saved in one DAY. Imagine the rate of population growth we'd see! Over a year, 16,000 works out to 5.84 MILLION, who will give birth to 14.6 million, who will give birth to 36.5 million. Over the course of three generations you would end up with close to 100 million new children being born. Three more generations and it works out to 1 and a half BILLION. At that rate, by the year 2100 those 15,000 lives you saved would have pushed the earth's population to 8 or 9 billion.

      There's a very simple solution to the problem of children starving - stop having so many god-damn kids. Unfortunately, people like you seem to think that the best course of action is to guilt-trip us into giving more food to people who are breeding like rabbits. Sorry, I might sound like a heartless bastard, but I know who is responsible for those deaths and it's certainly not me or my society. If your "god" has any common sense, he'll see it the same way.

    7. Re:Priorities by wombert · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. They might see this as a tool for converting people's eternal souls, and could certainly consider that a higher priority than alleviating people's suffering while on Earth. Don't assume that they share your interpretation of "Christianity".

      --
      Did I say overlords? I meant protectors.
    8. Re:Priorities by florescent_beige · · Score: 1

      Finally. A critique not written by a 12 year old.

      Your main point is an excellent one and I'm glad you made it. My reply is this: starvation isn't necessary as a means of population control because an alternative exists and the alternative doesn't involve dead children. That alternative is wealth.

      There is a strong inverse relationship between per capita GDP and birth rate. By helping the new generation be well fed so they can go to school, grow up, and get seriously involved in the economy we can help them solve their population crisis. I don't know, it seems obvious to me.

      By doing this we help ourselves directly: we get to feel good, we address the world's population problem, and we reduce the number of angry young men in broken countries who mean us harm.

      Your other implied objection is that the parents of the children somehow don't deserve our help. That's not something a good shrug can't solve.

      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    9. Re:Priorities by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Funny, as I was responding to the original post I found myself thinking "you know, I should probably say something about education as a solution". I dismissed the idea because I figured that either you wouldn't be intelligent enough to consider it, or that if you were intelligent enough to think of it, you'd also probably be smart enough to realize why it's not really a solution. Unfortunately, while you are clearly intelligent, you're also idealistic :)

      Yes, in the long term education can be a solution. Education creates wealth, which encourages people to pursue new goals, which tends to lower the birth rate. Unfortunately, education is also dependant on factors like wealth and societal structure. You need to raise the standard of living past a certain point before people will concern themselves with education, and we're not capable of doing that for the entire world.

      Then there's issues of trust/paranoia. In some nations, western-funded programs are avoided by the local populace. Polio vaccines are said to be an plot to cause mass sterilization. Education programs are said to be US or "Zionist" brainwashing. Even contraceptive education is said to be an evil plot by the western world to cause a population decline in the nation so that they can be more easily beaten in some future war.

      On top of all that, there's the issue of conflicting interests and perceptions. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have for the most part improved the standard of living in those nations, yet most of the world is opposed to those missions. How do you improve the living conditions in countries ruled by dictators, unless you're willing to fight wars to do it? Another example: Israel constantly get painted as inhuman warmongers, while Palestinians train their children to be suicide-bombers, and educate them with propaganda campaigns that would put Orwell to shame. How do you fight something like that? They have an "education" system in place, but what good is it when it's aimed at increasing hate and ignorance?

      The world is a lot more complex than you make it out to be. We can't simply wave a magic wand, and make it all better. But we're trying. I sponsor a child in India through the World Vision program. I also work for the military, and have taken part in humanitarian missions. Many of us are making an effort to make the world a better place. But it's going to take time. The uplifting of human civilization has been a long and bloody struggle, as it will continue to be for the foreseeable future. If "God" wants to help the process along, he could do us a huge favor if he'd at least settle all these idiotic religious conflicts.

    10. Re:Priorities by florescent_beige · · Score: 1

      What's ironic is that I also assumed something about you, which was that you were using your argument as an excuse to do nothing, which clearly isn't the case.

      In the interest of keeping my post short I just stated the idea without saying how it might be done. You provided a nice summary of why it is so hard because of war, religion, ethnic conflict, logistics, and corruption. There is another side to the coin, however, but you don't always hear about it because it's not very interesting. Things like how infant mortality due to diarrhea has been drastically reduced in some countries. Not very sexy.

      But anyway, you can't say nothing can be done. And the idea that a church, a church should spend millions and millions on a shrine to ignorance when they could have equally well build an irrigation system somewhere, I think that's more appalling than the silly things they think about prehistory.
      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    11. Re:Priorities by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Well, that's something we can agree on 100%. However, that's the price we pay for free will. People spend money on all sorts of useless and horrible things. A certain group of religious fanatics spent millions of dollars in order to hijack 4 airliners and slam them into office buildings, killing 3,000 people and creating billions of dollars in damage. Compared to that, the construction of this museum is peanuts.

      Anyway, if there's one thing I value more than life, it's free will, or freedom. Personally I think that ALL organized religion is a waste of resources, but I also respect the freedom of others to chose how they spend their money. As such, it would be hypocritical of me to single out this particular groups for criticism. If nothing else, this will serve as a reminder that fanaticism exists in all nations. With the current focus on the "War-on-Terror", I think a lot of people are starting to forget the importance of fighting ignorance and indoctrination in our own societies. We've still got a ways to go when it comes to educating the citizens of our own nations. Like I said, it'll be a long and bloody road.

  46. Canada is getting a creation "museum" too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Aren't we lucky?! Granted, it's not a glitzy, big-budget production like AiG's 27 million dollar monument to ignorance; but Anusfail, Alberta is getting their own creation "museum" too according to this story:


    Creation rules over evolution at museum
    Biblical flood among displays near Innisfail

    Paula Beauchamp, Calgary Herald
    Published: Tuesday, May 22, 2007

    Canada's first permanent creation museum --set to open in Alberta next month -- will use fossil displays to support the Bible's explanation of creation.

    The controversial Big Valley Creation Science Museum, located east of Innisfail, is billed as an alternative to the world view presented by the Royal Tyrell Museum in Drumheller and will open on June 5.

    Owner Harry Nibourg said in a press release that the museum provides compelling evidence for creation and refutes any unguided, "natural" processes such as evolution.

    He said the museum's "fossils and the flood" display, which teams a giant model of Noah's ark with museum-quality fossils, is evidence the biblical flood actually happened.

    According to the museum's website, another display called "dinosaurs and humans" disproves evolutionary theory that dinosaurs became extinct at least 60 million years before humans evolved.


  47. No... by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1

    Mixing the two seems sort of cartoonish at best and ignorant at worst.

    It is ignorant at BEST. God only knows the /worst/ that perpetuating this sort of nonsense can create.

  48. Human Beings by networkzombie · · Score: 1

    Human beings are so stupid. I am embarrassed to be one. Nietzsche thought it would take humans another 200 years before we got religion out of our system. I think he was right. We have another hundred years to go.

    1. Re:Human Beings by florescent_beige · · Score: 1

      There was a time in Quebec, pre-1960's, when the Catholic church ran things, leading eventually to the province's "dark ages" under Maurice Duplessis. What followed, the quiet revolution, was a complete rejection of the church's authority.

      Religious authority may be on the ascendancy in America, but that will eventually lead to it's own downfall. When, exactly, that might happen is another story.
      --
      Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
    2. Re:Human Beings by emh203 · · Score: 1

      While I don't agree with the 6000 years ago, an objective observer would have to laugh at "scientific" explanation of the universe.

      Q:
      "Where did the universe come from?"

      A:
      " Looks the the Big Bang did it all. Things evovled from there."

      Q: "Where did the big bang come from?

      A: "Basically everything came from nothing."


      While the details afterward are different, sounds like the same argument of the Theists. Something came from nothing. I find that hard to believe as well

    3. Re:Human Beings by HeroreV · · Score: 1

      The big bang theory simply says the universe at one time was extremely compact and quickly expanded. There is much evidence to support that. The big bang theory doesn't say everything popped out of nowhere. It actually doesn't say anything about how everything came to be.

      It's easy to laugh at science when you purposely don't understand it.

    4. Re:Human Beings by emh203 · · Score: 1

      and I agreee with you! But Scientists fundamentally have the same answer as the Deists. Either something came from nothing or its was always here. Both sound kinda loopy to me as well.

  49. not a museum by JustShootMe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd defend the right of the people who started this to continue on as long as they can support it, but I'm not sure it should be called a "museum". A museum implies some hind of historical accuracy.

    Perhaps "theme park", or "house of ill repute" instead?

    --
    For linux tips: http://www.linuxtipsblog.com
    1. Re:not a museum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A building, place or institution devoted to the acquisition, conservation, study, exhibition and educational interpretation of objects having scientific, historical or artistic value. The word Museum is derived from the Latin muses, meaning "a source of inspiration," or "to be absorbed in one's thoughts."

      It's definitely going to be a source of inspiration for many people - and the exhibits may have artistic value. I'll call it a museum.

    2. Re:not a museum by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 1

      Perhaps "theme park", or "house of ill repute" instead?

      I worked on some of the exhibits in this museum, but when she asks, I tell my mom I'm a pianist at a whorehouse.

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    3. Re:not a museum by CrankyOldBastard · · Score: 1
      Ah, but it is a museum. The Museum was the temple of the Muses. The Muses were a set of goddesses ( 3 to 9 in number depending on when and where you're talking about) responsible for investing a human with genius - a kind of daemon that provided inspiration to humans.


      So it's kind of hilarious really.

    4. Re:not a museum by asninn · · Score: 1

      To reference the Simpsons... how about "bemusement park"?

      --
      butter the donkey
  50. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by kennygraham · · Score: 5, Informative

    several groups (both religious and secular) will be protesting. come join us!

  51. are dinosaurs mentioned in the Bible or Koran? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe Barney, Jurassaic Park etc. put them over the top so that the Creationists couldn't deny their existence and still make the sale... but coexistence is a whole nother matter. After all, humans and dinosaurs certainly got along well together in The Flintstones.

  52. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mobby_6kl · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    And fried chicken, mmmm...

  53. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by jkorz · · Score: 1, Interesting

    http://www.genesispark.org/genpark/ancient/ancient .htm

    Do a little reading before you post. There are even fossilized dinosaur tracks with human footprints going through them. http://www.bible.ca/tracks/tracks.htm

  54. Re:About the Bible by microsoft_hater · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're both joking, but you're absolutely right. Christopher Hitchens once said in an interview: "Yes, and the Seventh-Day Adventists, who descended from the Millerites. I can see that Scientology now enjoys charitable status as a religion, which I think is a real triumph. I can't get over that. You can set some idea of what it would have been like to live in third-century Nicea when Christianity was being hammered together - an experience I am very glad I did not have. Religious diversity is confused with pluralism. Because of multi-culturalism and what is called "political correctness," religion has a certain protection that it couldn't expect to have if it was a state-sponsored racket like the Church of England." Not that it's cool to be an apologist for oil wars or anything, but the guy *really* likes the Kurds...

  55. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

    If you can see it, then it can see you. A quick dinner, and no one is left to paint the picture.

    --
    Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
  56. without the distortions.... by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    of reality... sheesh.

    I dont care if you belive in creationism or not, the idea that we were wandering around with dinosaurs is ludicrous. Why cant there be room for evolution in 'gods plan'?

    Sure we can debate until we are blue in the face what actually started this mess we call the universe, since NO ONE knows the truth yet, but i dont see why 90% of the rest of the scientific discoveries cant be embraced by the religous kooks without their god going up in a poof of logic. If their god is that subject to being sent out of existance via logic, its time to find another thing to believe in.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:without the distortions.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I dont care if you belive in creationism or not, the idea that we were wandering around with dinosaurs is ludicrous. Why cant there be room for evolution in 'gods plan'?"

      Ah but you see, the people need something to bicker about so that they don't pay attention to the real issues. By manipulating one group to believe one false story you get lots of people that understand that it's false to waste their time and energy bickering but sadly they're still not smart enough to realize what's going on. It's amazing how easy it is to become hot-headed with things like this but it doesn't matter who's right, it's all about divide and conquer people and I'm just wondering how far down the line we are...

    2. Re:without the distortions.... by k_187 · · Score: 1

      Because the people that think there is room for evolution in God's plan aren't the ones building museums.

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
  57. Religion is bulltshit by miscz · · Score: 1

    Sorry, if you believe in some fantasy, you're retared.

    I'm drunk but I'm atheist while being sober. Sorry.

  58. Small god cares what you believe by DeeVeeAnt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It always amazes how these people underestimate the scale and beauty of "god"'s creation by so many orders of magnitude. Apparently their god would not have been subtle enough to make life which could adapt to a changing world? There is nothing in any science which confirms or denies god's existence. Imagine if they had won over the astronomers, we would have been stuck with a tiny god who could only manage one little planet, and one star. Now we know about the vast beauty of the stars and galaxies spread across the sky. Surely if you are going to believe in a creator, this sort of knowledge can only increase your respect for it? There I go again, trying to apply reason to religion. But why doesn't it ever work?

    --
    Home fucking is killing prostitution.
    1. Re:Small god cares what you believe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many people interpret the Bible as saying that God created everything, but didn't necessarily make it perfect; this is explained by how Eve is able to convince Adam to eat the apple.

      It's really just idiots who take everything to its litteral value.

      For those who wondered about a lack of dino drawings:

      WTF? I mean, how's a person going to draw something that went extinct before him? Dinosaurs seem to be just a big bunch of animals that died, and then God came and replaced them with humans. At least that's what you get by observing the Bible. And really, who says God couldn't have done it? I mean, what if dinosaurs were supposed to be his top-secret ultimate project of 1337ness?

    2. Re:Small god cares what you believe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because religious people aren't reasonable?

      I wonder if a religious god would be reasonable.

      Oh wait, I already saw Stargate. Never mind.

  59. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by arthurpaliden · · Score: 3, Informative

    In there examples the closest thing to a cave drawing was only mineral stains on rock. The rest were 'modern' illistrations of accepted legends of the time. And as to the foot prints, a walking foot print does not look like any of those depicted.

  60. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by jfclavette · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now I'm torn between supporting young-earth creationnists or an organisation with a marquee on its website. Help me Slashdot !

  61. Actually by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

    For the believer, it seems, this museum provides a kind of relief:

    No, actually it makes me consider becoming an atheist again. But my faith is in God not silly people.

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    1. Re:Actually by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Cool, but which god?

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    2. Re:Actually by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      The one and only.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    3. Re:Actually by maxume · · Score: 1

      Zuul?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Actually by anilg · · Score: 1

      Yes! Faith in His Noodliness is never wasted!

      --
      http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
  62. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Lomacar · · Score: 1

    There are "cave" drawings of men and dinosaurs. You haven't heard of the Ica Stones? And where do you think the idea of dragons came from?

  63. Lying teachers?? by sibelius5th · · Score: 1
    A quote from http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867 ,21801520-1702,00.html :

    "Teachers don't deserve a student coming into class saying 'Gee Mrs. Brown, I went to this fancy museum and it said you're teaching me a lie,'" Dr Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Centre for Science Education, said before the museum opened.
    I agree wholeheartedly with this. Teachers should teach theory as theory, and fact as fact. Darwin's theories are... theories. Creationism is another theory. When we've got a time machine to start proving things, at least one of these theories will be dismissed.
    1. Re:Lying teachers?? by jonfr · · Score: 1

      Creationism isn't a theory, it doesn't even come close. It is a story, a tale. On that, it is save to demands that tales, stories like the one of the creation of the universe and the Earth are kept outside the science classes. If they want to teach them, they should teach them for what they are, stories.

    2. Re:Lying teachers?? by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      I agree wholeheartedly with this. Teachers should teach theory as theory, and fact as fact. Darwin's theories are... theories. Creationism is another theory. And the theory of gravity is another theory. I can pick just as many holes in the theory of gravity as you can pick in evolution -- where by "hole" we of course mean "thing that we don't yet have a comlete explanation for". Using ID style rehtorical tactics it is easy enough to write an argument suggesting that the theory of gravity is wrong and that we should instead teach that what we observe is "an uncaused force" and clearly the active hand of God at constant work in the universe. That theory is no more and no less credible than intelligent design, and just as impossible to refute. It is also just as much not science, and just as worthless as an explanation.
    3. Re:Lying teachers?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shame you don't know what the definition of a theory is - never mind.

      Go and look up the definitions of words such as hypothesis (an idea without any evidence) and theory (an idea with evidence) before you go spouting off pish.

    4. Re:Lying teachers?? by jtn · · Score: 1

      Sigh.

      Creationism is not a theory, not in the scientific context. Please don't dilute the meaning by misapplying the word to creationistic nonsense.

      "In science, a theory is a mathematical or logical explanation, or a testable model of the manner of interaction of a set of natural phenomena, capable of predicting future occurrences or observations of the same kind, and capable of being tested through experiment or otherwise falsified through empirical observation."

      (Above quoted from Wikipedia)

    5. Re:Lying teachers?? by bmo · · Score: 1

      "Darwin's theories are... theories. Creationism is another theory."

      No, you're confusing the real definition of "theory" with "hypotheis" which far too many people, who aren't familiar with the _vast_ differences between the two, use interchangeably.

      IOW, you're spouting a half-truth.

      What's a half-truth? A whole lie.

      And besides, Creationism isn't falsifiable, so it doesn't even pass the laugh test by calling it a hypothesis.

      I'll agree to teaching Creationism if we also teach ALL THE OTHER creation stories on par with it - Buddhist, Shinto, Hindu, all of them. Fair play and all that. Deal?

      --
      BMO

    6. Re:Lying teachers?? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Creationism isn't a theory, it doesn't even come close.

      Actually Biblical creationism is a theory. It makes specific claims, such as that the earth is less than 10,000 years old and that speciation does not occur. There's overwhelming evidence against these claims, so we can say that creationism is a *false* theory with extremely high probability, just like geocentrism and spontaneous generation.

      On the other hand, intelligent design tries to avoid that pesky evidence problem by *not* being a theory. It says only that an undefined designer took one or more undefined actions at one or more unspecified times. It makes no testable predictions and can't be falsified, so it's not even wrong.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    7. Re:Lying teachers?? by jonfr · · Score: 1

      Making a claim doesn't make it a theory. Since theories are based on hypothesis that in there selfs are based on actual data, since a theories are attempt to explain the world. The Creationism claims aren't based on actual facts, they are in fact based on a unproven and false story. That in it self is good enough reason to dismiss the whole thing as hoax and bullshit. Theories can also be questioned, doubt and dismissed or questioned, reviewed, looked at and accepted or dismissed on the ground of a better data. Creationism story cannot questioned or dismissed, since the bible in it self is absolute for those how believe it in the hardest. That also makes the creationisms claims false and based on a story.

      It is also worthy to mention that the creation history is from that time when science was in the arms of the church, with terrible consequences, as the church did held back the progress of sciences for at least 900 years, after the dark ages. Speaking agents the church claims did mount to heresy and a death sentence, by the church.

    8. Re:Lying teachers?? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Then teachers should teach all kinds of crazy-ass theories everyone has without any shred of supporting evidence. That's the difference between scientific theories and biblical ones. Science has supporting evidence, biblical ones only have a book. It's fucking childish to think they're even similar.

  64. Wear a helmet by NMerriam · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure this will be a safe place to bring children.

    After all, Gravity is only a theory, so there's no reason for builders of faith to follow those state-enforced secular building codes describing what kind of load bearing supports are required.

    --
    Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    1. Re:Wear a helmet by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      Gravity is a myth. The earth sucks.

  65. All knowledge is uncertain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The human mind only knows what it experiences (including the experience of receiving communication from others in any form). The accuracy of said experiences, as well as the soundness of the interpretation, is always questionable.

    Some people are very uncomfortable with uncertainty. They desperately crave a solid and unquestionable source for correct knowledge. So, in the absence of such a source, the mind will play games with itself to create one. Hence the popular religious trend of interpreting mythology as if it were history.

    It is true that scientific knowledge is not rock-solid. It is vulnerable to inaccuracy and just as questionable as any other kind of knowledge. So, the religious believers are correct in pointing this out. However, there is a very important difference of methodology at work. The scientific process is one of perpetual questioning and re-examination of fact, and hence of perpetual refinement of accuracy. The religious process utterly lacks this element, and as such it has no demonstrable means of approaching any kind of practical validity. That, however, does not prevent people from convincing themselves that their religion of choice is correct and unquestionable, and that any and all evidence to the contrary must be in error.

    So long as this thought process is confined to the realm of private institutions (museums, churches, clubs, and what have you), I am fine with it. Just don't go infecting public education with your myths.

  66. natural selection by mistersooreams · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Urm, even if you reject the scientific theory of evolution, it's just ridiculous to reject natural selection. You can easily observe it in your own lifetime, as Darwin did.

    1. Re:natural selection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one debates that species adapt on a mirco scale... as to how they do it lot more interesting ...
      I used to be interested in changes made by 'random mutations' until I talked to a PHD student who knew about genetics.
      As it happens he also was a creationist.

      Darwin believed that animials behaviour some how directly influenced genetic changes, as this is no longer thought to be true, random mutations which provided functional benefits to improve 'fitness' is what is generaly thought to provide 'natural selection'

      "it's just ridiculous to reject natural selection. You can easily observe it in your own lifetime"
      What are you actualty oberving? species adapting to their environment yes.. they do!

      However their isn't any solid evidence for 'random mutations' producing POSITIVE benefits (what you mean natural selection yes?). The examples usually given for it are moths or human 'sickel cell' mutation. The Moths example normaly states that because of polution moths changes color but it reality all that happens is a particualar color moth is more sucesful and becomes more preverlant ... not an example of natural selection, as the diferencial aready existed. as for the human example it is VERY debatable if its a positive mutation.

      In summary, my point isn't to reject 'natural selection' but to argue that 'natural selection caused by genetic mutations hasn't been observed in ones own life time, and that goes for Darwin too.

    2. Re:natural selection by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Generally, though, "rejecting the scientific theory of evolution" isn't what's on the table for discussion. Usually, people advocating "evolution" from a secular standpoint mean the term as inclusive of the biological process of evolution itself, -plus- the -wholly unrelated unstated premise- that empirical naturalism is all that exists.

      This is the problem with these endless false-dichotomy "debates" of "God vs. evolution".

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    3. Re:natural selection by AlphaFreak · · Score: 1

      Darwin believed that animials behaviour some how directly influenced genetic changes, as this is no longer thought to be true Hmmm I thought it was Lamarck who believed that the evolution was directed by behaviour, not Darwin...

    4. Re:natural selection by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Darwin believed that animials behaviour some how directly influenced genetic changes

      No he ddn't. You are thinking of Lamark.

    5. Re:natural selection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Charles Darwin agreed with Lamarck ... I wasn't saying that Darwin came up with the idea ..
      just that he believed it...

    6. Re:natural selection by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Charles Darwin agreed with Lamarck

      No he didn't. Darwin (correctly) believed that change came about though variation and natural selection.

    7. Re:natural selection by Copid · · Score: 1

      However their isn't any solid evidence for 'random mutations' producing POSITIVE benefits (what you mean natural selection yes?). The examples usually given for it are moths or human 'sickel cell' mutation. The Moths example normaly states that because of polution moths changes color but it reality all that happens is a particualar color moth is more sucesful and becomes more preverlant ... not an example of natural selection, as the diferencial aready existed. as for the human example it is VERY debatable if its a positive mutation.
      You might be interested in the nylon bug.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  67. Theories are not all equal by DeeVeeAnt · · Score: 1

    One of these theories tries to explain why the world works the way it does. The other one basically tells you not to wonder why it works beyond "god made it so". Only one of these theories counts as any kind of science.

    --
    Home fucking is killing prostitution.
  68. Ummm...Question by DnemoniX · · Score: 1

    Why do some of you people keep saying 4,000 years ago? The "Young Earth Creationists" generally refer to the date of creation to be ~6,000-10,000 years ago. The "Mesopotamian Wars of the Early Dynastic Period" were around 2900 B.C. folks. Never mind that we have have recoded histories dating back at least 5,000 years. So what's the deal, am I missing something here?

    1. Re:Ummm...Question by toddhisattva · · Score: 1

      People are leaving off the B.C.(E.).

  69. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Funny

    "And fried chicken, mmmm..."

    ... and now bronto-burgers, you atheist secular humanist!

  70. I've got some bad news for you... by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    The fundementalist wings already are. Or have you been under some rock for the last six years?

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  71. Can anyone explain by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    why its always America where the most obviously stupid beliefs actually get followers?

    1. Re:Can anyone explain by networkzombie · · Score: 1

      Obviously you have never stoned a little girl to death on the soccer field.

    2. Re:Can anyone explain by toddhisattva · · Score: 1

      why its always America where the most obviously stupid beliefs actually get followers?
      How's that Communism working out?
    3. Re:Can anyone explain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      About the same as that Democracy in Iraq thing.

    4. Re:Can anyone explain by thewils · · Score: 1


      1. Build Creationism Museum in Kentucky
      2. Profit!

      --
      Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
    5. Re:Can anyone explain by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      Yeah I wondered if thats what it wasn't all about, but it seems from the original article that everyone working there really believes in this stuff....although I suppose they would have to say that in public....

      It would be interesting to see how they explain away dinosaurs and humans together in the same diorama though, given the fossil record, carbon dating, etc etc all show the first early humans were about 63 million years after the end of the cretaceous period.

    6. Re:Can anyone explain by thewils · · Score: 1

      It would be interesting to see how they explain away...

      You're forgetting that creationists have an explanation for absolutely everything.
      --
      Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
    7. Re:Can anyone explain by Rotten168 · · Score: 1

      It's going to be interesting in 20 years to find out who's right about global warming.

    8. Re:Can anyone explain by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Pretty well actually.

      Leninism and its successor Stalinism is dead and buried. The mixed-model revisionists that promote Social Democracy based on Marx' ideas on the distribution of wealth and power have managed to create a quite decent society (notwithstanding Liberatarian Socialist critiques that they have not fundamentally attacked the power structure).

      On the other hand, the fundamentalist bloody-minded idiots in the U.S. still exist and garner ever more influence, thanks to politicians up to the President pandering to them.

      Got any more stupid questions?

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  72. Where's the tolerance? by anomaly · · Score: 1

    I fully support philosophical materialists' right to raise money and build museums teaching what is consistent with their world view. I don't support philosophical materialism being taught in the publich school science classroom.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Where's the tolerance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't support any thing other than science being taught in the public school science classroom.

    2. Re:Where's the tolerance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "philosophical materialism"

      What the FUCK does that mean? I googled it and it was a bunch of shit! You a fucking liberal arts major?

      Damn you idiots.

      Yeah, I'm posting AC because fucktards like you would just mod me down for calling you on your shit.

      Dang, I feel like the Nintendo Video Nerd right now.

      cockfuck

  73. Insightful, NOT! by michaelepley · · Score: 1

    Must be some lame moderators today, your post is nothing but total BS. You describe evolution as a "religion" (wrong: scientific theory). Or the "Nobody said that the world was made in 7 24h days" (wrong: the bible, try reading it). You make specious arguments, such as the "there were no 24 hour days" (wrong: at the time the bible was supposedly written BY MAN there were). You're obviously misinformed when you say "The only religion that teaches [literal 24 hr days] as far as I know is catholicism and maybe some other offspring religions in Christendom." Not to mention just about everything else you say is basically wrong.

    As to your question to me: What if I come up with a scientific theory that better fits the bill? You're going to massively change then? Yes, absolutely, because evolution is NOT a religion. But I'm not holding my breath here. I'd like to see a religious nut say the same.

  74. Intellectual carelessness by anomaly · · Score: 1

    For you to discard the viewpoints these people by a caricature of "nutjob" demonstrates your intellectual carelessness. People who disagree with conventional wisdom may have some unique insight. People who disagree with you may have some good points to make? How much literature on the subject of Intelligent Design have you read? Have you read any of Ham's writings?

    For you to call names indicates that you are ignorant. Thankfully, ignorance is fixable, an exercise left to the reader.

    --
    But Herr Heisenberg, how does the electron know when I'm looking?
    1. Re:Intellectual carelessness by bmo · · Score: 1

      "People who disagree with conventional wisdom may have some unique insight. "

      One should not keep a mind so open, however, that the brains fall out.

      "How much literature on the subject of Intelligent Design have you read?"

      Enough to take a Tums.

      ID is not a theory. It is a wild-eyed perversion of the creation _story_ in the Bible. It invents, out of whole cloth, stuff that _isn't_ in the Bible _or_ in science, tries to fit all of it to the weird ID hypotheses with sledgehammers and crowbars, and makes one pick and choose _anyway_ from the Bible if any of it is to believed. If Ham paid attention to what he's actually doing and believes in that the Bible is the word of God, he should be concerned for his eternal soul. If the Bible is the be-all and end-all of the Origin of Everything, where is their FAITH which ID pushers talk so much about? Isn't the story in the Bible good enough for people like Ham? Apparently not. He accuses real scientists of undermining religion, yet he's doing a bang-up job on his own. ID is full of false assumptions, data skewing, unprovable statements, and just outright lies. It's about time that ID nutjobs stop trying to pervert what should be faith into some lurching Frankensteinian monster by trying to bolt a fucked-up version of what they call "science" to it.

      1 Thes. v. 21: "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." By corollary, toss that which is bogus under the bus. ID is bogus science _and_ religion.

      --
      BMO

    2. Re:Intellectual carelessness by rasputin465 · · Score: 1

      First, I should say that if I had discarded the viewpoints of a group because of their personal, individual beliefs which they did not try to force on others, in such a manner as I did here, I agree that might be called 'intellectual carelessness', as you so diplomatically put it. But I am referring specifically to the people who designed, paid for, built and promoted this perversion of thought they call a museum. Pushing an agenda of I.D. is intellectually inexcusable. I.D. is supported by NO evidence which can be verified in a scientific, and more importantly, way.

      If there were a group which built a 'Flat Earth' museum/amusement park, and additionally tried to push for public schools to teach kids that the flat earth scenario is a viable and alternate theory for the earth's shape, would you object when they are characterized as 'nutjobs'? If there were a group which pushed for Santa Clause as an actual, true alternative to the theory of gift-appearance on Christmas Eve, would you object when someone calls them 'nutjobs'? How about the Tooth Fairy as an alternative theory to lost-tooth-under-the pillow disappearance? Intelligent Design is equally ridiculous to any of these. What makes it worse is that it's a fairy tale which people try to push as reality. But the only reality of I.D is that it sickens the mind into abandonment of rational and critical thought. These people are categorical nutjobs.

  75. Don't they have churches? by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

    Why on earth do they need to build a museum - Do they not have enough churches already?

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  76. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually there are American Indian drawings that clearly depict dinosaurs.

  77. Out of our public education? by msimm · · Score: 1

    Why? America is too divided. Let the middle states continue to separate. We all win. They get to embrace their beliefs and values and we get a country that isn't run by them. Perfect.

    --
    Quack, quack.
    1. Re:Out of our public education? by maxume · · Score: 1

      I believe that I live in what you are calling a 'middle state'(Michigan). What exactly are you a talking about?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  78. Hint to moderators: by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    If the PP says my +1 Insightful view on it is this, it's not required that you mod him that way.

    Unless, of course, you're creationists. In which case you really ought to just believe what he says. He is telling the Truth, you know, so there's no sense in questioning it.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  79. Can god make a stone... by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

    so heavy that he cannot lift it?

    Shortly after Man created God in his image, some Greek wise ass thought of that one - literally a classic.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    1. Re:Can god make a stone... by n6kuy · · Score: 1

      Wise-ass is right, since it's a nonsense question.

      I don't suppose God can make square circles, either.

      --
      If you disagree with me on social issues, then it's pretty clear that you are a narrow-minded bigot.
    2. Re:Can god make a stone... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Isn't the more interesting question whether he can make circles square?

      Or is the ultimate question whether he can make rectangles bitter?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:Can god make a stone... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could Jesus microwave a burrito so hot that he himself could not eat it?

  80. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by CNeb96 · · Score: 0

    There are lots of ancient drawings which look like dinosaurs but they are usually referred to as dragons http://www.genesispark.org/genpark/ancient/ancient .htm

  81. An appeal by Puff+of+Logic · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm attaching this as a reply to the first post in the hopes that it will be seen by people entering the thread and thus head off some inevitable posts. Creationists, this is addressed to you.

    Here goes:

    The word "theory" is not synonymous with the word "hypothesis" in science.

    Please, please try to remember this when you instinctively want to cry "but it's only a theory!" when talking about evolutionary theory. As has doubtless been explained to you ad nauseum by the scientifically-inclined, Theory is a designator that must be earned and requires a reasonable body of supporting evidence. So while indeed the colloquial allows the use of "I have a theory" to mean a hypothesis, this is not correct in science.

    Make whatever other arguments you will, but please stop making this elementary mistake. cheers.

    --
    P.P.S. I'm doing Science and I'm still alive.
    1. Re:An appeal by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly: evolution is a theory, like gravity.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:An appeal by pairo · · Score: 0

      Which has been proven to be wrong. What's your point? :-)

    3. Re:An appeal by interiot · · Score: 1

      Silly canards aren't all bad... they make it easy to determine whether a given individual is primarily interested in seeking out the most accurate information possible, or if they're more interested in parroting what their parents and pastor say.

    4. Re:An appeal by semiotec · · Score: 2, Funny

      WTF! You mean there's no gravity?

    5. Re:An appeal by iminplaya · · Score: 2, Funny

      Nope. The Earth sucks!

      --
      What?
    6. Re:An appeal by BRUTICUS · · Score: 1

      also, EVOLUTION is not a THEORY its a FACT. If you believe that your son or daughter has carried on ANY of your traits. Then you believe in evolution.

      The question is, did life on earth happen as a resullt of evolution or creationism.

    7. Re:An appeal by Puff+of+Logic · · Score: 1

      also, EVOLUTION is not a THEORY its a FACT. I'm afraid you're making the same mistake that the creationists do. The syntax of your statement places "theory" in an opposing position to "fact", suggesting the the former is an unproven assertion whereas the latter is a proven assertion. In science, theories contain facts (at least, as far as our observations can discern) rather than existing as facts.

      Further, science as both a methodology and as an intellectual system frowns upon absolute declarations. Perhaps the most fundamental and indeed beautiful thing about science is that nothing is written in stone and everything is fair game for questioning. Of course, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, but nothing is considered off-limits.

      Thus, I would suggest that your assertion above does more to harm non-scientists' perception of evolutionary theory than help it. Far better, in my opinion, to say that a large body of evidence strongly supports evolutionary theory, including a great deal of science at the genetic level that is producing concrete medical results. For the record, I'd agree with you that evolution is factual, well-elucidated, and good science.

      I would also state that most religious people who challenge evolutionary theory do so because it contradicts a literal reading of their holy text, and that such people are in fact primarily debating the origin of life, unaware that evolutionary theory is silent on that subject. Abiogenesis--the hypothesis that most religious people seem to confuse with evolution--is far less well-supported than evolutionary theory and is consequently far more contentious.

      To end, here's a bit of humour and philosophy from one of my favourite sources:

      Do not be troubled, Bruticus. :)
      --
      P.P.S. I'm doing Science and I'm still alive.
    8. Re:An appeal by ignavus · · Score: 1

      But I don't believe in gravity. I believe in levity.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    9. Re:An appeal by Thondermonst · · Score: 1, Funny

      I don't beleive in gravity, only in intelligent downward pressure...

    10. Re:An appeal by Criffer · · Score: 1

      evolution is a theory, like gravity

      Actually no, gravity is a Law: something observable which has always held true. If you throw an apple in the air, it will always come down.

      Newton's Theory of Gravity, which is "Bodies attract each other with a force equal to the product of their masses divided by the square of the distance between them", is a Theory; from this theory, we can then hypothesise the concept of escape velocity: that two bodies can move apart at such a velocity that the deceleration force of gravity will never cause the velocity to reach zero and turn the object. We can test this hypothesis, by building rockets, and reinforce the Theory of Gravity, even though it contradicts the previously-known Law of Gravity. The Theory explains why the Law no longer holds, and the Law adjusts to: If you throw an apple in the air, it will always come down unless you throw it hard enough.
    11. Re:An appeal by noamsml · · Score: 1
      You actually BELIEVE in gravity?

      The theory of gravity, which has been pushed on our children by evil secular godless atheist heathens, still remains unproven. We should be teaching Intelligent Falling, which states that Go... er, an intelligent faller pushes all of humanity down to the ground whenever they jump up.

    12. Re:An appeal by BRUTICUS · · Score: 1

      so basically 4 paragraphs of loftier words than I have used to say "I AGREE". Thanxabunch smarty pants.

      Look up "DARK MATTER" in the dictionary, it's stated as a theory. Look up "EVOLUTION" it's not.

    13. Re:An appeal by thelandp · · Score: 1
      or how bout this:

      Evolution is a theory. Religion is only a mythology.

      hey, this argument by simile is fun!

      --

      -- the only thing we have to fear is really scary things
    14. Re:An appeal by GTMoogle · · Score: 1

      Sure. Still the same as evolution. I'm unaware of existing terminology to put it in the same words, but the law would be that living things are related to each other. On many levels from genetic to outward appearance, creatures share features.

      The 'Theory' of evolution is the ever-growing body of knowledge of the mechanisms, consequences, and expectations surround the subject matter.

      There's no difference in absurdity between saying God wills things to fall, and God willed animals to be what they are. It's not even false - I can't say god didn't will it. But to say that men and monkeys are unrelated is to ignore the apple tree you're sitting under while wondering about your sudden headache.

      The only creationist I've talked to on the matter doesn't disbelieve in anything evolution states, as long as it applies after Noah's ark. He thinks the ark carried the different kinds of animals - different dogs evolved from the 2 on the ark. Remarks about his intelligence aside, at least he's got the theory/hypothesis thing mostly straight.

      Ok, got off on a tangent - I realize the parent post was just being a semantics nazi, but I still think he's wrong. In the context of talking about the theory of evolution, the theory of gravity is appropriate. The law of gravity has its equivalent as well, I'm just not aware of a term that avoids it being lumped in with the theory of evolution.

      ===================
      "Creationists make it sound as though a 'theory' is something you dreamt up after being drunk all night."
      "To surrender to ignorance and call it God has always been premature, and it remains premature today."
      -Asimov

    15. Re:An appeal by pairo · · Score: 1

      I mean a bloke called Einstein proved Newton wasn't _actually_ right. Also, quantum physics isn't really agreeing with the law of gravitation.

    16. Re:An appeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With respect to gravitation, the guy named Einstein was working on a problem in observational astronomy, namely that the perihelion orbital precession of Mercury as observed was not in agreement with the Kepler-Newton model. The precession anomaly had been known for decades prior to general relativity, so Newton was already known to be wrong in at least that case.

      Einstein unified the Kepler-Newton model of planetary motion and universal gravitation with his own work on special relativity and the concept that the spacetime is distorted by the mass-energy and momentum of matter embedded within it. Except when the spacetime distortion is large (because of high mass-energy or high momentum), Newton's inverse square law is correct and accurate to within possible measurability. That is, Einstein offered a theory that was compatible with Newtonian mechanics involving weak gravitational interactions, but which was more accurate than Newtonian mechanics when strong gravitational interactions are involved. He did not prove that Newtonian mechanics were inaccurate -- astronomers observing the orbit of Mercury did that conclusively well before Einstein came along.

      Quantum Mechanics does not challenge Newton (in flat (Minkowski) spacetime), and it is consistent with general relativity as well. What QM does not do is quantize gravitation or inertia, and in strongly curved spacetime, quantum fields become increasingly difficult to interpret as particles (they "smear").

      However, it does not disagree with General Relativity, since it offers no alternative explanation for gravitation. Unfortunately QM becomes awkward in strongly curved spacetime (like close to a black hole).

      So, in short, you're wrong on both points.

    17. Re:An appeal by volpe · · Score: 1

      No, gravity is an observation. Theories explain observations. General Relativity theory explains gravity. Evolution by natural selection explains the diversity yet commonality among various life forms on earth. The round-earth theory explains why we don't fall off the edge. These are all exceptionally well-confirmed theories.

  82. Coming soon: A Computing Science exhibit... by Anderson+Council · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised they aren't highlighting things like this already:

    Intelligent Design Sorting

    Further proof from our sacred peers that all that fuss made about needing poker chips to clear our tubes of all that p0rn was a public service. Good thing at least one Centre of Excellence is giving us the information we need to know.

    --
    ~AC

  83. That means the Biblical hero's were all girly-men by arthurpaliden · · Score: 4, Funny

    OK, so man and dinosaurs lived together. That must mean then, that all the Biblical hero's were pansies. I mean all they did was kill few wolves (David) and enter a Lions den (Daniel) . If they were real hero's why did they not slay one of the T-Rexes that were wondering around eating everything in sight or enter a den of hungry Velosoraptors. Then they would have been real hero's.

  84. Really, like what? by benhocking · · Score: 2, Informative

    fortunately science consists of more than theories

    Sure, it consists of laws (i.e., observations), hypotheses, theories, as well as methods that allow us to test theories against observations. The theory of evolution invokes the law of natural selection, and has withstood the scientific method quite well. Is there something else you have in mind for what science consists of?

    Please, please, be sure to understand that laws are not "above" theories. If anything, they are beneath theories in that they are only descriptive, whereas theories are also explanatory.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  85. Pushing beliefs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The issue of pushing beliefs in the comments is hilarious. By saying someone is pushing their beliefs on you, you have already started pushing your beliefs on others. "Pushing beliefs" is required in an argument or debate. You can't convince someone that your side of the argument/debate is correct unless you actually believe it.

    Tolerance is generally what people strive for. However, tolerance can be simply brought about by ignorance. What people should strive for is understanding by delving into the related facts. Not some strange tangent about something totally unrelated and use it as a point in an argument. In a real debate, those points would be thrown out.

    Anyways. There I've shown you. I've just pushed a little "Post-modernism" and proper "Rhetoric" beliefs upon you all. You Lose.

  86. The lesser known terrorist attack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You caught the anthrax-letters, yet failed to prevent the release of our genetically enhanced Maximus Stupidoea into the general public of rural America.

    All your brains are belong to us.

    Osama Bin Laden

  87. It doesn't just reject evolution by benhocking · · Score: 1

    Creationism also rejects modern geological knowledge. How many geologists do you think use "creation science" to predict where to strike oil?

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  88. The main thing I'd like to see... by localman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...is a recognition from both sides that evolution is not in opposition to the bible or Christianity. Many (most?) Christians know this already, but there are a few (like the folks that made this museum) who haven't figured it out yet. There are also many non-Christian evolutionists who think that evolution is counter to Christianity. I was raised a Christian, though I am no longer one, but I don't see that evolution contradicts the bible.

    The bible is full of events natural events that science has gone on to explain but which we don't fret about. Every time someone falls to the ground they were being pulled by a magical force which science later called "gravity". Does knowing the way in which gravity works, and the ability to predict its effects contradict the bible? No: people assume that God created gravity and that is the method by which he keeps people stuck to the Earth and the planets and stars in rotation. What about disease? When it was discovered that bacteria and viruses cause disease, and that we could control the effects to a large degree, was the bible's absence in describing the physical mechanism of disease a sudden point of contention? No.

    So why is it that natural selection, an obvious, elegant, and indeed predictive theory (see drug resistant pests) seen as something else? Why can't natural selection be the mechanism by which God brought forth first the plants, then the animals, and then man, as described in Genisis?

    He does not need to be a "God of the Gaps" filling in only that which we don't know. He can be God the architect, designer of all that which we do know, and also that which we have yet to discover.

    Personally, I don't believe in God, but most of my family does. I am continually surprised that they struggle so hard with evolution.

    Cheers.

    1. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by HobophobE · · Score: 1

      It's much more an affront to their worldview to think that god didn't just snap its fingers and suddenly modern-day humans with their SUVs appeared. They have a need to believe that everything was planned and that their golf game will improve because it's their destiny.

      It's largely based in the concept (the terminology escapes me at the moment, possibly investment trap?) whereby you bought a lemon of a car. You poured $1,000 into that car in the first year and it was still a lemon so you poured $1,000 into it each year for the next five. Suddenly you're in your 7th year with it and it needs another $1,250 of work done on it. You feel committed due to the money you've already put into it, even though your best interest is to accept your poor decision of the past and move on.

      If you find out some integral part of your belief system is flawed and yet you've spent the past 30 years committed to it, making decisions based on it then you're far less likely to change. There are some known examples of this including the Millerites[1] who believed the end of the world was imminent and then when the day came and went selected a new date. Even after the new date came to pass without consequence the followers did not disperse entirely. Scientologists[2] fit that bill as well, believing in the power of the e-meter and pay for pray as they climb the stairway to heaven.

      This is why closing your mind and solidifying in a belief is a bad thing. It keeps you from being able to adapt when something like Global Warming occurs. You're dragging your feet to make the changes you need to and then when it's too late you're screwed.

      [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millerites#Origins
      [2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientology#Controver sy_and_criticism

      --

      -HobophobE
      Nothing laughs forever.
    2. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and I'm continually surprised that people like you cling to the notion that God and evolution aren't mutually exclusive... they are.

      Which is your god? The Omniscient one? or the Omnipotent one?

      And whichever he is... then grapple with the utility of the other...

      i.e. if god is omnipotent, then he is not omniscient, i.e. he is not the creator, and if god is omniscient, then he is not omnipotent, i.e. he does not exist.

    3. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Believing in evolution means you toss out large chunks of the bible, at least with the old testament. In particular, the acceptance of "Deep Time", required for evolution and geology, tosses away the idea that a diety created Earth only a few thousand years ago, put humans on it fully formed in a garden, then kicked them out into the wide word.

      Accepting evolution and other modern scientific viewpoints increasingly forces you to treat the Bible as a set of parables, not the literal word of God. And if it's just a bunch of parables, where does it's definitive authority, and the authority of religion come from?

      No, it's very easy to see why many deeply religious Christians have problems with evolution....

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    4. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by SoapBox17 · · Score: 1

      The bible is full of events natural events that science has gone on to explain but which we don't fret about. Every time someone falls to the ground they were being pulled by a magical force which science later called "gravity". Does knowing the way in which gravity works, and the ability to predict its effects contradict the bible? No: people assume that God created gravity and that is the method by which he keeps people stuck to the Earth and the planets and stars in rotation.
      Actually, Copernicus and Galileo both hit quite a wall in introducing gravity related concepts (like the earth revolving around the sun and the existence of other planets). Seems that pesky catholic church was none too quick to catch on.

      Religion, in general, has a really bad history of outright refusing to acknowledge any counter points to their previously held facts. Its human nature, everyone does it. Fortunately in recent years the Roman Catholic church has become level headed, and they even accept evolution. The problem is the nut-jobs just love it here in the US (it was founded by them, after all).

      Personally I think maybe we should try just treating creationists like flat earthers or other fringe people. I wish everyone could just agree that they are nuts and just ignore them as extremists and move on. Highlighting this "museum" and fighting it only gives them excuses to continue to believe there is a "fight" going on in science about evolution or that anyone actually cares what they think.
    5. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by localman · · Score: 1

      Wow, what a malformed post.

      I said I don't believe in god. I'm an athiest. Thus your question makes no sense.

      My point was that for someone who _does_ believe in god, natural selection can be the mechanism by which he created us.

      And furthermore you've totally blown your attempt at disproving god. From a logical perspective, he can certainly be all-powerful and all-knowing. The problem doesn't arise until you also try to add in that he's all-good. Then it falls apart because he has created/allowed such suffering. He could be any two of those three things, but not all three. That's the generally accepted proof against the Christian god.

      Personally I shake my head as soon as someone uses the word "all-powerful" or "all-knowing" or "all-anything". I don't believe in absolutes or ultimates. There is no unstoppable force, there is no immovable object. We live in a world of infinite regress and assention.

      Cheers.

    6. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by localman · · Score: 1

      I hear all that, but is it really any different from accepting modern medicine? According to the bible, health afflictions are curses and are best eradicated by sacrafice and prayer. What I don't get is why someone could throw out that much of the old (and new) testaments and then balk at evolution. And I don't agree that taking the vague creation story as a parable makes the bible worthless; first because there are already recognized parables in the bible and second because it could be a simplified explanation of creation through a big bang and evolution... let there be light, divde the night from day, bring forth plants, then animals, then us. I imagine if I explained my scientific ideas about creation to someone several thousand years ago they might write something similar.

      But you're right in the sense that many Christians won't accept it. Ah well, still seems absurd to me, but then again so much of Christianity does.

    7. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by localman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Good point. I wonder how long the debates went on about their discoveries... a solid theory of evolution has only been around for 150 years or so. Maybe just like the earth-centered universe we'll all eventually come around.

      Funny related story: my grandfather was a pastor at a Christian church. At some point in the sixties, I think, he had an guest preacher come by -- a very old Italian fellow. For his sermon, he focused on how ridiculous it was that scientists claimed the earth was round. He read passage after passage from the bible that demonstrated that the earth was flat, and he had a good laugh since it was so obvious that it was flat. The scientists, he said, were fools. Again, this was in the 1960's.

      My poor grandfather had to dedicate the entire sermon the following week to undoing the damage. He found several passages in the bible that implied the earth was round, and he preached about that. He also bought the old fellow, the guest preacher, a globe.

      Aside from the obvious ridiculousness of believing the earth is flat at that point in time, I find it extra amusing that both men were able to support their completely contradictory ideas from the same book.

    8. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by master_p · · Score: 1

      The contradiction is that as science progresses, God seems to interfere less and less with reality. In the end, if we can explain everything by science (except a few axioms needed for the system to work - see Goedel's incompletion theorem that every axiomatic system is never complete because it has to has axioms in it), then it is very little left for God to do, which does not justify God's actions in the Bible.

    9. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, he can't be both omnipotent and omniscient, either. If he was the latter, he would know absolutely everything, including everything that is yet to happen. This means he has no room to make any choices, as he already knows what he will do. Thus he is not omnipotent.

    10. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by RodgerDodger · · Score: 1

      There are many Christian groups that _don't_ trust modern medicine, particularly fundamentalist groups. The Seventh-Day Adventists come to mind...

      And it's not that taking the bible as a series of parables makes it worthless, it just that doing so strips it of the authority of being the Word of God. When you can pick and choose, or interpret as you see fit, it stops being, well, Holy Writ, and just becomes an historical and cultural document, no different to Aesop's Fables (except that they teach better moral lessons...)

      --
      "Software is too expensive to build cheaply"
    11. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by localman · · Score: 1

      An interesting take I had not considered... however, couldn't it be argued that in his all-powerfulness he already made all choices and this is why he his all-knowing? I mean, yeah, it's kind of ridiculous, such is the whole concept, but if we're talking about God, I think that could make some kind of sense? His power and knowledge came into being at once and that was all there was?

      Man, it must suck to be God. What a boring, boring life.

    12. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

      Man, it must suck to be God. What a boring, boring life.

      Which is why He tortures humans for fun.

      --
      Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
    13. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it extra amusing that both men were able to support their completely contradictory ideas from the same book.

      You ain't seen nothing yet! You ain't seen nothing!

      "And he [...] went and hanged himself." (Matthew 27:5) "Then said Jesus unto him, 'Go, and do thou likewise.'" (Luke 10:37)

    14. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by vidarh · · Score: 1
      That argument only works if people happen to agree with you that the Christian god truly is all-powerful or all-knowing and all good in the strictest sense.

      Unfortunately, you'll pretty quickly meet people who add qualifications or work their way around it. A typical example to unify the all powerful, all knowing and all good bit is for them to say that he's all good because he's used his power to create the least amount of suffering possible, and that since he's all knowing you shouldn't question why there's still so much suffering because he knows best, being all knowing and all that.

      It's a possibility, no matter how ridiculous, and we can't disprove it. The best we can do is point to suffering and keep asking _why_ that suffering is necessary, and how stopping it would harm "God's plan" if he prevented it from happening. Incidentally, pointing to deaths doesn't work, as the perfect deflection to that is to say that God wanted to bring that person to heaven to end their suffering, and that the good coming out of that far outweighs any pain of those left behind.

      It's a bit like playing chess with a brilliant chess player with the temper of a five year old. Most religious people have played this game in a highly defensive way all their lives. They know how to avoid giving up any territory, and whenever they feel threatened, they'll kick the board and run away crying and refuse to play with you again until they've purged it from their memory.

    15. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by localman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're right. I was only putting that up because the parent hadn't even made a logical point. But I agree logic holds little sway with most religious types. I don't argue with people on these topics unless they want to.

      But sometimes I just want to yell "for god's sake! you've rationalized a hundred other ridiculous things! can't you find some rationalization for evolution so we can all move on?"

      Cheers.

    16. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by Ikester8 · · Score: 1

      It's much more an affront to their worldview to think that god didn't just snap its fingers and suddenly modern-day humans with their SUVs appeared. They have a need to believe that everything was planned and that their golf game will improve because it's their destiny. It's an interesting coincidence that Creationism seems to be an almost purely American phenomenom, as far as I can tell. One wonders if this is somehow connected with the fact that it's such a young culture as well.
      --
      That's the last time I run code posted in somebody's sig...
    17. Re:The main thing I'd like to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I am continually surprised that they struggle so hard with evolution"

      Because it doesn't artificially inflate their egos the way fundamentalism does. All that stuff about being vastly superior to animals, unrelated to them, "created in God's image", blah, blah, blah.

      Notice thst most of them have no problem believing in "physics". The idea that physics were created by God is no problem. Put evolution in the same sentence, and suddenly all the stupid ego-stroking that religion offers its adherents goes away.

  89. That is, "Young Earth Creationism" by Empiric · · Score: 1

    I really hope more people will take a first-year philosophy course to understand from Aristotle that "creationism" as used here is simply an invalid concept (or "weasel-word" if you prefer).

    It integrates wholly disparate concepts into a single term, that is, that the earth is a few thousand years old, and that a higher power created it. Neither premise is remotely dependent on, or even much associated with, the other.

    Politicians construct intrinsically-misleading terminology all the time, but I'd hope Slashdot aspires to somewhat more constructive discussion...

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
  90. concepts and names by drDugan · · Score: 1

    this is a perfect example of why a .museum top-level domain (TLD) is a bad idea unless we open up the TLD space to any word

    http://british.museum/

  91. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's the nice thing about religion. There's always an easy answer for a complicated problem. Usually, it's either God testing your faith or Satan trying to thwart you, and that's good enough. Have faith! Don't question, believe blindly.

    I slowly get a hunch just why the government is suddenly so keen on supporting religion and faith based education...

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  92. I'm assuming you're a troll, but anyway... by Glytch · · Score: 1

    Real science is all theory. Any real scientist in any field knows that a new accurate observation can completely change one's understanding of a phenomenon, requiring revision or abandonment of the theory in question. In science nothing is provable, only disprovable, and this is what I think scares the crap out of idiots like you. Don't bring up the "law of gravity" argument, because there's no such thing. Newtonian gravity just another theory, albeit one with a pretty good track record on the large scale.

    Don't bring up the "but math has proofs" argument argument either. Pure mathematics isn't a science. It doesn't work that way.

    All the creationists I've known are either con artists looking to pull the wool over peoples' eyes for their own benefit, or idiots who accept whatever they're told by a con artist.

  93. And so we go through this AGAIN. by khasim · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Yes, every time evolution comes up, the same arguments against it are presented. Despite the fact that those same arguments have been discredited time and time again (if one would but do some basic research).

    #1.

    The only thing that has ever been observed is minor changes within a kind of animal over time: adaptation.


    No, DNA mutations have been observed. Most of these mutations have NO adaptation value AT THE POINT IN TIME THAT THEY OCCURRED. Changes to the environment AFTER those mutations caused them to become advantageous.

    #2.

    No real evidence has ever been discovered (or much less reproduced) that one kind of animal can bring forth an animal of a different kind: i.e. a fish giving birth to a frog.


    Yes, it has. The easiest example is a colony of fruit flies. Split them into two sub-colonies and within a dozen generations they will no longer be able to inter-breed between the colonies. They have become two different species.

    Your fish/frog example is flawed because there is no reason to believe that one those different animals could achieve gestation within each other. Modern fish came from animals that were ALMOST identical to modern fish. Modern frogs came from animals that were ALMOST identical to modern frogs.

    #3.

    The idea that a complicated organism can "evolve" one part at a time is just idiotic, no matter how many people believe it.

    And yet the evidence seems to support that theory.

    And not only that, but the theory of evolution is the basis of our entire medical science now. And that seems to work, also.
    1. Re:And so we go through this AGAIN. by Ploum · · Score: 1

      When I was reading /. 4 years ago, it would have been unimaginable to have to argue against a pro-creationism content. I mean, it was clear at that time that if someone really believe in creationism, his intelligence might not be enough to eat with a fork, so clearly not enough to use a computer and read slashdot.

      It's frightenning to see how, in 4 years, the creationism vs evolution has become, in both parts, an accepted "debat".

    2. Re:And so we go through this AGAIN. by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's frightening to see how, in 4 years, the creationism vs evolution has become, in both parts, an accepted "debate".

      It's depressing as hell, too. I thought this "debate" was won 70 years ago, but apparently the stupidity gene refuses to die out.

    3. Re:And so we go through this AGAIN. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >apparently the stupidity gene refuses to die out.

      The Selfish bastard! ;-)

    4. Re:And so we go through this AGAIN. by hotfireball · · Score: 1

      Any evidence where particles and gas came from to make "The Great Explosion"? :-)

    5. Re:And so we go through this AGAIN. by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      I dont think it is because there are more creationist that the debate is happening though. What is going on IMHO is that people have lost the idea that creation/evolution is not the argument, yet they are pushing that. The debate has become the Theists vs the non Theists, the creation thing is just the battleground. Worse, both sides have taken Theology and put it on the same axis as Creationism. What is the logical disbelief in Darwin's Theory of Evolution? Hint: it is not Creationism. What is the disbelief of the Christian God? Hint: it is not Darwinism. Both sides are trying to make it an issue.

      Oh and your crack about creationists is trollish at best. The articles that get posted to slashdot are *never* pro-Creation. If there is anyone to blame it is your Theist hating brethren.

      Sera

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
  94. Your knowledge of catholicism is clearly deep by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 4, Informative

    If I weren't already catholic I'd probably steer clear, based on those things you said. Most of them were false, but I imagine you know that.

    The only one I'll address is "their teachings are not Christian and aren't considered so by anyone other than themselves".

    Everyone in the world, except for a few Protestant sects, considers the Roman Catholic Church to be Christian. By that I mean literally about 97% of the world.

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
  95. It was largly a reaction to the Enlightenment by Xenographic · · Score: 1

    > Young earth hypothesis is a recent addition to Christian thought?

    Ancient Christian scholars came at it from a completely different angle and believed Genesis to be metaphorical. You see, their opponents argued that, "If God is omnipotent, why did it take Him seven days to create the world?"

  96. Re:Heading off at the pass - its flooding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having heard the story of the ark I often wondered what happened to all the flood water? I mean if it rained so much there was no land for the dove then that means it rains until it was above Mount Everest at 29000 and odd feet?

    I dunno how big a volume of water or what the rate of flow was to fill up in 40 days and 40 nights but as that was in additon to the water in the seas where did it all go?

    Secondly which kind of fish did Noah take on the ark - fresh water or salt water?

  97. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put the creationists in that museum, lock the doors and throw away the key.

  98. I don't know by ib1026 · · Score: 1

    I don't know if the earth is only 4000 years old or not. I do know that God is beyond time. For him one day is like a thousand, and a thousand days are like one.

    1. Re:I don't know by John3 · · Score: 1

      And you know this because?

      --
      "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    2. Re:I don't know by vidarh · · Score: 1

      Like most religious people the best bet is that he knows this because mommy or daddy told him so.

  99. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Wavicle · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are even fossilized dinosaur tracks with human footprints going through them.

    No there aren't

    http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/paluxy/tsite.html

    --
    Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
    Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
  100. Appalling by Saraphim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I weep for America when, in otherwise legitimate media, the articles actually approach a topic from a superstitious angle: "... For the believer, it seems, this museum provides a kind of relief: Finally the world is being shown as it really is, without the distortions of secularism and natural selection." I'm not an American, but from what I have read of NYT's articles, I got the idea they was the kind of newspaper that would not stoop as low as to lend any credibility to superstition.

    1. Re:Appalling by onx · · Score: 1

      No, the article does not approach the topic from a superstitious angle. In fact, it wouldn't be unreasonable to conclude that the author himself does not believe in the ideas the museum promotes. For example, the section you quoted, "... For the believer, it seems, this museum provides a kind of relief: Finally the world is being shown as it really is, without the distortions of secularism and natural selection." the author does not approach from a superstitious angle. Instead he approaches as an outsider, trying to understand what fundamentalists must feel when they are in the museum. He supposes that they feel some sort of relief as they believe the museum presents is what actually happened.

      He talks about what a "visitor steeped in the scientific world view..." would experience without supposition, "...the impact of the museum is a disorienting mix of faith and reason, the exotic and the familiar. Nature here is not "red in tooth and claw," as Tennyson asserted. In fact at first it seems almost as genteel as Eden's dinosaurs. We learn that chameleons, for example, change colors not because that serves as a survival mechanism, but "to 'talk' to other chameleons, to show off their mood, and to adjust to heat and light."

      The author is trying to come off as being objective, but he does not try very hard hide his personal beliefs. He even pokes fun, somewhat subtly, at the museum, at first asking if the museum is a "reproduction of a childhood fantasy in which dinosaurs are friends of inquisitive youngsters?" In the sentence after the one which you quoted he also attacks, rather harshly, the museum as a place where reason has been abandoned, "The Creation Museum actually stands the natural history museum on its head. Natural history museums developed out of the Enlightenment: encyclopedic collections of natural objects were made subject to ever more searching forms of inquiry and organization. The natural history museum gave order to the natural world, taming its seeming chaos with the principles of human reason."

      So then, no need for weeping. :)

    2. Re:Appalling by Saraphim · · Score: 1

      You're right. I think my English actually failed me when originally reading that article. Thank you for taking the time to sort me out.

  101. If science still continues to chase cold fusion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...despite the logical fact it can't happen, we can let them have this. To not would be HYPOCRITICAL. Plus no one is being FORCED to go to this museum.

  102. wow, a tax universalist by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    By that reasoning, there is no activity safe from government regulation.

    I mean, seriously, how far is it from asserting that a non-taxed entity should not be allowed to build museums dedicated to a ridiculous (in someone's opinion) theory to preventing _anyone_ from voicing a contrary opinion? Maybe it's all of twenty years' more legal evolution, but that's way too close for me.

    (And, no, I'm not talking about whether the theory of the evolution of species is considered legal or not, I'm talking about the evolution of the interpretation of the Constitution that was originally intended to protect the individual's freedom to think things another person thought weren't worthy of being thought. And, no, the freedom to think, without the option of attempting to implement the thought, is not really freedom to think. It would be like the freedom to write source code without the freedom to compile and debug it. Or maybe the freedom to write comments but not actual code.)

    joudanzuki

  103. Many branches of christianity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    There are many branches of Christianity. If your branch is not based off of the Anglican branch, you believe in a concept call purgatory where all people go to when they die to be purified before going to heaven (where nothing imperfect may enter). If you're a universalist Christian, you believe that God is merciful and would not irreversibly punish people for eternity for wrongs done in a the short (on the cosmic scale) span of 100 years. So everyone can go to heaven, even Hitler and Stalin. The catch is that the more imperfect you are, the more time you spend in purgatory and it's not at all a pleasant place, so it's best to conduct your life so that you can spend as less time there as possible.

    So getting back to your question about infallibility. Relative to us, God is effectively infinitely perfect, just as relative to us, the universe is effectively infinitely big. While the universe isn't actually infinitely big, it's unknowable with our puny brains if God is actually infinitely perfect.

    But if he is, I'd reason that the reason we aren't perfect is a mercy. Let's face it. Perfection is *boring*. Just imagine. You know everything, so there's nothing to learn or discover. You have no needs, so there is nothing to strive for. There is no uncertainty (either good or bad) so there is nothing to look forward to. Our imperfection makes us exciting so God likely lives vicariously though us the way some parents live through their successful children. If that's the case, then reincarnation might be possible so that we can escape all that perfection...or maybe not and we'd be stuck in God's shoes.

    1. Re:Many branches of christianity by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      Perfection is *boring*. Just imagine. You know everything, so there's nothing to learn or discover. You have no needs, so there is nothing to strive for. There is no uncertainty (either good or bad) so there is nothing to look forward to.

      But perfection would also imply you don't need to have something to strive for, have no urge to learn, don't get a thrill from uncertainty, and never get bored. Perfection might be boring for an outside viewer, but for the person who is perfect, everything if fine the way it is.

    2. Re:Many branches of christianity by brezel · · Score: 1

      So getting back to your question about infallibility. Relative to us, God is effectively infinitely perfect, just as relative to us, the universe is effectively infinitely big. While the universe isn't actually infinitely big, it's unknowable with our puny brains if God is actually infinitely perfect.

      But if he is, I'd reason that the reason we aren't perfect is a mercy. Let's face it. Perfection is *boring*. well that is a different subject. all i am saying is that the creation theory has so many flaws and can so easily be torn apart just by a little reasoning and logic that i cannot accept to see it on the same level as a *real* scientific theory such as darwin's theory of evolution.

      i have nothing against religious people...i don't understand them but i accept that they believe things that seem idiotic to me. but having creationism try to compete with science is just ridiculous.
  104. No need to make up Bible quotes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee; he eateth grass as an ox. Lo now, his strength is in his loins, and his force is in the navel of his belly. He moveth his tail like a cedar: the sinews of his stones are wrapped together. His bones are as strong pieces of brass; his bones are like bars of iron. He is the chief of the ways of God: he that made him can make his sword to approach unto him.
    Job 40, 15-19
    1. Re:No need to make up Bible quotes by pairo · · Score: 1

      Damn, that's one funny site I found on Google relating to those verses. http://www.creationists.org/

  105. The problem with the Bible by mangu · · Score: 1
    I believe there is one problem with the Bible: it was physically written be humans


    That's OK with me, those humans were inspired by God, weren't they?


    The problem with any sort of literal interpretation of the Bible, IMHO, comes when you read it from the first to the last page, like I did, on three different translations (sorry, I don't know enough of the original languages...).


    Read Matthew, chapter 1, versicles 2 to 16, and Luke, chapter 2, versicles 23 to 38. Now, tell me, is it possible for any sane-minded person to believe that *everything* in the Bible is literally true, in all respects? Shouldn't we assume that at least some interpretation, or at least some pretty involved explanation, is needed?


    If the genealogy of Jesus, God Himself, is not quite clear, then why should we assume that the Bible tells everything, to the smallest details, about how the creation of the world was done? The Bible is unsure whether the grandfather of Jesus was Jacob (Matthew 1,16) or Heli (Luke 3,23). If they couldn't keep an accurate count of Jesus' ancestors, then why should we assume it got all the days involved in the creation of the Universe right?

  106. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Satan can actually draw really well, but it wouldn't be a convincing "cave man art" had he gone around painting masterpieces everywhere.

  107. wow by gerrysteele · · Score: 1

    I bet if that jesus dude were alive today to see the ramifications of his tomfoolery, he would be the first to apologise and say he was only doing it for kicks.

  108. What a joke.. by cakeypower · · Score: 1

    ..its embarrassing.

  109. I agree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those parents who felt the need to FUCK unprotected despite not having any way to properly raise and feed the resulting child will be first on the list.

  110. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    I slowly get a hunch just why the government is suddenly so keen on supporting religion and faith based education...

    It just took them a century of decimating our schools first. Government has accomplished this (not through any specific actions, but by simply relaxing standards and allowing schools to churn out graduates with oatmeal for brains) to such good effect that people in this country will, by and large, believe anything. It astounds me how many people I know honestly think that belief is more powerful than fact, that the Universe is as they would wish it to be, rather than as it is.

    Fact is, we live in the Golden Age of the Talking Head, and as long as the Head we happen to be watching has a nice hairdo we'll take whatever it's saying at face value. Don't believe me? Just look at what we've been putting in the White House these past thirty-odd years. It is worrisome, since America is under attack from several quarters, including an overreaching government that just won't back off. If there's any one thing We the People desperately need at this point in our history, it is the ability to think clearly. We can't afford too many more mistakes, and frankly our Creationist friends are not helping.

    Put it this way, if your mental faculties are so bereft of logic and reason that you are capable of accepting the Bible as historical fact, as the literal Word of God, then you're also an easy mark for the first demagogue to come along, for the first politician that says whatever you want to hear. And those guys are very good at telling us what we want to hear: it's their stock-in-trade. So yes, I tend to agree with you about so-called faith-based education.

    And I'm not picking solely on Christians here: whenever I say "Bible" or "Word of God", feel free to substitute your own Holy Book and your own personal Supreme Being. Pick your poison, it's all the same in the end. The powers of unreason that kept humanity in the dark for thousands of years are alive and well, haven't changed their agenda one whit, and have one of their most powerful tools in organized religion.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  111. evolution as religion by Joseph_Daniel_Zukige · · Score: 1

    I haven't read who you were replying to, but I've sure seen a lot of joe-sixpack-types proclaiming loudly how glad they were that evolution proved religion wrong so they could watch their pr0n on Saturday night and going to church on Sunday morning with a clean conscience.

    Evolution is not _a_ religion, but it has sure been used as a substitute for religion by a lot of people who don't want to think.

    The argument here is not between religion and science. It's between people who don't like what the other guy is thinking.

    Personally, I'd prefer you to think, using the best tools you have, even if they're wrong.

    joudanzuki

  112. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by jcr · · Score: 1

    Drink enough of it, and you'll see dinosaurs. Big, pink dinosaurs.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  113. That is true by sveinungkv · · Score: 1

    *pedant hat on* In fact, no Fundamentalist Christian (as far as I know) would believe that the Earth is 4000 years old. 4000 years ago would be the time of Abraham, at least according to the Bible + the secular sources used to calculate the time where there are no biblical sources.

    --
    Spelling/grammar nazis welcome (English is not my first language and I am trying to improve my spelling/grammar)
  114. no witnesses by pedantic+bore · · Score: 1

    Nobody who saw the 20' high meat-eating monster lived long enough to paint a picture. Hard to paint whilst being digested.

    Gee, maybe this creationism stuff is logically consistent.

    Nah, just kidding.

    --
    Am I part of the core demographic for Swedish Fish?
  115. Creationism is the least troublesome issue by viking80 · · Score: 1

    Creationism must be one of the lease troublesome aspects of christianity. The bible is a list of events that can only be considered insane: Water becomes wine, Virgins have babies, Apples have knowledge, oceans go dry, and the end of the world has been near for almost 2000 years now.

    Saying you are a christian that believes in evolution is like saying your beliefsystem is only 99.99% screwed up.

    --
    don't cut it off www.mgmbill.org
  116. Not what I expected. by pedantic+bore · · Score: 1

    From the headline, I thought that creationism had ended and someone had put up a museum so we would never forget or repeat the blunders of the past.

    No such luck.

    --
    Am I part of the core demographic for Swedish Fish?
  117. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Lord+Apathy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why are you protesting? Who gives a shit? As long as they keep their creationist crap out of our schools, that's all I care about.

    --

    Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification

  118. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

    So why are there not cave drawings of man with really impressive animals like the dinasaurs.

    That's easy, everyone that tried to draw pictures of T-Rex got eaten before they could finish. First example of this was discovered by seekers of the Holly Grail looking for the castle aaaagh.

    --
    If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
  119. Please clarify... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    I have no fscking idea what you're talking about.

    America is too divided... for what? Let the middle states continue to... separate? Is that what they're doing?

    And what the hell is a "middle state"? I live in Iowa, and we don't have this bullshit here. It really only seems to be Kansas...

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:Please clarify... by msimm · · Score: 1

      The "Middle" states have a majority that typically vote pretty different. The coasts tend to vote pretty different.

      --
      Quack, quack.
  120. Re:Heading off at the pass - its flooding by IdleTime · · Score: 1

    The Flood? Well, here's how it could never happen.>br>
    First- the global flood supposedly (Scripturally) covered the planet, (see that, George? If so, why are you still being so stupid?) and Mount Everest is 8,848 meters tall. The diameter of the earth at the equator, on the other hand, is 12,756.8 km. All we have to do is calculate the volume of water to fill a sphere with a radius of the Earth + Mount Everest; then we subtract the volume of a sphere with a radius of the Earth. Now, I know this won't yield a perfect result, because the Earth isn't a perfect sphere, but it will serve to give a general idea about the amounts involved.

    So, here are the calculations:

    First, Everest

    V= 4/3 * pi * r cubed
    = 4/3 * pi * 6387.248 km cubed
    = 1.09151 x 10 to the 12 cubic kilometres (1.09151x102 km3)

    Now, the Earth at sea level

    V = 4/3 * pi * r cubed
    = 4/3 * pi * 6378.4 km cubed
    = 1.08698 x 10 to the 12 cubic kilometres (1.08698x1012 km3)

    The difference between these two figures is the amount of water needed to just cover the Earth:

    4.525 x 10 to the ninth cubic kilometres (4.525x1009 km3) Or, to put into a more sensible number, 4,525,000,000,000 cubic kilometres

    This is one helluva lot of water.

    For those who think it might come from the polar ice caps, please don't forget that water is more dense than ice, and thus that the volume of ice present in those ice caps would have to be more than the volume of water necessary.

    Some interesting physical effects of all that water, too. How much weight do you think that is? Well, water at STP weighs in at 1 gram/cubic centimetre (by definition)...so,

    4.252x1009 km3 of water,
    X 106 (= cubic meters),
    X 106 (= cubic centimetres),
    X 1 g/cm3 (= grams),
    X 10-3 (= kilograms),
    (turn the crank)
    equals 4.525E+21 kg
    . Ever wonder what the effects of that much weight would be? Well, many times in the near past (i.e., the Pleistocene), continental ice sheets covered many of the northern states and most all of Canada. For the sake of argument, let's call the area covered by the Wisconsinian advance (the latest and greatest) was 10,000,000,000 (ten million) km2, by an average thickness of 1 km of ice (a good estimate...it was thicker in some areas [the zones of accumulation] and much thinner elsewhere [at the ablating edges]). Now, 1.00x1007 km2 X 1 km thickness equals 1.00E+07 km3 of ice.

    Now, remember earlier that we noted that it would take 4.525x1009 km3 of water for the flood? Well, looking at the Wisconsinian glaciation, all that ice (which is frozen water, remember?) would be precisely 0.222% [...do the math](that's zero decimal two hundred twenty two thousandths) percent of the water needed for the flood.

    Well, the Wisconsinian glacial stade ended about 25,000 YBP (years before present), as compared for the approximately supposedly 4,000 YBP flood event.

    Due to these late Pleistocene glaciations (some 21,000 years preceding the supposed flood), the mass of the ice has actually depressed the crust of the Earth. That crust, now that the ice is gone, is slowly rising (called glacial rebound); and this rebound can be measured, in places (like northern Wisconsin), in centimetres/year. Sea level was also lowered some 10's of meters due to the very finite amount of water in the Earth's hydrosphere being locked up in glacial ice sheets (geologists call this glacioeustacy).

    Now, glacial rebound can only be measured, obviously, in glaciated terranes, i.e., the Sahara is not rebounding as it was not glaciated during the Pleistocene. This lack of rebound is noted by laser ranged interferometery and satellite geodesy [so there], as well as by geomorphology. Glacial striae on bedrock, eskers, tills, moraines, rouche moutenees, drumlins, kame and kettle topography, fjords, deranged fluvial drainage and erratic blocks all betray a glacier's passage. Needless to say, these geomorphological expressions are not f

    --
    If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
  121. The 9 Commandments by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    The museum also hands out copies of the 9 commandments for the true believers as they walk in the door. The commandment that "thou shall not bear false witness" has been left out for concern that it would be bad for business to remind visitors and the employees that by entering they taker their first step toward Hell.

  122. Not unexpected from Kentucky by frankShook · · Score: 1

    Yep. I hear the toothbrush was invented here in Kentucky: Anywhere else and they would have called it a "teethbrush".

  123. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

    Clearly I am not drinking the right stuff!

    --
    We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
  124. Is there a bus tour of Kitschy Stupidity Sites? by smchris · · Score: 1

    I want to go. Honestly I do. I have this urge to buy some bib overalls, a flannel shirt, and blacken a couple teeth for a souvenir photo shoot.

    Where is Michael Moore's weekly TV show when you need it? Maybe a Penn and Teller Bullshit special?

  125. My own idea. by prelelat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The question of creationism has always puzzled me. When I was younger I believed in it whole heartedly. Now that I'm older I have had to rethink my beliefs which I think everyone should do regardless of what you believe, you should always re-evaluate everything. But I don't think that the percentage of people that believe in Creationism are going to be compelled by a museum. I mean personal beliefs usually have some kind of variation between others (different religions and your own ideas), but I guess if you're in an organized religion they might be quite similar. I just don't think you can have a museum on Creationism, I think peoples efforts would be better spent on a museum of Religion. This would be more beneficial to everyone knowing the history of theirs and others beliefs. Knowing what is actually true about someone else's religion could help them to understand others as well.

    What I purpose is a place where you can go and be educated on every belief. I myself think that atheism requires just as much faith as a person who believes in god. Who are you to know for a fact that something intelligent didn't create everything, something had to come from somewhere no one knows so why it is that it has to be nothing. Frankly I haven't seen much come from nothing I haven't seen any proof of that so I don't know why people think that it takes less faith to believe that there is no god than it does to believe that there is. Frankly you will never convince someone who has a strong faith to switch in either direction. That is why I think that it fits in as well, I'm sure that there are a lot of people on Slashdot that will disagree with me. I've met quite a few in my travels and at work when the subject comes up. But I think that we can all agree that people generally need to make the decision themselves, be it one way or another.

    Back on topic I think it would be better to give a whole history of different beliefs such as Greek/roman gods, Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Atheism, and much much more. I think it would be more educational for people and help them with clarity on their own beliefs. I guess when I was younger I was exposed to all the differing views on everything so that I could make a more educated guess at the time in what I believe. Not that it would help much because I always wonder as I think most of you must.

    Of course this is all just my opinion, I'm pretty sure someone will disagree or say it wouldn't work or that it's no different than what is proposed. I just think it would be a good idea in my own head.

    1. Re:My own idea. by arevos · · Score: 1

      I myself think that atheism requires just as much faith as a person who believes in god. Who are you to know for a fact that something intelligent didn't create everything, something had to come from somewhere no one knows so why it is that it has to be nothing. It depends on whether you're talking about weak atheism, which is the absence of a belief in god, or strong atheism, which is the belief that god does not exist.
    2. Re:My own idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh*

      Please go read the definitions for atheism and agnosticism, it will blow your mind

    3. Re:My own idea. by Bubariba · · Score: 1

      I myself think that atheism requires just as much faith as a person who believes in god. Who are you to know for a fact that something intelligent didn't create everything, something had to come from somewhere no one knows so why it is that it has to be nothing. Often, you will hear a believer ask "What caused the Big Bang?" and that is used to convince the athiest that a creator must exist to have brought the universe into existence. What puzzles me, is that the believer doesn't seem to have a problem with the question of "What created the creator?". Furthermore, we have to be careful how we define God. Christians believe that God is an intelligent, individual being, capable of emotion. Often you will hear things like "God is love", or "God is everything". In those cases, God does exist, just like if I were to say "God is the universe", I am simply redefining God to be something everyone agrees exists. Ultimately, the big question is "Why is there something, rather than nothing?" That question has so far eluded science and is the backbone of religion.

    4. Re:My own idea. by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      Who are you to know for a fact that something intelligent didn't create everything, something had to come from somewhere no one knows so why it is that it has to be nothing. Frankly I haven't seen much come from nothing I haven't seen any proof of that so I don't know why people think that it takes less faith to believe that there is no god than it does to believe that there is.

      Which is easier to believe:

      1) The Universe exists uncaused
      2) An intelligent entity capable of designing and creating the Universe exists uncaused

      Personally, I'd say that (1) is easier, since (2) effectively includes (1), and then some more. Until and unless given a very good reason indeed to think otherwise, I'll go with (1).

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    5. Re:My own idea. by vidarh · · Score: 1
      I myself think that atheism requires just as much faith as a person who believes in god. Who are you to know for a fact that something intelligent didn't create everything,

      As an atheist, I don't. However that is no excuse to believe in a god without proof. I also don't know that you aren't the Tooth Fairy taking a break in between collecting teeth to write on Slashdot, but I have no rational reason to believe you are, so I don't. Nor do I believe you are Superman, or hold an infinite number of other ridiculous beliefs for exactly the same reason.

      I can't prove that you aren't the Tooth Fairy or Superman without more information. Yet I will state categorically that you aren't unless I see proof to indicate that there is a possibility you could be, because the odds are vanishingly small and it seemingly violates a huge amount of knowledge I have of the world.

      My lack of belief in a god is of exactly the same character. And so I say there is no god.

      Since you can't prove the non-existence of something without having it precisely enough defined to be able to prove it can't exist, and the idea of gods differ so widely, proving the non-existence of the nebulous concept of "god" is impossible, so that's as far as it goes, just as with similar nebulous fantasy creatures.

      something had to come from somewhere no one knows so why it is that it has to be nothing. Why do you assume that atheists thinks the universe comes from nothing? A preferable alternative is to assume it came from another universe or another structure that could result in something like the Big Bang purely through natural processes.

      As others have pointed out, introducing a "creator" achieves nothing - it just pushes the question of what the start was one step back. Who created the creator? And the creators creator?

      We can't prove there was no creator, again, just as we can't prove an infinite number of other explanations for all kinds of actions. At the same time we have no reason to assume a complex solution involving a sentient being of enormous power all the time we have no observations to support such an assumption.

    6. Re:My own idea. by arevos · · Score: 1

      Please go read the definitions for atheism and agnosticism, it will blow your mind I have, but clearly you haven't.
  126. Happened already. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Newton's gravitation was "just a theory". Now we have a better one, called Relativity.

    But even here, the old, disproved theory of Newtonian physics is still incredibly useful 99% of the time.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  127. How embarrassing... by R3d+Jack · · Score: 1

    I came to believe in a god while studying physics in college. Years later, I concluded the God of the Bible was indeed that god. After many more years, I still believe in physics and God. It took a long time, but I finally figured out that the Bible was meant to be understood, not taken in a wooden, literal sense. Now, I am amazed at the picture Genesis 1 draws of evolution. The Bible actually predicted what we have discovered since Darwin, but only if one gets past the idea that "days" has to mean 24 hour periods. As a reformed fundamentalist, I am now embarrassed by those who insist on trying to force their ideas into a weird mold and then justify it as "faith". Why couldn't God create evolution and then have a brief description of the process written?

    1. Re:How embarrassing... by Tack · · Score: 1

      The Bible actually predicted what we have discovered since Darwin, but only if one gets past the idea that "days" has to mean 24 hour periods.

      The problem is that if you decide to treat the bible as metaphor, then you can continually retrofit that metaphor to fit our evolving understanding of the universe, which results in an endless cycle of confirmation bias. So either the bible must be taken literally, in which case it is ridiculous, or it must be interpreted as metaphor, in which case it is useless.

    2. Re:How embarrassing... by R3d+Jack · · Score: 1

      Allegorical interpretation (placing a symbolic meaning on each piece of a narrative) does allow any meaning to be assigned to a text. I'm not talking about allegory. Each of the events on the six days of Genesis 1 describes part of the big picture of the evolution of the earth and life on it. Two examples. First, the waters being separated above and below describes the change from the earth being covered with water and the atmosphere being saturated with water vapor to a band of clear air forming between the sea and the clouds. Second, the waters drawing back to expose dry land describes what happened as a result of changes in plate tectonics, when two main convection chambers broke down into several smaller ones. The outcome was Pangaea. The rest of the account describes actual events in the same way.
          As our understanding of the world and history improves, we are forced to reassess parts of our understanding of the Bible. However, the Bible has countless times affirmed itself, as it does in the present case.

  128. In LA, visit the Museum of Jurassic Technology by Animats · · Score: 1

    When in Los Angeles, visit the Museum of Jurassic Technology. See their model of Noah's Ark.

    1. Re:In LA, visit the Museum of Jurassic Technology by thewils · · Score: 1
      ...and be sure to call in at the Garden of Eden on Wheels

      Selected Collections from Los Angeles Area Mobile Home and Trailer Parks

      I am _not_ making this up.
      --
      Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
  129. There's a couple... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Others have already pointed out a couple easy-to-refute claims.

    But the real reason people don't usually refute these claims is, we don't have the time. It's obvious that "creation science" is as much pseudoscience as the Q-Ray to anyone who pays attention. Real scientists, in general, would much rather go about discovering reality than disproving your biblical fantasy.

    It'd be kind of like asking the government to go around disproving every UFO sighting and conspiracy theory. It's a pointless waste of resources.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  130. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by hey! · · Score: 1

    Ah, but Wild Turkey is made by Austin, Nichols, which is a subdivision of the French company Pernod, which got its start producing Absinthe.

    So maybe us patriotic Americans should be drinking Jack Daniels and calling "Freedom Whiskey". But yuck, JD is like drinking undiluted maple syrup. I'll stick to the Kickin' Chicken straight up with a glass of water on the side.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  131. Geologists responsible for pr0n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From the NY Times article:

    Start accepting evolution or an ancient Earth, and the result is like the giant wrecking ball, labeled "Millions of Years," that is shown smashing the ground at the foundation of a church, the cracks reaching across the gallery to a model of a home in which videos demonstrate the imminence of moral dissolution. A teenager is shown sitting at a computer; he is, we are told, looking at pornography.


    There you have it, geologists are responsible for the rise in internet pr0n! Potassium-Argon dating gave rise to ChicksWithDicks.com, who knew?

  132. I prefer the LATimes piece... by rkhalloran · · Score: 1

    This piece in the LA Times hits the mark a little closer for most of us: 'Yabba-dabba science'.

  133. Re:That means the Biblical hero's were all girly-m by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude - just forget you have an apostrophe on your keyboard. Just forget it. In fact, try to never use an apostrophe again until you develop something approximating a clue. Please.

  134. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by ScentCone · · Score: 1

    which is a subdivision of the French company Pernod

    On the other hand, the French just had one of their most rational elections in a long time. I'll lift a glass of gen-u-ine Baker's to them for getting it (more than usually) right. I can tolerate ownership of a US-based beverage company by a French business because: as hard as it is to run a business in France, I can sure understand why they'd want to invest in one that makes their products in the US... and, no question, the French know a thing or two about swell stuff to drink.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  135. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > So maybe us patriotic Americans should be drinking Jack Daniels and calling "Freedom Whiskey".

    Not anymore, the French elected a "friend of the United States." Go Sarkozy!

  136. What I find strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever see a fundamentalist deny any other scientific principle in recent times? Didn't think so. Contrary to what you want to believe, they have no qualms with anything else, or science in general. Just a single set of related concepts that have no applicable use anyway, outside of nomenclature.

    1. Re:What I find strange by nanosquid · · Score: 1

      Your response is as predictable as it is wrong: evolution is not "a single set of related concepts that have no applicable use anyway, outside of nomenclature", it's at the heart of modern biology and medicine, and, increasingly, computer science.

    2. Re:What I find strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think that evolution has no application then you must not be familiar with modern medicine or biology at all.

  137. I've promised little Jimmy... by caffiend2049 · · Score: 0, Troll
    that as soon as he gets out of the Christian Science Hospital, we are going to visit the creation museum.

    I hope he believes enough to regrow that leg.

    --
    Pandering to the lowest common denominator would be less frequent if more people were prime numbers.
  138. Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by Sam+Legend · · Score: 1

    It is funny how there are basically two kinds of believers. The Fundamentalists and those who interpret the bible. We always make fun of fundamentalists but often forget that picking the 'best' parts parts is equally ridiculous. It defies the meaning of faith. Why is some particular part 'holier' than the others? Most believers fail to answer this. I laugh at fundamentalists as much as the next guy, but lets not forget that denying parts of your texts is just damn ridiculous.

    1. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Your sense of the ridiculous is caused by a delusional sort of belief that is apparently rather common in the U.S.

      If you take a basic postulate of Christianity, that only God is perfect, and humans are imperfect, and you are then confronted with scientific evidence that your scriptures are written and compiled by humans then you can do two things:

      1. The nutjob way: postulate that these people were divinely inspired and their utterings thus infallible.
      2. The rational way: accept that humanity's knowledge of God is imperfectly transmitted.

      I see no reason why a rational Christian should abide by a primitive 'sola scriptura' when it is obvious that even scripture is God's word as relayed by intermediaries. I mean, it is not as if there are not warnings against that in that very scripture itself, starting with God's admonition to Job as to where he gets his authority to speak on behalf of God.

      Only in America is a rational way of looking at scripture seen as either heretical or hypocritical, by fundamentalists of both sorts. Otherwise, judging the relevance of certain parts of scripture is as unscientific as making a distinction between primary, secondary and tertiary sources.

      The only thing that makes any sense is the rather obvious observation that in interpreting the scriptural texts the primary source (i.e. God) is by definition an untestable one. If you have a problem with that and want to build your atheism on that observation, more power to you, I won't disagree. But in discussions such as this, that kind of rational analysis is sorely missing. All I see is people blindly parroting talking points from uninformed sources.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    2. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by Sam+Legend · · Score: 1

      Only in America is a rational way of looking at scripture seen as either heretical or hypocritical, by fundamentalists of both sorts. Otherwise, judging the relevance of certain parts of scripture is as unscientific as making a distinction between primary, secondary and tertiary sources.
      You forget that faith is by no means scientific. Basically this "rational" way of reading means that you try to adapt the teachings to match the present moral and ethical views. Lets look at it this way, first bible was holy and direct voice of the god, now the popular view seems to be that bible is the voice of god as written by man. Another popular view is that bible is a collection of stories teaching various moral and ethical values. There's a big difference between the first and the last methods. The last way of interpretation does not even require the existence of god. Faith is not rational (in scientific sense), as soon as you try to apply logic to faith it becomes something else.
    3. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      You have not read a single word of what I wrote, have you? As soon as you saw the word 'rational' in what you believed to be a defense of faith, you went into attack mode, didn't you?

      Your post makes it obvious where you stand: with the uninformed parrots.

      Here's a cracker, Polly.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    4. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by Sam+Legend · · Score: 1

      You have not read a single word of what I wrote, have you? As soon as you saw the word 'rational' in what you believed to be a defense of faith, you went into attack mode, didn't you? Your post makes it obvious where you stand: with the uninformed parrots.
      Not much to comment on that, you are wrong. Let's break it down for you.

      If you take a basic postulate of Christianity, that only God is perfect, and humans are imperfect, and you are then confronted with scientific evidence that your scriptures are written and compiled by humans then you can do two things:

      1. The nutjob way: postulate that these people were divinely inspired and their utterings thus infallible.
      2. The rational way: accept that humanity's knowledge of God is imperfectly transmitted.
      My point exactly. The problem with 2. is that you can then interpret the bible as you see fit. That is what I was writing about.

      I see no reason why a rational Christian should abide by a primitive 'sola scriptura' when it is obvious that even scripture is God's word as relayed by intermediaries. I mean, it is not as if there are not warnings against that in that very scripture itself, starting with God's admonition to Job as to where he gets his authority to speak on behalf of God.
      Once you start to interpret there's no coming back. At the end of the day you have a nice collection of teachings comfortable to follow. Hardly the original meaning of the bible.

      Only in America is a rational way of looking at scripture seen as either heretical or hypocritical, by fundamentalists of both sorts. Otherwise, judging the relevance of certain parts of scripture is as unscientific as making a distinction between primary, secondary and tertiary sources.
      So cutting off unpleasant parts is now scientific? Where I can see why some parts are wrong interpretations and some are correct? It looks like you just want to justify the removing of unwanted material.
    5. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Where I can see why some parts are wrong interpretations and some are correct?

      Same place as where you can see what historical documents are relevant and which are merely propaganda. By analysing the relationship with the source material and other sources. You seem to be stuck in the same delusion as the fundies, that whatever translation you're citing is the source material. And you then present a false dichotomy: accept the full text or none of it.

      In short, you're at worst an idiot, or at best ignorant.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    6. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by Sam+Legend · · Score: 1

      Same place as where you can see what historical documents are relevant and which are merely propaganda. By analysing the relationship with the source material and other sources. You seem to be stuck in the same delusion as the fundies, that whatever translation you're citing is the source material.
      Is missing the point what you do for living? You actually believe that this is the way they choose what they regard as meaningful?

      And you then present a false dichotomy: accept the full text or none of it.
      So you can believe that paradise existed, but there's no god? You either believe the whole story or none, that is exactly why selecting parts as you see fit is ridiculous. If you just want to embrace christian values, that's different story.
    7. Re:Fundamentalism or "Free interpretation" ? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Same place as where you can see what historical documents are relevant and which are merely propaganda. By analysing the relationship with the source material and other sources. You seem to be stuck in the same delusion as the fundies, that whatever translation you're citing is the source material.
      Is missing the point what you do for living? You actually believe that this is the way they choose what they regard as meaningful?

      In the churches I grew up with, where a Theology degree is a prerequisite for ordination as a minister, this is exactly how texts are handled. Which is why Paul's letters are no longer the authority they used to be for our Calvinist forebears. Before lecturing others on missing the point, you'd better do something about the beam in your own eye.

      Again, your particular deluded view on how Christianity works is almost exclusively American. Until you've taken a few classes in Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic and can show me an informed analysis of the provenance of a text, I prefer the insights of the reverends I grew up with over the words of a random, obviously uninformed, idiot on the Internet.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
  139. Problem with all of you evolutionists by jimigsu · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I have a question. You always call Christians close minded, narrow, bigots, scientifically stupid and the such, but that does not include all of us. I am a college educated man who has spent years studying science at a major secular university. I do believe in "creationism" and amazingly a lot of it has some of the changes and such that are found in "evolution." The only problem being that most of you will not study both sides, you see the fact that an idea is Christian, or has some basis and automatically you become close minded, narrow, bigots. Not everyone believes your science as your "scientists" often are found to be liars as well. Piltdown man, The amazing Tasaday tribe, A National Geographic (NG) article 'Feathers for T. Rex?' by the Senior Assistant Editor, Christopher Sloan and many others. Sometime evolutionists force things to make them seem real and then it quietly goes away. So blinded by your "faith" that you cannot see the truth. So please, before your next discussion ( actually your bashing of everything that you have never researched) please research it all, not just some Christians that are ignorant. Speak to the educated, and someone who has done research. I would not ask a kindergarten teacher to explain the Pyrrhonian regress.

    1. Re:Problem with all of you evolutionists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off no one is an "evolutionist". That's just a word made up by creationists to make people that understand the fact of evolution seem like adherents to just another religion. It's as absurd as calling someone who understands gravity a "gravitist". Now let me address another thing you mentioned. You said "most of you will not study both sides". Quite right! Why? Because there is only one side, science. You are employing an old logical fallacy here, the false dichotomy. I'm sorry to inform you of this but Young Earth Creationism is no more a competing theory to evolution than astrology is to astronomy or phrenology is to neurosurgery. In all three exsamples, one is science and the other is religious/pseudo-scientific nonsense. I'm sure you think that Young Earth Creationism is very scientific. Were that the case though, you could provide some scientific evidence. The fact that no Young Earth Creationist has ever done so in the history of the world causes me to doubt it's credibility. You also mention lying scientists. Well, thanks to the transparent nature of science, forgeries like piltdown man and Archaeoraptor were exposed. By scientists in fact. NOT Creationists. Actually, I can't think of any contribution a Young Earth Creationist has ever made to any field of Science ever. Obviously individual Christians have, but certainly no one from AIG or any of the various "Intelligent Design" groups. Also, you should do better research. The Tasaday tribe has been shown to have in fact NOT been a hoax. Also, no one who understands evolution has "faith" in it. There is no need for faith in evolution. It has facts to back it up.

  140. A name for the museum.. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

    I think they should call it the yaba-daba-doo museum...

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  141. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by name*censored* · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I dunno man, really cool special effects have been making movies succeed despite the ridiculous stories attached to them for a long time now..

    --
    Commodore64_love: I don't comprehend people who're so frightened of death that they'll bankrupt themselves to stay alive
  142. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IMHO, blaming the creationists is exactly what the plutocracy wants you to do. While you pick on the former, the later will gain power by crippling the public education system.

  143. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ~(A ^ ~A)
    (A v ~A)

  144. Don't bash Christians! by JimDaGeek · · Score: 1

    Seriously, there are a lot of Christians out there (like me) that almost fell out of a chair when reading this crap.

    Yes, I believe is some spiritual life. However, if someone tells me the Earth is only 6,000 years old, well, I think that person should be committed. It is sad, IMO, that a few wacho "christian" sects get to totally destroy the reputation of Christians with most most people. To me it is no different than people who think all Muslims want to strap a bomb to themselves and blow up kids or something. Or that all Jews "own the world's wealth".

    I am glad I do not live in that crappy state. I am a card-carrying-member of the ACLU and I donate every month (they have a monthly plan). I hope that this kind of crap can be stopped.

    A lot of people I know don't think you can be a Christian and support an organization like the ACLU. Why, because the ACLU supports RIGHTS that some so called "Christians" don't agree with. Well, I am not one of them. While I do not support abortion (I have 3 kids and I am working on #4 :-), I do not think it should be "illegal". Abortion is a personal choice and should be a freedom that ever women has. Granted, my personal opinion is that no one should ever have an abortion unless there is a medical reason. However, I have no right to force my own opinion on any other HUMAN!

    Oh, well, let me get off my soap-box :-)

    I just want to leave my fellow geeks with the knowledge that not all Christians are sick-freaks like the ones in the article. Seriously, what intelligent human would think the Earth is only 6,000 y/o? We have tons of scientific evidence showing how old the Earth is.

    Every time I read a story like this, I cringe! It makes me sad about the fact that so many Christians are mislead and uninformed :-(

    --
    General, you are listening to a machine! Do the world a favor and don't act like one.
    1. Re:Don't bash Christians! by anilg · · Score: 1

      "We have tons of scientific evidence showing how old the Earth is"

      We have tons of evidence for a whole load of other stuff. You don't get the right to be so virtuous just because you choose to believe one scientific branch. Its the whole way of reason and rationality, or nothing.

      --
      http://dilemma.gulecha.org - My philospohical short film.
  145. Japanese have written history 6000 years! by ealbers · · Score: 1

    How to creationists deal with a WRITTEN Japanese and Chinese history streatching back almost
    10,000 years???!!!

  146. The Simpsons' Creation Museum by Lachlan+Hunt · · Score: 1

    I wonder if its anything like the creation exhibit in this Simpsons clip.

    --
    By reading this signature, you hereby agree with the content of the above comment.
  147. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Nephilium · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that JD has changed their "100 year old recipe" as recently as 2005...

    I'll stick with beer...

    Nephilium

  148. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by BlueFireIce · · Score: 0

    I only did a quick search of Google and came up with this (Yes, it's a "Christian" site) http://www.genesispark.org/genpark/ancient/ancient .htm/ and countless others of cave drawings of dinosaurs (or dragons). You should try doing a search of OOPARTS (Out Of Place Artifacts) some time, some really weird stuff out there.

    But I really doubt we are taking cave drawings as proof these days other wise you would be believing in some truly odd things. But I don't see how cave drawings have any bearings on whether or not something existed as there are countless things and animals not depicted in any cave drawing. Not all civilizations practiced cave drawing anyway, which shows why we have so many artifacts, tablets, containers and the like which also depict animals long thought extinct.

    But I am sure whether or not you believe these things are real I am sure you will just pass them off as chance or pure imagination. Heck, with enough time I am sure they could have formed by chance! Yep, thats it!

  149. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mad.frog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, you have it exactly wrong: belief has nothing to do with it, and that's the point.

    The schools should be teaching what is supported by evidence (e.g., evolution), not what is proposed to prop up a theology (e.g. creationism).

  150. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by bulliver · · Score: 1

    As long as they keep their creationist crap out of our schools, that's all I care about.

    Do you live in Kansas?

    --
    Support the mob or mysteriously disappear.
  151. Re:Heading off at the pass - its flooding by mad.frog · · Score: 1

    This is quite possibly the best posting I have ever read on Slashdot. My hat is off to you.

  152. How does this guy know that it happened like that? by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Bible tells a rich history of God with man. Why does man have to make up stories because there were certain details left out? I don't take sides with the young earth or ye old universe theory, but it bothers me when someone thinks they're so right they have to do something like this. It's almost as bad as bickering between denominations. Anyway, I know God is real, but that doesn't mean I know everything, and odds are neither does this guy.

  153. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by linguizic · · Score: 1

    I think you mean:
    ~(p ^ q) => ~p v ~p

    I myself am certain that in no possible world does one equal two. Not even God (should one exist) could make one equal two.

    --
    Does this sig remind you of Agatha Christie?
  154. Apropriate.... by dragondm · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... I always thought Creationism belonged in a museum.

    --
    -- -- The Dragon De Monsyne
  155. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by flyingsquid · · Score: 5, Insightful
    several groups (both religious and secular) will be protesting. come join us!

    Are you kidding? This museum is doing us a tremendous favor. If anything, we should send them money.

    The intelligent design movement managed to make creationism look vaguely scientific. Its proponents had academic degrees and wrote books; Behe is actually a biochemist. They didn't make patently absurd claims about world being 6000 years old, they didn't use the Bible as a primary source, and they didn't directly refer to God and Jesus in every third sentence. They didn't do science, but they did a decent job of pretending to, and made creationism look almost respectable.

    But if you want to see creationism made to look ridiculously unsophisticated and ignorant again, nobody could do a better job than this museum. Apatosaurus living with Adam and Eve? Dinosaurs on Noah's Ark? If you were trying to parody creationism, or create a strawman of all the worst creationist arguments, you couldn't do a better job. And the intelligent design guys- Behe and Dembski- will suddenly find that when they're arguing for creationism, people will be asking them if they believe that Jesus rode a Velociraptor.

    So I say, put the Genesis account on display, in all its glory, and let people see it. I think most people will leave thinking exactly what they thought when they came in: evangelicals will leave still knowing that every word in the Bible is true, people looking for a laugh will emerge thinking that while science doesn't have all the answers, it's a lot better than a bunch of ancient myths, and kids- well, I say, let them see dinosaurs and men living alongside each other. Because while adults like to be told what they already know, kids like to ask questions, and I think those dioramas will get them asking a lot of questions.

  156. Hooray! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +1 pts. for Creationism. :)

  157. They could be right! by ragefan · · Score: 2, Funny

    I think they might be on to something... its quite possible that natural selection is wrong, given that people this stupid exist! Otherwise their ancestors would have been eaten by bears.

    Also, they probably feed their plants with Brawndo: "Its got what plants crave!"

  158. ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I've noticed that many slashdot articles about evolution seem to attract a sizeable number of creationists. Because of this, I've decided to address the serious (i.e. non-trolling) creationists that frequent slashdot in the hope that I can prevent you from making the same easily avoided mistakes that make so many of your brethren sound like ignorant cretins. Here are some common arguments that creationists use, and why I think that you shouldn't use them... unless of course you want to be ridiculed. Note: this is by no means a comprehensive list.

    (1) "Evolution is just a THEORY"

    This is the most common (and the most disappointing) creationist argument I hear on a regular basis. While it's true that evolution is a theory, this statement is made in an attempt to cast doubt on evolution by implying that evolution is akin to a wild guess that scientists came up with after a night of heavy drinking. Newsflash: it's not going to work. Most educated people understand that you're confusing the word "theory" (which means an explanation or model that is capable of predicting future events) with the word "hypothesis" (which means an educated guess). Calling evolution a "theory" isn't an insult. For the millionth time, I will repeat this: gravity is also "just" a theory (for example, google the "General Theory of Relativity"). I might even add that most scientists would consider evolution to be a better-supported theory than gravity, because of the fact that gravity cannot (currently) be quantized, despite decades of attempts. If you want to debate evolution, fine- but don't play these childish word games.

    (2) "But evolution has never been observed!"

    Most creationists, faced with the mind-numbingly obvious fact that viruses and other creatures (like those famous moths) evolve right in front of our eyes, make a distinction between micro-evolution and macro-evolution. Micro-evolution is "proven", they say, because it only represents a change in allele frequency within a species. Macro-evolution, defined as change from one species to another (aka "speciation"), is more of a problem for creationists. They often insist that speciation has never been observed outside of laboratory experiments. This is blatantly false. Many examples of speciation have been observed in the wild- for example check out this large list of peer-reviewed journal articles here and also here.

    The next step that creationists take in response to this rebuttal is to claim that speciation proves nothing- only a change from one kind of organism to another will prove evolution. What's a "kind", you might ask? No one knows. Creationists will give vague examples, such as saying that a dog is a different kind of animal than a whale, but a rigid definition has never (to my knowledge) been offered or universally accepted by the major creationist organizations. It's just a convenient goal post which keeps getting pushed back every time new evidence is found. The fact is, speciation is rather easy to observe in organisms which breed relatively quickly. Observing the creation of, say, a new phylum or order could take many millennia. Unfortunately, human civilization hasn't been around that long. Plus, standard biological nomenclature isn't based on evolutionary criteria, so it isn't clear to me that equating a "kind" with a phylum or order is meaningful in this context.

    (3) "But Intelligent Design is different than Biblical Creationism! It's a purely scientific alternative theory."

    Don't try to pretend that "Intelligent Design" is somehow different than creationism. Especially don't try to pretend that it's a scientific theory. Seriously. No one's buying it. "Intelligent Design" is a disguise- a secular-sounding term thrown over religious creationism to try to smuggle it into a state-funded science class

    1. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      All I have to say is.... very nice post!

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    2. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Grym · · Score: 1

      Excellent post.

      evolution is a theory

      Indeed it is.

      As an aside, it's very heart-warming for me to read your post. I can't help but hope that you keep up the good fight here on slashdot. It's so great to see a nice, young Christian like yourself spreading the Good News of ID. Keep up the good work!!!1111

      =pGrym

    3. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 1
      I think you meant to respond to another post...

      Either that or you've blown a sarcasm gasket.

    4. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by deuist · · Score: 1

      I don't have anything to add. I just wanted to say that your post is probably the most well constructed essay I've ever seen on Slashdot. Have you ever given a public talk with your ideas?

    5. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks. Hope you don't mind me copying this and mailing to a few people who should read it.

    6. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I've not really considered that before, but I'm not really sure I'd want to give a lecture like this in public. From what I've seen, public debates on evolution are usually failures for rationalists. There are several reasons:

      (1) Most scientists are accustomed to honest, civilized debate. Scientific conferences are full of disagreements and arguments, make no mistake about that. But (almost) all the participants are aiming to understand the universe better, to examine their assumptions and use experimental evidence and logic to figure out whether or not they need to change their assumptions or ideas. They might attack a speaker's ideas if they believe that a mistake is being made, but there's nothing very personal at stake. So once proven wrong, they admit it (usually politely if you're lucky). Most creationists, on the other hand, are defending the One True Religion. They already know The Truth, and simply pick and choose arguments from creationist websites to attempt to defend that Truth. This kind of backwards reasoning (arrive at conclusion first, find supporting facts later) is so alien to scientists that they simply can't handle it. I'm not sure I could, for that matter.

      (2) Creationists often make statements like "Evolution can't produce new information in a genome" or "We don't know how old the earth is because carbon dating isn't useful on large timescales and we don't know the initial amounts of isotopes and polonium halos disprove old ages anyway". Answering each one of these statements would require hours of boring, dry lecturing- something that simply isn't going to happen. And the problem is that creationists don't just make one of these statements, they make DOZENS of them. Answering this kind of deluge of mis-information in such a way that it can be intelligible to the average person would take an unbelievably long amount of time. As such, even answering questions from the crowd can be a tricky business. How do you explain isochronology and radioactive dating methods in 2 minutes to a young earth creationist? I can barely explain it to a fellow scientist in less than 15 minutes. Now imagine someone standing up and asking two or three of these questions in rapid fire mode, and ridiculing you for not having a snappy answer. This kind of public failure would not look good.

      (3) Creationists are usually much better at the fine art of crowd manipulation, whether they're participating in a debate or simply asking an "impromptu" question from the audience. I'm finishing up my PhD now, and I've taught some pretty big classes, but never had to worry about anything like this. I'd probably be slaughtered if I tried...

      I'm not completely knocking the idea, it's just that I can easily see it becoming ugly.

    7. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Puff+of+Logic · · Score: 1

      Excellent. As a physicist, perhaps you'd be willing to answer a question I've been wondering about for a while now.

      Physics is probably my weakest area of science but I thoroughly enjoy reading layman-level explanations of some of the strange stuff out there. Naturally, String Theory has been a pretty hot topic of late (indeed a friend of mine rather amusingly proclaims it to be scientific evidence for the principles of Buddhism!) but I cannot help but wonder how it attained the "theory" designator. Isn't it more of a hypothesis or set of hypotheses, especially since neither it nor its predictions seem to be particularly testable?

      Again, I freely acknowledge that my knowledge of physics is pretty weak and therefore a reply of "you moron, it's completely testable!" might be in order. But I thought I'd ask someone qualifed. :) cheers.

      --
      P.P.S. I'm doing Science and I'm still alive.
    8. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      Physics is probably my weakest area of science but I thoroughly enjoy reading layman-level explanations of some of the strange stuff out there. Naturally, String Theory has been a pretty hot topic of late (indeed a friend of mine rather amusingly proclaims it to be scientific evidence for the principles of Buddhism!) but I cannot help but wonder how it attained the "theory" designator. Isn't it more of a hypothesis or set of hypotheses, especially since neither it nor its predictions seem to be particularly testable?

      Well, first of all I'm a geophysicist, so string theory is above my head too. I have some friends working on high energy colliders, and that's about as close as I get to the field of string theory. But I have had several professors argue very strongly that it doesn't deserve the label of "theory". At this point, I'd say that it seems more like mathematics that may or may not have a connection to the real world. Maybe in the future we'll find a way to test string "theory" but for now I agree that it is, at best, a hypothesis.

      The real problem is that these terms, "theory" and "hypothesis" are used interchangeably by almost everyone; even scientists sometimes fall into the trap of saying "I have a theory" when they actually mean "I have a hypothesis". I'd imagine that's what's going on here- it's simply unwieldy to say "string hypothesis", whereas "string theory" has a nice ring to it. Probably the best approach to take here is not to worry too much about semantics like the labels we put on ideas. That was basically the gist of what I was trying to say to creationists in my above post: "debate evolution if you like, but don't waste my time arguing about labels like 'theory' ".

    9. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Uzbek · · Score: 1

      Evolution is NOT a theory. It is scientifically observed process. Darwin's explanation of evolution through natural selection is the theory that best explains already observed process of evolution. New theories will develop to better explain process of evolution, but the process itself exists and well documented. I hope people will get this straight.

    10. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maybe the best answer is to say that it's actually a fact and a theory. It's a fact that objects fall to the earth when we release them, and several theories (Newtonian gravity, Einstein's General Theory of Relativity) have been proposed to fit these facts into a coherent whole. It's a fact that species evolve, and several theories (gradualism, punctuated equilibrium) have been proposed to fit these facts into a coherent whole.

    11. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Puff+of+Logic · · Score: 1

      ...it's simply unwieldy to say "string hypothesis", whereas "string theory" has a nice ring to it. Probably the best approach to take here is not to worry too much about semantics like the labels we put on ideas. That was basically the gist of what I was trying to say to creationists in my above post: "debate evolution if you like, but don't waste my time arguing about labels like 'theory'. Fair enough. However in science I think the difference between hypothesis and theory is not mere semantics, since the term used actually conveys information. The Foo Hypothesis carries a different weighting in my mind than Foo Theory, since the latter presumably has a body of evidence to support it.

      That said, your point is well-taken. Science vs. Religion discussions always seem to devolve into semantics, which doesn't really serve the argument. My only concern with semantics is that I hate to see argument by obfuscation, or arguments predicated on misunderstanding. However, that many people furiously try to use rational arguments to debate the veracity of fundamentally irrational things should probably eclipse any concerns I might have about word usage!
      --
      P.P.S. I'm doing Science and I'm still alive.
    12. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      What's a "kind", you might ask? No one knows.... Plus, standard biological nomenclature isn't based on evolutionary criteria, so it isn't clear to me that equating a "kind" with a phylum or order is meaningful in this context. I agree that the meaning of the word "kind" is rather vague, and I think this is a particularly important point when discussing Noah's Ark. It has been argued that what the Bible describes in Genesis 6 is completely impossible, because there are millions of difference species of animals and there wouldn't have been room for them... but the word "species" and our current scientific understanding of it didn't exist when the Bible was written.

      "Take with you seven* of every kind of clean animal, a male and its mate, and two of every kind of unclean animal, a male and its mate, and also seven of every kind of bird, male and female, to keep their various kinds alive throughout the earth." - Genesis 7:2-3 (NIV)

      * an NIV footnote suggests this might actually mean seven pairs Creationists believe that all animals living today evolved (yes, I used that word) from those Noah brought on the Ark 4,000 years ago. If you consider that wolves and poodles both evolved from a common ancestor (though largely, in the case of dogs, through artificial rather than natural selection, i.e. deliberate breeding) then the number of animals that would have had to be present on the Ark is significantly less than the variety of animals we see today.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    13. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      For the sake of argument, I believe you could place an lower bound on the number of animals on the ark by estimating an upper bound on speciation rates for the species which would have been on the ark (land animals primarily, I would assume). In other words, if all the species alive today came from a very small number of species, the small initial population of each species would have had to speciate at a high rate in order to produce the diversity observed today.

    14. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by FlyingSquidStudios · · Score: 1

      Okay, now explain how they kept the freshwater fish apart from the saltwater fish.

    15. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Grym · · Score: 1

      Most creationists, on the other hand, are defending the One True Religion. They already know The Truth, and simply pick and choose arguments from creationist websites to attempt to defend that Truth. This kind of backwards reasoning (arrive at conclusion first, find supporting facts later) is so alien to scientists that they simply can't handle it. I'm not sure I could, for that matter.

      You're absolutely right. And the troubling thing about it all is that often, even after having their arguments completely blown out of the water, many "young Earth" creationists on the internet will simply abandon debate with knowledgeable individuals altogether and go to another post or forum spouting the same non-sense as if it were undisputed fact. It's very strange.

      My only explanation for this behavior is that these individuals either: (1) avoid, if at all possible, knowledgeable people/sources out of some fear of having their faith shaken (2) only read or hear what they want to out of out of the academics they are arguing with* or (3) are knowingly engaged in some kind of Public Relations campaign whose real goal clearly isn't productive discussion but simply deception of the general populace on the issue of human origin (among other things).

      For me, the last possibility, while admittedly the least likely is, however, the most intriguing. I think it'd be very interesting if someone were to track down and interview some of the more stubborn and out-spoken ID/creationism debaters if only to discover what motivates them and what connections they have to each other.

      -Grym

      * This was the basis, by the way, for my tongue-in-cheek post earlier. I have to say I think I got you. =P

    16. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by jdogalt · · Score: 1

      "
      The problem is that any such Alien Designer would have had to evolve himself, which is impossible according to "Intelligent Design".
      "

      See, when you use (incidentally wrong and baseless) absolutes like this, people like me get to shoot down your argument wholesale by attacking a single sentence.

      I'll grant, that any variant of ID that states that Everything* was created by a creator, is scientifically ludicrous. But take for example what a hypothetically intelligent chimp living in a zoo would come to believe over time. With sufficient intelligence, it could really only conclude that its entire environment was intelligently designed by one or more members of another species. Perhaps even a species that is so closely related to itself, that it could be thought of as a distant relative (perhaps not a father per-se...). Now, would this chimp in one lifetime without access to a vast social information network be able to come to understand the complete process by which scientific evolution surrounded him with nearly perfect cylindrical refined metal bars that restrict his movement?

      All I'm saying is that the idea that the vast majority of what we see around us, is the result of some intelligent design, does not seem so ludicrous to me, even outside my religous faith. I mean, do you find it inconceivable that in the next 200 years, mankind might not genetically engineer the vast majority of our crops, and somewhere along the line annihilate ourselves and our civilization. And then in a few hundred/thousand/million years some of the survivors evolve to our current technological level. In that scenario, would it be wrong to say that their entire environment was intelligently designed? Right down to the nature of the food crops they eat?

      I know about occams razor, and honestly the idea that we are currently the VERY FIRST EVOLUTION OF INTELLIGENCE IN OUR SOLAR SYSTEM to our level of technology, over the last BILLIONS OF YEARS, just seems far less likely to me, than the idea that some ancestors or ancient species (or individual/collective-hivelike-consciousness) didn't signifigantly and radically shape (if not outright create) our environment. (and possibly leave some symbolic history, which no doubt would have suffered horrible degradation over the millenia, much like the traditional children's 'phone game')

      * thats the big E, what I would equate with my definition of the Universe. I.e. by my definition of Universe, there ain't no 'other Universes'. But thats a semantic issue.

    17. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by doxology · · Score: 1

      A lot of people believe that string theory doesn't deserve funding from physics department, saying that it is a subject more appropriate for a philosophy or religious studies department.

      --
      sigfault. core dumped.
    18. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is NOT a theory.

      Evolution is a SCIENTIFIC theory.

    19. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hello. I'm a creationist, and I read Slashdot. My field of expertise is computing, but I also have a graduate degree in philosophy which included "philosophy of science", and I like a good argument. I would like to address point #3 briefly.

      In your first paragraph (of point #3) you point out a strong correlation between belief in intelligent design and certain religious views. You are appealing to the prevailing Slashdot bias against organised religion when you do this: the correlation says absolutely nothing in and of itself as to whether the idea is true or false. C. S. Lewis described that form of argument as "Bulverism": dismiss the argument on the basis that the person raising it has particular motives for doing so. "You just say that because you hold religious view X." I can't argue against this, because it isn't an argument.

      I will point out, however, that Intelligent Design and Creationism are not the exclusive property of theists. Sir Fred Hoyle and the "panspermia" proposal are an example of a prominent scientific atheist and a naturalistic intelligent design theory (limited to chemical evolution in scope). His ideas were not accepted, of course, and I wonder whether his audacity in questioning such sacred cows (and providing quotable material to the infidel creationists) didn't cost him Nobel Prize recognition in the end. Still, he started a meme that may yet bloom and grow: "seeds of life".

      I don't mean to imply that such contrary ideas are common among practicing scientists: they are not. But is that because the ideas are profoundly and obviously wrongheaded, or simply because it's professional suicide for anyone less renowned than Sir Fred Hoyle to confess public doubt in evolution? Science is an old boys' club: break the social taboos and you'll be shunned -- a process otherwise known as peer review. If you think that science is a dry, dispassionate, truth-finding machine (rather than a thoroughly human, political, and perception-driven process) then I can only assume you've never submitted a research paper through a review process. Just about anyone who has (regardless of field, I'm sure) will have had the experience of getting back reviewer comments and thinking, "FFS, did you even read what I wrote?" If you have an argument that seems sympathetic to creationism, you won't get published in a bastion of evolutionary thought no matter how damn good your argument is: it will be dismissed as "creationist rubbish" on the first skim-read.

      Moving on, you spend considerable time talking about "Naturalism". I have a really big problem with science being synonymous with philosophical naturalism, and I can summarise that problem very easily. Assume, for the sake of argument, that some sort of supernatural being did, in fact, create the natural world using a supernatural process (by which I mean that it flagrantly violated known laws of physics, such as mass/energy conservation). Does this not leave the whole process of naturalistic science as one of pursuing falsehoods? The true explanation (a supernatural creator) is ruled out a priori by the method of investigation. Naturalistic science (as it relates to origins) would be the process of finding the most credible falsehood about the origin of things.

      Perhaps you can address that issue for me: if science is necessarily naturalistic, then how do we know that a naturalistic explanation like "big bang + evolution" is true, as opposed to a credible falsehood? Why do scientists such as yourself disparage supernatural proposals as though they were false, when you are yourself not in honest pursuit of truth, but of credible naturalistic explanations?

      The last point you cover is that of falsification. This is a subject dear to my heart in my capacity as a lover of philosophy. Rather than attempt to refute your argument or point out deficiencies in "falsification" itself, however, I think I have a better question. I

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    20. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The next step that creationists take in response to this rebuttal is to claim that speciation proves nothing- only a change from one kind of organism to another will prove evolution. What's a "kind", you might ask? No one knows. Creationists will give vague examples, such as saying that a dog is a different kind of animal than a whale, but a rigid definition has never (to my knowledge) been offered or universally accepted by the major creationist organizations. It's just a convenient goal post which keeps getting pushed back every time new evidence is found. The fact is, speciation is rather easy to observe in organisms which breed relatively quickly. Observing the creation of, say, a new phylum or order could take many millennia. Unfortunately, human civilization hasn't been around that long. Plus, standard biological nomenclature isn't based on evolutionary criteria, so it isn't clear to me that equating a "kind" with a phylum or order is meaningful in this context. I suppose the reason you've never seen a rigid definition of what creationists mean by "kind" is because no one has every really taken the time to find out exactly where all the dividing lines are. About the best short definition I can come up with offhand is that a "kind" consists of all similar species that can successfully mate and produce offspring between themselves. The creationist position is that any type of evolution that can happen will always result in offspring similar to the original breeding pair no matter how many generations of breeding have occurred (ie. inter-breeding different species of reptiles will never produce a bird, no matter how many species of reptiles you use or how often you breed their offspring).
    21. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by MMaestro · · Score: 1
      But take for example what a hypothetically intelligent chimp living in a zoo would come to believe over time. With sufficient intelligence, it could really only conclude that its entire environment was intelligently designed by one or more members of another species.

      Except by that logic, the chimp can only perceive what its creator (or captor) has allowed it to perceive. Thats not very "intelligent" for "intelligent design". Sooner or later, the monkey will grow to the point that it requires more space/food/water and without intervention from the zoo keeper, the monkey will die off.

      You find the same issue when you read up on European medieval theology. The Earth is the center of the universe, oh wait oops its not. God made Man out of His image, oh wait then why do we have a worthless appendix and a tail bone? God made Eve from Adam's rib, oh wait then why don't male humans have one less rib than female humans? Rinse and repeat.

      And Occam's Razor is inappropriate (and outdated) when you're talking about evolution, let alone the chances of evolution on a galactic or universal scale. Human beings have never gone past our moon and only recently are we sending satellites beyond Pluto, and people want to assume that aliens have never evolved anywhere else in the universe? If alien life WAS out in the universe, it would take DECADES to send and receive radio transmissions from them. They could be bombarding us with transmissions containing blueprints for space travel right now but our technology might not be advanced enough to understand it. Hell, they might have sent radio transmissions to us in the past and we simply never picked it up because SETI wasn't established at the time. The list goes on. Occam's Razor? With billions/trillions of planets in the universe, the simplest answer is that sooner or later, somewhere, somehow an alien civilization will evolve into existence simply because there are so many chances of it happening. Same thing with evolution. With billions/trillions of organisms on Earth, sooner or later, somewhere, somehow a new species will evolve into existence and will simply never be noticed for years/decades/centuries.

    22. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by xigxag · · Score: 1

      Except for one thing. Evolution isn't a theory. It's a phenomenon, a historical fact. It is described and explained by one or more theories. Perhaps nitpicky, but I think that part of the problem with the modern attitude toward science is that people mistake the interpretation of a fact for the fact itself. And people can argue until the cows come home exactly how evolution works. What is inarguable is that the creatures returning from pasture are distant relatives of the endlessly bickering humans.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    23. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by ranton · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why do scientists such as yourself disparage supernatural proposals as though they were false, when you are yourself not in honest pursuit of truth, but of credible naturalistic explanations?

      That is pretty much a semantic argument. There really is no difference between the natural and the supernatural. When we describe something as "natural", it is because we can explain it already. When we describe something as "supernatural", it is because we cannot explain it yet. Lightning was once supernatural. As soon as we have a working theory for something, it becomes "naturalistic".

      Science does not ignore "supernatural" occurances. They are routinely dismissed because they are usually found to be simple misconceptions, but the options are always on the table. Any decent scientist will tell you that we know that we dont know everything yet.

      If God was shown to exist, he would be a very natural being. He would just have natural laws that are completely unknown to us, just as electromagnetism was unknown to us 1000 years ago. The reason why God's existance is dismissed is not simply because he is deemed to be supernatural, but because there is no reason to believe that he does exist.

      Not a single scientific experiment that I am aware of has ever pointed to the existance of any god that has ever been worshiped by man. Quite the opposite in fact. An almost infinite amount of natural phenomena that have at one time been attributed to a godlike being have been explained with "natural" laws.

      We basically have two choices:
      1) Almost every god that has ever been worshiped in the history of mankind is false, but the One God worhiped by a few similar religions today is real.
      OR
      2) ALL relgions that provide no tangible and reasonable proof are false.

      I am sure that the Romans thought the same thing that we do today. I am sure that they laughed at the idea of the old babylonian gods actually existing. Just like our descendants a thousand years from now will probably be laughing at our current religious beliefs.

      Science is not being close minded by not listening to religious arguments. Science has listened, but has found nothing worth continued listening. The only reason that it is even a topic of discussion is because of how many people still believe in organized religion. Illiteracy is something that has only recently been almost eliminated in the civilized world. Our civilization's next step of enlightenment is to rid ourselves of religion, but it will take a while. Until then we will still have discussions that confuse the natural and supernatural, and confuse scientific conviction with religious conviction.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    24. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Apparently all freshwater fish have evolved from saltwater fish that were able to survive the Flood, or something, because Noah didn't take fish on the Ark.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    25. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see. Please explain why I feel consciousness. Please explain what happens to that consciousness when I die.

      Science has barely attempted to answer those questions, even though the existence of "free will", "soul", "spirit", "consciousness" or whatever your philosophy calls it, lies at the heart of most theology. So, one million rational scientific arguments on external observable phenomena do not lend more or less credence to science's progress at understanding this experience of every man.

      We can go through time right back to the Big Bang, saying "ok, and what caused the big bang... ok and what caused that...? and where did the laws governing this process come from?" until eventually we must come up with one of the non-scientific arguments "nothing did it" or "God did it". (*) Similarly, we can go through the scientific motions of understanding how we are able to receive, process and respond to stimuli, perhaps eventually control those processes in another or share their memories, but we still feel that we are ourselves, an occurrence whose very existence is unscientific: it is provable to the individual experiencing his own consciousness, because he trusts his senses (an essential ingredient of the scientific method), but not provable by any other.

      (*) Or the cop-out infinite loop scenario, somewhat akin to my presenting 10 PRINT "HELLO UNIVERSE "; 20 GOTO 10 executing on a computer and explaining that there was no programmer, because there's never been a point in time that it hasn't already been executing. N.B. "programmer" here refers to the Deist "create laws, leave universe alone" concept, not Irrelevant Design.

    26. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Remember that the people you're trying to explain the meaning of the word "theory" think that the word "liberal" is an insult.

    27. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      But what about the water? If the Bible was right and the whole planet was flooded 4000 years ago there would've been a LOT more water on the planet at that time. Where did all that water go? We now know that water doesn't simply vanish, it follows a cycle and such amounts of water would have to go somewhere.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    28. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      The issue is that e.g. the chimp in the zoo was taken from a species that developed roughly simultaneously with the species that now shapes its environment whereas ID seeks to act as a theory for where all life came from. If the designer is exempt from the rules that something complex cannot have developed at random, where did the designer come from and why can't everything else have come from the same source? If that source can produce a being capable of high intelligence and creating the universe, why can't it produce something much more simple, e.g. the universe itself? After all, since we haven't seen any intelligent designers spontaneously form in nature or in any experiments such a thing can't be very simple, right? And since we haven't found any way to shape a universe with such precision that would be something of far higher complexity than we are. So why do we have to explain something complex by saying "such complexity can't happen by itself, it was created by something significantly more complex"?

      The thing is that ID is something that should not even be considered until EVERY less complex theory has been disproven since until then we have no reason to assume something is more complex than our model that describes the data perfectly.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    29. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Teilo · · Score: 0, Troll

      I have seen many abortive attempts here at defending creationism, which generally end up adopting the same invalid arguments as do evolutionists, thus posing the question rather than answering it. Thank you for cutting to the heart of the argument. It is here that the debate must be carried out if it is going to be effective.

      As an earlier post here notes, the essential tenet of evolutionism, spontaneous life from nothing, or taking it a step further, spontaneous something from nothing, is also unfalsifiable. This leaves us at an impasse by this standard of judgment. If both ID and naturalism are at their very core unfalsifiable, then one is required to choose one or the other as a premise, a premise that cannot be disproven, for all that follows thereafter. As an internally consistent model which explains the observed universe may be developed from either premise, one is left with a choice which cannot be based upon any objective standard but only upon one's personal aversions.

      --
      Mir tut es leid, Menschen daß Einfältigfehlersuchenbaumfolgendenaffen sind.
    30. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Weedlekin · · Score: 2, Informative

      "I will point out, however, that Intelligent Design and Creationism are not the exclusive property of theists. Sir Fred Hoyle and the "panspermia" proposal are an example of a prominent scientific atheist and a naturalistic intelligent design theory (limited to chemical evolution in scope)."

      Hoyle's panspermia was nothing like you are presenting it. He believed that the "seeds" for for life are a property of the universe, which his steady-state model claimed has always existed, and will continue to do so for eternity. Hoyle's universe was thus not created intelligently or otherwise, because it's always been there, together with the seeds of life, which were also not created -- indeed, one of the driving forces for his theories was to refute the very concepts you claim he was supporting. Note also that rather than being "limited to chemical evolution", Hoyle thoroughly rejected that concept, although he fully accepted Darwinian evolution because, unlike ID / creationists, he understood the fact that life origins and evolution theory are separate fields, and did not therefore attempt to use one as a straw man against the other.

      "His ideas were not accepted, of course"

      As is always the case with science, he had some prominent supporters and some prominent detractors -- Darwin had a much harder job getting his ideas accepted than Hoyle did. Note also that Hoyle didn't invent the concept of panspermia, because it dates back to at least the 5th century BC, and was quite a popular idea during the 18th and 19th centuries.

      "I wonder whether his audacity in questioning such sacred cows (and providing quotable material to the infidel creationists) didn't cost him Nobel Prize recognition in the end."

      If this was actually the case, then how did Francis Crick, a prominent supporter (and possibly co-originator) of directed panspermia, get a Nobel prize?

      "is that because the ideas are profoundly and obviously wrongheaded, or simply because it's professional suicide for anyone less renowned than Sir Fred Hoyle to confess public doubt in evolution?"

      Fred Hoyle never expressed any doubts whatsoever about evolution - indeed, he proposed the idea that viruses and other organic matter falling on to the Earth and causing new epidemics among species (which either adapt and survive or die out) might act as one of its fundamental driving mechanisms.

      I didn't bother reading the rest of your post, because it's obvious that you are both a liar and a fool. Everybody on Slashdot is by definition on the Internet, and can therefore use Google etc. to check up on Hoyle's ideas for themselves, and then know that you are being completely disingenuous. This type of tripe might work when preaching to the converted, but only an utter fool would post it on a forum where the average IQ is above that of a cardboard box, and people can quickly and easy see for themselves that your argument is built on a foundation of obvious lies.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    31. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As an earlier post here notes, the essential tenet of evolutionism, spontaneous life from nothing, or taking it a step further, spontaneous something from nothing, is also unfalsifiable."

      Odd that the "essential tenet" of "evolutionism" (whatever that is) has absolutely nothing to do with evolution. God poofed the first critter into existence? Okey-dokey, now it's acting under natural selection, mutation, genetic drift, etc. Even stranger is the notion that evolution requires "spontaneous something from nothing" which I guess is some bizarro stab at the Big Bang, but also has absolutely nothing to do with evolution. If you're going to try and criticize something, you ought to first know something about it. You obviously don't.

    32. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by GTMoogle · · Score: 1

      One short answer is that your sense of self is a delusion. Your brain filters your senses, interprets them, culls useless information, and then, maybe, lets your 'consciousness' know something important happened.

      One of the best ways to understand a system is to see what happens when it breaks. A famous example: Guy with a brain injury required a surgery that physically cut the two halves of his brain. He's sitting in a chair, and a researcher shows him a sign that tells him to stand up. The researcher asks him why he just stood up, and he answers "I'm thirsty, I was going to go get a drink." - The part of the guy's brain that understands speech didn't have the reason, which was in the part that understands writing. So it made something up. That's one of the key features of the human mind: it's astoundingly great at rationalization. Just as you question your senses, the man questioned his motive and came to an answer that was reasonable and validated his senses, and just happened in his case to be completely wrong.

      (I'm probably getting the specifics of the experiment wrong, but the lesson is intact)

      I say that that's 'one' answer, because it's a really vague question, and all kinds of approaches have been taken to answer it. There are a lot of different answers.

      As to what happens to your consciousness when you die? Science has not found any valid evidence that consciousness extends beyond the confines of the nervous system. Sorry.

    33. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Hoyle's universe was thus not created intelligently or otherwise, because it's always been there, together with the seeds of life, which were also not created...

      He may have further refined his theories in subsequent years, but his book "The Intelligent Universe" can easily leave you with the idea that life on earth was the result of advanced, intelligent beings elsewhere in the galaxy deliberately sending microbes into space to "seed" other planets. Whether or not these "seeds" were engineered specifically for the job, intelligence was involved.

      Note also that rather than being "limited to chemical evolution", Hoyle thoroughly rejected that concept...

      You seem to have misunderstood me. My point was that his rejection of evolution was limited in scope to chemical evolution. That is to say, as you also say, he thoroughly rejected chemical evolution. His "seeds of life" were a substitute for it, and they were at least partly artificial in nature. It's a naturalistic theory, but it involves intelligence.

      Darwin had a much harder job getting his ideas accepted than Hoyle did.

      How do you figure? Last time I heard, origins was a choice of DNA world, RNA world, protein world, and maybe clay world. Seeds from space and supernatural intervention weren't on the menu.

      Hoyle didn't invent the concept of panspermia...

      I never claimed he did. Darwin didn't invent the idea of evolution, either. What's your point?

      If this was actually the case, then how did Francis Crick, a prominent supporter (and possibly co-originator) of directed panspermia, get a Nobel prize?

      Because Crick didn't wasn't as vocal and thus wasn't as widely quoted by creationists wishing to show that prominent scientists doubted the possibility of chemical evolution? Hoyle's the one who made the quip about a tornado in a junkyard, and the one about blind men simultaneously solving Rubik's cubes by accident. Hoyle really rips into the theory of chemical evolution, which is really not going to sit well with the significant majority who believe in it. If Crick was ever so quotably outspoken about chemical evolution, it slipped under my radar.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    34. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by wigle · · Score: 1

      Science is an old boys' club: break the social taboos and you'll be shunned -- a process otherwise known as peer review. If you think that science is a dry, dispassionate, truth-finding machine (rather than a thoroughly human, political, and perception-driven process) then I can only assume you've never submitted a research paper through a review process. Science is a body of knowledge and a process to learn new theories or to modify existing ones. The most widely accepted theories usually offer the most in terms of explanation and prediction. Simply because there is a subjective element to publishing in groundbreaking science doesn't mean scientists are accepting these theories, especially when they offer nothing new to explain or predict.

      Assume, for the sake of argument, that some sort of supernatural being did, in fact, create the natural world using a supernatural process (by which I mean that it flagrantly violated known laws of physics, such as mass/energy conservation). Does this not leave the whole process of naturalistic science as one of pursuing falsehoods? The true explanation (a supernatural creator) is ruled out a priori by the method of investigation. The method of investigation of science (and all human knowledge generally) relies on meaningful concepts and observable phenomena. This starting point is at least verified by our experience. What justification is there to presuppose anything beyond things observable and meaningful concepts?

      Given the importance of falsification to scientific theory, would you not agree that "anti-evolutionists" provide a vital service to science, even if they have no alternative theory? Every field needs its sceptics, devil's advocates, and foils. Why aren't we encouraging attempts to find weaknesses in the theory of evolution? Anti-evolutionists provide the same service to biology as astrologers provide to astronomy. Horoscopes, creationism, and intelligent design are not even at the theory stage yet--they offer nothing explanatorily or predictively to science. In order for an alternative theory to even be considered for science, it should fulfill at least some of the accepted demarcation criteria if we are to have any confidence about its truth or empirical adequacy.
      --
      ::wigle::
    35. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by GTMoogle · · Score: 1

      "inarguable"

      I don't think that word means what you think it means. :)

    36. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by CuteAlien · · Score: 1

      Actually a lot of scientists attempt to answer the questions of consciousness. Unlike Religions which don't seem to care about any useful explanation (except it's there, or it's made by some powerful being). So far there is no agreement on the correct thesis, but is it that surprising to you to hear that there are still open questions in science? And while the final answer to that problem might not be there, a lot of progress is made every year on which other scientists working on that problem can build upon. Religions on the other hand did not seem to advance that much in the last few hundred years.

      And like any good creationist you've obviously decided to move to another, completely unrelated topic in your next paragraph. And you also completely missed the point of science there. There is a big difference going from chaos/nothing/mathspace to slightly higher complexity compared to going from some big entity to anything less complex. Science tries to _explain_ the steps. Scientists did not just open a dictionary at random and happened by accident to find the words big bang and use those to explain a beginning which is completely unrelated to any other findings. The trick is not to find any explanation but to find a thesis which does fit in with all the other findings like p.E. cosmological radiation.

    37. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by GTMoogle · · Score: 1

      That's actually part of the working definition of what a species is. It's hard to define because 'species' is an artificial concept. Ability to interbreed only exhibits that, between assortments of a given set of animals, the offspring doesn't have a crippling incompatibility. The point being made was that 'kinds' is even more artificial. There are many similar species that can't interbreed. The 'kinds' argument is being made by people who are familiar with farm animals that have been bred for various traits - cows, horses, dogs, cats, pigs. It's like trying to take a shrub and decide which of the branches are different organisms by cutting any that are thicker than an inch - completely arbitrary to the shrub and based only on individual taste.

      Some specific examples - horses and donkeys can create infertile mules. Ligers and tigons are differentiated by different male/female pairings of lions and tigers, and are very different themselves - Ligers tend to be larger than their parents, the largest known being 1200 lbs, while tigons are distinctly smaller, usually 350 lbs. In the mid-west US there are populations of chipmunks that live in adjacent groups. We'll call them types A, B, C, D, etc. (there are several, but I don't remember how many were identified.) A can breed with B, but not C. B can breed with C and A, but not D. C with B and D, not A.

      It's hard enough to classify whether each of those chipmunks should be a species, but are we going to say squirrels and chipmunks are the same 'kind' of animal? Prairie dogs? Capybaras? Beavers? Mice? Reality does not bend to our classifications.

    38. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Wow, it's hard to have an argument when words have so many meanings. The OP was in favour of something called "naturalism", and now you're telling me that there's no real distinction between "natural" and "supernatural". If that's true, then what's this "naturalism" the OP was talking about? Surely it must exist in contrast to something that's not natural, or the word would be utterly pointless, right?

      Perhaps we can ditch "supernatural", however, because it is a kind of philosophical concept which probably isn't essential to the argument at hand. In contrast to "natural", we can have "artificial". The distinction here is not the underlying substance: natural and artificial substances are both made from matter, right? The question is one of how the substance came to have its current form. You can have natural ingredients, produced by natural processes, or artificial ingredients, synthesised in a manufacturing process. The different processes obey the same laws of physics, but there's still a distinction. There's even a distinction between "natural" and "nature identical": the two are exactly the same chemical substance, but the former is extracted from some natural product, and the latter is synthesised. If I gave a chemist some benzoic acid and asked, "can you tell me whether this is natural or nature identical?" they'd hand it back to me without so much as a litmus test and say, "you can't tell the difference between natural and nature identical: that's what the 'identical' part means." They don't have identical histories, but chemistry can't recover that information.

      The problem we face here is similar, but worse. The difference between "natural" and "nature identical" is like the difference between "evolution" and "theistic evolution". There's no way to tell those two apart, scientifically speaking: the difference is purely metaphysical. The difference between "creation" and "evolution" is like the difference between "artificial" and "natural". You might be able to pick these apart, if the "artificial" isn't something that occurs in nature. Unfortunately, our question here is whether the whole of nature itself is natural, so that technique fails unless we already know the answer. The paradigm of "naturalism" addresses this issue by assuming that nature is natural, and trying to find the most credible explanation that violates the fewest number of known scientific principles -- or at least pushes them as far back into the Big Bang as possible, where a lot of laws are expected to break down anyhow.

      And so I rephrase my original question without reference to the "supernatural" (whatever it is, if anything). If science is necessarily naturalistic, then how do we know that a naturalistic explanation like "big bang + evolution" is true, as opposed to a credible falsehood? Creationism is, under this scheme, excluded from consideration a priori because it involves a synthetic universe. But if the universe is synthetic, then naturalism is just a bad assumption. We could try to come up with a test to determine whether the universe is natural or not, but we would have to drop the whole "naturalism" paradigm in so doing because naturalism presupposes the answer! So either science is not necessarily naturalistic, or science can not tell the difference between a natural universe and an artificial one.

      Seems like a dilemma to me.

      PS: Sorry I didn't address your other points about religions, but I really want an answer on this whole "science is necessarily naturalistic" concept.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    39. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      I was going to write a response to the whole of your post, but darnit there's so much wrong with it that I don't have the time. Instead, I'll cut at what I think is the very core of the problem: "...if science is necessarily naturalistic, then how do we know that a naturalistic explanation like "big bang + evolution" is true, as opposed to a credible falsehood? Why do scientists such as yourself disparage supernatural proposals as though they were false, when you are yourself not in honest pursuit of truth, but of credible naturalistic explanations?" Science does not deal in Truth. Religions and philosophies do, or more cynically perhaps just claim to. Science deals with evidence and reasonable interpretation of the evidence. Absolutely everything in science could be to use your term a "credible falsehood." That includes evolution, the Big Bang, germ theory, gravity, and when you get right down to it the theory that the sky is blue. Anybody who's ever had an intro to philosophy course can come up with objections to the sky being blue. Could be we're brains floating in jars hooked up to an artificial reality under a sky that's neon orange. Could be space aliens doing some odd experiment, just waiting to turn off their machines that hide the sky's greenness to see what effect that has on earthlings, or could be a god playing a practical joke. They're all the same, though: useless. It is reasonable to think that the sky is blue. My eyes tell me that it's blue, and have told me the same thing every day that I can remember. I can ask other people, and except for the random smartass (like me when I'm in that mood) I'll get the same answer. I don't even have to use my eyes--I can rely on spectrometers to measure wavelengths for me, I can check out the chemical composition of the sky, and I can read all the descriptions in history about the sky's blueness. Could that all be a "credible falsehood?" Yep. Does it matter? Nope. At least not until there's new data of some form that comes along making our "credible falsehood" suddenly less credible.

      I'm a biochemist. I've extensively studied an enzyme, solved a pair of crystal structures of it with different compounds bound to its active site, done mutagenesis and kinetics to pin down the excruciatingly small details of the reaction mechanism. I know that compound A binds to the enzyme at site A, with interactions A1, A2, A3... in the order of their importance, followed by compound B with its site and interactions. I know which amino acid pops a proton off which substrate carbon, followed by what bond rotations occur, and blah blah etc. blah to sum up five years of my own work. Now suppose that all that's a credible falsehood and the real explanation is actually supernatural: bond pixies. Bond pixies might be really real, even in the real world, or not, but it just doesn't matter to science. How do I study bond pixies, study what they're doing, when they're doing it, why they're doing it, and really to begin with how do I even know that it's really bond pixies and not Elmer the Ghost? How do I do it so that I can publish my Bond Pixie Theory in the Journal of Molecular Biology and reasonably and with evidence differentiate it from standard enzymology and Elmer the Ghostism? The supernatural as a scientific explanation is disparaged by scientists because it adds nothing, explains nothing, predicts nothing, is unfalsifiable, and thus not useful in the slightest.

    40. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Evilest+Doer · · Score: 1

      In your first paragraph (of point #3) you point out a strong correlation between belief in intelligent design and certain religious views. You are appealing to the prevailing Slashdot bias against organised religion when you do this: the correlation says absolutely nothing in and of itself as to whether the idea is true or false. C. S. Lewis described that form of argument as "Bulverism": dismiss the argument on the basis that the person raising it has particular motives for doing so. "You just say that because you hold religious view X." I can't argue against this, because it isn't an argument.
      That is not at all what he was doing, and if you had bothered to carefully read what he wrote it would be apparent. He was demonstrating that Intelligent Design is simply repackaged Young Earth Creationism by showing that only certain varieties of Christianity tend to support Intelligent Design. It would be like showing that, despite a political parties outward statements, they are still generally racists since many of the actual members of the party belong to white supremecist organizations.


      Also, I always think it is funny when you fundies bring up C.S. Lewis. He readily accepted biological evolution, was adamantly against forming a "Christian" political party (partly since it would imply that everyone else, even other Christians, were not "real" Christians), and was against using the power of the State to enforce religious dogma (like rules on divorce). If C.S. Lewis lived today, you fundies would want him roasted alive. But now that he is dead, you can selectively quote him to your hearts' content.

      --
      I feel like death on a soda cracker.
    41. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by turnipsatemybaby · · Score: 1

      As stated, "spontaneous life from nothing" is completely inaccurate and useless. So yes, it IS unfalsifiable because we are unable to go back in time and determine if monkeys indeed magically fly out of god's primordial buttocks.

      Now, if you give a REAL statement such as, "Did the conditions of early earth allow for amino acids to spontaneously form?" Or "Is it possible for amino acids to bump into each other and form proteins", etc, etc. Then you have statements that can be analyzed and experimented against.

      Creationists love to think evolution is all about life popping into existence out of thin air. Or how specific organs automagically just popped out of an easy-bake oven and fell into place. I'm sorry, but that is NOT how evolution works, and that is not how science works. That is how a supernatural non-scientific deity works.

      People who treat science as if it were just another religion have absolutely no idea of what science is really about. And I would opine that, they prefer it that way, otherwise they would themselves be doing their own research to improve their understanding.

    42. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Science does not deal in Truth.

      I'm aware of that. However, you must understand that I'm also bombarded by the assertion that "evolution is a Fact". As a good befuddled philosopher, I'm not sure what "Truth" or "Fact" really are, other than that people will berate you for denying either of them. You could assist me by denying that evolution deals with Fact, and I will feel much more relaxed about it. I'll settle for "evolution (in the sense of molecules-to-man) is a theory based on an assumption of naturalism". If you can assent to that, we have no disagreement about the nature of evolution itself.

      As for whether the sky is blue, I'm happy to call that an observation. You're right that we could be deluded by any number of things, but hey, I'm satisfied with "a blue sky appears to me", whether or not there is a sky at all. Evolution, particularly in the sense of historical evolution (molecules to man) is not something I observe. I'm told it's a blindingly obvious inference given things we can observe, especially the fossil things, but ah -- my troubling doubts.

      As to explaining your "enzymes" and their behaviour, you are merely using the accepted terminology of your field. That paradigm includes "amino acids" and "protons" and other such mythical elements. Whether you believe in those or "bond pixies" doesn't really matter much if the predictions and whatnot come out the same. Whether you say, "an amino acid pops a proton off a substrate carbon," or, "a bond pixie smacks a frobnockle off a slithy tove," matters only in that the former language is that which your peers speak. If, on the other hand, you felt that you had a better model for enzyme behaviour which involved differently behaved basic entities and operations, you'd best present those ideas using new words. Good luck with that: paradigm shifting is backbreaking work.

      Neither the sky thing nor the jargon thing really capture my trouble with evolution as a theory. I'm not sure I can make my point any clearer at 4am.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    43. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by xigxag · · Score: 1

      I suppose nothing's really "inarguable," so point taken. :)

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    44. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      "Fear paralyzes the brain. Progress is born of courage, Fear believes -- courage doubts. Fear falls upon the earth and prays -- courage stands erect and thinks. Fear retreats -- courage advances. Fear is barbarism -- courage is civilization. Fear believes in witchcraft, in devils and in ghosts. Fear is religion courage is science."

      Ingersoll.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    45. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Gorath99 · · Score: 1

      If I may intrude myself upon this discussion: I do not believe that science is necessarily naturalistic. Physics, chemistry and biology, however, are natural sciences, while your concern belongs to the field of philosophy (where it has been studied at least since Descartes), which is not a natural science.

      The disagreement in this discussion stems from the fact that an issue from one field of science is drawn into a field of science that does not concern itself with such issues. Naturally, this proves unhelpful for both sides of the argument.

    46. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Teilo · · Score: 1

      And you obviously do not listen, because your "God poofed the first critter into existence?" argument has nothing to do with what I said. Nor anywhere did I deny natural selection, mutation, genetic drift, etc. I believe in all of these things. How easy it is to pigeonhole your intellectual adversaries, and thus evade an answer. Would you agree with this statement? "He who disagrees with me must by definition be an ignoramus." Nevertheless that is what you have done. I do not believe you are an ignoramus, but you find it much easier to treat me so. After all, why argue with ignorant people who do not know what they are talking about?

      I do not believe that evolution is a religion. It is an internally consistent scientific theory. Evolutionism is an ideology, a belief in the theory of evolution.

      Yes, I said life from nothing, because that is precisely what evolution demands, life from nothing. When speaking of the origin of life, one cannot, as you seem wont to do, divorce it from the question of the origin of the universe itself. Even evolution relies upon a universe which has pre-existing and consistent laws. These laws either spontaneously arose from nothing in the big bang, or they were created from nothing. If you are dealing with the question of evolution as opposed to creation as an explanation for life as we know it, then you cannot separate these two subjects.

      Remarkable that I would be called a troll. On what basis? This shows how bigotted so much of Slashdot is when it comes to a serious debate on this topic. Don't agree with your opponent? Then Mod down! I NEVER mod down a person simply because I do not agree with him.

      --
      Mir tut es leid, Menschen daß Einfältigfehlersuchenbaumfolgendenaffen sind.
    47. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Teilo · · Score: 1

      You, like the above poster, have read my argument, and assumed you know everything I think about evolution. Now, if you wish to debate ME, then do not form an argument in such a manner as: "Creations love to . . ." and therefore I must also. Foolish of you, for I actually read what evolutionists write, and know their arguments. Don't believe me? Then I invite you to take it offline with me and find out. My email is mwdiers [-at-] gmail dot com.

      Now, I have said nothing to insult the intelligence of evolutionists. Yet you, as do so many others who are unable to hold a dispassionate debate on this subject, attempt to blaspheme my religion. Like it or not, that is ad hominem.

      I said life from nothing to cut through the question of the mechanics of evolution, and get down to the brass tacks. If you had read the GP, you would know this. Ultimately, one arrives at the question of naturalism vs. ID, a question upon which evolution relies as its essential premise. If the answer to that either-or debate is naturalism, then evolution must, by necessity, be valid and true. If, on the other hand, naturalism is false, then a key supporting pillar of evolution has been shaken, and the theory, as a theory, is no longer a requirement, but merely a possibility. It would then have to be held to a higher standard of proof, because by necessity, it would have to subject itself not only to the natural laws as we know them, but also the supernatural laws which we do not yet know.

      So, since you cannot separate evolution from naturalism, I ask you, and hope you will answer, is naturalism falsifiable?

      Please read my response to the other Slashdotter who responded to me. It answers you as well, since you both make the same arguments.

      --
      Mir tut es leid, Menschen daß Einfältigfehlersuchenbaumfolgendenaffen sind.
    48. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by SamSim · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, to oppose creationism, you must fight on their terms - with a rapid-fire listing of faults and shortcomings in creationism?

    49. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by DerangedAlchemist · · Score: 1

      Creationism is not science because it does not predict anything. Evolution theory has successfully predicted an incredible number of facts (and is falsifiable because incorrect predictions point to flaws in the theory). If you asked scientists whether evolution was THE most important and effective theory in science, many would agree that it is. Evolution predicted the existence of genetics, emergence of antibiotic and pesticide resistance (and successful methods of preventing the resistance from emerging), the existence and locations of transition fossils, to name a few relevant ones. The idea that peer review blocks outside ideas is false. If this were true, quantum mechanics would not exist as a scientific theory, it was hated and not believed but accepted after it repeated made correct predictions of experiment. Wave/particle duality was an absurd idea by a patent clerk (Einstein), but the arguments held. You do have to be more convincing in science when you are stating that everyone else is wrong, but it can be done. The main ideal of science is skepticism, not faith. Supernatural theories are ignored generally because they predict nothing and, therefore, are scientifically useless. There is no way to make predictions without knowing the intent and abilities of the designers. You could simply say God makes objects fall down to explain gravity, but this doesn't advance knowledge in any useful way. Most importantly, even if the world is only 6000 years old and creations are right about everything, evolution should still be taught as an important scientific theory. Even if its 'wrong' in a strict sense, the natural world exists in a state as if evolution occurred. The highly conserved amino acids in a protein sequence (ones unchanged from different species) are critical to function. If the male of a species has very large testicles, the species is promiscuous. Genetic algorithms have even found use in the distant field of computer science. If creationists were actually raising valid points or providing insight, the scientific community would not be acting this way. Creationist arguments are very well refuted and completely unconvincing to the informed scientific community. Scientists are dismissive of the claims, but after someones cried 'wolf' a few hundred times, you tend to ignore them. The same as people claiming free energy inventions. Creationists have been effective in persuading the uniformed public, however.

    50. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When speaking of the origin of life, one cannot, as you seem wont to do, divorce it from the question of the origin of the universe itself.


      Which, of course, is true for everything and anything, real or imagined, that might pop into your head. Yet with evolution, as with the mundane facts of everyday life, it is possible and necessary to limit the scope of your questions if you ever expect to arrive at an answer.

      Oh, and on the question of so-called Evolutionism as a belief system: deference to experts by laymen does not imply unquestioning belief; rather, it is simply a byproduct of a civilization that has advanced beyond the point where one person can know all that is known. Thus, trust is a glue that holds society together. Certainly, trust can be abused; but if we're going to give it up, we might as well move back into the trees.

    51. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      "You could assist me by denying that evolution deals with Fact, and I will feel much more relaxed about it. I'll settle for "evolution (in the sense of molecules-to-man) is a theory based on an assumption of naturalism". If you can assent to that, we have no disagreement about the nature of evolution itself."

      If you require that facts not have the "assumption of naturalism," then fine, don't call evolution a fact. However logical consistency demands that you no longer consider "the sky is blue" to be a fact for the exact same reason. Really none of our interactions with the entire, everyday world can be considered factual without methodological naturalism. After all, a supernatural entity could be tricking us in ways that we could not possibly even imagine. Maybe this morning I ate my Cheerios with a fork because Loki tricked me into thinking it was a spoon. But such speculation I'll cheerfully leave to the sophists and postmodernists. Also, we must be very careful with our terms. Science is not possible without methodological naturalism, for the reasons in my previous post as well as the above. Philosophical naturalism on the other hand is irrelevant to science as the supernatural can't be studied using science. For somebody who says they've got a graduate degree in philosophy, your posts read messily on this distinction. Also I urge you to better inform yourself on what evolution actually says. "Molecules to man" is a phrase that instantly tells me that you've read little about evolution from pro-science sources. I recommend Berkeley's evolution website and talk.origins as good starting off places, wikipedia's got a decent page as well.

      "As to explaining your "enzymes" and their behaviour, you are merely using the accepted terminology of your field. That paradigm includes "amino acids" and "protons" and other such mythical elements. Whether you believe in those or "bond pixies" doesn't really matter much if the predictions and whatnot come out the same. Whether you say, "an amino acid pops a proton off a substrate carbon," or, "a bond pixie smacks a frobnockle off a slithy tove," matters only in that the former language is that which your peers speak. If, on the other hand, you felt that you had a better model for enzyme behaviour which involved differently behaved basic entities and operations, you'd best present those ideas using new words. Good luck with that: paradigm shifting is backbreaking work."

      Yes if I replaced "abstract a proton from the terminal methyl group" it wouldn't be any different than "a bond pixie smacks a frobnockle off a slithy tove" provided "The Famous Brett Wat speak" could be translated into acceptable terms. You've missed the argument completely. The argument is that just in my little field a whole host of observations using a great many different techniques done by a great many different individuals over the course of many decades have been done. It all builds on itself, it all interrelates, and major contradictions are not seen. The explanatory and predictive power is enormous. Along comes somebody who wants to know why supernatural Bond Pixies haven't been considered. Yet who and what Bond Pixies are, and how/when/why they make an enzyme work, how this is different from the established view, and what exactly are the predictive and explanatory powers of this concept are not defined, nor is any observed evidence presented. Until those terms are defined, and somebody comes up with an objective way to detect and measure Bond Pixies and how they make an enzyme function, they are not a useful concept. Same goes for evolution, cosmology, dermatology, or any other field of scientific inquiry and any other undefined supernatural entity acting in any undefined way.

      As you say paradigm shifting is hard work. But instead doing any work at all, creationists come in claiming without evidence

    52. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Creationism is not science because it does not predict anything.

      So if someone could come up with a specific account of creation which made specific predictions, that would qualify as science? Does Message Theory qualify?

      Evolution predicted the existence of genetics...

      In what sense of "predict?" Darwin worked within the existing model of pangenesis. Mendel's discoveries and the emergence of modern genetics meant that it was necessary to revise Darwinian evolution into Neo-Darwinian evolution, in which traits were generated through mutation rather than acquired by effort (such as stretching the neck). So not only did Darwinian evolution not predict genetics, it had to be modified to be compatible with it. Where's the predictive element in that?

      On the broader subject of "evolution predicts", I did a little search because I've rarely seen anyone praise evolution for its predictive ability (as opposed to its explanatory power). In doing so, I found a critique of the matter in a blog which I think is worth reading. The most directly relevant entry is here, but read the prior and latter entries if you have the time, since they contribute to the overall argument.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    53. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In your first paragraph (of point #3) you point out a strong correlation between belief in intelligent design and certain religious views. You are appealing to the prevailing Slashdot bias against organised religion when you do this: the correlation says absolutely nothing in and of itself as to whether the idea is true or false. C. S. Lewis described that form of argument as "Bulverism": dismiss the argument on the basis that the person raising it has particular motives for doing so. "You just say that because you hold religious view X." I can't argue against this, because it isn't an argument.

      Note that I wasn't attempting to use this correlation to argue that intelligent design is false. I was arguing that intelligent design is a religious idea, not a scientific idea. I believe that the fact that evolution is not well correlated with religion, whereas intelligent design IS well correlated with religion, is evidence that intelligent design is related to religion in some manner. Of course, as I point out at the end of that paragraph, there are ways to argue around this point so I don't consider it particularly strong evidence.

      I will point out, however, that Intelligent Design and Creationism are not the exclusive property of theists. Sir Fred Hoyle and the "panspermia" proposal are an example of a prominent scientific atheist and a naturalistic intelligent design theory (limited to chemical evolution in scope). His ideas were not accepted, of course, and I wonder whether his audacity in questioning such sacred cows (and providing quotable material to the infidel creationists) didn't cost him Nobel Prize recognition in the end. Still, he started a meme that may yet bloom and grow: "seeds of life".

      That's interesting. I didn't know that Fred Hoyle identified as an atheist. I wonder if he continued to self-identify as an atheist after espousing these ideas...

      I'm not sure that panspermia is at odds with evolution. As far as I understand the idea, panspermia simply expands the "biosphere" from planet Earth to the whole galaxy or even beyond. Natural selection still acts, species still evolve to fill available ecological niches, etc. If true, it completely changes the answer to the question of the origin of life on earth (ordinarily called abiogenesis, but that term doesn't seem appropriate in this context). Depending on the rate at which microbes survive re-entry into earth's atmosphere, it might also contribute somewhat to genetic diversity on geological timescales. But it seems compatible with evolution unless I'm misunderstanding something.

      As far as his often-quoted "tornado assembling a 747 from a junkyard" remarks, I don't think I'm qualified to deal with this issue in detail because I'm not a molecular biologist. I do have two things to say, though. First, he seems to be arguing that abiogenesis (rather than evolution) is statistically unlikely. From what I can tell he's not arguing that natural selection is incapable of producing the diversity we see around us, provided we assume the existence of just one living cell. He's simply arguing against abiogenesis by saying that the first cell is so improbable that it can't have formed by chance.

      Secondly, abiogenesis is arguably the most mysterious question in biology because of the fact that it happened so long ago and left no trace of how it happened. It will probably remain mysterious until we find other biospheres (crossing my fingers for Mars, Europa and Titan) or find a way to successfully simulate abiogenesis in the lab. I haven't read his explanation of how he arrived at his claim that "the cell has one chance in 10^(40,000) of forming". And, again, I'm way out of my depth here, but I'd like to go out on a limb and suggest a possible flaw in his analysis. As far as I can tell, he seems to be examining the simplest cell he can find, and calculating the probability of

    54. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      If you require that facts not have the "assumption of naturalism," then fine, don't call evolution a fact. However logical consistency demands that you no longer consider "the sky is blue" to be a fact for the exact same reason. Really none of our interactions with the entire, everyday world can be considered factual without methodological naturalism.

      No, I think you're combining two completely separate issues here. One is the question of whether we can rely on our senses. I'm willing to handwave that whole question away with an "I don't care, let's just proceed as though our senses are reliable unless we come across some contradictions in them." The other is an assumption of naturalism brought into theories which attempt to explain the evidence we have accrued through the senses we are assuming to be reliable. I hope you can see the distinction between a piece of evidence and a theory used to explain that evidence and put it in a broader context.

      The theory of gravity is one such theory. It is a nice theory in that it is just a mathematical model of behaviour. You don't have to start with "let's assume that the movements of celestial bodies are not influenced by supernatural forces" -- all you have to do is observe the actual movements and come up with a mathematical model that matches it. There's no a priori guarantee that such a model exists, but if the motions are sufficiently regular and predictable, it's a pretty strong hint that it can be described mathematically somehow. When you find an appropriate model (be it Newton's or Einstein's or whatever), you still haven't explained why the universe behaves that way -- maybe God gave a bunch of planet-moving angels precise instructions as to how to move heavenly bodies. Such metaphysical matters can be left to the philosophers anyhow: a mathematical model of gravity is palpably useful.

      With origins, on the other hand, it seems that you want to start with the assumption, "let's assume that life is a product of natural processes, not a product of supernatural intervention". Note that we do not need this assumption for gravity, or electricity, or chemistry, or any of that practical, useful, technological stuff. Actually, it's worse than that: there's a very strong assumption of "uniformity" in these historical sciences too. So not only must I assume that there was no God involved, I must also assume that the past is like the present. Well, that rule is a little less hard and fast: catastrophic theories of dinosaur extinction seem to get due consideration, but it's a hard and fast rule when it comes to interpreting dating methods.

      My problem with these assumptions is that they rule out too many possibilities. If I'm interested in checking out various creation myths for possible accuracy, this whole "uniformitarian naturalism" thing is going to be just plain incompatible with many of them. That doesn't discredit the myths themselves, because the incompatibility is the result of assumptions. This is the way I see it, and yet evolutionists tell me that I can't throw out those assumptions without abandoning good sense and landing in the realm of radical scepticism where we might all be brains in vats or subject to the trickery of capricious Cartesian demons.

      As far as I'm concerned, this is all fairly clear: if science must assume those things about naturalism and uniformity, then science can't tell me whether those things are true. An argument can only be as good as its assumptions, and likewise evolution can only be as true as the assumptions on which it rests. If the assumptions turn out to be false, then the theory is unsound.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    55. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by DerangedAlchemist · · Score: 1

      in which traits were generated through mutation rather than acquired by effort (such as stretching the neck). You are thinking of Lamarkismhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamarckism, an alternate theory to natural selection that is inconsistent with Mendelian genetics. Natural selection is consistent with Mendelian genetics.

      The explanatory power of evolution is one of its greatest strengths and often mentioned. However, I was pointing out that evolution theory makes important and accurate predictions also. That is a very important difference between evolution and creationism.

      For example, evolution predicts the emergence of antibiotic resistance by selection processes when antibiotics are used and discontinued before the infection is cured. Evolution explains this process, but also predicts that the same behavior will emerge in other bacteria, using other drugs and even in similar processes like insects acquiring pesticide resistance. A creationist explanation might be that God punishes people for breaking their word to the pharmacist and predict that prayer will save them or any other number of theories depending on the designer?

      Of course the theory of evolution has changed. Science is not a religion, it is supposed to change when better evidence of the truth emerges. But why the problem with evolution in the first place? Do you really believe that that the entire fields of geology, paleontology, genetics, zoology, anthropology and history are in some world wide, cross culture conspiracy to promote evolution? Why would all these people almost unanimously pervert their entire philosophy to pursue knowledge and truth? There are many religious members of the scientific community, why would they go along with this?

      People with a startling similarity to creationists did think the bible proved the sun went around the earth and imprisoned Galileo for writing a book that suggested that facts indicated otherwise. They took this very seriously. Religion did not collapse. Science was not promoting the theory to disprove religion.

      If creationism wants to be a philosophy, that is fine and may even be valuble. If creationism or intelligent design want to be a science, it must stand up to the same standards as evolution has. According to standards developed specifically to promote truth and understanding at the expense of established belief, evolution is a well established and very, very well supported theory, while the others are minor fringe theories. If the entire system and standards of science are false, you can develop another one but you must establish credibility on your own. You can't call it science.

    56. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Thanks for a much more thoughtful reply than average for this thread. Sadly I can't give your reply all the time it deserves, because I've chosen to reply to quite a few already, as well as having my original post modded up to Interesting+4 and then back down to hell by angry mods. I'll cherry-pick a couple of points on which to comment, though.

      Arguments based on very old research that have since been corrected by more recent work.

      Well, that's part of the problem with attempting to falsify evolution. What was once a valid objection becomes invalid because the target moves. Before we knew how much dust was actually on the moon, for example, long-age theory made "lots" the obvious prediction. Now that we know how much dust there is on the moon, we have a post hoc explanation for it in terms of long ages. This also applies to all the human ancestor candidates that have come and gone. If you want anti-evolutionists to keep up with all the latest developments, give them funding specifically to find flaws in the latest pro-evolutionary findings.

      That doesn't pass the laugh test, of course. Nobody is going to fund anti-evolutionary research if they are pro-evolution, no matter how hard they wave the flag of falsificationism. A particularly Machiavellian pro-evolutionist would fund the most incompetent researchers he could find to be devil's advocates, just so he can point at all the failed falsification attempts as evidence. But I digress.

      Arguments from ignorance. Michael Behe and his intelligent design proponents are the most prominent examples of this fallacy.

      This objection irks me. It seems that the people who accuse Behe of arguing from ignorance provide refutations in the form of arguments from credulity. Behe points out complex systems and says "remove any one piece and the system breaks." His opponents respond, "so it happened some other way." Where does the onus lie? This seems to be another situation where the two sides never truly engage: Behe is a sceptic with regards to naturalism -- he doubts that such and such a system could possibly form naturally. His opponents are already persuaded that "naturally" is the only way anything forms, so they give a just-so story about how it might possibly have happened, and consider the case closed. This doesn't satisfy Behe's scepticism, of course: he wants an answer that addresses the difficulties with at least the same amount of detail that he's put into pointing them out in the first place.

      The problem for any kind of intelligent design theorist is that natural-formation theorists of any kind (such as evolutionists) already believe that the structures in question can form naturally, and that adding a designer is unnecessarily complex. It's not clear to me what sort of evidence can be presented to the naturalists in support of ID theory under these conditions. It's one of those situations where the ID theorist is obliged to prove that something could not happen. How do you prove that a particular construct is so unlikely to form via natural processes that its formation would be miraculous? If an ID theorist says, "see, it can't have happened this way," a naturalist can always respond, "so it happened some other way." Even when the naturalist is relatively specific about how it might have happened (a just-so story), this is never accompanied by an actual demonstration of the process (which would prove the possibility, rather than it being a mere speculative suggestion); rather, it is left to the ID theorist to try to raise doubt about it.

      So I'm really not happy with this whole tactic of dismissing Behe as "arguing from ignorance". What are the appropriate standards of proof here? How do we decide whether naturalist explanations are actually plausible? This seems like a tremendous area of credulity among evolutionists (who take immense offence at the suggestion that they are credulous). What's a man like Behe supposed to do to demonstrate his case? The onus probandi here seems insurmountable for the ID theorist.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    57. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      You claimed that evolution predicted genetics. I'm calling you out on that claim, specifically: back it up with citations. Darwin's natural selection is not incompatible with Lamarck's inheritance of acquired characteristics, and Darwin did not rule it out. He arguably lessened its role, emphasising "natural selection" as the primary mechanism of evolution, but Lamarck's inheritance was still accepted. Since you cite the infamous Wiki, I will too. Here's what I'm talking about.

      In subsequent years, Morgan and his colleagues developed the Mendelian-Chromosome theory of inheritance, publishing The Mechanism of Mendelian Inheritance in 1915. By that time, most biologists accepted that genes situated linearly on chromosomes were the primary mechanism of inheritance, although how this could be compatible with natural selection and gradual evolution remained unclear. ... This issue was partially resolved by R. A. Fisher, who in 1918 produced a paper entitled The Correlation Between Relatives on the Supposition of Mendelian Inheritance,[1] which used a model to show how continuous variation could be the result of the action of many discrete genetic loci. ... Morgan's student Theodosius Dobzhansky was the first to apply Morgan's chromosome theory and the mathematics of population genetics to natural populations of organisms, in particular Drosophila melanogaster. His 1937 work Genetics and the Origin of Species is usually considered the first mature work of neo-Darwinism.

      Darwinism did not predict genetics. On the contrary, the initial discoveries of genetics were distinctly problematic to it. These issues were resolved by making appropriate adjustments to Darwin's theory, then redesignated neo-Darwinism to underscore the differences between it and the theory put forth in "Origin of Species".

      Where do you get the idea that the theory of evolution predicts genetics? It doesn't even require genetics in the Mendelian sense.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    58. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Here's AIG's answer.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    59. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by ranton · · Score: 1

      Wow, it's hard to have an argument when words have so many meanings.

      Its really not that hard, because most of the meanings of these words are simply generalisations that make conversation easier. The problem comes from using semantic arguments to attack something (like science) by using these generalities. Your arguments are like attacking someone for using F=ma because they are not taking into account special relativity. It is when that happens that things start to get confusing.

      From here on out, I will simply use the word "natural" to mean something that is not designed by a sapient creature. So when I talk about a natural being, I am talking about one that has evolved. Unnatural will mean something that has been designed. Any other connotations or denotations from either the word natural or unnatural are not intended.

      The reason I went into a very brief tangeant on the invalidity of religion in general is because you have a very valid point about what you call "natural" and "nature identical". But science has many techniques for telling the difference. Science is always open to new theories, but religion is a very poor place to look.

      The first and easiest way to tell if something is artificial is to look for flaws. Flaws are used to show that the object is natural instead of artificial. There are artificial diamonds that are basically identical to real diamonds. The only way to tell the difference is that all natural diamonds have some kind of flaws.

      So science uses this knowledge to look at things in our world and try to tell if they are designed or have come from more "natural" methods. The human body is a perfect example. It has numerous "design flaws" that show how obviously that we evolved from natural methods.

      Semi-soft discs between vertebrae and just anterior to the spinal cord are well suited to quadrupeds. But in humans the upper body weight compresses these and can cause herniations. It is quite obvious that they are left overs from when we walked on all fours.

      Our hip joints are also designed for quadrupeds. They are not designed for the stresses of a biped. That is why you would never see high occurances of hip degeneration or femoral neck fractures in a dog or horse. There are numerous other designs in the human body that work better if we were quadrupeds instead of bipeds, but I will just mention those two.

      There are also many congenial birth defects that are caused by structures only found in more primitive animals. Gills in our embryonic stage can continue to develop into partial gills called branchial cleft cysts. They can cause pain and abscesses later in life. Chordomas are another remnent of "old" genes. They are tumors made up of embryonic notochordal remnants. These notochords generally regress as the embryo reaches maturity in complex animals, as they are simply leftovers from more primitive animals such as Pikaea and Amphioxus.

      There are many other examples of even entire organs that we no longer use (appendix). There is overwhelming evidence that the human body was not designed. You could of course think that God put these things there just to test our faith, but such an explanation stretches any level of credulity.

      There is absolutely no way to 100% prove or disprove anything. You could not possibly prove that there is not a flying spaceship above your head that is invisible and undetectable by any natural means; made up of a type of matter that we havent even discovered yet. It all comes down to what are the chances.

      The little bit that I spoke about how rediculous it is to believe that the current religions of the world just happen to be "true" (but all others in the history of mankind were "false") just enhances the likelihood that our world is not designed. Once you remove the chance of their being some kind of divine creator based on just how infinitly remote the chances are, the idea of a designer becomes more far fetched. And even if there is a designer, it does not discr

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    60. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "He may have further refined his theories in subsequent years, but his book "The Intelligent Universe" can easily leave you with the idea that life on earth was the result of advanced, intelligent beings elsewhere in the galaxy deliberately sending microbes into space to "seed" other planets. Whether or not these "seeds" were engineered specifically for the job, intelligence was involved."

      It's actually his later works that contain the "directed panspermia" ideas rather than his earlier ones. Evidence forced Hoyle to accept that his steady-state model of the universe was wrong (as he says in the book itself), so his original ideas about the "seeds of life" being a basic property of a universe that had no beginning and no end were obviously also wrong. Some have said the he never fully recovered from this, hence the fact that the book contains so many assertions which were refuted by evidence that was well known to people working in the field for some years before it was published.

      His "Mathematics Of Evolution" is in my opinion rather better, because unlike "The Intelligent Universe", it wasn't primarily aimed at an "educated layman" audience, and therefore contains mathematical proofs instead of the (IMO sometimes silly) analogies he used in the other work.

      "You seem to have misunderstood me. My point was that his rejection of evolution was limited in scope to chemical evolution."

      I obviously did misunderstand you, as I thought you were saying that Hoyle supported chemical evolution, but not macro-evolution. However, it isn't really correct to say that he only rejected chemical evolution, because Hoyle also disliked the idea of mutation as a major driving force for macro-evolution, and therefore expended considerable effort trying to disprove that it was anything beyond a minor and very occasional factor in both of "The intelligent Universe" and "The Mathematics Of Evolution". Some of the points he made are very interesting, although it's also fair to say that a good many others were once again refuted by evolutionary biologists who cite evidence that was known when Hoyle wrote it.

      "How do you figure [that Darwin had a harder time getting accepted than Hoyle]? Last time I heard, origins was a choice of DNA world, RNA world, protein world, and maybe clay world. Seeds from space and supernatural intervention weren't on the menu."

      Nobody knew about DNA or RNA when "the Origin Of Species" was published, so Darwin's supporters couldn't use it in their arguments. Chemists were familiar with proteins (although the name wasn't coined until shortly before Darwin published his work), but nobody knew much about them beyond the fact that they were biological, and changed in certain ways when heated, so they couldn't be used to support anything either. Supernatural explanations were not only on the menu, but firmly entrenched in the scientific mainstream, where Creationism was the prevailing scientific explanation for the existence of all forms of life on Earth (although Ussher's "young Earth" ideas that placed its age at six thousands of years had been universally rejected by this time).

      To give some idea of how much resistance to Darwin's book there was from both scientists and society in general, I shall take the liberty of quoting from Huxley's eulogy to him:

      "None have fought better, and none have been more fortunate, than Charles Darwin. He found a great truth trodden underfoot, reviled by bigots, and ridiculed by all the world".

      "I never claimed he did. Darwin didn't invent the idea of evolution, either. What's your point?"

      My point was that evolutionary biologists were well aware of panspermia long before Hoyle came on the scene, and it already had a number of prominent supporters in the scientific community (and indeed still does, e.g. the late Carl Sagan). The "primeval soup" ideas of biogenesis were not therefore simple pieces of entrenched scientific dogma that had established themselves without any opposition, but a model that had become accepted by p

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    61. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by DerangedAlchemist · · Score: 1

      You claimed that evolution predicted genetics. I'm calling you out on that claim, specifically: back it up with citations. Darwin's natural selection is not incompatible with Lamarck's inheritance of acquired characteristics, and Darwin did not rule it out. He arguably lessened its role, emphasising "natural selection" as the primary mechanism of evolution, but Lamarck's inheritance was still accepted. Since you cite the infamous Wiki, I will too. Here's what I'm talking about.

      In subsequent years, Morgan and his colleagues developed the Mendelian-Chromosome theory of inheritance, publishing The Mechanism of Mendelian Inheritance in 1915. By that time, most biologists accepted that genes situated linearly on chromosomes were the primary mechanism of inheritance, although how this could be compatible with natural selection and gradual evolution remained unclear. ... This issue was partially resolved by R. A. Fisher, who in 1918 produced a paper entitled The Correlation Between Relatives on the Supposition of Mendelian Inheritance,[1] which used a model to show how continuous variation could be the result of the action of many discrete genetic loci. ... Morgan's student Theodosius Dobzhansky was the first to apply Morgan's chromosome theory and the mathematics of population genetics to natural populations of organisms, in particular Drosophila melanogaster. His 1937 work Genetics and the Origin of Species is usually considered the first mature work of neo-Darwinism.

      Darwinism did not predict genetics. On the contrary, the initial discoveries of genetics were distinctly problematic to it. These issues were resolved by making appropriate adjustments to Darwin's theory, then redesignated neo-Darwinism to underscore the differences between it and the theory put forth in "Origin of Species".

      Where do you get the idea that the theory of evolution predicts genetics? It doesn't even require genetics in the Mendelian sense.

      Lamarkism was accepted at the time because it was a reasonable explanation. Facts did not bear this out as a major force of evolution as more data was gathered (although features like culture are arguably Larmarkian evolution). Notice that this is consistent with the natural selection theory (and of course many others). Unlike creationism, natural selection requires A mechanism to transfer features from parent to child. This was the point I was trying to make. Without an inheritance mechanism, natural selection could not have caused evolution. This was a falsifiable claim. You are right that it does not require Mendelian genetics, but it requires something like genetics to exist. From what you quoted, the conflict with Mendelian views of genetics was resolved by changing the theory of how genetics functioned, not natural selection! You are right that Mendelian genetics is not required, after all prokaryotic bacteria and viruses don't have chromosomes but evolve too. They do have an inheritance mechanism, though.

      This was really a very minor point, however. Creationists are very fond of using the old models and theories to make their points. Most of the best examples where they are actually pointing out flaws in evolution theory can be resolved by checking modern literature. Transition state fossils and problems of complex organs like the eye evolving are good examples of this. More transitions state fossils continue to be found. More related proteins are found that are related to vision, meaning the evolutionary jumps required are not as extreme and improbable as first imagined.

      Some ideas about evolution have definitely changed. It appears that punctuated equilibrium, rather than gradual change is the major mechanism. But I have to point out again that this is why evolution theory is taken seriously - Science theories must be changed or abandoned whe

    62. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Copid · · Score: 1

      This objection irks me. It seems that the people who accuse Behe of arguing from ignorance provide refutations in the form of arguments from credulity. Behe points out complex systems and says "remove any one piece and the system breaks." His opponents respond, "so it happened some other way." Where does the onus lie?
      The problem with Behe is that he wants to have his cake and eat it too. He presents IC as a death blow to evolution because it's an argument of the form "It's not possible for X structure to develop through evolution." On the other hand, when somebody posits a reasonable (although speculative) counterexample, Behe calls it a "just so" story, ignoring the fact that any counterexample at all renders the whole idea of IC useless. On top of that, it's worth noting that there's no way to prove that a system is IC except by looking really hard and saying, "It looks too complicated to me!"

      Personally, I see the biggest flaw in Behe's position to be the simple fact that there's no reason for evolution to have to arrive at a result by constantly adding things. If a system has N parts and can't survive with N-1 (let's assume this assertion--while completely unproven--is true for the moment), there's nothing to say that the system didn't start as N+1 parts and lose a part to end up at N. Climbers sometimes get stuck on ledges because they've climbed down to a point where they can't climb down any further, but they can't climb back up. Behe's observation would be that they must have been put there by an outside force simply because there's no direct climbable path up to their location.

      The problem for any kind of intelligent design theorist is that natural-formation theorists of any kind (such as evolutionists) already believe that the structures in question can form naturally, and that adding a designer is unnecessarily complex. It's not clear to me what sort of evidence can be presented to the naturalists in support of ID theory under these conditions.
      That's what makes ID a fine thing to think about but not a particularly scientific endeavor. I'd be fascinated if somebody like Dembski could put together a rigorous way of measuring the quantity he calls "complex specified information" and actually use it for something, but as it stands, he's simply engaging in philosophical wanking with more mathematics than is really necessary. My problem with positing a designer is that it's simply not a solution to the problem "Complex things need a complex designer." Simply assuming a designer that is somehow not bound by that axiom doesn't really do anything for us that simply dropping that silly axiom would, and it's clearly just as arbitrary.

      So I'm really not happy with this whole tactic of dismissing Behe as "arguing from ignorance". What are the appropriate standards of proof here? How do we decide whether naturalist explanations are actually plausible? This seems like a tremendous area of credulity among evolutionists (who take immense offence at the suggestion that they are credulous). What's a man like Behe supposed to do to demonstrate his case? The onus probandi here seems insurmountable for the ID theorist.
      I'm not sure how much sympathy I feel for Behe and company. Their position appears to be that there is an unmeasurable entity somewhere that is interacting (or has interacted) with our reality somewhere along the line in an unmeasurable way that produces unmeasurable results. If that's your position, you're kind of stuck with the options of either modifying it to make it meaningful or sucking it up and dealing with the fact that it's just your intuition and you won't be able to get your foot in the door with the scientific community. They can at least look on the bright side and remember that the popular press publishing and lecture circuit are usually much more profitable endeavors than doing lab work.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    63. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for a much more thoughtful reply than average for this thread.

      Right back at ya.

      Sadly I can't give your reply all the time it deserves, because I've chosen to reply to quite a few already, as well as having my original post modded up to Interesting+4 and then back down to hell by angry mods.

      For what it's worth, I'd have modded you +1 interesting had I not posted.

      Well, that's part of the problem with attempting to falsify evolution. What was once a valid objection becomes invalid because the target moves.

      Evolution in particular, or science in general?

      Before we knew how much dust was actually on the moon, for example, long-age theory made "lots" the obvious prediction. Now that we know how much dust there is on the moon, we have a post hoc explanation for it in terms of long ages.

      First of all, I'm not sure that obvious prediction was "lots". After reading these two pages, it looks like there was just one guy (Pettersson) providing data that implied a large amount of dust. He did so by making a number of bad assumptions, such as the assumption that any nickel in the air must be coming from meteors.

      Secondly, your "post hoc explanation" sound bite gives the impression that scientists looked at the amount of dust on the moon and fudged the numbers to make it fit. The actual process involved measuring meteorite impact rates using satellites above earth's atmosphere to avoid earthly contamination, which resulted in an estimate 1000x less than Pettersson's. This estimate was then subjected to an independent cross-check by comparing them to average amounts of meteorite dust found in sedimentary rock, and they agreed.

      If you want anti-evolutionists to keep up with all the latest developments, give them funding specifically to find flaws in the latest pro-evolutionary findings.

      What's special about the field of evolution that makes the usual scientific process break down? Every other field of science follows the same basic process: researchers present evidence which is then checked for accuracy by their peers. What is it, specifically, about evolution that requires tacking a separate step onto the process of peer review? Why not give that (limited) funding to people who have problems with modern medicine or plasma physics or heliocentricity? Before you answer, note that I don't really see a qualitative difference between most creationists and the arguments presented at these sites (especially the heliocentricity site). Is there a difference, other than the fact that you believe one rather than the other? (I'm crossing my fingers hoping you're not a geocentrist.)

      This objection irks me. It seems that the people who accuse Behe of arguing from ignorance provide refutations in the form of arguments from credulity. Behe points out complex systems and says "remove any one piece and the system breaks." His opponents respond, "so it happened some other way." Where does the onus lie?

      ...

      His opponents are already persuaded that "naturally" is the only way anything forms, so they give a just-so story about how it might possibly have happened, and consider the case closed.

      Behe is making an extraordinary claim, namely that the evolution of a specific structure (take your pick from his examples) will never, repeat NEVER, be explained in full detail. Furthermore, he's arguing that this (predicted) failure isn't evidence for our collective stupidity. No, instead he jumps to the conclusion that this (again, predicted) fai

    64. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by jdogalt · · Score: 1

      Wierd, that i.e. e.g. thing must have been part of your sig. Anyway, it's what earned this reply (i.e. thanks for the education, though I think for the most part I was using i.e. correctly).

      I see a few issues with your response, which all really boil down to the fact that I.D. is not a theory, in the same league with a specific theory laid out by a specific scientist.

      I personally defend ID because I think time may yet reveal a good theory based around the idea that "most if not all of what we see around us is the result of intelligent design".

      So, to counter your points-

      "whereas ID seeks to act as a theory for where all life came from"

      This is wrong for the reasons mentioned above. It may be a perfectly valid attack against many other people's personal ID variants, but not mine. And I hope that given your reply to me, that you respect my reasoning enough to grant that my above personal ID variant is worth debating.

      next-

      "If that source can produce a being capable of high intelligence and creating the universe"

      I point out again the semantic issue of what one means by the word 'universe'. It's one of those tricky words like 'natural' or 'should'. Maybe you can whip out the historical derivation of the world that I'm too lazy to google, but I see the emphasis on "uni" as in "the one thing", the implication being that _any_ _thing_ must be a part of or a subset of _the_ 'universe'. Thus with my semantics, any and all creators are 'things' which must by _definition_ be part of _the_ universe. Thus your above statement really makes no sense with my semantics. Once you open the semantic door to *other* universeS, then I can just call any particular zoo a "universe" which was obviously intelligently designed. Thus ID has been proven, QED.

      And finally-

      "After all, since we haven't seen any intelligent designers spontaneously form in nature"

      This is so obviously wrong... Genetically engineered crops, any example of human architecture, embryo's selected due to sex or lack of genetic disease traits, ... The world is RIFE with intelligent designers that have spontaneously formed in nature. (oops, 'nature' is another of those tricky words...)

      Anyway, it's been fun philosophizing with you...

      peace...

      -dmc/jdog

    65. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      The human body is a perfect example. It has numerous "design flaws" that show how obviously that we evolved from natural methods.

      I don't accept this argument. For starters, there is no evidence that the "flawed" structures can evolve by natural methods. No such evolution has even been observed -- only surmised through an interpretation of the fossil record. If such structures can not evolve naturally, then they must be designed (no third alternative), whether they are "flawed" or not. So even if they are "flawed", that's not really evidence that they aren't designed. It might be evidence of design compromise, or degeneracy of the specimen, and so on.

      That brings me to my second point, which is the preposterousness of presuming an ability to judge the design in the first place. What's your track record of designing macro organisms like? Are you even vaguely familiar with the constraints of the medium, and the trade-offs involved? Of course not -- that level of biological engineering knowledge is pure science fiction. I see no need to respect the criticism of such an ignorant critic. Why should I believe you when you say "feature X is an obvious flaw"? -- you don't have any expertise in the field. On top of that, do you know what the designers goals are? The non-technical reasons behind the decision to make humans errect bipeds without a tail, and so on? Of course not -- you don't have a clue. Neither do I.

      In short, I might hold this argument in a little more respect if (a) there was an actual demonstration in evidence that the structures in question could occur naturally, and (b) the person criticising the flaws in the structures actually knew how to design an organism in the first place. As it stands, neither point holds -- not even close. Your argument begs too much belief in your conclusion.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    66. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Unlike creationism, natural selection requires A mechanism to transfer features from parent to child. This was the point I was trying to make. Without an inheritance mechanism, natural selection could not have caused evolution. This was a falsifiable claim. You are right that it does not require Mendelian genetics, but it requires something like genetics to exist.

      So what evolution predicted was not genetics specifically, but "an inheritance mechanism"? And that prediction makes evolution a falsifiable claim, because you could disprove evolution by showing that no such inheritance mechanism exists? Once again, you are using a strange sense of "predict", given that inheritance was already a well known fact. It doesn't take too much scientific sophistication to realise that offspring have a tendency to resemble their parents. Selective breeders have been using this trait since well before Darwin.

      This is not a prediction, and it's not a possible point of falsification either. The known fact of inheritance was a consideration in the formulation of the theory: you have the cart before the horse.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    67. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, when shown solid scientific evidence that ID does not exist you make the claim that since the GP does not have the expansive knowledge of an intelligent designer his refutation is invalid thus falling back into the "humans are too dumb to understand ID therefore it must exist" argument? No wonder science scoffs at ID.

    68. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cut down to the brass tax? You claim to know how everything just popped into existence... God. He does not claim to know but all the evidence so far does not point to 'God'.

    69. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we need to assume God created everything for the creationism argument to work? Well, whenever Religion has fought science in the past it's always come down on Science's side, but this time you really got 'em on the ropes. I mean heck, this time you *can't* be proven wrong.

    70. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by DerangedAlchemist · · Score: 1

      So what evolution predicted was not genetics specifically, but "an inheritance mechanism"? And that prediction makes evolution a falsifiable claim, because you could disprove evolution by showing that no such inheritance mechanism exists? Once again, you are using a strange sense of "predict", given that inheritance was already a well known fact. It doesn't take too much scientific sophistication to realise that offspring have a tendency to resemble their parents. Selective breeders have been using this trait since well before Darwin.

      This is not a prediction, and it's not a possible point of falsification either. The known fact of inheritance was a consideration in the formulation of the theory: you have the cart before the horse.

      This is scientific theory, not a hypothesis. A scientific theory is supposed to explain and not conflict with known facts. Of course Darwin knew of selective breeding, it is a major part of the theory of evolution. A simplified description of Darwin's observations were that especially in small, isolated islands nature acted like a selective breeder. Natural selection. Selective breeding of dogs made great danes and chauas whose size difference can make it physically impossible to interbreed. Similar things happen naturally.

      When bugs don't eat a poison plant, they act like farmers breeding for poison. The core idea is that simple.

      And it follows from the theory that an inheritance mechanism must exist for selective breeding to function and, therefore, natural selection. A god, on the other hand, could choose to have inheritance or could grant/alter abilities as required, so creationism gives no insights and makes no prediction.

      There are millions of other things that must also be consistent for evolution. Millions of these are consistent. Others led insights into the mechanisms of evolution, such as aultruistic behavior having 'selfish' benefits, while some led to changes in the theory of evolution, like punctuated equilibrium as opposed to gradual change.

    71. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Copid · · Score: 1

      Sooo... the short version of that is "magic"?

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    72. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In physics in English there is a generally accepted naming convention that distinguishes between "x theory" and "The Theory of Y", where the former is a collection of related hypotheses and analytical frameworks, while the latter is an established explanation for repeated and repeatable observations, which likely started as "y theory". There is likewise a tendency to distinguish between overlapping theories (in the second sense) by affixing a proper surname, like in "Newtonian Mechanics" or "Quantum Mechanics".

      There is also tension over the use of "hypothesis" -- some people (in various branches of science and philosophy) think it's more disciplined to restrict the use of the term to discrete, testable, falsifiable predictions, even at the cost of uncertainty over the meaning of "theory".

      We generally do ourselves no favours in naming conventions in high energy physics, however. There is a great deal of whimsy and sometimes esoteric references to clever scientists of the past. This has been a common complaint since at least the time of Enrico Fermi, who allegedly complained that the naming schemes for newly discovered subatomic particles were even less consistent and prone to vanity than those in biological taxonomy. (Fermions are named for him, incidentally, since he was a very clever scientist who among many other things constructed the first artificial sustained nuclear fission chain reaction, which liberated lots of fermions that had been bound up in atoms, which made it difficult to study them).

      People's objections to string theory are twofold. Firstly, it does not make useful predictions that differ from those made by QM or GR. Unuseful predictions include those for which we are unlikely to have observational evidence (either in the sky or in a lab) with feasible budgets using currently feasible technology, and the upper limit of "feasible" is the stuff of office politics. Secondly, it is a piece of a much more aggressive and broader meta-hypothesis, namely that there is a useful cosmology based on a fundamental particle that presents itself in 4-space as a 1-dimensional wave ("vibrating string"). The meta-hypothesis is by its nature subject to rapid changes as observations constrain various aspects of these cosmologies. (This is also somewhat true of the Standard Model in QM, although it has had a much slower rate of change than string theory).

      String theory's big attraction is probably that the relationship between several properties of a quantum string (such as its size) and the string tension is intuitive.

      Unfortunately, it has several shortcomings. There is a large number of possible false vacuum energies in string theory in general, and there is no generally accepted means of finding which one is correct -- and brute force computational search is infeasible. This is a glaring weakness compared with the work in Cosmic Inflation using GR and QM, and the potentially much easier maths in a correct string theory does not seem to be worth the wait in quickly moving areas of cosmology and high energy physics.

      Although Cosmic Inflation has a number of variables whose values are not fully known, there is an agreed upon means of testing people's guesses (analysis of the pattern of small temperature differences in the cosmic microwave background radiation, mainly). There have been a number of interesting ideas which have been excluded by recent CMBR observations, and there has been evidence which has supported the existence of a large amount of nonbaryonic matter (Lambda-CDM). This has implications for the Standard Model.

      These same quickly moving areas of research have also forced the rapid proliferation and culling of string theories, most of which have become "superstring" or "brane" or "M-" theories that require the strings as we perceive them in 4-space to have extent in other dimensions. (This is because any string theory consistent with observations to date has a gauge anomaly -- the maths are inconsistent with a massless photon excep

    73. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      The problem with Behe is that he wants to have his cake and eat it too. He presents IC as a death blow to evolution because it's an argument of the form "It's not possible for X structure to develop through evolution." On the other hand, when somebody posits a reasonable (although speculative) counterexample, Behe calls it a "just so" story, ignoring the fact that any counterexample at all renders the whole idea of IC useless. On top of that, it's worth noting that there's no way to prove that a system is IC except by looking really hard and saying, "It looks too complicated to me!"

      The problem with speculative counterexamples is that they aren't scientific. A counterexample only renders the finding invalid if it actually works: it it doesn't work, it's not actually a counterexample. We only know that a counterexample is a counterexample after it's been demonstrated to work. This comes down to a battle of unfounded beliefs: Behe believes there's no way to evolve the system, and the evolutionists believe there is.

      To demonstrate the impossibility of producing a system by chance, Behe would have to demonstrate that every conceivable set of modifications to the system within certain probability bounds fails to perform as required. To demonstrate the possibility of producing the system by chance, evolutionists would have to demonstrate a path of modifications, ecah with acceptable probability. Both of these are big asks.

      I conclude that both camps hold to positions which have not been adequately demonstrated experimentally. Neither position should be considered to have greater scientific merit than the other. However, I think the problem of irreducible complexity should receive some attention, since it is a scientifically interesting problem, even if (or perhaps because we don't have a resolution to it yet. I note that the current evolutionist strategy of willing the problem away with speculative examples is a lot like the behaviour I hear creationists accused of: saying "God did it" and leaving it at that. This is just saying, "it's not a problem, nature can do it" and leaving out the science.

      Personally, I see the biggest flaw in Behe's position to be the simple fact that there's no reason for evolution to have to arrive at a result by constantly adding things.

      The biggest problem that I have with this objection is that it addresses the problem by replacing it with a bigger problem and less evidence. If a system has evolved down to a state of irreducible complexity, then earlier iterations were more complex -- containing more parts. So you're saying that a particular complex system can not evolve by pure addition, but it can evolve by a longer and more complex path of addition and subtraction -- with no evidence offered to back the claim. Where's the science?

      Simply assuming a designer that is somehow not bound by that axiom doesn't really do anything for us that simply dropping that silly axiom would, and it's clearly just as arbitrary.

      Just as arbitrary? If you want to agree on, "it's no sillier to believe in a supernatural designer than it is to believe there is no design", I can assent to it. I'd call that progress.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    74. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Dekortage · · Score: 1

      While I agree that the Creationist view of the world is generally a pile of steaming brown matter, I have to disagree with you on this:

      Most scientists are accustomed to honest, civilized debate. Scientific conferences are full of disagreements and arguments, make no mistake about that. But (almost) all the participants are aiming to understand the universe better, to examine their assumptions and use experimental evidence and logic to figure out whether or not they need to change their assumptions or ideas. They might attack a speaker's ideas if they believe that a mistake is being made, but there's nothing very personal at stake.

      Maybe I've just seen the worst of it, and maybe I am a jaded cynic, but after being part of the academic world for more than 30 years, I suggest that science is very frequently personal. Your average, random-sampled group of scientists will have as many bigots and self-promoters and assholes as an equally random group of Creationists (or any other group: Italians, homosexuals, diabetics, school kids, people who wear boxer shorts, Slashdot readers, etc.). Let's not pretend otherwise. Now, when faced with a common enemy (e.g. a Creationist), most scientists will team up to support each other, but that can be expected of most any group.

      --
      $nice = $webHosting + $domainNames + $sslCerts
    75. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Teilo · · Score: 1

      Insofar as supernatural explanations have been a priori eliminated from any consideration, in no way can you legitimately make the claim that "all the evidence so far does not point to God." Thus my contention that the difference between the two camps can never be fruitfully discussed on the basis of arguments concerning the process of evolution.

      It is the premise that must first be addressed: naturalism vs. ID, both of which are unfalsifiable. The claim of scientific isolationism from any such "philosophical" discussion is not accurate. If evolution is to be considered as a legitimate explanation for all life, it relies upon naturalism as its essential premise, a premise that cannot be falsified. Like it or not, you cannot have a fruitful debate on the subject of origins unless you first deal with the premises upon which each theory relies. The unwillingness shown by the majority of evolutionists to enter this debate is understandable.

      --
      Mir tut es leid, Menschen daß Einfältigfehlersuchenbaumfolgendenaffen sind.
    76. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      Well, that's part of the problem with attempting to falsify evolution. What was once a valid objection becomes invalid because the target moves.

      Evolution in particular, or science in general?

      Yes. It's a problem with science in general, but evolution is a particularly hard case. It's a very malleable theory in the broad, and entertains some diverse possibilities. It can move at the speed of a just-so story, whereas physicists are generally constrained in their storytelling by a lot more mathematics and experimental data. It's much easier to find counterexamples for theories of physics that miss the mark, so long as technology is keeping up with the problem. Evolution has it around the other way: it can be hard to find data that contradicts a theory -- or even find enough data to make people consider that the evidence might actually contradict the theory -- but new theories only have to adjust the story to fit that new data. This can be as simple as, "so maybe the dinosaurs were wiped out by famine rather than a big impact, then" -- and now the falsifier (having just persuaded everyone that it wasn't an asteroid) has to demonstrate that it couldn't have been a famine.

      I should point out that this isn't unique to evolution. I like to think of science having a spectrum from "harder" to "softer". "Harder" sciences provide falsifying data more readily than the "softer" ones. Mathematics is perhaps the hardest of all sciences, and metaphysics the softest (if you'll allow the looser use of "science" to cover non-physical subjects). Bits of evolution are modestly hard -- where it has hard data like genes, for instance. Bits of evolution are really soft -- fossils are soft data that aren't very amenable to experiment, and are more or less compatible with a lot of explanations. The sciences that Popper accused of being Pseudoscience I think were just too soft for his tastes. There is no real cut-off point.

      What's special about the field of evolution that makes the usual scientific process break down? Every other field of science follows the same basic process: researchers present evidence which is then checked for accuracy by their peers. What is it, specifically, about evolution that requires tacking a separate step onto the process of peer review? Why not give that (limited) funding to people who have problems with modern medicine or plasma physics or heliocentricity?

      Well, you kind of missed my point. First of all, I'm not talking about a breakdown in the scientific process: I'm talking about taking falsificationism seriously, since it's frequently accepted as a tenet of science. If you're going to be serious about falsificationism, you need to construct experiments with the intention of disproving a theory. The worst person in the world to whom you can entrust this task is the person who came up with the theory. Even if he's not emotionally invested in it (ha! as if!) then he's still probably got the wrong kind of mental approach to the problem. Ideally you give the task to competent researchers who are inclined to think the theory is wrong, and think they know how to falsify it. If they are any good as researchers, they will provide a great service whether they succeed or fail. They need to conduct experiments which could, in principle, produce data that would clash with the theory. If they fail, they produce data that supports the theory; if they succeed, they demonstrate a flaw in the theory. It's win either way.

      This is pretty much how it works in the field of cryptography. Someone comes up with an algorithm they think is pretty neat and has certain properties. Others hack away at it with all the malice they can muster. Most algorithms are "falsified" sooner or later (with respect to the properties they claim to have). This is exemplary applied falsificationism in action.

      As for which areas should be funded -- I don't know -- that's a political matter. My point is that there s

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    77. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Walter+Carver · · Score: 1

      It will not a scientific discussion, so that's why a scientist can't do it. Maybe if the evolutionist speaker would skip directly to the bottom line of these questions (an even use complex terms), and if further explenation is necessary he could start unfolding the thread from the end to the beginning.

    78. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Copid · · Score: 1

      The problem with speculative counterexamples is that they aren't scientific. A counterexample only renders the finding invalid if it actually works: it it doesn't work, it's not actually a counterexample. We only know that a counterexample is a counterexample after it's been demonstrated to work. This comes down to a battle of unfounded beliefs: Behe believes there's no way to evolve the system, and the evolutionists believe there is.

      In that case, why bother with IC at all? Just about everything that ever evolved did so through a path that's unknown, so we may as well throw up our hands and say that the whole thing is nonsense. Of course, if we want to say that there are a lot of structures whose origins are unclear, that's perfectly fine. If Behe wants to sell it as a death knell for evolution, that's another matter entirely.

      Of course, as soon as there's overwhelming evidence that a particular system isn't IC, all Behe and company have to do is find another one to jump on. Basically, Behe is saying that we can't rule out intelligent design until we've demonstrated, in detail, every evolutionary step that ever occurred. That's technically accurate, but totally uninteresting, especially given that even Behe acknowledges the overwhelming evidence for common descent. "This rock appears to have been smoothed by erosion" can always be answered (quite correctly) with "Or it could have been intelligent agency!" but without some reason to think it's probable, I just don't see a reason to go down that route. Basically, most of us aren't contradicting Behe's claim that we don't know the origins of blood clotting with 100% accuracy. We're saying that we're not ready to assert magic where history tells us that there's an explanation, and that his position that we should isn't going to win him any accolades as a great scientist.

      To demonstrate the impossibility of producing a system by chance, Behe would have to demonstrate that every conceivable set of modifications to the system within certain probability bounds fails to perform as required. To demonstrate the possibility of producing the system by chance, evolutionists would have to demonstrate a path of modifications, ecah with acceptable probability. Both of these are big asks.

      Basically, yes. Since that can't be done, it's a bit irrational to say that he he's come up with a concept that lends any credibility to the idea of a designer. We have no idea whether the probabilities associated with IC are large or small, so what he's given us is essentially a very well dressed god in the gaps argument. We've seen it before, and while it may be 100% correct, he's not likely to get very much attention from the scientific community for it. I tend to shy away from god in the gaps simply because the number of gaps appears to get monotonically smaller with time. History is not on the side of the position of assuming divine intervention.

      I conclude that both camps hold to positions which have not been adequately demonstrated experimentally. Neither position should be considered to have greater scientific merit than the other. However, I think the problem of irreducible complexity should receive some attention, since it is a scientifically interesting problem, even if (or perhaps because we don't have a resolution to it yet.

      Honestly, I don't think it's a very interesting problem. Perhaps from a mathematical perspective it's interesting (what's the minimum system with X properties?), but from the perspective of figuring out whether things are "designed" or not, I think it's a dead end. As I see it, there are two ways to interpret the argument of irreducible complexity. The first way is, "There's no way for this to happen other than intelligent agency." That is clearly answered by simple thought experiments, and a lot of work has been done poking holes in the examples posited for the absolutist position. The logical response to this is si

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    79. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by ranton · · Score: 1

      So basically because I am not God, I cannot find fault in God's creations? It is kind of like:

      Me: How do you know God exists?
      You: The Bible tells me so.
      Me: How do you know the Bible is true?
      You: God wrote it.
      Me: But how do you know God wrote it?
      You: Because the Bible tells me so.
      Me: Ugh.

      A mechanic can tell if a set of wires is in a place that will make it likely to short, and can tell that it should have been put somewhere else. He doesnt need a PhD in mechanical and electrical engineering to tell that it is a bad design. He may not be able to do better, but he can tell a mistake when he sees one.

      None of the things I listed where done based on research of my own. I am a software engineer, not a doctor or biologist. I refer to the experts on such matters. Our current scientists may not be able to design a sapient creature just yet, but they definetly know enough to notice a bad design.

      For starters, there is no evidence that the "flawed" structures can evolve by natural methods.

      Are you kidding? Fossil evidence is a type of evidence (it is the second word, right after fossil). It is not 100% conclusive; nothing ever is. But macroevolution has alot of evidence in both the fossil record and in the biology of existing creatures. The fact that humans still have gills in early development is a great example of that kind of evidence.

      While it is possible that God could have made mistakes (such as with human vertebrae), something like gills in a human is obviously not part of any design. Humans have no use for a set of useless gills. Especially gills that can only develop into harmful cysts. Because the fossil evidence shows that all mammals developed from bony fish, these gills only reinforce that evidence. Evolution used these gills as a stepping stone to create the neck as it is found in mammals. That is why they still exist in early human embryos.

      While this is not 100% fact, it is a very good explanation based on actual evidence. "God did it" is just wishful thinking based on no evidence at all.

      --

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      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    80. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pointless to ask these kind of questions to Creationists because they BELIEVE in magic.

    81. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      If you want to check out various creation myths, go right ahead. First you ought to define what agent(s) you've got, when/how/why they do whatever it is that they do, how we detect such agents and their actions, and how your particular whatever is different from currently accepted science. All that and, of course, evidence. Without that, you've got Bond Pixies.

    82. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      So basically because I am not God, I cannot find fault in God's creations?

      No, you can't find fault in God's creations because you don't understand 1% of how it works. The chances that your "design flaws" are correctly explained in terms of you having made an ignorant error are just way too high.

      The fact that humans still have gills in early development is a great example of that kind of evidence.

      The fact that you think humans have gills in early development is a great example of what I'm talking about here.

      A mechanic can tell if a set of wires is in a place that will make it likely to short, and can tell that it should have been put somewhere else. He doesnt need a PhD in mechanical and electrical engineering to tell that it is a bad design. He may not be able to do better, but he can tell a mistake when he sees one.

      And he'll sound perfectly credible about it right up until the designer shows up, calls him an arrogant asshat, and explains in great detail all the decisions and trade-offs that went into placing the wires in that way, up to and including the cost to risk ratio of the short happening versus modifying the design to prevent it. That is unless, of course, the designer is a bit of a git -- but weren't you trying to show that bad design is evidence of no designer rather than a bad designer? Your mechanic friend would look pretty silly if he said, "this is a terrible design, so obviously it wasn't designed at all."

      Fossil evidence is a type of evidence (it is the second word, right after fossil).

      The fossil record is absolutely stunning evidence for the evolutionary history of our planet if you rule out all non-naturalistic alternative hypotheses. Of course, if you've ruled out all non-naturalistic alternative hypotheses, all you're left with is arguments over how we evolved, not whether we evolved. It's not the evidence itself that rules out such hypotheses: it's arbitrary rules regarding the kind of hypotheses that we are allowed to entertain. Bad rules, so far as I'm concerned -- rules which result from philosophical naturalists co-opting science as a whole.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    83. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Saying "there's a chance someone intelligent altered our environment" isn't something really useful. A scientific theory is formed because there's inexplicable data, not because someone has a hunch that it could be true because otherwise we end up with philosophy, not science. Sure we could argue philosophy and reach the strangest conclusions but I'm not convinced there's any point in doing so. The universe could have popped into existence five minutes ago or even just now but there's no real point to talkling about that because it wouldn't help us any. If your personal version of ID is a philosophy that's nice but still not something that fits into a discussion about science or claims that wish they were science. Of course it's possible that someone changed the environment, as I said it's possible that the universe just popped into existence or that there's an invisible pink unicorn guiding everyone's fate but we have to reason to assume it's what actually happened because we have seen no evidence that suggests something like that happened.

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      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    84. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by khayman80 · · Score: 1
      Sorry for the delay. I tried to install Kubuntu on a software RAID array and it completely nuked my MBR- I had to reinstall Windows from scratch. Fun fun fun.

      ... evolution is a particularly hard case. It's a very malleable theory in the broad, and entertains some diverse possibilities. ... it can be hard to find data that contradicts a theory -- or even find enough data to make people consider that the evidence might actually contradict the theory -- but new theories only have to adjust the story to fit that new data. ... Bits of evolution are modestly hard -- where it has hard data like genes, for instance. Bits of evolution are really soft -- fossils are soft data that aren't very amenable to experiment, and are more or less compatible with a lot of explanations.

      Based on these statements, and links you provided in another post, it's clear that you think evolution produces no predictions and is not falsifiable. I don't agree, because as far as I know there are many potential falsifications (click on parts 1,2,3,4,5 for long lists of potential falsifications) for evolution and lots of verified predictions. I especially like this quote from Origin of Species: "If it could be proved that any part of the structure of any one species had been formed for the exclusive good of another species, it would annihilate my theory, for such could not have been produced through natural selection."

      What predictions can creationism offer, and how can we falsify it? As far as I can tell, the answers are "none" and "it's not falsifiable". Creationism is compatible with every conceivable discovery. For instance, it's strange that all life we find uses the same DNA bases (which is a specific requirement of common descent). But it's also compatible with creationism because, even though God could have created every species with different bases of DNA (or something even wilder) to provide obvious proof that common descent is false, He obviously chose not to, presumably because His Ways Are Mysterious. It's strange that the fossil record shows a general progression from simpler, less diverse organisms in the distant past to more diverse and complex organisms in the "recent" past (which is a specific prediction of evolution), but this is ALSO compatible with creationism because God (or Satan?) could be playing games with our heads.

      I noticed your link to "Message Theory", but I'm surprised that you would consider this to be a valid example of a prediction. As far as I can tell from the book synopsis and this review, the author is basically saying "the prediction of intelligent design is that intelligent design is obviously correct and no other interpretation is possible." Isn't that tautological? It's like saying "evolution predicts that evolution is correct and no other interpretation is possible". Notice that none of the predictions or potential falsifications I have mentioned or linked to follow this pattern...

      Incidentally, did you ever read the novel Contact (NOT the movie)? At the end of the book, Sagan's heroine discovers an obvious, indisputable message encoded in the digits of pi. This is what I would consider to be definitive proof of God's existence, and a true example of the discovery of a message from an intelligent designer.

      I sense a problem in that many evolutionists complain that creationists don't have theories of their own, but just pick on the theories of others. That shouldn't be perceived as a problem -- it should be perceived as modern science in action. ...

      I completely agree with you

    85. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by jdogalt · · Score: 1

      In the absence of a well known specifically laid out variant of ID, philosophy is all this was ever about, and you have been philosophizing all along without realizing it.

      I.e. scientifically we weren't debating 'evolution'. That's just a word, perhaps with as many subtle variants of meaning as the word 'universe'. Scientifically we were discussing _darwins_ theory of evolution, versus the philosophy of Intelligent Design.

      If you'd really like to vet out a scientific theory of intelligent design, then point me to the author of the theory's whitepaper, and there is about a 95% chance that I'll join in with you in bashing it's author's lack of scientific rigor. Of course, I am genuinely interested in the 5% chance that I might run across an ID theory that is as _scientifically_ attackable as **darwin's** theory of evolution.

      Please forgive me... I admit that my philosophizing with a confused scientist, was perhaps a bit of a troll. But given how much irrational BS comes out of scientists when they attack the _philosophy_ of ID _as_ science, I feel I need to do my part to make them look just as foolish as they think they are making the ID philosophers look.

      In closing- It all boils down to a scientific whitepaper/treatise/whatever. If you start attacking ID without prefixing it with something as specific as "darwin's theory of", then you are philosophizing whether you are aware of it or not.

      Be seeing you...

    86. Re:ATTENTION CREATIONISTS!!! by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      I tried to install Kubuntu on a software RAID array...

      I've had a related experience with software RAID and loss of data. What a miserable experience that was. Let's just say that I am never again going to attempt an upgrade where any live filesystem is using software RAID (unless I truly don't care whether I lose the lot). And now back to the topic at hand.

      ...it's clear that you think evolution produces no predictions and is not falsifiable.

      Broadly speaking, you are correct. The "Message Theory" book spends quite some time criticising the theory on this front. The blog I linked to in that other post does a good job (IMO) of criticising the very proposed falsifications to which you link. As for Darwin's remarks, I don't believe that support for his theory would buckle in the slightest under such evidence. After all, the situation he describes could easily be attained under a scenario of neutral evolution, don't you think? Under that explanation, the structure wouldn't have evolved for the other species, but just evolved as a matter of neutral drift. We could even argue that this benefit to the other species may have resulted in a symbiotic benefit of some sort in return, and then we have a selective benefit.

      I think that evolution is almost infinitely adaptable like this, and is thus unfalsifiable. Evolutionists are willing to claim that certain scenarios would invalidate the theory, but in practice it's just certain specifics that get abandoned in the face of such evidence -- if anything. The broad, naturalistic shape remains the same.

      Actually, I wrote an essay in 2005 on the subject of creation/evolution and the distinction between science and metaphysics. I've just re-read it, and I'd wind up repeating a fair slab of it here in response to much of what you say. Perhaps you'd care to read Don't Shoot the Creationist and see how much it clears up my position for you. Certain of your questions aren't so directly relevant to it, though, and I'll try to answer them here.

      I noticed your link to "Message Theory"...

      I do so having read the book. I probably still have it here somewhere. Message theory in short is the hypothesis that life was designed specifically to look as though it (a) was not the product of a natural process, and (b) was the product of a single designer. The author discusses how these design goals conflict: emphasising the unity of design can lend weight to the "all life is related" hypothesis present in evolution; emphasising the differences in design can lend weight to the "multiple creators" hypothesis. Much of the evidence for evolution can also be presented as evidence for the "single designer" hypothesis; the interesting part is the "not a natural process" hypothesis, which is where it diametrically opposes evolution.

      Of course this re-raises the interesting question as to whether we can discern, scientifically, the difference between a natural process and one that involved agencies not in evidence (like a creator, or a factory, or whatever). As we've seen in this very discussion, strongly held metaphysical beliefs tend to substitute for evidence. Further, although we recognise manufactured products in our daily lives, we don't seem to have any agreement on whether life looks like such a thing. The evolutionist says that life resembles a smooth pebble, easily explained by natural processes; the creationist says that life resembles a stone arrowhead, shaped by a force with a purpose in mind. How do you tell the difference?

      ...Sagan's heroine discovers an obvious, indisputable message encoded in the digits of pi.

      For the sake of scope containment, I'm not going to discuss this from any angle, other than to say

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
  159. Equals by BillGatesLoveChild · · Score: 1

    For want of a better word, "Amen!" :-)

    If I was created by a God, that God has no dominion over me. I won't bow, grovel or worship him. He is no more or less equal than any other creature in the Universe.

  160. Parental responsibility, and much more by cbhacking · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There are numerous problems. Would you like them listed?
    • If God created Adam and Eve in His own image, and God is perfect or infallible, so too would Adam and Eve have been. Direct contradiction if you accept that interpretation.
    • If "free will" is what God has, and it is what He gave Adam and Eve, then that is certainly in His own image. However, humans have curiosity and must experiment to satisfy it, and God does not (based on the assumption that He already knows anything that He might possibly be curious about), so God clearly denied us a tool we needed to be safe (it was supposedly safe in the garden, right?) Put differently, exactly why were Knowledge and Life suppsed to be mutually exclusive?
    • For that matter, why would would God create such a temptation in the first place? What purpose does it serve? How was its creation essential to the creation of everything else? I'm pretty sure I haven't seen any trees of knowledge (or life) lately, so they can't be terribly important elements of the world. If nothing else, it clearly falls under the category of an attractive nuisance.
    • Let us not forget the God also supposedly created the snake (and apparently made it either evil or possessed of free will and a twisted sense of humor... not to mention speech) let it loose in his childrens' paradise! Nowhere does it state that the snake should have been created good (although one might infer that from the fact that its creator was supposedly the essence of goodliness) but what an utter lack of morality would be required to put such a thing in the garden where your children play! Thus God is either evil or both irresponsible and uncaring.
    • Almost at the end, the explanation most directly relevent:
      If God created Adam and Eve, then they were His children and His responsibility. It was His duty to teach them, to guide them, to nurture them, to comfort them, to correct them when they made mistakes, and to keep them safe from their own ignorance. Creating beings with free will, whether by divine powers or natural conception, makes you responsible for those who are created. If they screw up their lives because you left them in an environment with dangerous elements that your children have no experience in dealing with, then it is your fault. Heck, from the perspective of Adam and Eve, the snake was probably a perfectly legitimate source of guidance; nobody had told them it wasn't!
    • Finally, if God didn't want humans to be little automata, but denied us education, didn't He pretty much just make a pair of amusing little pets? At best, Adam and Eve were sentient monkeys in a zoo, placed there without having ever known their parents and watched by an uncaring master through semi-silvered glass. At worst, they essentially WERE automata, except they lacked a pre-defined sequence of instructions. Robots without any programming except curiosity, that had once been given a command but that had been designed to act with a certain degree of randomness. If that's your idea of creating beings with free will, I sure as hell hope you aren't involved in any major AI projects.

    In any case, if Adam and Eve existed, then they had pretty much the worst growing up experience possible. They were given curiosity but were kept ignorant, provided with dangerous temptations, and given no guides save for malicious entities that they had never even been warned against. When the urge to satisfy that curiosity (at the urging of a creature made by their same creator and dwelling in their own safe garden) became too great, they were irrevocably changed, cast out from paradise, and defamed as the originators of sin for the rest of eternity. At THIS point, their all-powerful 'parent' offers no comfort or assistance, but decides that NOW He would put protection on the one thing that might, possibly, have reversed the change done to them.

    You are arguing that this deity loves us, and that we should worship Him? The average everyday, non-omniceint, flawed-in-various-ways father and mother that most of us had growing up is far more worthy, in my opinion (not that I worship anybody, but maybe I'm just a bit too cynical).
    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    1. Re:Parental responsibility, and much more by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Finally, if God didn't want humans to be little automata, but denied us education, didn't He pretty much just make a pair of amusing little pets?

      One might argue that Adam and Eve did get one Hell of an education, so to speak, one that the rest of us have gotten to share ever since.

      At THIS point, their all-powerful 'parent' offers no comfort or assistance, but decides that NOW He would put protection on the one thing that might, possibly, have reversed the change done to them.

      Actually, the Fall story says that God gave them clothes. One might also argue that the whole rest of the Bible describes efforts to fix things.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    2. Re:Parental responsibility, and much more by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Let us not forget the God also supposedly created the snake (and apparently made it either evil or possessed of free will and a twisted sense of humor... not to mention speech) let it loose in his childrens' paradise!

      I was under the impression that the snake was actually Satan in disguise. Mind that this is based on a several years old memory of reading Paradise Lost, and while Milton may have been a student of theology, I most certainly am not.

    3. Re:Parental responsibility, and much more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a pretty modern concept. Originally, the snake was just a snake.

  161. cognitive dissonance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It'd take some serious fuckin' tolerance of cognitive dissonance to build a place like that, or at least some serious fuckin' hypocrisy.

  162. missed tag? by v1 · · Score: 1

    Why didn't this get tagged with "haha" ?

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  163. The God Delusion by BillGatesLoveChild · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A good book by Richard Dawkins who wrote 'The Selfish Gene'. Here's a summary:

    Richard Dawkins on why religion sticks: "There is no such thing as a Muslim Child. There is a child of Muslim Parents. There is no such thing as a Christian Child. There is a child of Christian Parents.

    My specific hypothesis is about children. More than any other species, we survive by the accumulated experience of previous
    generations, and that experience needs to be passed on to children for their protection and well-being. Theoretically, children might learn from personal experience not to go too near a cliff edge, not to eat untried red berries, not to swim in crocodile-infested waters. But, to say the least, there will be a selective advantage to child brains that possess the rule of thumb: believe, without question, whatever your grown-ups tell you. Obey your parents; obey the tribal elders, especially when they adopt a solemn, minatory tone. Trust your elders without question. This is a generally valuable rule for a child. But, as with the moths, it can go wrong.

    Natural selection builds child brains with a tendency to believe whatever their parents and tribal elders tell them.
    Such trusting obedience is valuable for survival: the analogue of steering by the moon for a moth. But the flip side of trusting obedience is slavish gullibility. The inevitable by-product is vulnerability to infection by mind viruses.

    Sociologists studying British children have found that only about one in twelve break away from their parents' religious beliefs."

    Remember the old consistency thing. People are loathe to change their mind:

    "It would be a severe disadvantage, for example, when hunting or making tools, to keep changing one's mind, so under some circumstances, it is better to persist in an irrational belief than to vacillate, even if new evidence or ratiocination favors a change."

    Douglas Adams: "Religion . . . has certain ideas at the heart of it which we call sacred or holy or whatever. What it means is, 'Here is an idea or a notion that you're not allowed to say anything bad about; you're just not. Why not? - because you're not!' If somebody votes for a party that you don't agree with, you're free to argue about it as much as you like; everybody will have an argument but nobody feels aggrieved by it. If somebody thinks taxes should go up or down you are free to have an argument about it. But on the other hand if somebody says 'I mustn't move a light switch on a Saturday', you say, 'I respect that'.

    Why should it be that it's perfectly legitimate to support the Labour party or the Conservative party, Republicans or Democrats, this model of economics versus that, Macintosh instead of Windows - but to have an opinion about how the Universe began, about who created the Universe . .. no, that's holy? . .. We are used to not challenging religious ideas but it's very interesting how
    much of a furore Richard creates when he does it!

    Everybody gets absolutely frantic about it because you're not allowed to say these things. Yet when you look at it rationally there is no reason why those ideas shouldn't be as open to debate as any other, except that we have agreed somehow between us that they shouldn't be."

    Andrew Mueller: "Pledging yourself to any particular religion 'is no more or less weird than choosing to believe that the world is rhombus-shaped, and borne through the cosmos in the pincers of two enormous green lobsters called Esmerelda and Keith'."

    Sam Harris: "We have names for people who have many beliefs for which there is no rational justification. When their beliefs are extremely common we call them 'religious'; otherwise, they are likely to be called 'mad', 'psychotic' or 'delusional' . . . Clearly there is sanity in numbers."

    Richard Dawkins: "The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodth

    1. Re:The God Delusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Research into the Dead Sea Scrolls suggests that Jesus may have never existed.

      According to John Allegro, one of the first Dead Sea researchers, the early Christians were organized around secret rites and rituals.

      Jesus was a retelling of the "Teacher of Righteousness."

      Allegro: "Alas, the scrolls make no mention of the Nazarene teacher by name, indeed, the whole gospel tradition of a wine-bibbing associate of paws (paul's?), pimps, and quizzlings, a friend of Roman officers, and an advocate of paying taxes to the enemy, has no parallel at all in what little we can glean from the scrolls, about the manner of life of Jesus' Essene counterpart, the so-called Teacher of Righteousness."

      Even if there was a sectarian Jewish teacher living in Palestine during the first part of the first century called Joshua, or Jesus, he had nothing at all to do with the crucified Christos of Paul's theology, thus had no part to play in the formation of that distinctive amalgam of faiths that eventually swept the world.

      Anyway, put that in your dinsoaur diorama and smoke it.

    2. Re:The God Delusion by Anonamused+Cow-herd · · Score: 1

      "The rest of us are expected to defend our prejudices. But ask a religious person to justify their faith and you infringe 'religious liberty'." In the US you can avoid military service if fighting is against your religion. Arguing that you disagree with war for moral/ethic beliefs is ignored.

      Just as a factual aside, that's not true. You can be a "conscientious objector" regardless of religious designation-- you need consistent evidence that you have been a pacifist for some time. Often, these individuals are assigned to non-combat roles, though antimilitarists can also be assigned to civilian service duty.

      --
      -----[0_o]-----
      We are not amused.
  164. Free Will by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

    God gave humans and angels Free Will, something not even He could divine. Than he apnked us for using it, but thats another story. Actually, it's The Story.

    -peace

    --
    "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
    1. Re:Free Will by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Again, omniscient and omnipotent. Either he can or he isn't.

      And no, he did not give Angels free will. At their creation they had to decide for or against him, for they, too, are beings transcending space and time, immortal and unchanging. Free will, though, implies the ability to change your mind.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Free Will by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

      Angels have free will or else they would not have been able to rebel against God.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallen_angel#Conseque nces_of_free_will

      Plus many other Christian web pages filled with breathless mumbo jumbo on the subject.

      If you take free will away from the Angels than you would need to take it away from Man. Both made decisions that went against God's will.

      As for omniscient vs. omnipotent, it's the age old question, "Could God create an object so massive that He could not move it". The point is that God can _do_ whatever He wants. If He wants to create something he does not control, nothing will stop him. But as Bill Cosby's dad said to him, "I brought you into this world, I'll take you out." Nothing is stopping him from snuffing out the whole creation experiment either. He may not know what you'll do next, but he may also kill you (or help you). Although he would never kill you directly. In the Bible at least, he used the Jews to do his killing. But I digress.

      -peace

      --
      "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
    3. Re:Free Will by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, I at least remember one incident when he committed mass murder directly, by flushing the toilet, so to speak. And yes, whether Angels do have free will is actually a matter of heated discussion, since there are a few contradicting sources that claim either that they are unchanging and "frozen in timeless time" (i.e. no free will) and their ability to defect, which is by the earlier group often dismissed as them being already created "crooked" and just playing along 'til the perfect moment... I digress.

      He also used other people to kill the Jews when they didn't behave, please don't forget a few tidbits, it might sound like something you don't want to imply.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:Free Will by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

      "He also used other people to kill the Jews when they didn't behave, please don't forget a few tidbits, it might sound like something you don't want to imply."

      Very true. I just find the sanctified genocides in The Holly Book amusing. I'm sick like that.

      The argument that there is no free will for Angels is weak in that:

      1. It does not eliminate the problem of Free Will for God's omniscience because Man definitely has it. So it's not helping any theo...logical arguments dealing with such contradictions.

      2. It's likely trying to preserve Man's special place in God's creation. However, God already says to Man that he is above the rest. What more do they want?

      3. Free Will in a completely deterministic Universe is a contradiction in itself. If God set some of the Angels up to fall, and manufactured basically every interesting detail in the Bible than it sort of bleaches out any moral message or meaning that we can derive from it. It also leaves God simply waiting for the end of a completely predictable movie, not that I can question how God spends His time. Also, believers could stop asking what God's plan is, it will happen no matter what they know, do, think or feel.

      Kind Regards,
      peace

      --
      "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
    5. Re:Free Will by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, provided God has a plan. What if he gave us free will because he didn't want to have a plan but just wanted to see how it evolves? Kinda like having a computer sim for his enjoyment, where he doesn't have to set up all the variables. I mean, what's the fun watching a movie when you already know how it ends?

      Actually, maybe he would be kinda pissed if everything always ran like he wants. I mean, that would be kinda boring too, wouldn't it?

      Imagine you're omnipotent and omniscient. Personally, I'd say the only real kind of enjoyment you have after a while is something that isn't predetermined. Simply because even for you, as someone who knows all and has everything, there's some surprise waiting.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:Free Will by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

      "Well, provided God has a plan. What if he gave us free will because he didn't want to have a plan..."

      Exactly. But religious folks always talk of God's plan. They can not even consider God without speculating on His plan. One thing I try to do is take what religious people say at face value, without any of my own objections. Than I try to test the internal and external consistency of their beliefs, on their own terms. So if they say He has a plan, that's what I use. It's not like I know anything about God, his plan or lack there of. I'll let people who know such things educate me. Not that _you_ were making any such claims, we were just discussing the free vs. proprietary will of Angels. Next up will be how many we can pack on the head of a pin :).

      But, the way the Old Testament reads, it does seem that even if God didn't have a plan, things did not go exactly as he had hoped.

      Even if they (the religious folk) do not speak directly of God's plan, even "putting your trust in God" speaks indirectly to some plan or at least an inclination. Otherwise, what would they be putting their trust in? Uncertainty? Chaos? God having some plan does seem central to Biblical theology and thus morals and ethics.

      "Imagine you're omnipotent and omniscient. Personally, I'd say the only real kind of enjoyment you have after a while is something that isn't predetermined."

      I agree. I'll just throw out there that God probably exists outside of space/time, so I doubt the same restrictions apply, necessarily. This does contradict a statement I made in the previous post but I think this is the truer description. God's enjoyment of His creation is not dependent on non-determinism.

      I find religion fascinating because it really is a powerful psychological tool that an individual can use to good effect in their lives. For example, a science minded intellectual might psych themselves out from doing something thinking of all the repercussions of failure. But a person who puts their faith in God in order to overcome fear will take action. Even if they are dumb as a post. Often taking action is the only difference between those who accomplish great things and those who do not. I think religion, whatever it is in a person, can be something that turns off the over analytical/fearful intellectual and ignites the base visceral drivers leading to action and elation. History not withstanding, it seems like a pretty useful tool.

      -peace

      --
      "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
  165. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    DeMorgan's law follows from the law of the excluded middle and the law of noncontradiction.

  166. the geek-god theroy by proadventurer · · Score: 1
    Here it is:

    Given an infinite universe and infinite timeline, a being could evolve with a super intellect and that could live forever and could master space-time, create a means of time travel. He could understand the placement of every atom and sub particle and master quantum math. Given a long enough timeline over multi space-times a being could become omnipotent and omniscient.

    This is known as the appel-vendal theory.

    --
    I hate slashdot
  167. Re:Japanese have written history 6000 years! by J.+T.+MacLeod · · Score: 1

    Probably because Japanese written history only goes back about 2400 years and Chinese written history 3200 years.

  168. Genealogies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The standard explanations for the genealogies are that:

    A) One is Mary's genealogy, the other is Joseph's.
    B) The word usually translated 'begat' doesn't imply they're father & son. That is to say, the person listed is quite possible a grandfather or great-grandfather or great-great grandfather, etc.

    1. Re:Genealogies by mangu · · Score: 1
      Both of your explanations mean that studying the Bible needs some interpretation beyond a mere literal reading. If one needs more sophisticated studies to analyze small details in something as simple as genealogies, then why should a simplistic approach be sufficient for the creation of the Universe?


      When the Bible says (Genesis 1,20, KJB) "And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creatures that hath life, and fowl that may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven", it doesn't mention which mechanism God used to do that. He could very well be using Evolution.


      A truly literal interpretation of the Bible can be very dangerous. God said (Genesis 1,29) "And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed , which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat". OK, let's see those fundie boys eat some poisonous fruits, please...


      As to the interpretations you mention about the differences in both genealogies of Jesus, neither holds water. Matthew 1,16 says "And Jacob begat Joseph,the husband of Mary, of whom was born Jesus, who is called Christ". Therefore your "A" explanation is not true, the Holy Bible very clearly states it's *not* the genealogy of Mary. Regarding the "B" explanation, at one point there's a 14 generation gap between both genealogies. If you are ready to assume that "begat" is so flexible that could mean either father and son or great-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-gr and-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-father and great-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-gr and-grand-grand-grand-grand-grand-son, well, then why can't you accept that a "day" in the Genesis could also mean 14 billion years...

    2. Re:Genealogies by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      A truly literal interpretation of the Bible can be very dangerous. God said (Genesis 1,29) "And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed , which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat". OK, let's see those fundie boys eat some poisonous fruits, please... They weren't poisonous before the Fall ("Cursed is the ground because of you... it will produce thorns and thistles for you"). Of course this is my non-literal interpretation. ;-)

      By the way, the idea that the universe is 6,000 years old is based on those genealogies, so if the GP is correct about "begat", that date could be a bit skewed.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  169. Hillbilly Museum by TheSlashaway · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    They should call it "The Hillbilly Museum of Creationism"

  170. "Partial Christianity" by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    I don't have the Chapter & Verse lined up yet, but you have to be really careful here sir.

    The most powerful decision you have to make regarding your faith is whether to go "pure literal" all the way, and hang on tight for the ride, or agree right at the outset to adopt one of the "Parable-Symbolic" type interpretations.

    If you have chosen the crisp literal style of belief, you do not believe in classical evolution.
    If you say you did, "I'm sorry, I didn't hear you. Can you repeat that?"

    On the other side, if you tag onto a couple of crucial hints that "Jesus spoke in parables", then you can freely interpret "days" as broad as the revelations phrase "end of days". (Clearly, the world will not end on July 7 after holidays sales are posted. Christ will reappear whenever He wants to... for large values of whenever.)

    Then "God created the world in six *epochs*" ... almost makes sense. (I think you have to combine a couple of portions of development, but you could find a six part division there somewhere.)

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  171. And the devil is human. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "But here steps in Satan, the eternal rebel, the first free-thinker and emancipator of worlds. He makes man ashamed of his bestial ignorance and obedience; he emancipates him, stamps upon his brow the seal of liberty and humanity, in urging him to disobey and eat of the fruit of knowledge." - Mikhail Bakunin

  172. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    It's a circular phenomenon. The ongoing failure of America's educational systems is producing a vast number of individuals with limited critical-thinking skills and no grasp of scientific method. These minds are fertile ground for irrational and unsupportable belief systems such as Creationism, yet you can't ignore the people who hold such beliefs simply because they are ignorant. They are dangerous because they make considerable efforts to acquire influence, and to inculcate others in their dubious thought processes. Worse yet, they eventually become part of the aforementioned plutocracy, which magnifies their power and influence manyfold.

    If civilization is to survive and avoid another Dark Age, we're going to have to fight on multiple fronts. It's not going to be easy, because willful ignorance is a powerful force. It's easy to simply dismiss Creationists and the like as the foolish, uninformed people that they are. That's a serious mistake, though, because they are organized and have a definite agenda.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  173. ob simpson's quote by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    bart: "according to creation theory, there were no cavemen"

    homer: "good riddance! their drawings sucked and they looked like hippies"

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  174. Re:That means the Biblical hero's were all girly-m by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 1

    Cause the flood wiped out the dinosaurs hundreds of years before David and Daniel, duh!

    --
    Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
  175. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by ENIGMAwastaken · · Score: 2, Funny
  176. Seriously, why? -- Total nonsense by pennystinker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Simply makes no sense, there is an obvious, perpetual,and profound flaw in the craziness that is Christianity and Judaism (other religions as well, some for the same some for different reasons): their "God" simply cannot exist, certainly not as described. The general belief in the "Almighty" ascribes "all knowing" (omniscience) and "all powerful" (omnipotence) properties to this "God" thing. At the same time this "God" thing "created" us with "free will" (whatever that is, a definition is not necessary, but suffice to say that "free will" implies an inability to make precise predictions about the behavior and actions of creatures endowed with such a property), but...

    Omniscience excludes "free will" as your "fate" (heaven/hell) has been known from the beginning of time, you never had a chance otherwise. If this is NOT the case then the "God" thing is not omniscient, inconsistent with the "all knowing" claim (more on this later). Also, one could argue that a "God" thing could choose to NOT exercise it's omniscient abilities, however:

        a) This does not change the issue of fate since all fates COULD be know, should the "God" thing choose to know it.

        b) Being omniscient this "God" thing would already know that it would or would not change "its mind" at some point, so if the decision to "remain in the dark" was made then it would be "forever".

        c) Choosing to "remain in the dark" by this "God" thing has profound implications (more in a bit)

    Omnipotence also excludes "free will" as any omnipotent being would be able to grant itself omniscience, see omniscience argument above. If this "God" thing cannot grant itself "omniscience", then it is not omnipotent.

    So either we have "free will" and this "God thing" is neither omnipotent nor omniscient, therefore not "almighty", or we do not have "free will" and choice is irrelevant, you are going to heaven or hell since the beginning of time.

    So, you can keep your "God" thing and nothing you do has any affect on your choices in the "afterlife" or your claims about this "God" thing are profoundly false.

    Implications for the non-omniscient "God" thing: if this "God" thing cannot "know" complete "rightness" or "wrongness" (I will not define these words, in this context I would venture to say that no meaningful definitions can be given), it can make mistakes, therefore is not "perfect". So, it is therefore possible that the "God" thing's judgement can be in error. So an eternity in "heaven" or "hell" can be granted in "error".

    Bottom line: it's all a bunch of nonsense, you might as well believe in leprechauns. And the practice and spread of this kind of thinking is harmful as it asks people to voluntarily give up rational thought. As it relates to this post about a "Creationism Museum", this is just yet another sad waste of human potential, and useless disinformation to be sending out to people.

    1. Re:Seriously, why? -- Total nonsense by pennystinker · · Score: 1

      Flamebait? You have to be kidding!

      "Creationists" open up a museum to promote an utterly non-scientific interpretation of the history of life on this planet. I take out the time to (yet again) point out that the fundamental precepts of their philosophy are baseless (and probably harmful), therefore their museum is nothing but an organized disinformation campaign. And I get marked as flamebait. That just sucks.

    2. Re:Seriously, why? -- Total nonsense by ylikone · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points, I'd mod you up. The problem with your post, although I agree with it, is that you are attacking the whole religious system... and there are still many intelligent people that believe in some sort of god. Those intelligent people still have some part of their brain that has not properly evolved and you have to be careful not to offend them. You need to be a bit more subtle in your approach.

      --
      Meh.
    3. Re:Seriously, why? -- Total nonsense by pennystinker · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your comment.

      I do understand about the "many intelligent people still believing in a 'god'" and so on and so forth. I used to be one of them. Trust me, I've tried the "dialog" or "tread lightly" approach, that does not work either. What I've learned over the years while trying to limit the influence and damage of these "crazy" and harmful ideas is this: the issue must be addressed head-on and no quarter is to be granted.

      Most of those "intelligent people" that your refer to are "too far gone", and will either simply continue to believe in the non-existent and "live accordingly" or worse, they will "project" a life according to the precepts of the mythological as mandatory. I can live in "peace" with the former but the later need to be confronted as sociopaths, for they are sick and dangerous people.

      "Intelligent design" has been thoroughly discredited, not only lacking of merit, but in fact, part of a larger more dangerous agenda: the imposition of the biblical account of creation (the work of humans) as "fact" despite being devoid of any supporting evidence.

      Humans have adjusted to the loss of the flat Earth, and the earth not being the center of the universe, and the fact that the stars are not pin-pricks of light shining down from "heaven", "we" can survive accepting the scientific take of the history on this planet, and the evolutionary development of spices.

  177. The Famous Moths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've taken time to read your post, and I'd appreciate if you'd return the favor by reading an argument to only a small portion of one of your points: the famous moths.

    1. Re:The Famous Moths by oaklybonn · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I did take some time to read that document, and I also took some time to look into its author. To quote this page:

      Rev. Wells decided in 1976 to "devote my life to destroying Darwinism" since it is incompatible with the beliefs of the Unification Church (the "Moonies"). He subsequently earned two Ph.D.'s (in theology and in biology) as a preparation for battle. Wells has indicated elsewhere that he is an "old-earth" creationist. He agrees that speciation has happened, but disputes common descent, and wants an ongoing role for God. Please read some of the reviews and rebuttals of of Reverend Wells other book, and see for yourself how its possible for someone to have a PhD in biology and yet still not understand how science works. I'm not a biologist, so I won't attempt to rebut the page you linked to - but you owe us all the favor of continuing to research what he writes, if you're going to cite it as cannon.
  178. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by JCCyC · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Teaching evolution and natural selection is as "preaching" as teaching that Pi is irrational.

    "Don't listen to the fancy college heathens! Pi is equal to THREE! it's in the Bible!" (It is.)

  179. Re:Sad, sad, sad by MikeB0Lton · · Score: 1

    Not everyone who attends church every Sunday is following what is in the scriptures (the same holds true for people of Jewish and Islamic faith as well) and you are correct that God will see right through the people who treated others like crap, but went to church every Sunday. However, to blame them rather than scripture for your disbelief is simply sad. Furthermore you are not religious because God is not what you want him to be? This seems rather selfish. Christianity is simple: Christ died to pay the price for our sinful nature. All we have to do is accept that. The rest is just strengthening the way you live your life, treat others, and look at the world.

    When I look around I see so many mysteries, and so much complexity that still cannot be explained by evolutionary science. The internal workings of a cell are a perfect example of this, or perhaps the eye. It's like throwing a few buckets of paint at a wall and expecting a beautiful portrait, or splashing ink on a page and getting Shakespeare. It just won't happen. Darwin himself struggled with this particular point. I won't go as far as to say the world is only a few thousand years old, or that nothing evolves, but perhaps God is there making that little change happen to please himself.

  180. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by jkabbe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just wanted to say a few things before you get modded down into non-existence.

    Evolution isn't any more "non-science" than astro-physics is non-science. Sure, it's pretty hard to set up an experiment to test evolution. But the same can be said for most of what goes on in space. That hasn't kept science out. Unfortunately, it does mean that the scatter is a little larger and research takes longer. But research still does happen because predictions can be made and then you wait and see if the observations match up.

    Evolution is falsifiable. If we actually wanted to run experiments we could. It might take a few hundred million years, but we could do it. Creation, on the other hand, is not falsifiable. But that won't stop those with blinders on from claiming they are similarly situated.

  181. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Capt_Morgan · · Score: 1

    Wow... either you are a liar or not paying attention in class. Science NEVER proves anything. The scientific method is about collecting facts and developing theories to fit the facts. Experiments are then performed to attempt to falsify those theories. No theory has been or will ever be "proven" There is more evidence (A LOT more) for the theory of evolution than there is for the theory of gravitation... should we stop teaching kids about gravity? You haven't studied the evidence for evolution (or you aren't smart enough to understand it) based on your post

    --
    It takes a big man to cry, but it takes a bigger man to laugh at that man.
  182. This battle began... by sheldon · · Score: 1
    Around the time of WWI.

    Why? Because the Germans claimed in their war-propaganda that Natural Selection and Darwin proved the German race was superior and they would defeat everybody else.

    So Williams Jennings Bryan fought Evolution, because he was opposed to the notion of Darwinism in our human society.

    From wikipedia

    In concluding that Darwinism was responsible for the immorality of the present age, Bryan was heavily influenced by two books: the first was Headquarters Nights: A Record of Conversations and Experiences at the Headquarters of the German Army in Belgium and France by Vernon Kellogg (1917), which forwarded that most German military leaders were committed Darwinists who were skeptical of Christianity. The second was The Science of Power by Benjamin Kidd (1918), which argued that German nationalism, materialism, and militarism could be attributed to the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, which in turn was the logical outworking of the Darwinian hypothesis.

    In 1920, Bryan told the World Brotherhood Congress that Darwinism was "the most paralyzing influence with which civilization has had to deal in the last century" and that Nietzsche, in carrying Darwinism to its logical conclusion, had "promulgated a philosophy that condemned democracy. . . denounced Christianity. . . denied the existence of God, overturned all concepts of morality. . . and endeavored to substitute the worship of the superhuman for the worship of Jehovah."

    However, it was not until 1921 that Bryan saw the threat to morality posed by Darwinism as a major internal threat to the US. The major study which seemed to convince Bryan of this was James Henry Leuba's The Belief in God and Immortality, a Psychological, Anthropological and Statistical Study (1916). In this study, Leuba showed that a considerable number of college students lost their faith during the four years they spent in college. Bryan was horrified that the next generation of American leaders might have the degraded sense of morality which had prevailed in Germany and caused the Great War. Bryan decided it was time to act and launched his massive anti-evolution campaign.



    I guess what I just find so ironic is how 80 years later, the people arguing this stupid battle... the ones arguing against Evolution because of a belief that it will undermine the moral fabric of the society... are the people with no morals.

  183. It's the whole "7 days" bit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See according to the Bible it took 6 days for the universe to be created, and on the seventh, God rested.

    Evolution works on the basis of it taking millions and millions of years to create even MAN.

    Obviously, millions of years != six days.

    The obvious solution to this is the fact that Man wasn't exactly created first, so whose timetable are we going by? God's? He would be an omnipotant, immortal being outside our own timestream. To him, he could be in the middle of his 8th or 9th day of watching over our universe. It could be that millions and millions of Earth Years = One God Day.

  184. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by southern+yank · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Kids often visit museums. If you're looking to influence young minds and you can't get into schools, museums are the next best thing.

  185. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

    You're getting a physics minor and you don't know the difference between "theory" and "hypothesis"?

    Are you graduating from Pat Robertson's Regent University School of Law? It puts more lawyers into the Bush administration than Yale and Harvard (and probably those two combined).

    The huge amount of difference between "theory" and "hypothesis" that Americans don't seem able to understand amazes me. No wonder that people such as yourself, who post to /. so I'd think would be reasonably intelligent, are part of the reason why they US is a laughingstock around the world for the huge percentage of people who don't believe in evolution. (one helluva a run on sentence but I hope you get the point).

  186. Science and Religion by jhmaughan · · Score: 1
    Your point here is critical:

    I'm not saying that science presupposes atheism. It's more accurate to say that science turns a blind eye to theology because the scientific method can't be applied to supernatural occurrences. Science doesn't deny the existence of god, it simply restricts its attention to the natural world. I think the problems arise when scientific theory tries to declare religious truth and religious theory tries to declare scientific fact. In my opinion, true religion and true science (assuming a person believes in "truth") will always agree, but until we can completely determine truth and fact, we ought to just keep them separate. Yes, I think God created the earth and yes, I think the earth is billions of years old. How did God make an earth billions of years old? I have no clue, but I'm good with that for now.
    1. Re:Science and Religion by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      I think you are dead right. This is where the churches of all religions fall apart. Information about the world is being accrued at a greater rate than the religious meme can adapt to. The information contradicts the gold standard of a church and the church cannot adjust its interpretation of the gold standard (usually a book of wisdom which has achieved status by being hundreds of years old). The problem the church has is that it has to maintain authority over the population and it is incapable of adjusting its teaching without losing face and therefore authority. A church in principle is an excellent human institution because it maintains a gold standard of behavior in questions of morality (read "how to control breeding and raising of children" or "a template for good verses bad behavior - why crime, corruption, unhealthy living is 'bad'".) Unfortunately like most imperfect human institutions it can only exercise power by consent or resort to violence to achieve its aim. Consent requires respect and this is weakened by rapid change. We don't have a problem these days with the idea that the earth goes round the sun but the Christian church was unable to adjust to the idea when it was first proven, because its teaching had placed earth and man at the center of gods universe. We don't have a problem with being 'Christians' these days and acknowledging that the earth goes round the sun. Time has modified the central tenet of the early Christian church that because man is gods creation, his planet has to be at the center of the universe. Man may still be at the center of gods universe but the universe itself just got a lot larger.

      The problem with the creationists is that they are backward and stupid. If they thought about the problem of creationism in the same way that they apparently can do for the 'earth going round the sun ' difficulty then there would be no problem. Unfortunately they confuse the attack on this moronic evolution denial with an attack on the more useful gold-standard morality of the church. Personally I am quite happy to let churches fly the flag for moral gold standards. Its certain that free market economics have no sensible way of doing this and its becoming clear that democracy is quite weak in defining how to live. The politician will happily gas six million Jews if it means they are re-elected. However the churches must adapt faster as we become more educated and more knowledgeable about the world if they are going to avoid a confrontation with us. They fight back by trying to indoctrinate the young and occasionally atheist states arise to resist this despicable behavior. This doesn't help much because atheist states usually behave very badly and fail as did the former soviet union when the people just gave up on it.

      Rather than attack the morons spouting creationism we should be calling out for churches to find ways of accommodating reality. If this doesn't happen then there will be civil war. Because I'm not going to let these idiots run my world.

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
  187. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by indy_Muad'Dib · · Score: 1

    "Probably would be cheaper and more effective to just down a fifth of bourbon, but this is for the whole family."

    it's Kentucky, bourbon is for the whole family there.

  188. Re:Heading off at the pass - its flooding by HeroreV · · Score: 1

    I don't think you understand how religion works. If somebody is determined to believe the entire earth was covered in water, they'll just tell themselves God must have added the water and then taken it away.

    Stars, day and night, hurricanes, tornadoes, ocean waves, the moon, earth quakes, rain, seasons, etc have all been attributed to God when there was no better explanation. If you don't know how something happens, just attribute it to God.

  189. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    ...but this is for the whole family.

    So's the bourbon. What's the age there? Two?

    --
    What?
  190. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by David.R.Benham · · Score: 0

    and I wish secular humanists would keep their evolution dogma out of our schools too.

  191. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why are you protesting? Who gives a shit? As long as they keep their creationist crap out of our schools, that's all I care about.

    This museum represents a direct attack on science. I give a shit because I happen to think that science and scientific literacy are important. The stuff presented in this museum is blatantly wrong, and ridiculous, and is a menace to the public understanding and enlightenment even without government support (though, I would not be surprised if the museum has not benefited at least indirectly from the tax breaks our government is too happy to give religious institutions.) The only educational value it has to serve as a case-in-point as to how excessive religious faith can obliterate any trace of rationality in an otherwise intelligent individual.

    Also, some schools (hopefully only private/religious schools) are undoubtedly planning field trips to this museum (an earlier article I read noted the parking lot which was designed to comfortably accommodate school buses). It's bad enough that parents and churches poison impressionable, helpless children's minds with this garbage, but now they'll have a multi-million dollar, Universal Studios caliber set of displays and presentations to even more thoroughly inculcate kids to this backwards, pre-medieval nonsense.

  192. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm honestly curious, is your school accredited? You clearly don't know much about the conceptual framework of science in general, so it's difficult to believe that you would be getting by without failing out of the very first science class you took at an accredited university.

  193. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    So schools shouldn't teach about atomic theory, like protons, neutrons, etc.? Or electrical theory? None of that stuff is proven, since we can't exactly see inside atoms.

    Do you go to the Bob Jones school of physics? You really have no business in a science class.

  194. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    I think you're confusing the distinction between theory and hypothesis. The former comes from the latter, but only after it has not been shown by every available means to be false.

    By your own admission:

    By the way, I'm a Christian, and one who holds to the young-earth ideas... ...I hate string theory, hope it dies a horrible painful death... ...My personal feeling is that both Evolution and Creation are non-science due to their subject matter...

    ...you appear to lack the objectivity required to be of any use in science, and I would advise you to abandon it and pursue a course of study more concordant with your abilities.

    Just my .02 cents.

    Well, you got that much right. 0.02 of a cent is a generous estimate of the value of your statements. BTW, I want everybody to take note how polite I'm being here, despite the strain. :-P

  195. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by DShard · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sure, it's pretty hard to set up an experiment to test evolution.
    No, it is very easy to set up an experiment. I do it all the time when I reuse yeast on many consecutive brewing sessions. Yeast rapidly evolves due to it's simple nature, and six generations is enough to change it's behavior. This results in a very different beer that can change a nice cream ale into a poor chimay. The thing that is hard is understanding what is happening, not finding the examples of it in your daily life.
  196. Re:Japanese have written history 6000 years! by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

    Probably because Japanese written history only goes back about 2400 years and Chinese written history 3200 years. ...Yes... but combined, they cover 5600 years... which is a perfect fit for ID fact..errr..theory.

    --

    "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

  197. Dammit -- not Kentucky ... by femur · · Score: 1

    Why must this museum be in Kentucky? Goddammit. As if that state needs to provide more low-hanging fruit for lazy comedians to throw. Can't we just stick with bourbon, college basketball, horses, and coal?

    Kentucky gave us Hunter S. Thomson, Johnny Depp, Muhammad Ali, George Clooney ... okay, maybe Kentucky should apologize for that one....

    But I digress. Does anyone else find it ironic that this museum is in the same state from which John Scopes came? Scopes taught in Tennessee but is from the Bluegrass State. How about that the pioneering geneticist Phil Sharp was a Kentuckian?

    Hope they eventually move this damn museum to Mississippi -- where it belongs.

    --
    So whaddaya expect for nuttin'?
  198. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Lord+Apathy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Evolution is a science. Why is it a science? Because it follows the scientific method. There is evidence and rules what can be treated as evidence. When the evidence no longer fits the model the model will be changed to fit the evidence. An this goes on and on until the evidence and the model fit together like a fine wine and cheese.

    Creationism on the other hand cannot follow the scientific method. For one thing there is only one theory and that theory can never be modified. Where on the other hand the theory of evolution has changed in the last 150 years since is formulation. Creationism is just the opposite of science. Since you can't change the theory you have to change the evidence. You can't do that in science. You have to go by what the evidence says.

    My friend as Penn & Teller say, "Creationsim is Bullshit!"

    --

    Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification

  199. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

    i must unfortunately disagree for one reason.
    children are first and foremost believe everything they are told by an authority figure. if a child's parents and all other adults are telling the child that creationism is correct and evolution is evil, the child will with a high probability believe that.

  200. the ultimate Catch-22 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "For the foolishness of God is wiser than man's wisdom... God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise"

    seriously. try to argue with that.

    (1 Cor 1:25, 27)

  201. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by imagelesskink · · Score: 1

    Those raptors are still here now: http://xkcd.com/c87.html

  202. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by slugstone · · Score: 1

    No, you have it exactly wrong: belief has nothing to do with it, and that's the point.

    The schools should be teaching what is supported by evidence (e.g., evolution), not what is proposed to prop up a theology (e.g. creationism). Unless you researched everything yourself, then there is belief. Who do you trust?
  203. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mad.frog · · Score: 1

    Good research is repeatable. And in fact, good research isn't accepted unless it's demonstrated to be repeatable.

    Geez, ever take a lab class?

  204. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mad.frog · · Score: 1

    No, schools should be teaching facts.

    That's a pretty bold statement. At one feel swoop you've just eliminated most of the humanities from schools.

    Literature? Not fact-based. Gone.

    History? Whoa, quite a can of worms! One man's history is another man's horrific distortion of the past. Whose history of, say, World War II will we be teaching this week?

    Math? Well, according to Goedel even arithmetic will contain statements that are true but cannot be proven. Does this mean they aren't facts?

  205. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by hazem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless you researched everything yourself, then there is belief. Who do you trust?

    Creationism and Evolution have one thing in common - a big stack of paper that tells what each is. But that's where it ends.

    Creationism says "This stack of papers states the absolute proof and if you challenge it you are a heretic who will burn in hell."

    Evolution(ism) says "These papers say the way we think things are based on the information we've found so far. If you can refute the evidence and findings in them, please do so, and add your evidence and findings to the stack of papers."

    One requires blind belief in "information" that cannot be examined or refuted. The other requires no belief and encourages examination and refutation.

  206. Lame lame lame by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Your response, which of course is the standard response, is totally and completely unsatisfactory and disintegrates upon a close inspection.

    First is the age old question of free will/predestination. If God knew what was going to happen, or what any individual is going to do a priori, just how is that free will?

    Second your comparison of parent-child relationship. What father would condemn his children to internal suffering just because of their lack of faith in the existence of an invisible being?

    Or even just the wrong invisible being... There is a strong correlation between religious affiliation and prevailing culture. So those unlucky individuals born into Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist cultures are going to have a much higher likelihood of being "cast into the lake of fire". Geography apparently strongly determines the demographics of hell.

    Next, why is freewill always associated with the propensity to disobey and unbelief? A rational creature can have freewill but still be inclined to obey or believe in a deity, especially with the presentation of some physical evidence. Likewise one can be inclined to disobey and not have free will. The whole freewill notion is a red herring.

    And why does this god of yours desire to "bring even more glory to Himself"!!! Think about this for a while. The desire for Glory is one the more detestable qualities of megalomaniacs, despotic rulers and warrior kings.

    Do you not think it is much more likely that this alleged desire for "glory" is just a transference of the manners of warrior kings to a blasphemous vision of God? A god made in man's image.

    You are worshiping a bronze-age god and using dark-age apologetics to justify it. As Sam Harris has noted there is a new wine being poured why not catch it with a clean glass.

  207. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by ultranova · · Score: 1

    Math? Well, according to Goedel even arithmetic will contain statements that are true but cannot be proven. Does this mean they aren't facts?

    If you can't prove them true how do you know they are ? And if you don't know if they are, why should you teach them as if they were ?

    So yes, as far as I'm concerned, an unproven mathemathical statement isn't a fact. It is, at best, an educated guess.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  208. A Shit by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    I think that's what they once said about the extremist Madrassa in muslim world. And now, I'm sure you've started hearing about muslim groups pressuring schools and governments to kowtow to their idiotic beliefs about depicting Muhammed or acknowledging the holocaust? Fanatacism never stays confined anywhere -- religion by it's very nature perpetuates itself and attempts to dominate every aspect of Human affairs. So you SHOULD give a shit. Sooner or later, they WILL try to force schools to teach this nonsense again, and museums like this make it easier to strengthen public support for their bullshit mythologies. The very existence of this monument to delusion and contempt for science is an abomination.

    1. Re:A Shit by VoidCrow · · Score: 1

      You've said what I'd want to say, and with a passion that I no longer possess. I respect that.

  209. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by sabernet · · Score: 1

    No...Church can 'preach' that which you apparently believe. Schools can 'teach' that which is observable in nature and verifiable in the lab.

    And the whole 'You can't prove evolution' argument is false. It can be viewed, recorded and reproduced in micro-cultures easily and it's effects can be extrapolated equally in the macroscopic universe looking at many things such as DNA similarities and physical similarities between varying species.

    You don't like learning scientific doctrine? Don't go to school. If you wanna get your personal views of big daddy God and his magical wonder book reinforced by other like minded peoples, go to your Church. Or a Church run 'school'. Just leave the public schools the fuck alone for those who don't want Jehova crammed down their throats.

  210. Falsification by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You can run an experiment on evolution in a matter of hours, using viruses or bacteria.

    This just shows how evil and destructive the theistic movement is -- they've already brainwashed society into thinking that evolution is an untested theory. It HAS been tested -- undergrad students (and even high school students) routinely run experiments in which they allow various traits to evolve in micro-organisms. There are thousands of examples of species that have evolved in the last century, many of them extremely novel. Novel ecosystems have developed. Entirely new metabolic pathways have appeared -- I somehow doubt that titanium-oxidizing bacteria, nylon-oxidizing bacteria, or fungi that subsist on high levels of ionizing radiation, developed before Human were around to provide pure titanium, nylon, or Chernobyl-level nuclear disasters.

    1. Re:Falsification by haraldm · · Score: 1

      ... or even much easier, bacteria stems adapting to various medications like antibiotics at light speed. This goes so blazingly fast (within just tens or hundreads of generations, each taking a mere hours) that one must wonder if some people are just plain stupid. Or not willing to see which is even more stupid.

      --
      open (SIG, "</dev/zero"); $sig = <SIG>; close SIG;
    2. Re:Falsification by noamsml · · Score: 1

      Hell, the average high school student's room is a large scale experiment in the evolution of bacteria.

    3. Re:Falsification by Tomfrh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It HAS been tested -- undergrad students (and even high school students) routinely run experiments in which they allow various traits to evolve in micro-organisms.

      Creationist folk argue that this is a case of microevolution, much like the breeding of dogs. To prove macroevolution is true they demand to see a transitional fossil, e.g. a mudskipper with monkey paws or something.

    4. Re:Falsification by Tyreth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Get a clue. Or at least have the decency to know a little something about what you criticise.

      As surprising as it may sound to you as someone who obviously doesn't know what they're talking about, Creationists *do* believe in evolution. They believe that mutations occur, that children differ from their parents, and that bacteria adapt to novel situations. If you don't believe me, take a look at the Answers in Genesis website, it shouldn't take you too long to find that out.

      What they dispute is the idea that all living things share a single common ancestor. They just don't believe that the dog and the shark are distantly related. But they do believe that evolution, defined as a change in allele frequencies in a population over time, does occur.

    5. Re:Falsification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Every fossil is a transitional fossil.

    6. Re:Falsification by neomunk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I personally think that since we know enough (not everything, but a good decent working approximation) about biochemistry that it is entirely possible to now do enhanced speed evolutionary experiments in a simulated environment. In fact, I know such research has been going on for longer than -I've- been alive already.

      I myself, being passively interested in self-adapting systems have been mucking around for years with various AI, AL (artificial life), machine learning and genetic algorithm programs. You can experience the wonders of evolution for yourself if you're willing to stare at a screen for hours on end. This IS slashdot, many of us do that already. :-)

      Seriously though, if you're really interested in at least seeing the very basics of evolution at work, I'd suggest a good start to be NetLOGO. It comes with a nice allotment of pre-built experiments for you to study and watch. Adaptive systems can effect very complex behaviors with very simple rules, and you can see that happen yourself if you really care.

      After NetLOGO you might wanna have a look at framsticks. Framsticks is basically an evolution simulator. Not true biochemical evolution (though I do think work has been done to make a biochemically accurate framework for framsticks) but a decent framework for macro-effects of biological evolution.

      Basically we already know that the mechanisms of life can (DO) change over time, and it's not too hard to grasp that the ones that work better survive longer. Since all life reproduces, it's probably a good assumption, though not 100% accurate, that the longer an organism lives, the more it reproduces. I cannot possibly fathom why such a simple system can draw so much ire.

      Oh, here are links to the programs I referenced.
      http://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/
      http://www.frams.alife.pl/

      With framsticks (if memory serves, it's been a year) you need (unless you're a text mode superstar) the shareware package. It's not annoying bother you alot shareware, and though it IS slightly crippled, IFIAK all the crippling is done on things like rendering your creatures in a full OpenGL world. It DOES render them for you, just not in a beautifully crafted world. Again, I may be wrong, or things might have changed.

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

      This just shows how evil and destructive the Evolution / Secular Humanism movement is -- they've already brainwashed society into thinking that evolution is a tested theory. It hasn't been tested -- undergrad students (and even high school students) playing with mutating bacteria is not macro-evolution -- no new species were made.

      Do you even stop to think about what you are saying?

    8. Re:Falsification by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      no new species were made.

      Speciation has been observed.

      And by "evolution / secular humanism movement", you mean "science".

    9. Re:Falsification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so they're happy to believe the well established scientific evidence that evolution occurs, but they choose to ignore the well established scientific evidence for common descent. that's a very scientific approach. start with the conclusion, then pick and choose the evidence that supports your idea, whilst ignoring the rest. just imagine how much of a better place the world would be is some retarded fuckhead like that was in charge of the most powerful nation in the world. oh FUCKING FUCK!!!!!!!!!!

    10. Re:Falsification by spoco2 · · Score: 1

      But they're completely prepared to believe in there being some all omnipotent being that exists that just 'created' out of thin air a bunch of fully formed animals, with easily identifiable traits that you can see where one type of animal has evolved from another... they just 'made them like that'.

      I find it much more easy to believe in things starting off very simple and slowly evolving and changing, and various new strains adapting to the areas they find themselves in until over millions of years you start having many quite disparate things starting to evolve.

      It's just so much easier to believe in, because it makes sense.

    11. Re:Falsification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Creationists aren't one specific group, there's varying levels of evolution denial. At one extreme are Intelligent Design Creationists, a small subset of which might actually admit that the earth is ancient, common descent and "macroevolution" are real, it's just that periodically their god's gotta come in and fiddle around a bit plunking in mitochondria here or flagella there. Scientifically it's the least wrong creationism, theologically it makes their god a drooling idiot who couldn't get it right the first time. At the other extreme of evolution denial you've got the young-earth creationists, a group so massively deluded they think the earth is only 6000 years old and that God slaughtered every living thing with a flood (except Noah who somehow crammed two of everything on a wooden boat, from penguins to polar bears--I'd have hated to be on pooper scooper duty!). The most deranged of this sub-group actually believe in geocentrism as a core religious tenent--hello the 15th century called and wants its cosmology back! For pure entertainment value though you couldn't beat the flat-earthers. They used to be pretty common among the fundamentalists just 100 years ago, but they seem to have died out recently.

    12. Re:Falsification by Tomfrh · · Score: 1

      Not to the creationist. Creationists observe that only coherent sensible animals exist in fossilized form. They then exclaim "AHA! why do we not see the ridiculous halfway creatures as proposed by this ridiculous theory of evolution!"

    13. Re:Falsification by Tyreth · · Score: 1

      I find it much more easy to believe in things starting off very simple and slowly evolving and changing, and various new strains adapting to the areas they find themselves in until over millions of years you start having many quite disparate things starting to evolve.

      It's just so much easier to believe in, because it makes sense.

      I can appreciate you thinking that, but it just isn't the case. If you think about it, you will soon realise that similarities in the makeup of various living things is as much evidence of common design as it is for common descent. Real world designed things bear that fact out. It is true that the common features of living things is explainable under the theory of common descent. It is not true, however, that this is an evidence of common descent, because it's equally well explained under common design.

      You might also appreciate (even if you disagree) the idea that most or all who believe in design believe that there were only a handful of original living things created (perhaps 50), and from those evolved all the existing living things we see today.

      Regarding creation out of thin air, I find it much more difficult to believe that this universe came from nothing as opposed from something. This is one of the many reasons why I could never be an atheist.

    14. Re:Falsification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding creation out of thin air, I find it much more difficult to believe that this universe came from nothing as opposed from something. This is one of the many reasons why I could never be an atheist.
      And where did the something from which this universe was created come from? Moving the question of origins one step away doesn't provide any sort of answer. If your god created the universe, how did god come into existence?

    15. Re:Falsification by spoco2 · · Score: 1

      As per the AC comment along with this, how does it make it any easier to believe?

      I have the issue of what came before the universe, you've got the problem of what came before your god.

      It's the same issue... although mine is easier (although I can't wrap my head around either scenario) because I just have to imagine how ANYTHING came into being, no matter how small or simple. You have to imagine how a hugely complex omnipotent being just popped into existence.

      I know which one I have less trouble with.

      As for common design vs common descent... common descent works better because we have things which have NO use at all to us in us (the coccyx as a left over for a tail has no use for us)... and why do men have nipples? It's purely excuse making to suggest that it's to do with common design, as the designer (ie God) is a pretty sloppy creature maker if he kept using bits from other animals in ones that he kinda, shouldn't have.

    16. Re:Falsification by Tyreth · · Score: 1

      As per the AC comment along with this, how does it make it any easier to believe?

      I have the issue of what came before the universe, you've got the problem of what came before your god.

      Sorry, I don't get emails me informing me of AC replies, so I usually don't pay attention to them. This response is a standard Dawkinsian one that, while seems intuitively sound, is in fact not relevant.

      Given the current cosmology of the universe, we believe time began with the big bang. If time began with the big bang, this means there is no "before" the big bang. If there is no time before the big bang, then the cause of the universe itself must have been timeless. And a timeless cause needs no beginning, no creation. The argument is sometimes presented as thus:
      1. Everything that begins to exist has a cause
      2. The universe began to exist
      3. Therefore, the universe has a cause
      Note that only those things which begin to exist need a cause. God, being timeless, has no beginning and therefore no need for a cause. This doesn't mean that God didn't have a cause, just that we have no need to look back further in the chain. We can reasonably stop there.

      Consider numbers. Do numbers have a beginning? Or do they just have a timeless sort of existence? Do we need to look for a beginning for them? I don't think so. In the same way, God can just exist, and need no explanation of origin - for He exists timelessly, and therefore needs no cause.

      Dawkins made this (and numerous other) mistake in his recent book. The fact is, when we find complex things, it is often the case that these complex things were caused by even more complex things. Dawkins argues that this is not the case. But consider a TV. Is it absurd to think that we should conceive of something more complex than the TV to explain its origins? Of course not. There is nothing irrational about taking one step back to find the cause.

      It's the same issue... although mine is easier (although I can't wrap my head around either scenario) because I just have to imagine how ANYTHING came into being, no matter how small or simple. You have to imagine how a hugely complex omnipotent being just popped into existence.
      Hopefully what I said will explain this in a way that might make a little sense.

      I know which one I have less trouble with.
      As do I :)

      As for common design vs common descent... common descent works better because we have things which have NO use at all to us in us (the coccyx as a left over for a tail has no use for us)... and why do men have nipples? It's purely excuse making to suggest that it's to do with common design, as the designer (ie God) is a pretty sloppy creature maker if he kept using bits from other animals in ones that he kinda, shouldn't have.
      These issues are all rather debatable. Maybe these really are vestigial traits, or maybe they are there for reasons we are not yet aware of. The number of organs and features thought unecessary, but later discovered to be quite useful, is large. The Coccyx for example does have a use - it is a place for muscles to attach, and a shock absorber for when we sit.

      It's rather a matter of perspective. As an atheist, one would expect to find features maladapted or no longer necessary. As a theist, you might still think some vestigial features could exist, but you'd expect the list to be quite small or zero. It's not really evidence for common ancestry. In fact, I've seen the opposite - the human body seems to be more and more intricately constructed so that all components are there.

    17. Re:Falsification by spoco2 · · Score: 1

      Note that only those things which begin to exist need a cause. God, being timeless, has no beginning and therefore no need for a cause. This doesn't mean that God didn't have a cause, just that we have no need to look back further in the chain. We can reasonably stop there. But that supposes that you believe in the concept of 'timelessness'... but we see time marching on all around us. You can argue that time is a construct of man, but that isn't so. We constructed our own units of measurement for it, but completely out of our control things keep being affected by the passage of time. (decay, erosion, etc.) If you're happy to just stop at a point of thinking about things and say... 'well that's all a bit hard to work out, a supreme being must have done it', and then when confronted by where he/she/it came from counter with 'he just always was' seems like such a cop out to me.

      the fact is, when we find complex things, it is often the case that these complex things were caused by even more complex things. Dawkins argues that this is not the case. But consider a TV. Is it absurd to think that we should conceive of something more complex than the TV to explain its origins? Of course not. There is nothing irrational about taking one step back to find the cause. Wah? It seems like you get tangled here... Surely the athiest viewpoint is always to think that we can break things down to more and more simple things until we get to the basic root of how and where things come from. To say that we should conceive of something more complex than a tv to explain its origins is absurd... you can break a tv down to all the component parts which in and of themselves are not particularly complex... then build it all back up (via a process of technical evolution mind you, from the first very primitive tvs) until you understand the entire workings of the set.

      To say 'I don't understand how life started', and then to just invent a pre-formed, always being entity to explain it all away is, really, just giving up.

      I have not read Dawkin's books, but I have seen him talk and I really do agree with what he says, and he comes from the point of view of seeing science being eroded and held back by religious groups who want people to just stop thinking and believe in a book of dubious origin...

      It's very frustrating to see it happen.
    18. Re:Falsification by Tyreth · · Score: 1

      But that supposes that you believe in the concept of 'timelessness'... but we see time marching on all around us. Time is already conceived by physicists as something with a distinct reality. There are two points I'd like to make, as quick notes:
      1. Numbers seem to have a timeless existence - it makes no sence to ask "when was 2?" We experience some concepts that are in fact timeless. If time did not exist (and we can ponder this), then we think that numbers could still exist. Animals can't exist without time, nor can rocks, but numbers can
      2. Current cosmology in the works of Einstein and others shows that time did "begin" to exist at the point of the big bang. ie, time is not inseparably linked with the idea of existence. Something can exist, but not be connected to time. It is atemporal. To ask what caused the big bang is a very reasonable question, but also the thing that caused it will be timeless, since time was a creation at the time of the big bang.

      In summary, I don't see any reason why you think it's not reasonable to think that things can be atemporal.

      Wah? It seems like you get tangled here... Surely the athiest viewpoint is always to think that we can break things down to more and more simple things until we get to the basic root of how and where things come from...
      *snip* I have not read Dawkin's books, but I have seen him talk and I really do agree with what he says
      I'm sorry, due to some confusion I thought you and the AC were referring to Dawkins' argument on the subject. He exclaims that you can't explain biological life by appealing to something more complex. He says that organised complexity is the very thing we're attempting to explain, so appealing to something even more complex (God) is a ridiculous answer to the question.

      I was trying to pre-empt this argument of Dawkins, which is itself foolish, and no more than sophistry. I was pointing out that sometimes organised complexity is to find its explanation in something even more complex. In this case the TV finds its explanation in human engineers. The reasoning of Dawkins would have us believe it is irrational to explain complexity by something even more complex.

      To say 'I don't understand how life started', and then to just invent a pre-formed, always being entity to explain it all away is, really, just giving up.
      I'm not saying I don't understand how life started. That's the atheist. In the atheist's worldview there is no good explanation now for how life arose from non-life. As a result they invent explanations - so why can't the theist do this? (not that I think we are - just want to know why something's ok for the atheist, but not the theist)

      The atheist has to explain how something came from nothing. The theist makes the very reasonable step of arguing that if the universe began to exist, it must have had a cause. The atheist takes the unreasonable step of saying that even if the universe began to exist, it doesn't necessarily need a cause. The theist doesn't invent deities to explain things that can be explained in other ways. There is a very real problem about how both life arose initially, and how the universe began, for the atheist. The theist postulates the most reasonable explanation - that the universe had a cause, and that cause we call God. A timeless cause that needs no explanation for its origin, for there was no beginning of it.

  211. Help me to come up with a working definition here: by z4pp4 · · Score: 1

    "Creationism is Evolution's way of seperating the dumb from the lesser-dumb."

  212. God put them here to test our faith by skeldoy · · Score: 0

    Jesus: "Let me bury fossil-heads with you dad, fuck em, fuck em all."

  213. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Might I suggest reading: "The Kentucky Derby is Decadent and Depraved" by by Hunter S. Thompson (http://www.derbypost.com/hunter.html)

  214. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quoting glitch23:
    "You forget that "your" schools are their schools too. Why should your views reign supreme? This country was founded upon freedom of religion however there was, and still is, a Christian foundation.
    And this makes a difference...how? The US government is religion-agnostic; it is IRRELEVANT as to what the religion of the original settlers was.
    "That doesn't mean everyone has to be a Christian for fear of the majority (or the US government for that matter)..."
    And yet it happens anyway.
    "...persecuting them but it also means that those who choose to be part of that faith can do it without fear of persecution. See, people like you don't want religion at all,..."
    Funny. I believe in evolution, but I'm also religiously active. Word of caution when talking to intelligent people: avoid blanket statements.
    "...but the US was founded by people who were actually punished for their beliefs because they didn't always agree with the state's religion. They came to this country to escape that and you are bringing it back with your bigotry."
    Perhaps you are unfamiliar with US History? The Puritans (i.e. the Pilgrims) were no less tolerant of people who didn't conform to their "city on a hill" ruling system than the Anglicans, for example.
    What "bigotry" do you speak of? Are you referring to execution of the Enlightenment-oriented scientific method? Need I remind you that the US was founded on Enlightenment (read: NOT religious) principles?
    "...The difference in this case is that instead of punishing someone because their religion is different than the state's religion you want to stifle them simply because they have *any* religion."
    Another humorous statement. Most scientists follow a religion; they just learn to prevent it from interfering with rationality. The "punishment" you refer to comes from the fact that your ilk want to undue hundreds of years of Enlightenment and Renaissance thought and mentally enslave the masses in a new Dark Age where Religion is Law.
    "You use the first amendment in a bastardized, and unintended, form as reason for your agenda."
    Pot calling the Kettle black.
    "We can not have a government religion (per the first amendment) but stifling those who want to practice religion while in school (or anywhere) is tantamount to violating the 1st amendment by passing laws preventing freedom of religion."
    Individual prayer is still legal. So are Bible studies. So are after-hours religious meetings. What is ILLEGAL is MANDATORY prayer (i.e. explicit prayer at, say, a school assembly). So what are you whining about?
    "You, in effect, create a state sanctioned atheistic "religion" and want it enforced everywhere."
    Don't confuse Science and Religion; they are completely separate. Allowing people to explore their world is in no way atheistic; in fact, I believe in Genesis it is written that man shall inherit the earth and do with it what he wishes. Are you contradicting yourself?
    "If that isn't irony I don't know what is."
    It seems that's not the only thing you don't know.
    "The first amendment is being used by people like you to prevent people of faith from practicing their religion, such as in their schools, when it was meant to do the exact opposite of protecting them so that they can practice their religion wherever and whenever they want. This isn't an issue of Creationism versus evolution. It is simply an issue of your intolerance for people of faith."
    The First Amendment is preventing people like you from imposing your religion on others. Maybe you'd be happier back in 18th Century England? The current interpretation is that no single religion cannot be favored by the government; if the government must somehow interfere with religion, it must do so to ALL religions. Also, the current ruling is that while individuals in the US can BELIEVE in their religion, the PRACTICE of it thereof can be controlled by the government. This is what prevents people from being married at the age of, s

  215. not with fruitflies it isn't. by HelloKitty · · Score: 1

    >> Sure, it's pretty hard to set up an experiment to test evolution.

    not with fruitflies it isn't... we have lots of proof of evolution. for real. just not the monkey/human 1million year experiment kind... missing links? yes, we have them.

    here's some interesting fuel for your fire: http://wiki.cotch.net/index.php/List_of_creationis t_arguments

    1. Re:not with fruitflies it isn't. by Tanuki64 · · Score: 1

      not with fruitflies it isn't...
      Fruitflies are an invention of the devil, so they don't count. ;-)
  216. wikipedia on creationism has some good info... by HelloKitty · · Score: 1

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

    interesting read, lots of sources referenced.

  217. Re:That means the Biblical hero's were all girly-m by yogurtforthesoul · · Score: 0

    You misunderstand. That's cause they were busy with the whole Perseus scandal. They had to move fast on that one. It was Medusa who killed the dinosaurs. /rimshot

    --
    Something witty goes here.
  218. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by TheDormouse · · Score: 1

    Do you even know what science is? Name ONE scientific fact please.

  219. God Created Religious Nutjobs To Test Me..... by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    JESUS SAVE ME..... .....from your followers.

    -
    It is *MY* belief that the Bible, and religion in general, has been hijacked by nutjobs who have bastardized and perverted the Bible and religious teachings into things that they are not.

    Keep in mind, following the Ten Commandments and the Bible DO NOT make you a religious nutter. They just make you more polite, and generally more pleasant to be around. It's when religion gets taken out of context, exploited, and contorted into something far different than what it was meant to be do people become the religious extremists that we have today. This goes for pretty much ANY religion, not just Christianity.

    Scientology is one exception: It just stupid no matter how you look at it, drunk or sober.
    -

    --
    Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
  220. Since This Thread is Light On It... by severoon · · Score: 1

    ...and it's obligatory for a discussion of this nature, I will now purport to be offended by something totally irrelevant to the main line of debate in order to (1) score emotional points from lurking idiots, currency which I will presumably spend soon to reinforce my absurd point of view and (2) draw attention away from the spotlight you're attempting to shine on the more subtly positioned points in the arguments you're advocating.

    Here I go.

    "Fat Americans"??? How dare you!

    Note how I used quotes improperly to put words in your mouth--words you didn't actually type. I'm hoping to establish a precedent here of being able to use quotes that approximate what you have said. This way, in later replies when I completely go off the reservation, I can continue to "quote" you as if I know what you're really saying and reference to your actual words are all but irrelevant.

    (This post is a result of my attempt to see things from the Creationist point of view, to better understand where they're coming from. If you're a Creationist, how'm I doing so far?)

    --
    but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
  221. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by severoon · · Score: 1

    Well, yes...but only because I "believe" in science.

    --
    but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
  222. I really feel sorry for these people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clearly they have a mental illness. Reputable psychiatrists normally describe relgion as a form of delusion. One has to pity the these poor sad beings, and their sickly disease of the mind. Religious fundementalism is a terrible thing.
    This creation is no more a museum than disneyland (in fact, less so - disneyland _does_ actually have educational elements)

  223. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by severoon · · Score: 1

    I don't understand your issue here--every public school science curriculum I've ever observed does exactly everything you ask of it and more when it comes to evolution...indeed, ALL science. They begin teaching science to students by teaching them the scientific method, which encompasses the basic definitions of scientific terms like "hypothesis," "theory," "experiment," etc. So, by calling it "the Theory of Evolution," right off the bat everyone knows what that means. Any student who paid attention during that first week of jr. high science ought to also be able to tell you the difference between the fact of evolution and the theory (also more casually referred to as "Darwinism")...something which I fear you perhaps cannot? This covers the first paragraph or so you have written...of course your statement that schools shouldn't teach theory, only fact, is bogglingly flawed. Pretty much all of science is about theory. Facts form little more than an almanac. Without theories, which is nothing more than a fact-based model used to make predictions, we would not have science at all. Nor would we be able to make scientific predictions, as the ability to predict is what separates science from, well, just about everything else. Quick litmus test to tell if we're talking about science...ask yourself, does it make reliable predictions? Astrology? No, therefore not science. Astronomy? Yup, therefore science. Gravity? Yup, therefore science. Mythology? Entertaining and interesting, but no predictions result, so no, not science. "Intelligent" design? Hmmm...

    --
    but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
  224. Not just in Kentucky..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Alberta (where I live) just opened it's first creationism museum this week. It forgoes any mention of religion and presents the theory of a 6000 year old world which man and dinosaur co-habitat as a justified scientific one. This shit is getting out of hand.

  225. Who Cares? by JaSla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You'll all be dead within 100 years anyway. It's funny how anytime something about God is posted we all have an opinion. Here's my 2 cents...

    If you don't believe in God, then I propose that for 24hrs you take notice that most everything in your life more than likely rotates around something man made. Whether it be the screen you're reading this through, the chair you sit, or the cup that holds your drink. You could very well be an unaware caged being. Take a camping trip and observe things not made by human hands.

    If you're a Christian, then I suggest you stop beating people over the head with the bible. Live by example & not comparison. Realize there IS a place/need for science. This isn't a fairly tale world we live in.

    Most of us possess strong beliefs whether it be in God or not. Science has a great need for fact, religion has a great need for faith. People of science find it difficult to believe in what they can't see & those of religion question the knowledge of man. I agree with both. It's difficult to believe in what one can't see & it's equally difficult to have faith in a species as corrupt as humans. However, in the end I feel actions speak louder than words. Have you stepped up and taken part in something aside from you own interests, or are you spinning your wheels a pissing contest?

  226. Disclaimer by sqldr · · Score: 0

    Christianity is theory, not fact. It is based on evidence passed down through generations of people who had no reason to disbelieve it. Please approach it with an open mind.

    --
    I wrote my first program at the age of six, and I still can't work out how this website works.
  227. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by iamacat · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Actually, both of those theories are backed by fact, but make unsubstianted claims that life didn't originate or change over time in any other ways. For example, Glofish definitely came to be through creationism. If it ever wanted a religion, it would be able to name both their creator and their purpose in life. And certainly there are many fossil records as well as contemporary experience in husbandry that shows evolution does take place and is the origin of many species. But, there are also inherent properties of hydrocarbons and DNA that limits the number of ways a particular desired trait can be realized. There are probably only so many ways a carbon-based organism can have vision, hearing, muscles, metabolism... This boils down to laws of physics in our Universe, but who is to say if the universe is intelligent and can be considered a kind of God, or what does this god want? Individual humans are intelligent and have certain moral objectives. It appears that millions of humans together have collective intelligence and morals that are sometimes more and sometimes less than that of an individual. It certainly seems unscientific to exclude the possibility that the universe at large has intelligence, moral objectives and a hand in making human species who we are.

    I do think it's extremely unlikely that intelligent universe/god(s) would care about our sex lives or support war in Iraq. If anything, it behooves on us to fight increase in entropy whenever we can.

  228. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

    And the whole 'You can't prove evolution' argument is false. It can be viewed, recorded and reproduced in micro-cultures easily and it's effects can be extrapolated equally in the macroscopic universe looking at many things such as DNA similarities and physical similarities between varying species.

    Don't forget that creationists claim there is some invisible line between "micro" and "macroevolution" which I think they draw between phylums and say that only microevolution has been proven. Of course they haven't bothered to show any data that suggests this line needs to be drawn in first place...

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  229. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by jeremyp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Creationism is falsifiable. The Genesis creation story makes some very specific claims about the way everything was created which should have predictable effects on the fossil record.

    For instance, all of the animals were made on the same day according to Genesis. This means that we should see fossil cows at every level of the geological column. Do we? No. Creationism is not only falsifiable, it is falsified.

    --
    All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
  230. I'm still at 3 by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    50% Insightful
    20% Interesting
    20% Overrated

    So far, no one's calling me a troll, or flamebait, or even offtopic. The worst I get is "overrated", which is fine, I think, for a one-liner like that.

    Care to tell me what your basis is for judging me "not insightful"?

    If I had to define my own insight, it's very simple: There's nothing wrong with creationism. There's nothing wrong with astrology, either. But let's not pretend that either one has any basis in science. If it's in the classroom at all, put it in sociology.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  231. Epistemology a bit too simple by jenik · · Score: 2, Informative

    Your epistemology of science appears to be a little too simple. The anomaly of Mercury's perihelion was known since the beginning of the 19th century but it had no effect on newtonian mechanics whatsoever until Einstein presented a rival theory. Also, all theories require supplementation by the ceteris paribus clause (i.e. everything else is the same). This means that a contradictory observation may ALWAYS be explained as failure of the ceteris paribus clause rather than failure of the theory. And so on and so forth, it's actually worth reading something on epistemology and scientific method (Popper, Lakatos, Kuhn...), you may be surprised by how science actually works.

  232. Chinese dragons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    don't fly, don't breathe fire and have many legs.

    So why didn't they see the same dragon we do?

  233. Re:Heading off at the pass - its flooding by ultranova · · Score: 1

    Without commenting on the validity of the Bible, I have to comment on the validity of some of your arguments.

    Due to these late Pleistocene glaciations (some 21,000 years preceding the supposed flood), the mass of the ice has actually depressed the crust of the Earth. That crust, now that the ice is gone, is slowly rising (called glacial rebound); and this rebound can be measured, in places (like northern Wisconsin), in centimetres/year. Sea level was also lowered some 10's of meters due to the very finite amount of water in the Earth's hydrosphere being locked up in glacial ice sheets (geologists call this glacioeustacy).

    If the whole Earth was covered in uniform water sheet, would that actually cause a depression ? After all, the rock, being solid matter, and the magma beneath it, being liquid, won't compress significantly under the pressures involved; most likely the glacial depression was made possible by pushing the land mass deeper into the mantle and displacing the magma, which would have the effect of rising the other areas of the world a bit. This isn't possible if the whole globe is uniformly covered; there's nowhere to displace magma to.

    Secondly, the Ice Age lasted for thousands of years, while the biblical flod supposedly lasted a few months. Maybe there simply wouldn't be time for significant depression - after all, the rebound is a very slow process, taking tens of thousands of years, so why would the depression be any faster ?

    Further, Mount Everest extends through 2/3 of the Earth's atmosphere. Since two forms of matter can't occupy the same space, we have an additional problem with the atmosphere. Its current boundary marks the point at which gasses of the atmosphere can escape the Earth's gravitational field. Even allowing for partial dissolving of the atmosphere into our huge ocean, we'd lose the vast majority of our atmosphere as it is raised some 5.155 km higher by the rising flood waters; and it boils off into space.

    Nonsense. The atmosphere is concentrated near Earth because it experiences the pull of gravity like anything else. The air pressure is caused by the weight of air atop you; the air pressure at sea level is greater than that at the top of Everest because there is more air above you weighting down on you. This greater pressure compresses the air, making it thicker. As you go upwards, there's less air atop you, hence less weight, hence less pressure; less pressure means that air isn't crushed into such high density and is therefore less dense. Because air is denser nearer the surface, the majority of Earth's atmosphere is concentrated near the surface.

    The gravity at Everest, or even at Low Earth Orbit, is not significantly weaker than at surface. In fact, since the strength of gravity is inversely proportional to the distance to the Earth's center of gravity (which we can assume to be at the geometric centre), and Earth's radius is (according to Google) about 6378.1 kilometers, and the height of Everest is 9 kilometers (to err on the side of caution), the gravity at the top of the Everest is about 0.2 percent weaker than at sea level.

    Or see Venus: the planet has less mass than Earth, but far thicker atmosphere.

    So, in conclusion: increasing Earth's radius by 9 kilometers wouldn't have any noticeable effect whatsoever on the atmosphere.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  234. And if it is false by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you find out and come up with another naturalist idea. (which could be false. rinse and repeat as necessary).

    What, however, if your faith is wrong? How do you find out? What do you replace it with?

    One of the advantages science has over faith is that science is a creation of humans. Humans are allowed to be wrong, so denying a scientists' view is OK. Annoying to the scientist, maybe. However, faith is a creation of a supreme being. A supreme being is not allowed to be wrong ('cept some earlier religions from Africa and Bhuddism) and so denying the faith is heresy. Annoying to ALL THE OTHER BELIEVERS.

    Yoiks!

  235. Mod Parent Up! by Elrac · · Score: 1

    The parent comment voices my concerns perfectly. I wish I had mod points!

    Given the sorry state of public education, the vacuum in children's heads can easily be filled with garbage. This museum is a giant garbage funnel planned and funded by the fundamentalist nutjobs. It's not harmless, it IS an attack on science.

    --
    When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion it is called Rel
  236. Re:That means the Biblical hero's were all girly-m by arthurpaliden · · Score: 1

    So English is not my first language, develope some manners.

  237. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by noamsml · · Score: 1

    "No, schools should be teaching facts." And creationism is a fact how? The fact of the matter is that the only profession that can be taught entirely with 100% proven facts is Mathematics. All other professions must insert a factor of uncertainty into their teaching. History, science, linguistics and other subjects all require speculation and inference from evidence. If schools were to teach only facts, they'd be teaching very little, if at all. No, schools should not teach only facts. Instead, they should teach fallibility. They should get students to understand that their knowledge is never definitive, and that the very foundations of science are constantly changing. And that, my friend, is a fact.

  238. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by haraldm · · Score: 1

    Apatosaurus living with Adam and Eve? Dinosaurs on Noah's Ark?

    I always knew the world was only 6000 years old, and my granny told me all the true stories of The Holy Bible [TM]. But I also always kept wondering who censored the dinosaurs out of these wonderful stories. Something looks strange here. Can someone help please?

    --
    open (SIG, "</dev/zero"); $sig = <SIG>; close SIG;
  239. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by GotenXiao · · Score: 1

    Except that nowhere does it say that a "day" in the context of Genesis is the standard 24 hours we're used to - it could been a few million years. Thus, creating every creature in a 2day" could in fact be referring to a span that covers the timeline given by evolution.

    True, I don't believe a word of creationism, but if they can provide evidence, I'll at least listen before laughing in their faces :P

    --
    Goten Xiao
  240. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by BakaHoushi · · Score: 2, Funny

    Watch my keen, tactical observational and logical skills:
    Bears, boars, and lions all exist, so they made it to the ark. These creatures are manly.
    Dragons, unicorns, and faeries are all mythical, so they didn't. Girls like these creatures more, in general.
    Humans tend to like things similar to themselves. Therefore, dragons, unicorns, and faeries are girly.
    Girls take FOREVER to get ready to go anywhere.
    Therefore, they all missed the ark because they were "still putting on their face" when the ark left.
    Damn women.

    On a side thought, if the entire world was flooded, why don't we find fossils/fish remains on the top of tall mountains, usually? You'd think the fish of the world would have swam to these new areas.

  241. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Bush+Pig · · Score: 1

    You probably ought to have taken a look at the Wikipaedia entry on Goedel before you posted ... it would have saved you some embarassment.

    --
    What a long, strange trip it's been.
  242. People never lived in caves by Chemisor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you believe the Bible, people never lived in caves. Adam and Eve went straight to a bronze-age livestyle, raising crops and livestock, and living in more or less decent housing. If anyone in their time lived in caves, it would have been some poor stupid shmucks who had no idea how to build a house. (All normal people are born knowing things like that and can undertake great engineering projects like, say, a giant floating Ark, without much instruction) Surely, we can't expect stupid people like that to know how to paint, can we?

    1. Re:People never lived in caves by arthurpaliden · · Score: 1

      In that case they could read and write. In Biblical times in the Holy Land there were wolves and lions. These were the top carnivores and they are mentioned frequently in the Bible. In addition large herbivores such as elephants and buffalo are also mentioned. Now these are very impressive animals so one can see that they would be mentioned in and take center stage in several of the Biblical stories and in the civil records of the ancient societies of the area. Now in the Holy Land there also lived an even more impressive animal who's fossilized bones have been found in Jordan, http://www.pellamuseum.org/Pella_Museum/Vertebrate /jibal_ghuzayma.htm. This animal was several times larger than and elephant. It was in fact a dinosaur and it is never motioned in the Bible. It is never mentioned in any clay tablet from any of the Biblical civilizations, it is never mentioned in the writings of the Egyptian empire. Imagine an animal that is 12 to 14 meters long and lived at the same time as people in the area and this animal is never once mentioned in either the Biblical or historical record. It was 3 to 4 times the size of an African elephant. It was never reported to have eaten up a villages crops, it was never reported to have accidentally stepped on any one and it was never used as a sacrifice. Ok, so now lets move on to to Syria where bones belonging to a species of 13 foot high camels have been found, http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,219310,00.html . These animals are twice the size of any description of any camel that was found in any of the Biblical or historical record of the time. Why were the never used like other camels. Why are there no stories about some chap going against the popular wisdom of the day an instead of using the small camels trapped and used the wild giant camels. Did people just over look these large and majestic beasts or or were these beasts just very good a hiding or maybe were they long gone before people ever arrived. After all they were supposedly taken aboard the Ark so they should be mentioned but they are not. No, not even one convincing description.

  243. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    ooh it turns from one type of drink to a slightly different one! It hasn't turned into a monkey yet - or your grandfather, though, has it?

  244. Wrong article title. by Toon+Moene · · Score: 2, Funny

    The title *should* have been:

    Creationism relegated to museum.

  245. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by BakaHoushi · · Score: 1

    I'll make this short:
    Evolution is just a theory. This is undeniable.
    But so is gravity.
    And thermodynamics.
    And well, pretty much every act of physics and biology.
    That's the funny thing about facts: You can never be 100% sure about them. I mean, okay, so for the past, I don't know, some-odd billion years or more, we've seen evidence that objects of mass have an attractive force between them. We called it gravity. But, you know, I suppose any day now, theoretically, it could just stop, hey why not? Gravity's just a theory!

  246. discrimination? by wikinerd · · Score: 1

    The Creation Museum is "powered" by the organisation Answers in Genesis, which as an employer requires something more than a good CV:

    "All job applicants need to supply a written statement of their testimony, a statement of what they believe regarding creation and a statement that they have read and can support the AiG statement of faith." - AiG website.

    Isn't this a form of disrimination? Is this legal?

  247. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, IIRC, the people who are behind the creation museum say that it was a literal, 24-hour day.

  248. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by RobertLTux · · Score: 0

    adaption/mutation can be proved but can you go from your yeast to say a funky fish?? decent jellyfish??? anything mutlicellular?

    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  249. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by pla · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    This museum represents a direct attack on science.

    Disney has several theme parks around the world that feature furries and princesses. Do you feel that those threaten science as well?

    Don't take this the wrong way - I completely agree with you. But don't take the cause as the effect. The real threat here involves the idiots poisoning their children with this particular set of ignorant and dangerous misinformation, not the means by which they do it.

    A theme park, IMO, at least puts this set of beliefs into a suitable context - One of fantasy and humor... "Pikachu, watch out! Jehova has immunity to lightning! Wait until he morphs into Jesus-form and then target his metal hand-spikes!".

  250. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by 12WTF$ · · Score: 1

    >My friend as Penn & Teller say, "Creationsim is Bullshit!"

    The Creation Museum opens Monday at 2800 Bullitts^H^H^H^Hshitburg Church Road, Petersburg, Ky.; (888) 582-4253.

    --
    Cryonics - Keep cool and carry on.
  251. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    I myself am certain that in no possible world does one equal two.

    1 x 0 = 2 x 0
    1 x infinity = 2 x infinity.
    1 x 360 degree rotation = 2 x 360 degree rotation...

    There are lots of times 1=2.

  252. direct urls for your convience by RobertLTux · · Score: 1
    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  253. Failing upward I see.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole world trying to advance and enrich itself in knowledge.. And those people try to pull us back to the Middle Ages ffs.
    It wasn't called the 'Dark Ages' because there was no sun, idiots.

    I just don't like the fact that they actually spent 27mil $ for it. Use it for the will of God (as in, help the poor), instead of making exhibits of Flinstones-like settings. Same principle goes for the whole of Roman-Catholic idea's by the way.

  254. obligatory DNA quote by Speare · · Score: 1

    Majikthise: "We'll take care of the eternal verities, thank you very much."

    "That's right," shouted Vroomfondel, "we demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!"

    --
    [ .sig file not found ]
  255. Re:Falsifying? by hachete · · Score: 1

    Can we have some examples to back up your assertions?

    --
    Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  256. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by BakaHoushi · · Score: 1

    I don't recall who, but a comedian once said "I wish I could be a 2nd grade teacher, because when you're in second grade, you don't know ANYTHING! You can go up on the board and write 'Two + two = chair' 'Oh my god, they're writing it down! They're actually writing it down!'"

    This is why I think religion is dangerous to a young mind.It's all fine and dandy when you're an adult (or even a teen) but when from day 1 you're told that God does everything, or something like that, well, it's pretty much the foundation for all your future thoughts and will be difficult to get around that thinking.

  257. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    Disney has several theme parks around the world that feature furries and princesses. Do you feel that those threaten science as well?

    Of course not, for the reason you mention; "A theme park, IMO, at least puts this set of beliefs into a suitable context - One of fantasy and humor...". Granted, a very young child may not clearly see a distinction between fantasy and reality, but that's something most of them grow out of fairly quickly, as long as the proper context is there. In my mind, that's the primary distinction between a book like the Bible and one such as the Silmarillion. One literary work is presented with the proper context and respect (as a work of fantasy and the product of an active imagination) while the other is not.

    Don't take this the wrong way - I completely agree with you. But don't take the cause as the effect. The real threat here involves the idiots poisoning their children with this particular set of ignorant and dangerous misinformation, not the means by which they do it.

    I agree, but if they didn't utilize any "means" to achieve their mind-warping abuse of children's minds (as well as the minds of anybody else whose bullshit filter isn't working properly) then it would sort of be a moot point. This "museum" just adds insult to injury, by attempting to adopt a somewhat academic/scientific/educational veneer, just like the whole ridiculous "Intelligent Design" movement. To me, it's bad enough if a child is taught that, according to the Bible, the world was created and populated directly by God, with a literalist spin, and is told to "have faith" in that story. At least then it's being taught in something resembling its proper context as a religious belief. In my opinion, it's still "wrong," but whatever. What's even worse, however, is when the fundamentalists put on lab coats and pose as respectable researchers, and masquerade their faith-derived nonsense as scientifically well-supported fact.

    That's why I say it represents it as an attack on science (and this museum is by no means the only representation -- how I wish it was), which makes it that much more offensive and infuriating to me as someone who respects real science and reason.

  258. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by gravis777 · · Score: 0

    I must disagree, but please listen before you tune me out.

    Evolutionism and Creationislm (bad spelling) are two opossite ends of the spectrum. One is Judeo/Christian at its fineist (once again, horrible spelling), the other pretty much directly attacks it.

    The issue comes into play where you teach one or the other as absolute truth to people who may not support your views. Teaching evolutionism directly stomps on the religious rights of parents trying to bring their children up with religious views, whereas teaching Creationalism to a group of kids whose parents are agnostic / atheist also stomps on their religious rights.

    You cannot just teach one or the other and expect to make everyone happy. There are only two possible solutions to this.

    1) Don't teach either. This way, you do not insult anyone.

    2) Teach both. Unfortunately, this has issues as well, in that you are limiting yourself to Judeo/Christian and Science. You must include all religions. Actually, my public high school is doing this as an elective, they cover Christianity, Judiasm, Islam, native-American views, so forth and so on. Present the kids with all the information from different religions and theories in science, let them make up their own mind. I support this, but only in the teenage years, when the student's mind have evolved to the point where they can make an informed decision. Some will probably choose to go with views different than what their parents believe, most will go with how they have been raised, but at least the information has been presented in a non-biased manner.

  259. Wouldn't work in practice by Jonathan · · Score: 1

    "Intelligent Design" groups have been running tours through legitimate museums, providing their own narrative in order to dispute the information provided by the museum displays. Maybe after this museum opens some atheist tour group so do the same thing...take tours through Ken's "museum" and provide scientific narrative to dispute his biblical nonsense.


    Cute, but it wouldn't work because typically real museums are public and have to allow everyone in, including the creationist groups (assuming they don't harass the other visitors), but Ham's creationist museum is private and probably simply would ban entry to any group that they perceived as "hostile".
  260. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by smagruder · · Score: 1

    But 1 is not proven to equal 2 in those equations. Try again.

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  261. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Puh-lease. The evidence is flawed, just like the rest of science. It's all made by man.

    You've apparently forgotten that 300 years ago, we were still sure that we could square a circle to get pi. In another 300 years, we'll look back laughing at what a bunch of retards the evolutionists were, and thank God we didn't write him out of his appropriate place in the world.

  262. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by buraianto · · Score: 1

    The bible has quite a few references to dragons. Everyone knows that 'dragon' is code for dinosaur. ;)

  263. C-14? by gabrielex · · Score: 1

    What about datation with Carbonium 14? I can't believe in 2007 there are still so many people believing in stuff like creationism and that humans lived at the same time as dinosaurs. Maybe they're right, not all humans evolved...

    --
    Bye -Gabriele- http://flickr.com/photos/gabriele83
    1. Re:C-14? by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      In all fairness, not all creationists believe that man and dinosaurs existed together. Nothing in the Genesis account teaches that. So not only are these guys throwing the scientific community's opinion out the window, they are also throwing out the very book they claim to support.

      This is one major area where the whole ID movement shows their stupidity. Marveling at the complexity and order found in nature and attributing God as the original cause is one thing. Inventing total crap and presenting it in the quasi-authoritative environment of a museum is another (as-is the manipulating of political elements to have it taught in schools).

      --
      blah blah blah
    2. Re:C-14? by RobertLTux · · Score: 2, Interesting

      (for details from my viewpoints talk with any of the AIG team)
      the big problem with Radio-X dating is that if you have a chunk of rock and then date it using [method] you will get a number pick another [method] and you will get another number. Chain this out for a bit and you may land up with X methods and X+Y numbers all from the same chunk of rock

      carbon dating has the problem that a sample drawn from a guy said he had been dead for x thousand( or was it million) years , when he was informed the man in question was surprised.

      Radio-X dating is about as reliable as statistics for the time frame in question (BC 5000 and earlier)

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    3. Re:C-14? by Copid · · Score: 1

      the big problem with Radio-X dating is that if you have a chunk of rock and then date it using [method] you will get a number pick another [method] and you will get another number. Chain this out for a bit and you may land up with X methods and X+Y numbers all from the same chunk of rock
      And AiG works very hard to get samples that produce the most disparate results possible. Not surprisingly, the results tend to agree when people other than AiG select the samples. It's all about selecting sensible samples.

      carbon dating has the problem that a sample drawn from a guy said he had been dead for x thousand( or was it million) years , when he was informed the man in question was surprised.
      Reference, please. These stories are almost always apocryphal. I can certainly see it if they were dating something like mussel shells, but for human tissue? Not likely.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    4. Re:C-14? by Grashnak · · Score: 1

      carbon dating has the problem that a sample drawn from a guy said he had been dead for x thousand( or was it million) years , when he was informed the man in question was surprised. I call bullshit. Unless you provide a source to this fantastic story debunking what is a fairly commonly accepted scientific test, I must conclude you are deliberately being obtuse. Carbon dating, as I understand it (i.e. as a non-science geek) uses pretty reliable information about the changes in materials over time and I sincerely doubt that it is routinely off by "millions" of years and yet the scientific community still uses it. Put up or shut up.
      --
      Life needs more saving throws.
    5. Re:C-14? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      everything is very nice in science UNTIL you get to the details. Carbon dating is notoriously inaccurate for anything older than a few thousand years - I believe you will get this from both scientists and "creationist researchers" whatever these later may be ...

    6. Re:C-14? by Grashnak · · Score: 1

      everything is very nice in science UNTIL you get to the details. Carbon dating is notoriously inaccurate for anything older than a few thousand years - I believe you will get this from both scientists and "creationist researchers" whatever these later may be ... Still waiting for a credible source. This may be true, but until someone produces a source, I'm doubting his story about them making a mistake of "millions of years".
      --
      Life needs more saving throws.
    7. Re:C-14? by Copid · · Score: 1

      everything is very nice in science UNTIL you get to the details.
      Not surprisingly, the people who knock radiometric dating tend not to provide those details.

      Carbon dating is notoriously inaccurate for anything older than a few thousand years - I believe you will get this from both scientists and "creationist researchers" whatever these later may be ...
      The upper practical limit on C14 dating is about 50,000 years, but the "sweet spot" is not quite that far out. C14 has a relatively short half life, so it's essentially all gone at ages older than that. With the "few thousand year" timeframe that's verifiable, calibrated C14 dating actually has a very good record. Stories of insanely wrong values tend to be from people who either through ignorance or malice dated materials that are simply not viable subjects for C14 dating.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  264. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by slugstone · · Score: 1

    Good research is repeatable. And in fact, good research isn't accepted unless it's demonstrated to be repeatable.

    Geez, ever take a lab class? Yes I have. Do you know the mind of God? I do not. All I was trying to say is have an open mind because there are at least two sides to a story.
  265. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evolutionary theory was proposed over 100 years ago, and while it continues to be tested and revised, it isn't quite in the same "new theory" category as quantum gravity or some of the other newer theories you mentioned. It is very thoroughly tested, widely accepted, and the basics of the theory (e.g., that life has diversified by inheritance and selection over many generations) aren't that controversial among scientists. There's plenty of argument about the details, and, therefore, like ALL scientific theories it's "unproven" in one detail or another. Science doesn't really "prove" theories anyway, so much as negate them. Anyway, saying that it is "unproven" doesn't distinguish it from theories such as gravitiation, which have plenty of "unproven" aspects as well, and which (as you point out) are still a matter of investigation and some controversy. Even so, few people would argue that gravitation doesn't occur at all, or isn't a useful scientific concept to understand the interaction of masses at a basic level. Same for evolution and the diversification of life.

    The suggestion that there is something fundamentally different about scientific study of events in the "unrecorded" past versus the events in the present is quite unjustified. Events occur elsewhere in the universe at great distances, but appear to operate with the physics seen here, even though they represent events that happened sometimes far in the past because of the time it took for the light to get here. Also, in a practical sense, we can't run experiments with colliding neutron stars or creating black holes either. We make predictions based on theory, observe, and test those predictions. That's science. We don't have to cause avolcano to erupt or a hurricane to form in order to test scientific predictions relating to their eruption or formation.

    The dependence on a table-top and present-day experiment in order to define "science" may work fine in high school, but it does not reflect how science is actually performed -- science is broader than that. Experiment may be the most controlled situation in which to test a hypothesis, but there are many things, past and present, that can not fit in a lab.

    As another example, even if it were possible, experimentally, to crash an asteroid into the Earth to see if it matches predictions about the impact that is thought to have occurred about 65 million years ago, why would you? It wouldn't be pleasant and it isn't necessary. If the physical laws we understand today apply to the distant past, then we can make very specific predictions about the physical evidence that would be left behind by such a process, and then go and look at the Earth's geology to test those predictions out. The fact that the "experiment" and the predictions are separated by 65 million years or so doesn't make a speck of difference, scientifically speaking, from if I had crashed an asteroid into the Earth yesterday. I can still make predictions and test them. It only differs in the practical challenge of searching for the evidence rather than setting the whole thing up and watching it happen in front of me.

    While someone who is extraordinarily skeptical might need that kind of first-hand witness to become convinced of something they already don't want to accept, most scientists regard such a requirement as unnecessary. If I'm skeptical of claims about the distant past, I can either look in the Earth's geology or through a telescope myself. That's all the first-hand observation I need -- independently validating the observations/evidence. I don't need the actual event responsible to happen again, now.

    To use an entirely different field, the same standard also applies to such things as convicting an accused murderer -- the jury doesn't have to *see* the actual murder happen in front of them (in fact, that's impossible, because it already happened). Science operates to a similar requirement -- the evidence related to the event must be independently tested and verified. The event itself does not have to be duplicated, even if it does help if it is possible to do.

  266. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We protest because they vote. The audience for these lies is the same poorly educated and therefore ignorant group of people who gave us W, the Worst president in history.

  267. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

    Who gives a shit?
    How very appropriate m'lord.
    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  268. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by uncoveror · · Score: 1
    The fundies can't even agree on what they believe about dinosaurs. This "museum" has them alongside humans. Some religious nuts insist there were never any such things as dinosaurs, and those bones are just there to test man's faith. Nonsense is so widely believed today that a new dark age can't be far off.


    I wonder which version of the Noah's Ark story they teach? Two of every kind of animal as in Genesis chapter 6, or 7 pairs of clean animals and one of unclean animals from Genesis chapter 7. How can both be literally true? The stupidity of this "museum" is off the charts.

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  269. As someone who may become a priest, this is sad!! by Cappadonna · · Score: 1

    I'm often asked what I would have been if I didn't become a systems analyst. My answer is that I would have been a pastor. I still think about joining the clergy today, but I realize that my own demons to work out before I would trust myself to minister to God's people.

    That being said, as a faithful Christian (I'm home this morning from service b/c I getting ready for a Memorial Day trip) and a scientist, I'm baffled and somewhat disturbed by the strident anti-intellectualism within the church. I've always know that religion and the denial of new discoveries go hand and hand (how long did it take the Catholic Church to accept that the world ain't flat?!), but damn!! Is it me, or have mainstream Christianity gotten dumber since I was a kid? I don't remember hearing about creationism in the 80's. My Bible-thumping mom always doubted evolution (growing up in the rural south with no running water) but that never stop her from letting me go to the local natural history museum. But then again, this is the age of Prosperity Ministry where everyone thinks that God is gonna give them a BMW they sprinkle holy water on and where people actually don't vote b/c they think the Apocalypse is going to start before the '08 election.

    Maybe its because my pastor had a degree in Mathematics and my Sunday School teacher was also my Junior High biology teacher, but we didn't have this conflict when I was growing up. Nobody in my congregation. Even little old ladies who actually remember and protested the Scopes trial, didn't bat an eye when I said I wanted to study evolutionary biology. (I ended up studying engineering and physics.) And I guarantee you that even back in the 80's, we didn't think pollution and Global warming were tree-hugger pipe dreams. Then again, my church, despite their conservative leanings, support needle exchange and condom distribution. I used to think that my church was backwards -- now I realize that by church standards I went to worshiped with Churchills and Einsteins.

    The more a think about it, the more its seems like I was in the Twilight Zone -- where people in the faith community actually encouraged rational scientific thought. As I walk through churches now, I feel like Luke Wilson in 'Idiocracy' where short of Halleluiah and patent Holy Roller babble, nobody likes to think anymore. Example: I was asked about speaking in tongues by a woman I know here in New York. When I explained what it actually meant in the Bible, I was told that I was too book smart and that I had no faith. WTF?! Substitute 'faggy' for 'no faith' and you have Idiocracy court room scene. Sad part about it, this woman is my age, not some old sharecropper like my parents who didn't have alot of formal education. Whether it be this ignorant ass creationism crap or Harry Potter, its almost as if I stepped I'm alien stranded on a planet of Pod People where TD Jakes and the recently deceased Jerry Falwell do all the thinking. Forget about substantive debates like euthenasia, abortion, global warming or gay marriage. We literally had a TV minister teaching people that Tinky Winky was going to make your children gay and fossils are a trick of the devil. Hell, people give me funny looks when I reference AW Tozier, St Augustine or CS Lewis. I bet more of you guys know who these people are than an average church goer.

    A lot of young adults I know throughly reject going to church b/c they feel they need to be idiots to sit through service. Right now, I'm disillusioned in general with the Church as a body, because I feel as if the barbarians have taken over. Maybe I should just stay home -- except I still have some faith in God and I refuse to let stupidity keep me from worshipping Him.

  270. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Evolutionism and Creationislm (bad spelling) are two opossite ends of the spectrum. One is Judeo/Christian at its fineist (once again, horrible spelling), the other pretty much directly attacks it.

    The theory of evolution and creationism are on opposite ends of a spectrum, if the spectrum you are talking about is one of scientific credibility and reason. I wouldn't call creationism Judeo-Christian belief at its finest, unless by "finest" you mean "most demonstrably incorrect."

    You cannot just teach one or the other and expect to make everyone happy. There are only two possible solutions to this.

    The "solution" is that you accept the fact that you can never make everyone happy and, after accepting that, accept the fact that the science education of children should not be compromised by anyone's religious beliefs. Anything else would be a ridiculous expression of excessive political correctness. The same sort of argument you're making here could be made against teaching about a heliocentric solar system, or a spherical Earth, if only you can find a parent who has a strong religious conviction that the Earth is flat and at the center of the universe and that contradicting theories/ideologies are the devil's work.

    2) Teach both. Unfortunately, this has issues as well, in that you are limiting yourself to Judeo/Christian and Science. You must include all religions. Actually, my public high school is doing this as an elective, they cover Christianity, Judiasm, Islam, native-American views, so forth and so on. Present the kids with all the information from different religions and theories in science, let them make up their own mind. I support this, but only in the teenage years, when the student's mind have evolved to the point where they can make an informed decision. Some will probably choose to go with views different than what their parents believe, most will go with how they have been raised, but at least the information has been presented in a non-biased manner.,

    Evolution should be taught in science class, for the reasons I've already outlined. Creationism has no place in science class.

    In my opinion, comparative religion should be taught as social studies. Creationism could be touched on here, as a part of a larger study of the beliefs of the Abrahamic faiths. Evolution would probably be outside the scope of this particular set of classes, except to possibly mention that it (or science generally) is where naturalists and non-religious people tend look to find answers to some of the questions that religions try to answer.

    Personally I think such classes should be taught as a fairly young age, for a similar reason that you suggest it should be taught later. Teaching comparative religion later rather than sooner does relatively little good, if your goal is to open minds and really, truly educate. At a young age, children are hardwired to believe virtually anything a parent or other authority figure tells them. It's not the school's place to tell children what religion they should believe, but I think it would be great if they were simply made aware of the fact that other religions exist, with an education of some of their more salient, defining features.

    This idea is objectionable to religious people of many stripes because I think deep down they realize that kids are smart enough to realize that looking at all of these different faiths side by side, that they can't all be true, and some of them will wonder if there is a good reason to believe one set of religious beliefs over another. The truth is, there really isn't, but there's no need to explicitly tell the children that ... they can come to that conclusion on their own -- or not.

    But why should schools take it upon themselves to potentially plant such a seed of doubt in the child's religious faith? To me, it comes down to trying to cultivate healthy critical thinking skills in students and allowing them some chance of making a personal

  271. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by wallyhall · · Score: 1

    And is it that much of a leap of faith to assume if God can create the world as it says in genesis to believe He could have created molecules with an atomic structure such that carbon dating says they're billions of years old? Or that as you said, that He could maybe just possibly decide to put fossiles in different layers so we *believe* that it's so much older than it really is? If He created the universe, is it really going to be that much harder for Him to create it with a bit of physical history? Umm. No.

    --
    I think therefore I am... a Linux geek.
  272. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tompaulco · · Score: 1

    Do you want the UFO museums, fairy museums, mythical monster museums and so forth to close as well, or is it just this one particular museum that bothers you?

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  273. Why are evolutionists so afraid of creationism? by David.R.Benham · · Score: 0

    When creationists try to present creation theory in the classroom, alongside evolutionary viewpoints, they are viciously attacked. If evolutionary theory is so sound, and creationism is such a farce, why not let them stand side to side and see who wins? Let the almighty scientific method do it's work and bring forth the truth.

    Come on, evolution should win in a landslide, shouldn't it? It shouldn't take our students more than a couple of weeks to poke holes all over that fairy-tale-laden-creationist account of the origin of life.

    And if evolution is such a sound and bullet-proof scientific theory, our young students should be able to use their training and test the hypothesis. What an awesome exercise for students, to disprove (or discover supporting evidence) for one viewpoint or the other.

    The truth will set us free.

    1. Re:Why are evolutionists so afraid of creationism? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

      Not a bad question.

      Tell me this, can people ever be made to believe something that clearly is not true? How about Pagan religions? How about Voodoo? Ancient Greek gods? Ancient Roman gods? Ancient Norwegian gods? Hindu gods? Those have all been considered actual religions.

      Is there a difference between teaching and preaching? Teaching creationism is just: "a giant magic man in the sky created everything by force of will." That's all there is to it. But I get the idea that some creationist are more interested in preaching.

    2. Re:Why are evolutionists so afraid of creationism? by ControlAltDelete · · Score: 1

      Lots of people try to pull this one - the old "if my idea's so wrong, why don't you let everyone decide!" method. The reason that doesn't work is because creationism is just ONE of MANY crackpot ideas. No scientist backing evolution is really saying that God didn't create the universe, they're saying that all the evidence we have points to the conclusion that God did not create the universe 6000 years ago, nor are all the animals that exist today in the exact same state they were when they were created. So, when all evidence points to the conclusion that the idea is totally ridiculous (an assertion that must be weighed very carefully, I agree - but creationism is just insane), we can't afford to waste our time teaching our students about it alongside serious education. If we forced ourselves to address every single absurd theory out there when teaching our children, we'd never get anywhere. We'd waste all of our time going over why invisible flying monkeys aren't really responsible for keeping us from flying into space as opposed to gravity, or why it's probably not true that those who eat paint are less likely to get cancer, or why creationism is probably not right. We have to admit that we can come to a rational conclusion (i.e. creationism = crazy) and know to not waste our children's time on it.

    3. Re:Why are evolutionists so afraid of creationism? by Copid · · Score: 1

      When creationists try to present creation theory in the classroom, alongside evolutionary viewpoints, they are viciously attacked. If evolutionary theory is so sound, and creationism is such a farce, why not let them stand side to side and see who wins? Let the almighty scientific method do it's work and bring forth the truth.
      Because we're teaching CHILDREN. Creationism hasn't been able to make any headway in the actual scientific community--the one populated by grownups who study and analyze data for a living. They've opted to take their case to kids instead. Think about that for a minute. What kind of case does a person have when he'd rather pack a jury with children than adults?

      To answer your question more completely, we don't do it for the same reason we don't offer a rebuttal on the benefits of crack in health class, the idea that f = ma^2 in physics class, and how the holocaust never happened in history class. The world is full of crackpot ideas and giving equal time to all of them is ridiculous on its face. If you want your idea to get into schools, convince the experts in the field that it has some merit. Do what the rest of modern science has done and gather the data and convince the establishment that you're right. Until then, you're just another "crack is good for you" fringe case.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    4. Re:Why are evolutionists so afraid of creationism? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      When creationists try to present creation theory in the classroom, alongside evolutionary viewpoints, they are viciously attacked.

      That's because they don't have a scientific theory, and therefore shouldn't be presenting what they do have (which is an untestable hypothesis) in a science classroom.

      "God did it" is not a theory.

      why not let them stand side to side and see who wins? Let the almighty scientific method do it's work and bring forth the truth.

      It did. The battle has already been fought over the last 100-150 years. Creationism lost. The debate is long over. It's only the creationists that haven't realized this yet.

  274. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by JebusIsLord · · Score: 1

    Bah, you can use facts to prove anything. -Homer

    --
    Jeremy
  275. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This museum represents a direct attack on science. I give a shit because I happen to think that science and scientific literacy are important. The stuff presented in this museum is blatantly wrong, and ridiculous, and is a menace to the public understanding and enlightenment even without government support ...
    ---
    Like a ....church?

  276. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    You are so right! God is fucking with our minds! That must explain dinosaurs.

  277. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by lumpenprole · · Score: 1

    Right, I remember that part of Genesis.

    "And Lo, the LORD made the world in such a way as to deny evidence of himself and give credence to natural processes because the LORD is a funny f$%#er. And the LORD took a couple hours off for a good snigger"

    --
    Disclaimer: MINAA (Mummy! I'm Not An Animal!)
  278. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by tompaulco · · Score: 1

    I myself am certain that in no possible world does one equal two. Not even God (should one exist) could make one equal two.
    One does not equal two for the simple reason that we decided it doesn't. We could have decided that one equals two in the same manner that we decided that two equals deuce. It all goes back to our founding standards. Now if you are referring to the conceptual number of items which we represent via the number one not being equal to the conceptual number of items which we represent via the number two, then that is something entirely different. But many people seem to think that there is some magic behind the numbering system, math, and science, when, in fact, many years ago, we just decided on our base numbering systems, and our basic assumptions of science.

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  279. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1

    Having an open mind is fine, but you shouldn't open it so far that your brain falls out.

  280. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but now they'll have a multi-million dollar, Universal Studios caliber set of displays and presentations to even more thoroughly inculcate kids to this backwards, pre-medieval nonsense.
    Just to back it up (from their site): "This center will equip Christians to better evangelize the lost with a sense of urgency, through a combination of exhibits, research and educational presentations that uphold the inerrancy of the Bible." They even have the audacity to talk about research, *sigh*...
  281. Gruaniad reviewed this some time ago by turly · · Score: 1
    (Repost of my blog last Nov 13th here.)

    -- The Guardian has a piece on the World's First Creationist Museum, opening soon in deepest flyover-state, USA.

    "Nothing [in science] contradicts the Bible's account of the origins."
    God almighty, preserve us from your followers. I've never understood the reverence afforded to a story book written by barely-literate nomads; especially when other creation myths are far more entertaining (and not to mention whose gods are less dour.) Indeed Genesis itself is a heavily plagiarised version of the much earlier Enuma Elish Babylonian creationist myth...

    "But what, I ask wonderingly, about those fossilised remains of early man-like creatures? Marsh knows all about that: 'There are no such things. Humans are basically as you see them today. Those skeletons they've found, what's the word? ... they could have been deformed, diseased or something. I've seen people like that running round the streets of New York.'"
    Jeez, New Yorkers ain't that bad.
    --
    IX CCXLIX XVII II CLVII CXVI CCXXVII XCI CCXVI LXV LXXXVI CXCVII XCIX LXXXVI CXXXVI CXCII
  282. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by CodeArtisan · · Score: 1

    1 whole = 2 halves.

  283. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    This museum represents a direct attack on science.

    Disney has several theme parks around the world that feature furries and
    princesses. Do you feel that those threaten science as well? 1- They aren't calling them museums.
    2- They have exhibits that teach science.
    --

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

  284. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    Three examples aren't enough? I suppsoe you could add 1=2 (modulo 1)

    Numbers are abstract concepts. They can be defined in many ways. These might not be useful, nevertheless they're not invalid.

  285. argument from ignorance by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1
    I see. Please explain why I feel consciousness. Please explain what happens to that consciousness when I die. Science has barely attempted to answer those questions, even though the existence of "free will", "soul", "spirit", "consciousness" or whatever your philosophy calls it, lies at the heart of most theology. So, one million rational scientific arguments on external observable phenomena do not lend more or less credence to science's progress at understanding this experience of every man.

    so what? that doesnt mean god did it. it just means we dont understand it yet, as illustrated by the GP when he talked about lightning being a mystery thousands of year ago.

    also, why is your explanation at all credible? it's just made up. what is the evidence to back up your position that god created the universe? ABSOLUTELY NOTHING WHATSOEVER. science has the humility and integrity to freely admit when something is unknown. religion arrogantly assumes an absolute answer on no evidence whatsoever, and has very little capacity to correct its position in the face of real evidence.

    We can go through time right back to the Big Bang, saying "ok, and what caused the big bang... ok and what caused that...? and where did the laws governing this process come from?" until eventually we must come up with one of the non-scientific arguments "nothing did it" or "God did it".

    How about, "we dont know?" if it turns out to be impossible for us to probe beyond the big bang, than we will never know. that is absolutley no reason to assume a god did it. we will just have to accept that we will never know what caused the big bang. or perhaps we are able to see beyond the big bang, and it turns out the thing that outside the universe is simply eternal (but not a god).

    you suffer from typical myopic "god of the gaps" mentality, in that anything that isnt explained or explainable must be the work of god. that is UTTER logical fallacy.

    --
    (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    1. Re:argument from ignorance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so what? that doesnt mean god did it.

      You are correct, it doesn't mean "God did it". Luckily, nowhere in my post did I suggest God did it.

      it just means we dont understand it yet, as illustrated by the GP when he talked about lightning being a mystery thousands of year ago.

      You are correct, we don't understand it yet, but the comparison with lightning is inappropriate, because lightning is a phenomenon observable by more than one human. On the other hand, every human has observed his own consciousness, but no human has ever observed anyone else's. No scientific statement has been made, nor, by the very nature of science, can be made, on a phenomenon that cannot be observed by more than one person.

      My point was that no scientific progress has ever been made on something that falls outside the realms of the scientific method - which demands causality (which will fail if you go back in time repeatedly asking "and where did _that_ came from?" ad infinitum) and demonstrability (which has not been done as you cannot put yourself "into my consciousness"). Even if you retort with a "but science will find a way", the issue here is that science has never touched these issues yet, because they involve new aspects of existence that are harder to tackle with current method.

      also, why is your explanation at all credible? it's just made up. what is the evidence to back up your position that god created the universe? ABSOLUTELY NOTHING WHATSOEVER.

      Didn't make an explanation. In case you think I'm someone else, the post you just replied to was my first to this thread.

      science has the humility and integrity to freely admit when something is unknown.

      A great many scientists identify themselves as "atheists", meaning, "I don't believe in God", and attempt to make a scientific argument for this belief. However, there is no science that has answered questions about self-consciousness or the origins or end of existence (of the Universe or of self-consciousness), partly for the reasons mentioned above, and as such, it is impossible to disprove God. Thus, from a scientific point of view, the most one can say is, "I don't know".

      And that's what I say, as a scientist - though what has truly scared me is how right I am in the previous paragraph by the kind of reception I have received to indicating that science should simply say, "I don't know! We're doing great at explaining lots of stuff, but there are some subjects we haven't touched yet!"

      religion arrogantly assumes an absolute answer on no evidence whatsoever, and has very little capacity to correct its position in the face of real evidence.

      No, religion sometimes arrogantly assumes an absolute answer on no evidence whatsoever. Much religious teaching is about day-to-day living, often involving heaps of intricate laws and advice that in their time worked very well for creating stable society, and today can form the basis for various (often humanist) philosophies. Sometimes it involves simple science or mathematics, e.g. calculation of important days might require astronomy, which in turn requires 3D geometry etc. In turn, this requires accepting reality - the laws of science - and (it is often believed) to reject God-created science would be to reject God. From the ancient Greeks who saw mathematics as a pathway to understanding God as mathematician-creator, to the religious manuscript collectors who patronised scientists beginning in the 14th and 15th centuries, religion has not always been anti-science.

      However, modern Western dogma reads to the contrary. Schools do very little teaching of the history of science and mathematics, even less of philosophy, to understand the messages religion has brought.

      or perhaps we are able t

    2. Re:argument from ignorance by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      fair enough, i misunderstood your position

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    3. Re:argument from ignorance by ranton · · Score: 1

      partly for the reasons mentioned above, and as such, it is impossible to disprove God. Thus, from a scientific point of view, the most one can say is, "I don't know".

      While that is technically true, the better answer would be: "I am not technically 100% sure, but it is incredibly unlikely."

      There could be an ancient race of "fork people" that fly about our universe stabbing planets for amusement. They are no larger than our more mundane utensils, and as such are undetectable by our current telescopes. In fact they try to hide themselves from detection.

      If you were to ask any scientist if these "fork people" actually exist, their answer would be the same as for your question about God. I don't know. That is why I think the answer of: I am not technically 100% sure, but it is incredibly unlikely is much better. While I don't know might be a fine response, some crackpots with their own irrational beliefs might attack those scientists for being close-minded and not accepting other possibilities.

      --

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    4. Re:argument from ignorance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is impossible to disprove God. Thus, from a scientific point of view, the most one can say is, "I don't know".

      Feel free to replace "God" with any and all of:

      • Santa
      • Zeus
      • My invisible friend Timmy (a small green flying unicorn who talks to me and makes my wishes come true)
      • Flying Spaghetti Monster
      • ... repeat ad infinitum

      As anyone with an ounce of intelligence should be able to work out, if you claim the existence of something wacky, and completely without supporting evidence, it is not suddenly everyone else's responsibility to accept and respect that belief until such a time as they can disprove it.

  286. Poor, oppressed christians. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    (3) "But Intelligent Design is different than Biblical Creationism! It's a purely scientific alternative theory."

    Don't try to pretend that "Intelligent Design" is somehow different than creationism. Especially don't try to pretend that it's a scientific theory. Seriously. No one's buying it. "Intelligent Design" is a disguise- a secular-sounding term thrown over religious creationism to try to smuggle it into a state-funded science classroom.

    Hello. I'm a creationist, and I read Slashdot. My field of expertise is computing, but I also have a graduate degree in philosophy which included "philosophy of science", and I like a good argument. I would like to address point #3 briefly.


    In your first paragraph (of point #3) you point out a strong correlation between belief in intelligent design and certain religious views. You are appealing to the prevailing Slashdot bias against organised religion when you do this

    First of all, I find your use of the word "briefly" patently offensive: Your post is one of the longest in the thread.

    Secondly, your long-winded philosophical bullshit on the "slashdot bias" against organized religion ignores the fact the GP wasn't expressing a bias, he was responding to a false claim that Intelligent design is science, a scam to sneak creationism past the separation of church and state.

    Finally, you got modded up for that bullshit, proving that there is a bias FOR the view you cast in a light of oppression, not against it.
    --

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

  287. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1

    And why, pray tell, would the people who wrote down the bible use the word "day" when they really meant "millions of years"?
    This kind of "re-explanation" of the bible has been going on for hundreds of years now. It used to be that the 6 days of genesis really were 6 days. It used to be that stoning the unbelievers was the thing to do. Advances in science and changes in society have chipped away at the bible little by little. In the end, there will be nothing left.

  288. Consider the duckbilled platypus by abb3w · · Score: 1

    Well the whole thing about God being perfect, but making humans flawed, blaming humans for being flawed, and then punishing someone else to make up for those flaws .....that seems a tad silly as well.

    It's just evidence that the Divine sense of humor is beyond human comprehension. =)

    "These Christian zealots point to the book and say the word of God states that creation took place in six days. This was written in the Old Testament, which is the book of my people, the Jewish people. Anyone who knows the Jewish people knows that we are good at bullshitting. It was just a great story for people who were wandering the desert and needed to be distracted from the lack of air-conditioning."
    —(Louis Black, during an HBO broadcast show)
    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  289. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by authority69 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    This museum represents a direct attack on science. Attacks on religion, religious thought, and religious people are, of course, perfectly acceptable. It doesn't matter if we offend Christians as long as no atheist feelings are hurt.

    I am a Christian, although honestly I think exhibits of dinosaurs and humans living together are just as laughable as you. Do I think the Earth and everything on it was created in a literal 7 revolutions of our planet? Not even close. 4.5 billion years sounds good to me. Does that mean I need to go protest/attack those who think otherwise? Nope! They can believe what they want to on this subject because I don't think this is an issue of salvation.

    Do I think that evolution is fact? Yes I do. And notice, I said fact, not theory, that's intentional. And having just read at least four different definitions of "macroevolution", I'm not going to argue micro vs. macro because we'd probably end up using different definitions for each and then of course neither of us would be wrong in our own mind. We can both agree that evolution occurs and is a natural part of life. We disagree on the scale.

    Do I think humans and monkeys share a common ancestor? Once again, no. Can I prove that I'm right? No. Can you prove that I'm wrong? No. We each have our own belief in this case. You can try to build your side up as the side of reason and science, but it's based on just as much assumption as you say mine is. Neither of us has proof, so we fill in the blanks with what we've each reasoned as the most logical answer.

    So just listen: This museum is not an attack on your beliefs in science any more than it's an attack on my beliefs. It's a presentation, albeit rather extravagant and fancy, of their beliefs. Your beliefs still get plenty of attention, whether in schools, TV, movies, magazines, etc. Get over yourself, you arrogant jerk. You and I both disagree with them, yet somehow I can continue to live my daily life without the need to feel offended that someone somewhere may disagree with me. And lay off this crap about wanting to save the children. If it were up to you, they would be spoon-fed evolution from day 1, nothing else. How's that any different or better? At least with religion in the home and evolution in school they get more than just one viewpoint.

    I think evolution and science in general have their limits. Science can't explain everything. But guess what, neither does the Bible.
    • There are a lot of subjects not discussed in the Bible where we need science to shed some light.
    • There are even some subjects in the Bible that science complements rather nicely.
    • There are areas where science is lacking that the Bible (and religion in general) helps to enlighten.
    It doesn't have to be "There can be only one!"
  290. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mad.frog · · Score: 1

    You really should have read the Wikipedia entry before posting that reply -- you now have just shown your lack of knowledge on this subject.

    Suffice to say that Goedel's Incompleteness Theorem turning mathematics world upside down by demonstrating that within a mathematical system there will be propositions that are true, but cannot be proved so by formal proof.

    It's actually quite fascinating, and for more thoughts on the implications, I highly recommend the book "Goedel, Escher, Bach" by Douglas Hofstadter.

  291. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

    "I mean, the whiskey has to count for SOMETHING, right?"

    I think you meant that the whiskey has to ACcount for something.

    --
    blah blah blah
  292. Mathematical consistency by abb3w · · Score: 1

    if science is necessarily naturalistic, then how do we know that a naturalistic explanation like "big bang + evolution" is true, as opposed to a credible falsehood?

    As the naturalistic explanation describes a greater diversity of the observed data compactly, it's more probably the truth. (See Minimum Description Length Induction, Bayesianism, and Kolmogorov Complexity", by Paul M. B. Vitányi and Ming Li [subscription PDF, free PS] for the math to prove this.) You can write the equations for all the most complicated models in physics (which describe pretty well all observed phenomena) and put them legibly on a one square meter poster, with the worst inconsistency being between quantum mechanics and relativistic gravity. The bible takes longer and presents more internal contradictions (or as the Catholic Church prefers to call them, "Mysteries of Faith").

    This whole "falsification" thing seems a little two-edged to me. Please demonstrate that it cuts creationists but not evolutionists in light of "creationism as an attempt to falsify evolution".

    Simple; falsification means that some hypothetical data might be found to prove the theory wrong. For example, Evolution (on Earth) might be proven false (and Intelligent Design true) by, say, the landing of UFO's and the appearance of the immortal alien designers who have been engineering the Earth's ecology for the past four billion years or so. "Yes, we've been doing this for entertainment. If you want, we can give you a courtesy copy of the 'Making Of' special to watch. We nearly went broke when the giant reptillians market went bust and have been struggling frantically to catch up with the competition ever since. One of our VP's for marketing has a possible comeback idea that he thinks will appeal to the same key demographic, though he won't say where he got it; your females won't need much modification, but the males of your species are going to need to grow a lot more tentacles over the next couple generations...."

    Shortly before the collapse of civilization into a bad Hentai piece, the scientists admit that, yes, evolution is a crock, that whole thing (at least hearabouts) was "intelligently designed", allowing for the loose value of "intelligent" that "entertainment executive" gives us.

    However, there is no* possible datum that might appear that would disprove their proposition "life was intelligently designed". It might become an observed fact (if they get really miraculously lucky), but it won't ever be a theory, because it's not falsifiable. Intelligent design isn't merely wrong, it isn't even wrong .


    * I suppose the appearance of God announcing "Say, I thought I left an nice damp chunk of iron here; where'd all this wet carbon-based goo wandering about come from?" shortly before correcting the problem might change a few minds before wiping them out, but technically that doesn't rule out that the whole thing is one of Satan's practical jokes.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  293. Um.. by Bleeks · · Score: 1

    I think this may actually infringe on the whole "Separation of Church and State" Thing going on in that constitution thingie. Ya know the one.

  294. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mcarp · · Score: 1

    Granted, a very young child may not clearly see a distinction between fantasy and reality, but that's something most of them grow out of fairly quickly, as long as the proper context is there. Most people would agree that children grow out of the belief in Santa Claus fairly easily yet they continue to believe in this God character....interesting....

  295. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Attacks on religion, religious thought, and religious people are, of course, perfectly acceptable. It doesn't matter if we offend Christians as long as no atheist feelings are hurt.

    I'm not concerned with feelings, Christians, atheists or otherwise where public understanding and scientific literacy is concerned. If someone's presentation of scientific theories, or logical statements of fact are offensive to some Christians, that is just too bad for the Christians, just as it is just too bad for atheists that we (at least those of us who live in the United States) have to endure the incessant, grating displays of piety that religious people are so enamored with (though that's something I'm more annoyed at than I am personally distressed about).

    I am a Christian, although honestly I think exhibits of dinosaurs and humans living together are just as laughable as you. Do I think the Earth and everything on it was created in a literal 7 revolutions of our planet? Not even close. 4.5 billion years sounds good to me. Does that mean I need to go protest/attack those who think otherwise? Nope! They can believe what they want to on this subject because I don't think this is an issue of salvation.

    As I said in another post, what really gets me riled up is the presentation of ideas that you describe as "laughable" as being somehow scientifically or academically credible, when they are anything but. It's deceptive and is, as I've said, it seeks to actively undermine and degrade science by employing a scientific facade to fool the ignorant and gullible. It's just bad for Kentucky residents' scientific literacy and in my opinion, the lack of critical thought and scientific literacy in the public at large is a serious problem.

    Do I think humans and monkeys share a common ancestor? Once again, no. Can I prove that I'm right? No. Can you prove that I'm wrong? No. We each have our own belief in this case. You can try to build your side up as the side of reason and science, but it's based on just as much assumption as you say mine is. Neither of us has proof, so we fill in the blanks with what we've each reasoned as the most logical answer.

    I can say that my side is built on the side of reason and science, simply because it is. Of course, you could say your own position is more reasonable (and from your point of view it may be, if you rate the Bible as being a very credible source of knowledge about the nature of the universe) but it certainly isn't as scientifically well-supported. That doesn't prove outright that I'm right and you're wrong about whether or not humans and other animals share a common ancestor, but logically one would have to conclude that I am at very least, more likely to be correct on this point.

    So just listen: This museum is not an attack on your beliefs in science any more than it's an attack on my beliefs. It's a presentation, albeit rather extravagant and fancy, of their beliefs. Your beliefs still get plenty of attention, whether in schools, TV, movies, magazines, etc. Get over yourself, you arrogant jerk. You and I both disagree with them, yet somehow I can continue to live my daily life without the need to feel offended that someone somewhere may disagree with me. And lay off this crap about wanting to save the children. If it were up to you, they would be spoon-fed evolution from day 1, nothing else. How's that any different or better? At least with religion in the home and evolution in school they get more than just one viewpoint.

    Where to begin?

    Although I find the Creation Museum offensive in that it is an affront to what I think museums should generally be about -- presenting accurate information about the subject matter and that they should strive for some degree of scientific legitimacy when treating that concern science, like biology (origin of species, the history of the world's ecology), geology (age of Earth) and cosmology/physics (age and origins of the universe) ... I do not find a

  296. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Lord+Apathy · · Score: 1

    Okay, I agree with you on all points. But I'm still not convenced that you are not waisting your time with it. The dumb asses are going to believe what they are told in church no matter what. The smart ones will realize its a crock on their own. Since you can't do nothing about former and the latter seem to be a okay on their own.

    Besides I find that these things tend to die on their own. It's a new thing right now, in a year or so people will have lost interest in it and that will be it. Evolutionist, like me, will go to it for its entertainment value and the True Believers will go for the religious expirence. Once they have gone it's, been there, done that.

    Since is by nature can never have nothing new to offer ether, it is a self correcting problem.

    --

    Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification

  297. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mcarp · · Score: 1

    You assume that evolution teaches against creationism. You assume that evolution is an attack on creationism. Unfortunate (for creationists) that the evidence simply supports evolution and not creationism. Creationists are mad because they perceive that they have been attacked by evolutionists. While it is true that creationists are mad, it isnt because evolutionists have attacked them, it is because scientific evidence simply contradicts what creationists believe. This is a perceived attack where no attacker exists unless you presume that the evidence itself is the attacking entity. The evidence simply exists, it does not attack.

    If creationists' faith is so easily shaken then perhaps it was weak from the start. So easily brought down by a non-attack. That's some pretty shakey stuff.

  298. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by jelton · · Score: 1

    Jarjarthejedi,

    I aplaud your willingness to take a skeptical view of claims made by science. I would, in fact, extend this idea to say that all claims made by humanity should be viewed skeptically, be they religious, scientific, philosophical or historical. What you are criticizing is the uncertainty (or doubt) inherent in all of the endeavors of mankind. Pardon me for my boldness, but I would like to offer a book recommendation that might help you to understand where mankind is in terms of the epistemological underpinnings of science. This book talks about the uncertainty inherent in all scientific facts and how that then informs the conclusions drawn while analyzing those facts. I don't want to tell you what to think and I don't want to push you into intellectul pursuits in which you have no interest. But if you are serious about criticizing science, this book presents as succinct and well-written an account of how scientists have defended the value of their pursuits as I have encountered. I always find that the best way to criticize something or someone is to, as fully as is possible, understand the arguments that they are making.

    The book I'm talking about is called "What Is This Thing Called Science?". It was written by A.F. Chalmers. I commend this work to you and anyone else reading this post that has an interest in understanding how scientits can claim the knowledge that they claim.

    --
    I am not a lawyer. This post does not constitute any form of legal advice.
  299. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by VJ42 · · Score: 1

    Puh-lease. The evidence is flawed, just like the rest of science. It's all made by man.
    In just the same way, religious texts were written by man. Indeed, in Christianity they even held councils to decide what texts should go into the bible and what should be left out. If, as you imply, things are flawed just because they are the work of man; then the Bible (and indeed other religious texts) fit right in
    --
    If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
  300. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "They didn't make patently absurd claims about world being 6000 years old, they didn't use the Bible as a primary source, and they didn't directly refer to God and Jesus in every third sentence."

    Actually a little history lesson is in order for you. Previous to 1984 'creationism' and 'god' were all the rage in all the anti-evolution books and public arguements. So what happened in 1984? The USA supreme court ruled that creationism was not a scientific theory and could not be taught in schools. Immediately afterwards 'intelligent design' became a super popular phrase and 'intelligent designer' replaced 'god'in publications and books, etc.

    here watch this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVRsWAjvQSg

  301. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    Facts and theories are different things - facts are things which happen, theories are models which explain why.

    Evolution is a fact and a theory - it's is a proven fact that we developed from earlier simpler lifeforms, and theory of evolution is the model which explains the mechanism by which this happened.

    Your statement that schools should not teach theories even if evidence supports them means that no theories could be taught in science lessons, which is rather bizarre.

  302. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by yulek · · Score: 1

    on the other other hand they're one of the states with counties still embracing the prohibition.

    --
    in this age of communication i'm just not getting through
  303. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

    You're the perfect example of why people like Sam Harris seem to have a such a dislike for religious moderates even though you are more or less on the same side, at least to some extent.

    Part of the problem is the way in which you are couching your terms, eg:

    Attacks on religion, religious thought, and religious people are, of course, perfectly acceptable. It doesn't matter if we offend Christians as long as no atheist feelings are hurt.

    This statement completely misses the point, and only shows your inability to see where the other side is coming from. Atheists aren't offended by someone believing in God, and in fact, this protest has nothing whatever to do with that. It has everything to do with certain religious groups denial of reason and rationality, and the utter hypocrisy that goes with it. When reason and rationality is abandoned then there is no longer a check on religious dogma, and that's when bad things happen. You need look no further than Jim Jones, David Koresh or any number of other cults that abandoned reason and rationality to worship a charismatic leader. Creationism is nothing more than a less dangerous version of the same mistake. These statements are not an attack on religious belief, they are an attack on anti-rationalism. From my pespective, it is you who are being the arrogant (and hypocritical) jerk by not acknowledging that the spread of this kind of thinking is damaging.

    By not speaking out, you are an unwitting enabler for extremist views. You are not doing yourself nor your faith any favors by playing games of equivocation while ignoring the dangers of pervasive ignorance.

    --

    Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

  304. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    Forgot to address this bit in my last post:

    I think evolution and science in general have their limits. Science can't explain everything. But guess what, neither does the Bible.

            * There are a lot of subjects not discussed in the Bible where we need science to shed some light.
            * There are even some subjects in the Bible that science complements rather nicely.
            * There are areas where science is lacking that the Bible (and religion in general) helps to enlighten.

    It doesn't have to be "There can be only one!"


    Science has its limits. Science is just our provisional understanding of the universe and a set of methods for achieving that understanding ... it's a human invention and so long as its being practiced by humans, it will be subject to human limitations. That said, I think it's fair to say that it's established itself as far and away the best way we have available to us to gain understanding about the world. The alternatives -- religion, superstition, haphazard guesswork -- occasionally bear fruit, but have not amassed anything close to the mountain of seemingly accurate knowledge about existence as science.

    Seeing as how that's the case, I've been able to rationally work out how it is useful to rely on those inferior methods, or credit them with any serious consideration, while science is available to us.

    The most logical argument I've heard for what you posit, that it doesn't have to be one or the other (religion or science) is the non-overlapping magisteria (NOMA) argument. That is, that the proper domain of science is to address how things are and how they work, in the physical universe ... that it's not really the place of the religion to make claims like "men do not share a common ancestor with other animals" or "the Earth is at the center of the universe" or "the seasons change because Persephone must periodically visit her husband in the underworld for stretches of time, which upsets Demeter." The facts and workings of the universe are the domain of empirical observation and the scientific method. However, the argument goes, religion can still exist, to concern itself with the meaning of what we learn from science, or perhaps provide moral insight.

    Personally I think there are some problems with that argument, in part because I think we could be better served by pursuing the social sciences and philosophy to fill the void that the natural sciences leave, but in any event the NOMA argument doesn't seem to be the one you're making, as you seem to subscribe to the notion that we should have a "God of the gaps" that supplies answers to questions that science cannot definitively provide, that supernatural/religious speculations and explanations are fair game and even to be encouraged. I (surprise) don't agree with this. I think it's preferable to admit ignorance or uncertainty about something than it is to make something up, or to rely on personal revelation to get such answers, or to trust some ancient "authority" like the Bible.

    There are a couple reasons I believe that, one of which I've already pointed out -- that science just has the better track record where such things are concerned. Another reason would be that to me, the scientific approach just seems a whole lot more sensible. Yet another would be because having such beliefs can be an impediment to gaining scientific understanding -- if you think you've already got the answer, you may stop looking (link is Neil de Grasse Tyson at the Beyond Belief 2006 conference talking about some of science's greatest thinkers invoking gods and "intelligent design").

    I think I'm done for now.

  305. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by highonlife · · Score: 1
    The main problem with your rant can be seen by simply replacing the word 'science' with 'religion' and vice versa:-

    This museum represents a direct attack on religion. I give a shit because I happen to think that religion and religious literacy are important. The stuff presented in this museum is blatantly wrong, and ridiculous, and is a menace to the public understanding and enlightenment even without government support (though, I would not be surprised if the museum has not benefited at least indirectly from the tax breaks our government is too happy to give scientific institutions.) The only educational value it has to serve as a case-in-point as to how excessive scientific faith can obliterate any trace of rationality in an otherwise intelligent individual. Also, some schools (hopefully only private/scientific schools) are undoubtedly planning field trips to this museum (an earlier article I read noted the parking lot which was designed to comfortably accommodate school buses). It's bad enough that parents and science (ok..no direct replacement here but deal with it) poison impressionable, helpless children's minds with this garbage, but now they'll have a multi-million dollar, Universal Studios caliber set of displays and presentations to even more thoroughly inculcate kids to this backwards, pre-medieval nonsense.


    While i agree with the spirit of your commments, i think we should refrain from arguments that blatantly sound like religious discourse.
  306. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Terrasque · · Score: 1

    Two of every kind of animal as in Genesis chapter 6, or 7 pairs of clean animals and one of unclean animals from Genesis chapter 7. And thus evolution was proven ;)
    --
    It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."
  307. wow by Dragonfire00 · · Score: 1

    All I have to say is wow. So your really doin it huh? I mean all you can do is laugh, i mean really?! I think every intelligent person just wants to slap them in the face and just tell them to wake up!

  308. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Physician · · Score: 1

    You're protesting the right of a private group to open up a museum of their own? That's sick and an abuse of the right of the people to assemble.

    --
    Does God treat us as servants or friends? Check my homepage.
  309. Re:Sad, sad, sad by dn15 · · Score: 1

    Not everyone who attends church every Sunday is following what is in the scriptures (the same holds true for people of Jewish and Islamic faith as well) and you are correct that God will see right through the people who treated others like crap, but went to church every Sunday. However, to blame them rather than scripture for your disbelief is simply sad.
    I am sorry if I gave the impression that I blame those people for my disbelief. What I intended to convey is this: Because I can't believe an omniscient god would judge us on dogmatic issues, I don't feel compelled to pick and participate in a religion. It's true, to some degree the "hypocritical" people do turn me off to it because I have encountered so many of them. But they are not specifically the reason I don't believe.
  310. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    * sigh *

    Saying that God doesn't exist is just as ridiculous as ignoring scientific facts. Many of the most famous scientists and brilliant minds responsible for much of the body of scientific knowledge believed in God. Newton and Galileo all the way down to Einstein believed in God. So, what, you are smarter than them now? Gimme a break.

  311. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mpsmps · · Score: 1

    And is it that much of a leap of faith to assume if God can create the world as it says in genesis to believe He could have created molecules with an atomic structure such that carbon dating says they're billions of years old? Or that as you said, that He could maybe just possibly decide to put fossiles in different layers so we *believe* that it's so much older than it really is? If He created the universe, is it really going to be that much harder for Him to create it with a bit of physical history? Umm. No.

    This belief that the scientific age of the world is different than the actual age of the world is actually held by many religious people. Although I don't share it, I have no objection to it as a religious belief (not unlike how when I dream at night, I inhabit worlds that appear older than the dream). This is a perfect example of something that may be appropriate in (privately funded) religious classes and obviously totally inappropriate to teach in science class (because it concedes that the world is scientifically old).

  312. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by rbanffy · · Score: 1

    Each and every dollar dedicated to creationist propaganda makes it easier to further the creationist agenda and to introduce creationism and other religious doctrines in schools.

    If we give them no money - if nobody visits, they earn nothing. With time, we can make stupidity, if not painful, at least expensive.

  313. Re:Falsifying? by rbanffy · · Score: 1

    Very good research?!

    Where can it be found?

  314. Good whiskey, fast horses and fine women. by wilec · · Score: 1

    Good whiskey,fast horses and fine women. Or is that Good whiskey, fine horses and fast women? Being a native son myself I can attest to the quality of the 'whiskey', especially Makers Mark and a few local products. Horses I know just enough about to stay away from, ie they are very large and tend to be rather nervous and excitable. Now the women part I have to admit confuses me, I married a 'fine' little Kentucky wildcat about 30 years ago, but I have also been familiar with a few 'fast' Kentucky gals in the past. As to the topic at hand, this is as of yet another sad story among many these days. Rest assured though there are a good many intelligent and reasonable folk still around these parts.

    Wabi-Sabi
    Matthew

  315. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by rbanffy · · Score: 1

    Most creationist nicely avoid this by saying "God made the fossil record this way to test our faith".

    This way, creationism becomes non-falsifiable and thus, not a science.

    So, they have a choice between being non-science or being already proved wrong. And this is the only question that should remain.

  316. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by sohare · · Score: 1
    The problem is that in so far as understanding the natural world is concerned, science (what you are calling Evolutionism) is the top dog. Your intuition, dreams, drug induced visions, stories, fairytales, poetry, and impressions will never explain mechanistic objects as well as science can. True, science is a way of understanding things, but don't be fooled by those postmodernists.

    Science isn't portrayed as truth, like a lot of pseudoscientists like to claim. It's simply a model of the universe. The interesting thing is that if your model predicts and behaves in the same fashion as the universe, the two structures are essentially isomorphic - i.e., the same thing just with the fundamentals relabeled. Dark matter, gravity, etc. might be a little different than our current formulations, but we might as well think about them the way we do because we can predict REAL results using our model.

    Religions and pseudosciences in general do not make predictive theories. You speak of science and religion as being on opposite ends of the spectrum but actually they aren't even on the same spectrum at all. Pseudoscience directly appeals to the paranormal, which is impossible to study with science. Something that is purely paranormal also is completely of disinterest to humanity, since this phenomenon will have no affect whatsoever. Once the paranormal begins to interact with the universe, however, we can study it with science. Science and mathematics are THE tools to use when something has an effect upon the universe.

    For example, take ESP. If ESP can manifest itself, then people should be able to use their ESP better than guessing. But all proper studies of ESP never show any positive result. So then you can chalk it up to methodology problems, so we change them a bit to give more leeway to the psychics and show again only a negative result. You do this enough and the only evidence for ESP becomes purely anecdotal, and it can only be used in a very noncontrolled, very unspecific setting, and so essentially becomes meaningless. Science can NEVER say that this ESP doesn't exist, but that it doesn't seem to manifest itself.

    Religion is the same way. It makes certain claims about how the earth developed or is. I.e., it is making naturalistic claims. Like the ESP, we should be able to test these claims about the natural world with science. But we find that many of these claims (cataclysmic flooding) probably did not happen, are (in the case of irreducible complexity) just outdated and wrong or (in the case of specified complexity) plain bad math. Better yet, with science we have a pretty good understanding of the natural world. However, you can never use science to talk about whether a supreme being that never makes its presence known created all the rules of the universe first and set them free to interact.

    Faith is that leap someone makes that, given how much we understand about the world, am I going search for an answer in a deity, or just let it be unknown. How much extra theory do I tack onto our BASIC, solid understanding of how things work. Faith is really how much you are willing to dull Occam's razor.

    But what a lot of IDers and such wish to do is essentially redefine science to include the paranormal. That is where the conflict really lies. That's also why option 1 of teaching neither is ridiculous. Science isn't religion and religion isn't science. You teach science using science, not with some hocus pocus mix of fantasy.

    The problem science gets such a bad rap in certain areas of the world is that people are scientifically ignorant. They have this idea that current science is a model that, at some time in the future, will be repalced wholesale by some newer model. That's not at all how science works. Rather, our understanding deepens. Newton's theory of gravity still works fine in so far as it works. We aren't going to throw out our ideas of the electron, or atom. Because they have predictive power.

  317. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by sohare · · Score: 1
    How in the world is saying something blatantly wrong or ridiculous in any way related to religious discourse? Granted our good friend didn't cite any studies, but there is plenty of reasons to believe that, in fact, dinosaurs did not walk with man. It's not like these museums go out, make observations, collect data, publish in archeological and anthropological journals, reach a consensus, etc.

    This museum does NOT represent a competing and solid theory about human and dinosaur evolution. It's not science at all. Not necessarily because it didn't follow the above trappings of science, but because its underlying methodology is not scientific.

  318. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by sohare · · Score: 1
    >>Science has its limits. Science is just our provisional understanding of the universe and a set of methods for achieving that understanding ... it's a human invention and so long as its being practiced by humans, it will be subject to human limitations.

    We should be clear about these limitations. Quantum mechanics for instance is not something humans have a great deal of intuition about. Really, if we were just relying on human intuition and thought, we shouldn't be talking much about quantum mechanics. But we have the incredible tool of mathematics. Granted, the mathematics we do is limited by how our brains are wired, but it allows us to probe things to a detail lost on the layperson.

    I don't think it's unreasonable to assume that one day humanity will possess understanding of the universe "so far as it matters." I.e., we have the precision down such that we can do, perhaps, interstellar space travel, without ending up in the wrong coordinate after 2 years of flight. Hell, right now, Newtonian mechanics is all that is really needed for travel within our solar system.

  319. not all christians are afraid of the truth.. by nick+bellando · · Score: 1

    I liked what you said re: supernatural / natural being the same thing. yes, creationists are generally nuts - but most humans have some things that they irrationally hold on to because they think its important; i'm willing to be patient, but it's unfortunate that you often can't hold a discussion with these people. we all have ideas of God. that "Supernatural" aspect of him - God being unknowable - that is, accepting mystery and ambiguity, is often thrown out in favor of an idea of God that we can hold on to (i.e., a God who made the earth 6,000 years ago, and put dinosaurs there as a prank to "test our faith"), and when that /idea/ of God is challenged, we figure that if our idea can't hold, then God can't exist, and therefore doesn't love us. you said, "If God was shown to exist, he would be a very natural being" yes! that's exactly what we believe. we believe that God was in Jesus reconciling the world to himself. a man, the only true man, being what he is supposed to be, the rest of us being fallen. we notice that existence is characterized by suffering. we believe that God revealed himself in Jesus, who died for the sins of a fallen world. there is no proof for this. my faith in God is about being loved. i was speaking to a monk about this.. not all christians are like american christians. in Russia, i met several scientists who became Christians because they saw mystery and wonder in their work, and wanted to be reconciled to God, forgiven, loved so as to love. in the west, we talk about "what we believe". zen buddhists are different; they believe that you ought to sit and count your breath. around the world, and through history, christians have believed that God designed us for eternal life in love and friendship with him, which is something that we believe because we love one another right here, tasting this this life. the truth of Christ is not proven by dinosaur bones; it is a rather concrete practice of acting rightly, practicing mercy, accepting mystery, believing in love (that is, God in Christ), and obeying in faith by being reconciled to the world. when we stop living this way, we look for dead anchors to hang our faith on, such as an unneccessarily literal interpretation of genesis. i don't mind questioning things. i became a christian while doing so. i'm sorry some of us are hateful towards.. smart people. often we are more worried about defending ludicrous ideas than we are concerned with showing Jesus' love in the flesh, i.e. making friends with scientists regardless of what they believe. i don't see what the hubub is. evolution really says nothing regarding the existence of God. it just sees complex forms coming from concentrations of energy. rather amazing...

  320. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by kennygraham · · Score: 1

    its not a protest against their right to open it. but i cant really blame you for not reading that site, since it looks like it came from 1995.

  321. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by denobug · · Score: 1

    Sure creationism runs against scientific evidances we have today, but so are some of the concepts in sci-fi/fantacy fictions (e.g. time travel). After all there's something call freedom of speach in this country. They can open up whatever kinf of museum they like, so long as they are not infringing on someone else's freedom. Simply stating Darwin's theory is wrong inside the Museum simply cannot count as attacking the scientific opionion. They are just respectably presenting their different opionion, whether it seems logical, or even downright silly to you.

  322. hah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL USA

  323. Untrue by porpnorber · · Score: 1

    You don't have to do a lot of empirical research to reach an informed judgment on the question of evolution. You can check the argument yourself. Structurally, the reasoning is a trivial induction, which would take down arithmetic if you doubted it. For points of attack, then, that leaves reproduction, variation and death. So what is it? Things don't die? They don't reproduce? Or you can't see that people's children take after them without being identical?

    The most bizarre thing about this whole debate is that evolution not 'just a theory.' It is one of those incredibly, blatantly obvious things that can't possibly be doubted once it has been pointed out, with an empirical component like that putting your tongue in a functioning toaster is a bad idea, and a logical one like that if you throw your stuff out then you won't have as much stuff as before. The amount of reasoning required is less than that needed to open one of those damned plastic clamshell packages that so many small electronic doodads come in. The only possible way to doubt it is to go 'oh! oh! I am afraid of this conclusion' and turn your brain off in the middle of the oh so huge three-step chain of reasoning.

    Seriously, anyone who is able to doubt evolution is not qualified to operate heavy machinery, much less teach or run a museum.

    And, by the way, this is not intended as an attack on anyone's religion. Merely on their mental competence or (given that it is more probable that they are lying than that they haven't noticed that people and animals have offspring and die) moral character.

    1. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was a lot of words you used to say nothing.

      Evolution is most definately a theory. Empirical evidence? Did you watch a monkey evolve into a man? No?

      You can make guesses (theories?) that similar life forms mutated or evolved from one to another to finally reach the state they are in today. That seems rather far fetched though.

    2. Re:Untrue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution is a theory and thats a good thing, see elsewhere. And, as said elsewhere, it's been empirically observed. And man did not evolve from monkeys, were distant cousins.

      You're ignorance is rather dissapointing.

      You are aware that mr hovind was sentenced to 10 years in prison for fraud? ;)

    3. Re:Untrue by porpnorber · · Score: 1

      The theory of evolution does not say that monkeys evolved into men. Indeed, nobody who has thought about it for a few minutes says this. The theory of evolution itself says just that things evolve. Empirical observation of biological systems leads us to believe that monkeys have common ancestors with men. Not that monkeys evolved into men (unless you are using the language in a way that also allows you to say that men evolved into monkeys).

      As to the idea of monkeys and men having a common ancestor, it is far fetched. It is so improbable as to be essentially unquantifiable. This is true of everything that happens in the real world; there's no obvious reason for things to turn out as they do. But, looking at how they have turned out, it's often not so hard to figure out the path they took. And in the case of men and monkeys, we can look at the DNA and see that yup, that's what seems to have happened. Because other explanations are less likely.

      And even that has no bearing on religion, by the way. God may still be controlling the dice; randomness by its nature has the power to conceal causation. Atheists may believe that it is unlikely that it is a god that the randomness is concealing, but on this question there is no statistical test you can apply.

      Quite seriously, you can say that you doubt the theory of evolution, but that's just words. If you genuinely understand it - as opposed, perhaps, to what you have heard people say about it - you'll find that its validity is entirely obvious.

  324. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to live in KY. I don't know if it's still true, but back then, Bourbon County was dry and Christian County was wet.

  325. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Call us when your yeast evolves into an animal...

  326. SACRILEGE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's no mention of dinosaurs in the Bible!!!!!!

    They're hell-bound sinners every one of them!!!!

  327. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because heavy things sink and fish don't purposefully ground themselves

  328. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by ultranova · · Score: 1

    Suffice to say that Goedel's Incompleteness Theorem turning mathematics world upside down by demonstrating that within a mathematical system there will be propositions that are true, but cannot be proved so by formal proof.

    Yes, I know. Now can you answer my question: if you can't prove a particular statement, how do you know it is true ? Or, in other words: does Goedel's theorem give a way to identify a particular statement as belonging to these unprovable true statements (and if such, wouldn't that actually be the proof for those statements ?), or does it simply state that they exist ?

    Remember, the original point was about considering particular unprovable statements as facts, not that such statements wouldn't exist.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  329. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if Creation is so provably wrong whats the harm in setting creation and evolution side by side in a science class? Shouldn't you always present what the other group believes and then give a counterargument? If you want a fair comparision I'd say a science class would be the best place. Technically though, both should be taught in a history class because both happened in the past.

    In all reallity we all believe in creation it's just a debate over the creator. Yours is astronomical chance; mine is an omniscient God.

    In response to the quoted text, if you believe parts of the bible, specifically the first couple of chapters, are fallable what make the rest of it infallible. If creation and the fall didn't happen then the rest of what is written in the bible is unnecessary. If God isn't powerful enough to create the earth then he's not powerful enough to save you either.

  330. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

    Why? Creationists thrive on their ability to make politicians think there is a controversy, and an active debate. Why give them any more attention than the guy on a street corner wearing a sandwich board proclaiming that the end is nigh? If they want to spend 27 million on their sandwich board, then fine.

    Showing that lots of people accept idea A and reject idea B is their tactic. Let's focus our attention on showing why appeals to authority and popularity are flawed, rather than trying to convince the public through the use of that same flawed logic.

  331. Re:As someone who may become a priest, this is sad by Ian+Alanai · · Score: 1

    Now I am a pretty rabid atheist but I *love* believers such as yourself. I just wish the rest of your lot were more like you. I have no problem with personal belief, respect mine, and I'll respect yours.

    As for the throwback evangelicals you have in the USofA... I don't know. It seems like there is a powerful combination of politics and greed at work in US Christianity. It is very disturbing.

    Fortunately you are not alone. Many other countries have believers that are well-mannered and polite. And not all atheists are as ideologically extreme as Dawkins. So in countries like Australia we still have a sense of proportion about religious issues, i.e. most people don't give a damn about other peoples' beliefs. (Not that we don't have some contaimination of political debate with religious ideology, but it isn't too bad. Yet.)

    --
    Whichever way you look at it, it's true. I'm not.
  332. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by adona1 · · Score: 1

    Not to mention...it's not exactly new news either.

    --
    Between the falling angel and the rising ape
  333. not the "Tree of Knowledge" by mateomiguel · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Its not Tree of Knowledge, as in knowledge was bad. Its the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, a very specific kind of knowledge, as in knowing that there is an alternative to Good is bad. Its a recurisvely-named tree. It is the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Don't eat of it, or you will gain the knowledge of Good and Evil. Evil is going against the command of not eating from the tree. So if you go against the command of not eating the tree, you will know what evil is.

  334. Re:AIG by Tyreth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've been through answers in Genesis. Acknowledgement of what they call "microevolution" is simply their latest fall-back point. They only concede it's truth because to do otherwise would make them look so deliberately ignorant that they would lose all but their core membership

    So, it turns out that they're not refusing the evidence you cited, but in fact embrace it, and so your response is "they're lying! They really don't believe it, but they're lying to us to suck us in". Well, you're wrong. I'm trying to help you understand something here, because it's quite obvious you're quick to criticise but slow to understand that which you reject. The YEC position (and I don't consider myself a YEC) is that natural selection and changes in allele frequencies in a population over time have played a *very* large part in the 6000 year history of the world, and their worldview. For you to say that they only concede it so as to not lose membership is a major (yet common) misunderstanding of the YEC position. I direct you to:
    http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v14/i3/fi nches.asp

    Most people are blissfully unaware of the objections cited to Darwinism, and so they wonder at how people can reject it. Maybe taking the time to understand the objections might make things a bit clearer.

    Nevertheless, if someone were to demonstrate a contradiction between the bible and "microevolution", they would be denying the existence of changes in allele frequencies soon afterwards.
    This is probably correct, but they don't expect this to happen. Since for them the Bible is revealed truth from God, it will *never* contradict facts of the world. So if something is actually true, then the Bible will never claim that it is false.
  335. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by nelsonal · · Score: 1

    http://www.nd.gov/ndgs/NDNotes/ndn9_h.htm There are lots of fossils of sea creatures in west at all elevations. Most creationists would say that dragons were the remaining dino decendants of the ones who went on the ark.

    --
    Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
  336. Re:Sad, sad, sad by MikeB0Lton · · Score: 1

    Who told you God would judge you on doctrinal issues? That is old testament stuff! Now yes we are all judged according to the word, but it is your faith in Christ that determines the outcome. There is much more to it than that and I don't wish to force it on you in this forum, but I ask that at the very least read the books of the new testament and then make an educated decision based on what you've read. Do not assume that what you have heard from others is truth. God bless you :-)

  337. Hell is the absence of reason by BillGatesLoveChild · · Score: 1

    Interesting someone(s) moderated this as flamebait: This is straight from Dawkin's the book. The first few paragraphs summaries how children stick steadfast to their parents religion, no matter what. Wonder how many of those flamebait moderators even read that far? It's not enough for them to disagree. They'd rather moderate it out of existence. This is why religious debate with "the faithful" is pointless, though points to Dawkins for having the guts to try. Points to him too for giving atheists permission to challenge zealotry.

    Otherwise stuff like things happens: "George Bush: 'God told me to end the tyranny in Iraq'" http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/news/archives/2005/10/ 06/george_bush_god_told_me_to_end_the_tyranny_in_i raq.html

  338. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    9/11!

  339. Attention all EVOLUTIONISTS! ;) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Before you go to boycott the museum, shouting your precious science minds, please take a look and explain chirality of molecules. ;-)

    Many important molecules required for life exist in two forms. These two forms are non-superimposable mirror images of each other, i.e.: they are related like our left and right hands. Hence this property is called chirality, from the Greek word for hand. The two forms are called enantiomers (from the Greek word for opposite) or optical isomers, because they rotate plane-polarised light either to the right or to the left.

    Nearly all biological polymers must be homochiral (all its component monomers having the same handedness. Another term used is optically pure or 100 % optically active) to function. All amino acids in proteins are 'left-handed', while all sugars in DNA and RNA, and in the metabolic pathways, are 'right-handed'.

    A 50/50 mixture of left- and right-handed forms is called a racemate or racemic mixture. Racemic polypeptides could not form the specific shapes required for enzymes, because they would have the side chains sticking out randomly. Also, a wrong-handed amino acid disrupts the stabilizing -helix in proteins. DNA could not be stabilised in a helix if even a single wrong-handed monomer were present, so it could not form long chains. This means it could not store much information, so it could not support life.

    Now, the question itself about DNA molecule's "cleaner mechanism" while enzyme is moving along DNA fixing its chirality to prevent DNA's immediate death. So, if DNA randomly has been created from an explosion, HOW the molecule "knows" that that cleaner mechanism will be extremely required to prevent it's self death? However, I think evolutionists already constructing Boeing 747 from a pile of its details, using an explosions of "Tomahawk" missles... ;-)

    As to the origin of the optically active enzymes, we can only speculate'. However, if we can only 'speculate' on the origin of life, why do so many people state that evolution is a 'fact'? Repeat a rumour often enough and people will swallow it.

  340. Re:AIG by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    The YEC position (and I don't consider myself a YEC) is that natural selection and changes in allele frequencies in a population over time have played a *very* large part in the 6000 year history of the world, and their worldview.
    You don't understand YEC at ALL. Their position is solely this: the bible is inerrant truth. They only acknowledge that changes in allele frequencies may have occurred, because it doesn't seem to contradict the bible and because too many of Christians accept some kind of evolution for them to completely deny it.

    Most people are blissfully unaware of the objections cited to Darwinism, and so they wonder at how people can reject it. Maybe taking the time to understand the objections might make things a bit clearer.
    There ARE no real objections to evolution. Just stupid ones based on ignorance and fear. You'll note that EVERY SINGLE ARGUMENT on AIG is based on disproven or discredited studies, deliberate misinterpretations of science, or is simply bullshit religious dogmaticism. Their ridiculously insane ideas about thermodynamics are enough to completely write them off as deranged, anti-science whackos.

    Incidentally, calling it "Darwinism" is deliberate and pejorative, since Darwin only provided our initial form of natural selection. The modern understanding of evolution is vastly more sophisticated and predicated on vastly more evidence. You may as well call classical mechanics "Galileoism", despite the fact that classical mechanics is vastly more advanced than anything Galileo would have understood, and has moved past many of the misconceptions of that age. This leads me to believe that you ARE a young-earth-creationist. Otherwise, you would have no reason to deliberately cast doubt on an establised and well-supported scientific theory.

  341. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by beyondkaoru · · Score: 1

    i think i read something somewhere (sorry, can't find a link) saying that 'day' was a semi-mistranslation; it was supposed to be like 'back in my day' sort of day. ah, if only i could read languages other than english, i'd have this settled by now. anyway, there's plenty of other stuff that's messed up about genesis, even in that little bit (like how all plants were created before all animals... yeah right).

    in other religions a lot of creation myths don't actually describe the beginning of the universe, simply the reconfiguration of things that were already there, so personally i think that people have been taking the jewish/christian/whatever religion a bit too far.

    --
    the privacy of one's mind is important.
    you do have something to hide.
  342. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by fractoid · · Score: 1

    Give him a enough millions of years, and sure, no problem.

    --
    Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
  343. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by shark72 · · Score: 1

    "several groups (both religious and secular) will be protesting. come join us!"

    Oh, dear. The big meme the creationists are presently pushing is "teach the controversy." This is a huge straw man, because there is no controversy, as far as teaching science is concerned. By even making a big deal about this, you may actually be helping promote the creationist agenda.

    --
    Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  344. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    Sure creationism runs against scientific evidances we have today, but so are some of the concepts in sci-fi/fantacy fictions (e.g. time travel).

    Yes, but the context makes all the difference. Fictional works tell you outright that they are, you know, fictional. There's a not-so-fine line between telling a story and making it clear that it is a work of pure imagination or speculation, and opening a museum that teaches religious ideas as something resembling scientific fact, when in truth, there is nothing scientific about them, when many of the ideas being presented have, in fact, have long been debunked and discredited by those who actually practice science.

    After all there's something call freedom of speach in this country. They can open up whatever kinf of museum they like, so long as they are not infringing on someone else's freedom.

    I've never said otherwise. Freedom of speech, however, also means having the freedom to protest things you find disagreeable, not just about government, but about the way private organizations conduct themselves. There is a public interest at stake here, as pointedly noted in my original comment.

    Simply stating Darwin's theory is wrong inside the Museum simply cannot count as attacking the scientific opionion. They are just respectably presenting their different opionion, whether it seems logical, or even downright silly to you.

    So taking evidence out of context, making completely evidentially unsupported claims, using unsound methodology, and a lot of jargon-filled hand-waving to make a polished, professional presentation that directly contradicts the consensus view held by virtually all scientists in the pertinent fields (biology and geology, most notably) ... and putting it all in a "museum" (not a church, not a temple, not an amusement park -- but a museum) with a suggestion of academic scientific credibility -- does not represent an attack on scientific opinion or science generally, in your view? If so, we're going to have to simply agree to disagree.

    I'm just calling this like I see it. It's a blatant attack on science in the same vein as the Catholic church's attempted suppression of Galileo's discoveries about the solar system. Religious organizations today cannot prevent scientists for publishing findings that contradict their beliefs (in part, because of that free speech thing and also because of their waning influence in the academic community, especially certain fields), so they do everything they can short of that. Some tell their flock not to read certain books. Some try to get themselves placed on school boards so they can excise any reference that's made to evolution -- or to force the teaching of an alternative point of view, as if there is one with any credibility ... there is not, so some have devoted a lot of time and money to creating a facsimile of science that roughly corroborates their religious claims, but is actually more focused on casting ill-founded doubt on good science (this is "creation science" and "intelligent design" in a nutshell).

    Darwin and most evolutionary biologists didn't develop the theory of evolution to specifically discredit Judeo-Christian beliefs (even if it does have the side effect of sometimes eroding one's belief in religion sometimes), but some people of faith feel sufficiently threatened by the theory and thus see a need to attack "in kind." They can't produce good evidence that supports their beliefs, however, so what they do instead is try to prevent the science from reaching the public in any way they can, or failing that, they try to discredit the science itself -- which is almost always done in a logically fallacious, intellectually dishonest manner.

    If you only bother to look, the behavior of those who created this museum creates a pattern that is plainly indicative of a direct assault on science/evolution, and not just a friendly espousing of their own beliefs in a good faith effort to educate.

  345. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by denobug · · Score: 1
    I've never said otherwise. Freedom of speech, however, also means having the freedom to protest things you find disagreeable, not just about government, but about the way private organizations conduct themselves. There is a public interest at stake here, as pointedly noted in my original comment.

    So you have a problem with my opionion of leaving them along and believe in what ever they wanted to believe instead of shoving your conviction in science down their throat? Because that's what your reply sounds like to me.

    we got enough debate topic in this country already. Frankly I think both camp need to lay off their attack off each other and start learning how to "repectably disagree" the other's opionion. Let them open their Museum in their own right, and you can open your museum dedicated to scientific theories behind Darwinism and how it had positively advance science and improve our lives.

    We still have not bagged all the polygamist and other more extremism and racists in this country yet. Can't we focus on them first before we can have a candid, yet gentlemen like discussion on the subject? If you truely believe in Science, then you should also believe that the truth in science will prove itself over time. Blasting different opionion will be the last thing that will persuade others to listen to you anyway. That's just human nature that even physical science cannot give you a straight mathematical formula on.
  346. PDF file debunking YEC claims by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lawrence Krauss, at Case Western Reserve University, has put out a pdf file to counter some of the claims made by this "museum"; the Top 10 Reasons Why the Universe, the Sun, Earth, and Life are NOT 6000 years old.

  347. Re:AIG by Tyreth · · Score: 1

    You don't understand YEC at ALL. Their position is solely this: the bible is inerrant truth. They only acknowledge that changes in allele frequencies may have occurred, because it doesn't seem to contradict the bible and because too many of Christians accept some kind of evolution for them to completely deny it.
    Well, small hope you'd read that article I suppose. You're free to believe what you want, but it would be nice if you didn't spread your uninformed opinions with others until you check your facts. As for your claims about their position "solely" being that the Bible is inerrant truth, you're equivocating. Yes, it's true that their position is that the Bible is inerrant and that's why Darwinism is false. But it is not true that all their beliefs are solely this. Just because the Bible doesn't say anything about the milk in their fridge, that doesn't mean they don't have any beliefs about it, or reject to its presence in their fridge. Likewise, just because the Bible doesn't say how different kinds spread after their creation doesn't mean that YEC's won't make statements about them, or try to learn more about this world. You're being completely unreasonable in your arguments - and I think it's because you've been caught out as ignorant, at the time when you were trying to expose someone else's ignorance.

    To anyone who knows something about YEC, your statements look foolish and uninformed. You say, "They only acknowledge that changes in allele frequencies may have occurred, because it doesn't seem to contradict the bible and because too many of Christians accept some kind of evolution for them to completely deny it". That's just ridiculous. Maybe you'll persuade some high school atheist who doesn't know what he's talking about - but you shouldn't wonder that the YEC ignores you when you say such stupid things. All you're saying is "they're lying". You offer no reason for someone to believe this other than your incredulity.

    You'll note that EVERY SINGLE ARGUMENT on AIG is based on disproven or discredited studies
    I'm not here to defend the YEC position, just to point out your ignorance, so I won't be commenting on this.

    Incidentally, calling it "Darwinism" is deliberate and pejorative, since Darwin only provided our initial form of natural selection...[snip]...This leads me to believe that you ARE a young-earth-creationist.
    I don't use the term Darwinism as a pejorative. YEC is not a pejorative, just a way of identifying a particular set of beliefs. A Darwinist as it is mostly used refers to someone who not only believes in a change in allele frequencies in a population over time, but also the idea that all living things share a single common ancestor, and usually also the belief that the first life arose spontaneously solely through natural processes not guided by any intelligence.

    That is all. Evolution is a word that is easily used equivocally. By using the term Darwinist it makes it much more clearly what is spoken about. If you like, the term Neo-Darwinist is used usually to take into account the modern views where they differ from Darwin.

    As for me being a YEC, I'm not (though I once was). But maybe you'll just accuse me of lying too...seems like an easy way to always think you're right.

  348. You know you're in America when... by Profound · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...your "creation science" museum has a notice saying:

    "Please note that the Creation Museum is a smoke-free facility. Firearms and pets (other than service animals) are not permitted in the museum."

    http://www.creationmuseum.org/plan-your-visit

  349. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by odourpreventer · · Score: 1

    The real outrage here, is that you're saying bourbon is whiskey. That's gross.

  350. Funny speculations by hotfireball · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Evolutionists wants to prove origin of the life? Great, but they should first prove how stuff appeared before The Great Explosion. Oh wait, they say for Universe has its age... So what was before?..

    If we can only "speculate" on the origin of life, why do so many people state that evolution is a "fact"? Repeat a rumour often enough and people will swallow it.

    1. Re:Funny speculations by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      Evolution has nothing to do with the 'origin of life.' Evolution only states that life tends to adapt itself to it's environment, and that over time, those adaptations can result in some pretty big changes.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    2. Re:Funny speculations by hotfireball · · Score: 1

      Oh, nobody is against adaptation of the life. It is very often if you take a horse of one kind and bring it elsewhere to other climate, then kind changes very strongly. Yet horse it persists. It does not turns to be a barking frog neither a flying monkey. However the therm of "evolution" means "The gradual development of something from a simple to a more complex form". An "organic evolution" means "the process by which different kinds of living organisms are thought to have developed and diversified from earlier forms during the history of the earth.".

      The idea of organic evolution was proposed by some ancient Greek thinkers but was long rejected in Europe as contrary to the literal interpretation of the Bible. Lamarck proposed a theory that organisms became transformed by their efforts to respond to the demands of their environment, but he was unable to explain a mechanism for this. Lyell demonstrated that geological deposits were the cumulative product of slow processes over vast ages. This helped Darwin toward a theory of gradual evolution over a long period by the natural selection of those varieties of an organism slightly better adapted to the environment and hence more likely to produce descendants. Combined with the later discoveries of the cellular and molecular basis of genetics, Darwin's theory of evolution has, with some modification, become the dominant unifying concept of modern biology.

      Yet this theory is not proven. And probably never be.

  351. I don't believe in 'Evolution' by Nivag064 · · Score: 1

    Actually I don't believe in 'Evolution', I just don't see the point in believing in it!

    However, I do understand that it is the best explanation we have for the diversity of life forms.

    A belief is essentially an implicit assumption that something is true.

    -Nivag

  352. Re:AIG by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1
    The sad little article in AiG was nothing more than the same bullshit and lies that theists have always engaged in. They draw the completely artificial line between so-called "macroevolution" (or "up-hill" evolution, as they're calling it here) and "microevolution" (or "down-hill" evolution). This distinction has been disproven and discredited a thousand times over, but they keep making it. They've seen the scientific arguments showing that the distinction isn't real, but they persist -- because absolutely nothing matters to them beyond clinging to their fantasy. Biblical inerrancy really is the crux of their entire belief system. They have no interest in real world data or evidence, except in so far as it can be manipulated and distorted to try and get people to believe in their mythology.

    The hilarious irony is that they believe that all of the species of finch could have arisen from just two WITHOUT any new alleles (since new alleles would imply "macroevolution"). But naturally, it's impossible for two finches to have more than four distinct alleles for a gene. For two finches on the Ark to give rise to thousands of distinct species would require much more genetic variation than two finches can carry. See how easy it is to discredit their insanity? If they had even the tiniest shred of real interest in science, they'd be forced to abandon their position immediately. Science is incompatible with dogma, with myth, and most especially with faith.

    I don't use the term Darwinism as a pejorative. YEC is not a pejorative, just a way of identifying a particular set of beliefs. A Darwinist as it is mostly used refers to someone who not only believes in a change in allele frequencies in a population over time, but also the idea that all living things share a single common ancestor, and usually also the belief that the first life arose spontaneously solely through natural processes not guided by any intelligence.

    You're so mired in your faith that you don't even see it anymore. The entire point of using the term "Darwinist" and "Darwinism" is to try and make the scientific belief in evolution appear as some kind of religious, cult-like following of a man, rather than science. You don't go around calling certain scientists Newtonists, Einsteinists, Planckists, Fermiists, or Hawkingists. There is no theory of "Bohrism" or some monstrous anti-god movement called "Lewisism". Zealots refer to the theory of evolution as "Darwinism" as part of a deliberate attempt to create a dichotomy for Christians between following Jesus and following Darwin.

    But it is not true that all their beliefs are solely this.

    Of course -- they believe in all kinds of different things that are mentioned in the bible, like a Human surviving inside of a whale's gastrointestinal tract, unicorns, dragons, giants that are half-human/half-angel, etc. One way or the other though, they follow a belief system in which evidence is rejected when it disagrees with fantasy.

    Just because the Bible doesn't say anything about the milk in their fridge, that doesn't mean they don't have any beliefs about it, or reject to its presence in their fridge.

    Keep in mind, we're talking about people who, if the bible claimed their fridge contained milk, would simply ASSUME that the milk was there and refuse to check. Likewise, if the bible claimed that there was no milk in the fridge, they wouldn't bother checking there even if they were about to starve to death. Biblical inerracy is one of the most truly amazing forms of Human stupidity.

    Likewise, just because the Bible doesn't say how different kinds spread after their creation doesn't mean that YEC's won't make statements about them, or try to learn more about this world.

    If you don't recognize the fundamental contradiction between basing one's knowledge on a book of fairy tales and basing it on observation of the real world, I doubt you

  353. Re:AIG by Tyreth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The sad little article in AiG was nothing more than the same bullshit and lies that theists have always engaged in.
    Your vehemence and irrationality seems to stem from this idea that all us theists (not just YEC's now!) willfully and knowingly tell lies to promote whatever cause we believe in.

    Whatever your reason for thinking this, I don't know. But if you think you'll persuade me, or indeed any theist, by telling us we're liars then you'll be sorely disappointed. I know I don't lie, so telling me I am a liar is not going to achieve anything. Who are you hoping to convince? Or do you have a chip on your shoulder from when you went to church, and now you think all theists are your natural enemies? Perhaps some of that Dawkins hostility has found its way to you. Whatever your problem is, there's no way you'll discuss anything meaningfully with a theist with your current attitude.

    I quoted that article not to justify any YEC belief, but just to show you that they don't reject natural selection. It doesn't matter if the conclusions they draw are completely wrong - the fact remains that they believe in natural selection and a change in allele frequencies in a population over time.

  354. Re:On the other hand, Moonshine by MauroGarza · · Score: 1

    Maybe moonshine will help to resolve the gasoline shortage.

  355. Re:AIG by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 0
    No, they ACCEPT natural selection. They would toss that acceptance aside in an instant if they thought it contradicted the bible. They would say the sky was green if someone were to show that the bible claimed it was so.

    There's a difference between holding that something is true, and simply not rejecting it. Normal people do the former about scientific truths; YECs do the latter.

    Besides, they DO reject natural selection. Natural selection leads as inevitably to the creation of new genuses, orders, and phyla -- new kinds, in their insane biblical terminology -- as it does to new species. So by rejecting the possibility of new "kinds", they're rejecting natural selection, in exactly the same way that someone who rejects the possibility of the Earth moving around the sun is rejecting gravity even though they'll admit the possibility of apples falling towards the ground. Accepting a scientific truth means accepting ALL of the consequences of that scientific truth, not just the ones that don't threaten your faith.

    This is why I see ALL theists as enemies of progress. The ones who aren't extremists support the ones who are. Supposedly rational christians support that ones that want science to be stricken from schools. Supposedly peaceful christians support the ones who bomb abortion clinics and murder doctors and pregnant women. Supposedly tolerate muslims support the ones who strap explosives to their chests. Supposedly pacifist Hindus support the ones who kill muslims and blow up mosques. Supposedly peaceful buddhists support the ones who riot and form mobs. Supposedly non-violent Jews support the zionists who want to commit genocide. It just goes on and on, until finally people start to accept that there is NO way to be a truly good person when your life is predicated on belief in stories that -- deep down -- you know are purely fantasy.

    (This is the part of the argument where the theist traditionally embarasses him or herself by pretending that Hitler and Stalin weren't religious men themselves -- catholic and russian orthodox respectively -- and that Naziism and Maoism aren't just as based on mythology and fantasy as any other religion; it's a nice try, but atheism still takes the prize for most peaceful and non-violent of all categories of belief in the supernatural).

  356. Re:AIG by Tyreth · · Score: 1

    This is the part of the argument where the theist traditionally embarasses him or herself by pretending that Hitler and Stalin weren't religious men themselves
    No, this is the point where our discussion ends. You have so far to go in understanding the position of a religious person that it's just not going to happen. Frequent conversations, possibly in person, would probably lead to some understanding between us - but that's not going to happen here on slashdot.
  357. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by mstahl · · Score: 1

    I think it's necessary to point out that your web site there has as many colour and format changes in it as the time cube! You might wanna fix that.

  358. Re:AIG by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    Having been raised by religious people, having lived among them for two and a half decades, having spent two decades as one of them, and having studied six millenia of Human history, I know everything I need to know about religion. I've waded knee-deep through the hypocrisy, hatred, violence, bigotry, and general delusional behaviour of theists... and from what I've seen, my personal experiences with religion were far, far more benign than what of the world's population experience (I've never seen anyone beheaded or burned alive, for instance).

  359. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by gtall · · Score: 1

    Technically, Goedel's theory says that there are true statements in a mathematical system of sufficient power (arithmetic) that cannot be proven WITHIN the system. One can always jump to a meta-system and possibly show the statement in question is in fact true. Of course, the same argument then applies to the meta-system, it too will have true but unprovable (within the metasystem) statements.

    So, proof of these unprovable statements is sometimes at hand, just not within the system you started with.

    Gerry

  360. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Grashnak · · Score: 1

    And is it that much of a leap of faith to assume if God can create the world as it says in genesis to believe He could have created molecules with an atomic structure such that carbon dating says they're billions of years old? Or that as you said, that He could maybe just possibly decide to put fossiles in different layers so we *believe* that it's so much older than it really is? If He created the universe, is it really going to be that much harder for Him to create it with a bit of physical history? Umm. No. Great, so not only is god such a vindictive jerk that he plans to torture people eternally for the sin of not believing in him, but now you say he is actively trying to trick people into not believing in him (and therefore getting eternally tortured). Sounds like a swell divine being you have.
    --
    Life needs more saving throws.
  361. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by authority69 · · Score: 1

    In response to the quoted text, if you believe parts of the bible, specifically the first couple of chapters, are fallable what make the rest of it infallible. If creation and the fall didn't happen then the rest of what is written in the bible is unnecessary. If God isn't powerful enough to create the earth then he's not powerful enough to save you either. I didn't say it was wrong/fallable, I said it wasn't literal. There's a big difference.
  362. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 2, Informative

    "why don't we find fossils/fish remains on the top of tall mountains, usually?"

    Actually, we do. You'd be surprised to see how few million years plate tectonics needed to change some sea bottom into very tall montain (there is one famous example between India and asia, but also many more around the world). Of course, the sediment layers in which fossils usually form tend to be destroyed by erosion when they are in direct contact to the athmosphere.

  363. Are Job requirements at museum legal? by CuteAlien · · Score: 1
    From the museum job site:

    All job applicants need to supply a written statement of their testimony, a statement of what they believe regarding creation and a statement that they have read and can support the AiG statement of faith. Read about that AiG statement of faith here: http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/about/fa ith.asp. This is going even far beyond just requiring to believe that the earth is just 6000 years old.

    I'm just wondering if something like that is even legal? I don't know the US legal system, but so far i thought that even asking religious questions in a job interview shouldn't be done. They are asking that of every applicant for a job position - including for example applications for a programming job. Someone who really needs a job will even write a statement like that, but it's degrading.
  364. guy with a gun by NotLad · · Score: 1

    I drove by the museum yesterday on my way back to Atlanta. I convinced my wife that we should pull over and check it out. I said "They have dinosaurs on Noah's Ark! I gotta see that!" and she was convinced. On the outside the building looked nice. I was disappointed to see that it was closed. We saw the rallyforreason.com guys sitting outside. What was more concerning was that we saw a guy walking towards the rallyforreason tent with a rifle. This made us decide NOT to get the documentation that was being handed out by these guys.

    Oh well, we can check it out next time. I'm sure it will be good for a laugh.

  365. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by somersault · · Score: 1

    Excellent argument there.. that's like saying if you gave Microsoft enough million years they could make Windows secure.. possible, but not very likely :P

    --
    which is totally what she said
  366. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by authority69 · · Score: 1

    First, as far as Genesis goes, it was written by one person, Moses. Two, it was not a first hand account of creation. How it was conveyed to Moses is not said, personally I suspect a vision of some sort. That worked well for other authors of the Bible. That being said, there probably wasn't a time stamp in the corner of the vision telling him how much time passed between the "days" as you see on many camcorders and cameras these days. Three, Jewish historians, not being all that concerned with the passage of time, commonly used figurative (rather than literal) language when expressing time. And being Jewish, Moses obviously didn't write this in English, "day" is a translation, perhaps the best word, but not the best idea.

    I have yet to find any reference to a "young earth Jew." Those that can read the original language and study the culture it came from don't seem to believe this seemingly American English Christian young earth view of the world.

  367. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is absurd. The "museum" is simply a place where people can learn about creationism and have fun in the process. No one is forcing you to go there, no one is forcing your kids to go there.

    Let them have their place and their teachings, they may be different from yours, but who are you to tell them what they can and cannot present to the public. The public should be free to go or not go to this theme park as they choose.

    Do you think we should ban cartoons like the Flintstones (portraying humans and dinosaurs living at the same time?). Does this "poison" childrens' minds?

  368. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are correct, yeast evolves, and behaves differently... but it's still yeast. It doesn't evolve into an apple. I know that's quite an extreme example, but it makes my point. I think this is one major thing that has yet to be proven about Evolution. Sure, there are many examples of evolution within species. Any Dog breeder knows that. However, no one has ever breeded two dogs and gotten a cat. There are mutations, such as a dog with five legs, or with two heads or whatever, but it's still a dog. No new DNA information is created or used. Rather, existing information is scrambled around or duplicated in those cases. I don't think there is any such thing as a beneficial mutation. If you can name me an example, please do so.

    Evolution is built entirely on something that has not been recorded or repeated in recorded human history and I believe it cannot be repeated. Never once has humanity witnessed inter-species evolution (again, show me an example, if you have one... not skeletons, as I will discuss in a second). We look at skeletons and assume that this skeleton is the ancestor of this one, but we don't really know for sure. It's just our best guess for now. The problem with this approach is that we have no idea if that skeleton had any kids. The only thing we know about the skeleton is that a long time ago, it died. We can't even know for sure how long ago it died, since modern dating methods have been proven unreliable. If I recall correctly, a freshly killed seal ( or some such animal ) was measured using Carbon Dating, and it was found to be thousands of years old... which was false because it had just died. That is a proof by counter-example that Carbon Dating is unreliable.

    Another thing that evolution assumes (and has not proven with a clear-cut, observable, repeatable example) is that when mutations occur every few millenia, that these mutations are an improvement, and they make the species stronger. However, as I mentioned earlier, I don't think one person has ever been able to observe and record such a beneficial mutations. There are all kinds of mutations that occur. Babies are born without limbs, or with too many. You see things like two-headed snakes, sheep with really short legs and five-legged bulls, etc. However, none of these mutations are helpful. Rather, they are hurtful and probably would shorten the life of the creature if it were in the wild. Someone cross-breeded and cross-breeded dogs until they got the chihuahua... probably the dumbest and most useless dog ever to exist (except for cute-puppy loving people :) ). He wouldn't last an hour in the wild. This is another example of how DNA actually breaks down the more it is distributed... Nature tends to chaos, not order...

    Anyway, it's really hard to prove and discuss these things on slashdot... because of the rabid evolution defenders (the bitterness and anger I read in a lot of these posts is actually kind of shocking) and also because the subject is so broad and complex that it would take several hours to have a good face-to face conversation.

    Anyway, I digress.

    I dare anyone to research what I said and see if I'm wrong... by research, I don't mean read a text book and believe it to be absolute truth. Approach the thing from all angles and see what you come up with. A lot of these text books make statements as if they are absolutely true, and then the next edition of the textbook changes that statement. Which statement is right? Obviously not the first one, if it was changed... but now I can't count on the second statement either, because it might be changed too... it's just a big mess

    --Rydawg
    I haven't logged in to slashdot for a while and I can't remember my pwd

  369. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    I'm probably wasting time responding to an AC post, but ...

    Saying that God doesn't exist is just as ridiculous as ignoring scientific facts.

    Not really. Saying God doesn't exist is like saying unicorns and ghosts don't exist. I'm a simple expression of rational skepticism given the lack of supporting evidence for things such as gods, fairies and Santa Claus. There is a remote possibility that something like God does exist, but the most logical assumption should be that there is not.

    Many of the most famous scientists and brilliant minds responsible for much of the body of scientific knowledge believed in God. Newton and Galileo all the way down to Einstein believed in God. So, what, you are smarter than them now? Gimme a break.

    The argument you are basically making here -- that these smart people believed in God, so God probably exists -- is a textbook example of the appeal to authority logical fallacy.

    Sometimes smart people believe silly things. There have been brilliant people of many different religious persuasions throughout history, as well as brilliant naturalists/atheists -- including Einstein.

    Einstein did not believe in a personal God and explicitly said as much in life on multiple occasions. Confusion is understandable, but what Einstein referred to as "God" could just as accurately be called "the universe" or "nature." See the philosophy of Spinoza, natura naturata, etc.

    I hope this helps to illuminate the atheist/agnostic position for you a little.

  370. Re:AIG by grub · · Score: 1


    Tyreth took his toys and left, your logic was probably causing some long-dormant neurons to fire up. Rational thinking is the enemy of Religion.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  371. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by grub · · Score: 1


    Two, it was not a first hand account of creation. How it was conveyed to Moses is not said, personally I suspect a vision of some sort.

    Like when Bush says "God speaks to me"? You really believe that?

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  372. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by grub · · Score: 1


    All I was trying to say is have an open mind because there are at least two sides to a story.

    The fact side and the fairy tale side?

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  373. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    Well, if Creation is so provably wrong whats the harm in setting creation and evolution side by side in a science class? Shouldn't you always present what the other group believes and then give a counterargument? If you want a fair comparision I'd say a science class would be the best place. Technically though, both should be taught in a history class because both happened in the past.

    Well, my basic position is, that since intelligent design and creationism are not valid scientific theories, they shouldn't be taught as a part of the science curriculum. The "harm" that may be done is to confound students' notion of what science is by introducing non-scientific concepts in the wrong context. I think that one of the major failings of our education system presently, even without creationism or ID in the classroom, is that we just don't do a good enough a job of teaching exactly what science is.

    In my opinion, before we start teaching students in an in depth manner about things such as physics, chemistry and biology (including evolution), the primary focus on science education should first be to build up the scientific literacy of students, and it should be a recurring, oft-reviewed theme/focus throughout their entire science education. A lot of time and energy should be devoted to making sure they understand the scientific method, empiricism, the meaning of words like "theory," "hypothesis and "falsifiability," in the scientific context. I also think we should give the students a very basic primer on the academics of science and science publishing -- about peer-reviewed journals, science ethics panels, some basics on how universities and other institutions.

    An introduction to science and the "culture" of science, in other words. Part of educating about science could possibility include an explicit education about what science is not. In this context it may be acceptable to engage the students of examples of science and non-science -- give (or solicit from students) examples of pseudoscience, unfettered non-scientific speculation about the natural world, and religious claims that all may superficially resemble scientific theories, but don't live up to those standards and must be classified merely as unsupported or discredited hypotheses/ideas.

    I do not expect that such an education would be viewed with welcoming good feelings by creationism or intelligent design advocates, but it is the only way I can think of to get creationism in science-related classes that does justice to the education of the students, otherwise the only proper place for it in school would be in social studies classes, as I've already mentioned. It is not appropriate to give evolution and creationism something resembling "equal time" and respect in science class because they are not anything close to being equally credible or scientific, and suggesting that they are would present a distorted, misleading view to students.

    In all reallity we all believe in creation it's just a debate over the creator. Yours is astronomical chance; mine is an omniscient God.

    If we're still talking about evolution here, I don't believe the origin of species and species diversity was created by "astronomical chance" -- I believe it arose as a result of the operation of non-chance mechanisms -- namely selection pressures (natural selection, sexual selection) and that these processes themselves arose through other mechanistic physical processes that can be observed and understood.

  374. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Copid · · Score: 2, Informative

    However, no one has ever breeded two dogs and gotten a cat.
    That would be extraordinarily surprising and hardly what evolutionary theory predicts. Species are a continuum much like colored light. If I start with red light and slowly increase the frequency, I'll eventually reach violet light. The fact that red light only begets more orangy-red light doesn't change that fact. It would be silly to say "I've never seen red light turn into violet light by this method!" In fact, any too adjacent light frequencies will be very similar.

    No new DNA information is created or used. Rather, existing information is scrambled around or duplicated in those cases. I don't think there is any such thing as a beneficial mutation. If you can name me an example, please do so.
    Your post is long on assertions and rather short on evidence. This is a classic case. What do you mean by "information" and how would we measure it? This is important, because without a halfway decent definition of the quantity "information" your whole point falls apart. If you're looking for an example of a beneficial mutation, you might want to look into the assorted mutations that imbue resistance to antibiotics or the now famous "nylon bug" in which a mutation allows a certain bacterium to "eat" nylon. The mutations are understood (i.e. mapped to a particular piece of DNA--the researchers know what happened) and they're clearly beneficial in that environment.

    We can't even know for sure how long ago it died, since modern dating methods have been proven unreliable.
    No, they haven't. You're just not looking deeply enough into those specific examples and understanding why they are the way they are.

    If I recall correctly, a freshly killed seal ( or some such animal ) was measured using Carbon Dating, and it was found to be thousands of years old... which was false because it had just died. That is a proof by counter-example that Carbon Dating is unreliable.
    It's very important to note that it was a seal or some such animal and not something else. The effect that whoever told you about this didn't mention to you (I'll be charitable and assume that it was an honest mistake) is called the "reservoir effect." For radiocarbon dating to work, the organism should be at equilibrium with atmospheric carbon. This isn't the case when organisms get most of their carbon from "old carbon reservoirs" like the seal in question did. The classic example is mollusk shells, which can often be constructed from the carbon in limestone to which the creatures are attached. In that case, the amount of "old carbon" from the rock will dwarf the amount of "new carbon" from the atmosphere, causing old dates. The same is true for the seal example (from Wakefield's "Mummified seals of southern Victoria Land"). The seal in question lives in an area where large quantities of old carbon are known to be in the food chain.

    Basically, you've taken a well-understood special case and made a hasty generalization to completely discard a huge pile of evidence to the contrary. It's important to understand that knowing how to use the tools is just as important as the accuracy of the tools themselves. Organizations like AiG often exploit this in their "research" and forcibly "break" the dating methods and pretend to be surprised. I recommend reading into the topic a little bit before discarding good research and essentially calling the vast majority of scientists incompetent based on stuff you read on the Internet.
    --
    An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  375. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Copid · · Score: 1

    Well, if Creation is so provably wrong whats the harm in setting creation and evolution side by side in a science class?
    What's the harm? Creation "science" isn't science, whether not its conclusions are correct. The point of science class at the primary school age is to teach a little bit of science and a lot about how science works. Teaching something that isn't science doesn't do anything to further either one of those goals.
    --
    An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  376. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    I'm late in responding to you because of the way you ended up "quoting" yourself, I didn't realize you had posted something new. Anyway.

    So you have a problem with my opionion of leaving them along and believe in what ever they wanted to believe instead of shoving your conviction in science down their throat? Because that's what your reply sounds like to me.

    If being uncompromising about identifying creationism nonsense for what it is constitutes "shoving my conviction in science down their throat", then yes. I think I'm being pretty mild in my expression of my opinion, to be honest though. I'm not calling for a jihad against creationists, or that the government outlaw the dissemination of their lies, or that they be in any other way have their liberties suppressed. I think that a peaceful protest of the museum that seeks to raise public consciousness about the factual errancy of the museum and the problems that go along with promulgating scientific illiteracy is a perfectly respectable, appropriate, measured response to its existence.

    we got enough debate topic in this country already. Frankly I think both camp need to lay off their attack off each other and start learning how to "repectably disagree" the other's opionion. Let them open their Museum in their own right, and you can open your museum dedicated to scientific theories behind Darwinism and how it had positively advance science and improve our lives.

    You see, from my point of view, I am respectfully disagreeing with the creationist position, their actions and policies -- that is, I am affording them all the respect they deserve. I also must respectfully disagree with your assertion that the country has exceeded its "debate quota" and that issues such as this should be quietly ignored. Civil discourse, non-violent protest and rational argument are some of the ways in which society can make progress.

    We still have not bagged all the polygamist and other more extremism and racists in this country yet. Can't we focus on them first before we can have a candid, yet gentlemen like discussion on the subject? If you truely believe in Science, then you should also believe that the truth in science will prove itself over time. Blasting different opionion will be the last thing that will persuade others to listen to you anyway. That's just human nature that even physical science cannot give you a straight mathematical formula on.

    As human beings, we are capable of sustaining a discussion on multiple subjects. Personally I am not opposed to polygamy in principle, the some of the anecdotes of polygamy that have reached me are certainly objectionable -- but yes, there are polygamists who exploit women and young girls, there are racists committing hate crimes, etc. -- but there will always be these sorts of people. Since you're saying we should "wait" to have this debate, maybe you can tell me exactly what criteria will need to be fulfilled before it is appropriate to have this discussion. I personally see no point in waiting -- the creation museum is up now, the anti-science religious agenda is in swing now -- the time to oppose it, is now.

    Besides that, we all "waste" time and resources on a variety of trivial amusements. One statistical I recently overheard stated that Americans spend about 4 hours per day, on average, watching TV. In light of that, how is a day spent protesting the creation museum, and several hours spent blogging and discussing any kind of woefully disproportionate response that we should feel bad about?

    One problem, as I see it, is that people like me are often accused as belonging some extreme fringe, the "militant, zealous advocate of atheism and science" reverse image of the "fundamentalist Biblical literalist," with the suggestion that our sometimes strident, combative tone is somehow wrong, irresponsible. I know that some of what I say may be offensive, but it's only because in our culture, religion is such a fixture and "faith"/piety is regarded

  377. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aha, yes :) I knew this would happen. At the end of my post, I basically gave up and said that it's impossible to discuss something like this over a forum... it's too complex. However, I will attempt to reply to some of your points (btw, I appreciate your candor, and your attitude)

    "However, no one has ever breeded two dogs and gotten a cat.

    That would be extraordinarily surprising and hardly what evolutionary theory predicts...."

    I am well aware of this. I don't think anyone honestly believes that's what evolution is all about (if they do, I have one word for that: Redneck). My point was not that something radical like this happens every few millenia, like some kind of X-Men phenomenon. I'm just skeptical that these beneficial mutations or evolution steps actually take place... this is a difficult position to take because most of modern science seems to think that evolution is correct... Anyway, the reason I think this is that I have yet to have an example of an evolutionary step that transcends two species. The examples you have given me are not Macro-Evolution steps, they are Micro-Evolution steps. The bacteria has not changed into something else, it's still bacteria. I have no problem believing in Micro-Evolution, and that the Micro-Evolution steps are sometimes beneficial. I do have a problem believing Macro-Evolution, where a plant or animal species splits into two or more different species... that is the kind of evolution that has yet to be proven, beyond speculation concerning fossils and other such things. There are no concrete repeatable, observable examples - to my knowledge. Again, if you have any examples, please tell me what they are.

    "If I start with red light and slowly increase the frequency, I'll eventually reach violet light."

    I see your point, but that matches exactly with one of my arguments earlier. If you have red light, and slowly increase the frequency, you still have light. It's a different kind of light, but it's still light. Wolves, Coyotes and Chihuahuas are all totally different kinds of dog (or whatever the proper name is for that type of animal), but they all are the same type (species) of animal. There are many different kinds of genetically altered plants such as corn, but no matter how much they change it, and add different resistances genetically, it's still corn.

    About Radio-Carbon dating:

    I attended a lecture by a member of the scientific community a couple years ago concerning two invalid assumptions Radio-Carbon dating makes (wow, a scientist who disagrees with Evolution! We don't hear much about those... I think more of them disagree with evolution than the average North American thinks). I'm scraping the dregs of my memory, but as I recall, the first assumption was that we know how much c-14 was contained in the animal when it died... there's really no way to prove that, at least not that I know of... unless someone invents time travel. Second, the dating method assumes that c-14 decays at a uniform rate. This is also open to question. Basing an entire dating method on these two assumptions seems a bit shaky to me.

    "Your post is long on assertions and rather short on evidence"

    That is why I urge the reader to investigate at the end of my post. Ask the tough questions. There is no way I'd fit all the evidence on a Slashdot post. By the way, most of the evidence for Evolution that I know about is "Inferred"... meaning, conclusions are drawn based on what information we have. Funny though, there is no way to prove these inferences are correct or incorrect, until some new piece of information comes up. And even then, another piece of information may come up to confirm or deny the previous information. I believe that is called provisional truth; in other words, "This is what we have concluded based on what we know right now"... not something I'm willing to put a lot of stake into. I know this is really high-level, but please correct me if I'm wrong. An example of this provis

  378. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > The fundies can't even agree on what they believe about dinosaurs.

    O, come on. The same goes for a lot of other theories about history (cause that's what we're talking about: history, not science).

    If anything, it is a good sign that there is room for different theories and for doubts. That shows that it is not a theory that has been dictated by one person or organisation, but that people are thinking for themselves.

  379. Re:AIG by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 0

    Yeah, truth is a bully. It savagely beats on the weak-minded and takes their lunch money. It spanks the stupid mercilessly.

  380. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Creationism says "This stack of papers states the absolute proof and if you challenge it you are a heretic who will burn in hell."

    To be honest, I've never met a creatonist that said that. If you read through this thread, it is the evolutionists that are calling the other side names.

    > One requires blind belief in "information" that cannot be examined or refuted. The other requires no belief and encourages examination and refutation.

    Again a lot of bad words about creationist.

    Both sides are trying to find out what happened, they are practicing history (not physics or biology). The difference is that one of the sides accepts the existence of a God and accepts the global line of events as described in the bible (which happens to be one of the oldest books we have).

  381. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Copid · · Score: 2, Informative

    I attended a lecture by a member of the scientific community a couple years ago concerning two invalid assumptions Radio-Carbon dating makes (wow, a scientist who disagrees with Evolution! We don't hear much about those... I think more of them disagree with evolution than the average North American thinks).
    I think that this is an important section to respond to because C14 dating gets a really raw deal in the general populace. There are some really important details that a lot of these debates gloss over, and people leave with the impression that C14 dating is little more than witch doctoring.

    I'm scraping the dregs of my memory, but as I recall, the first assumption was that we know how much c-14 was contained in the animal when it died... there's really no way to prove that, at least not that I know of... unless someone invents time travel.
    A common technique to deal with that is calibration with tree ring data. Most organisms are at equilibrium with the atmosphere when they die, so the question is, how much C14 is in the atmosphere? If you can get your hands on wood from old trees, you can trace back the years and then measure the carbon ratios for a given year. After that, you have a very good measure of what to expect to find in organisms from that year. As it turns out, C14 dating has been very successful when proper calibration is done. This field of research is called dendochronology. It should also be noted that for timeframes longer than a few tens of thousands of years, we have to go to something other than C14 dating, so C14 is really not relevant to anything but the "last mile" of evolutionary theory. Even so, I think it's important to point out that it's not the mess that most people seem to think it is.

    Second, the dating method assumes that c-14 decays at a uniform rate. This is also open to question. Basing an entire dating method on these two assumptions seems a bit shaky to me.
    Well, as I pointed out, the first assumption is testable for more than 10,000 years back. The second assumption is a consequence of atomic theory and has serious consequences if it's not true. Nobody has proposed an alternate atomic theory in which decay rates change in appreciable amounts. You'd be fiddling with some fundamental values in physics. That's not to say that it's not possible. It's just highly unlikely. The constancy of radioactive decay is not the house of cards so many people make it out to be.

    Another fact is that the radioactive dating methods tend to agree with each other, even systems that are based on different types of decay. Changing one type of decay would not be expected to have any effect on other types of decay. Likewise, different elements would be affected differently. We don't observe anything to support this, unless all of the decay rates have been fiddled with and tuned in such a way as to completely negate any measurable effects. Having an open mind is one thing, but essentially discarding most of modern physics simply because you're not comfortable with dates that C14 dating produces takes epistemological nihilism a bit too far, IMO.
    --
    An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  382. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Nalgas+D.+Lemur · · Score: 1

    people will be asking them if they believe that Jesus rode a Velociraptor. Close, but not quite: Jesus was a Velociraptor.
  383. As one that had an Lutheran upbringing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Lutheran and Methodist Churches are also mostly theologically compatible with the Catholic Church, with the exception of transubstantiation, and in fact, some have joked that in many ways, the Lutheran church is more Catholic than the Catholic Church, as it has stayed closer to its roots through the years.
    As someone that grew up as a Lutheran (real Lutheran, not the modern version of Positive Christianity), I have to point out one enormous distinction. Lutherans (like all other fundamentalists) believe man can only be saved by grace and by grace alone. We also believe that if you try to add anything to your salvation you will lose it. The Catholic church believe, at least according to Wikipedia:

    The Church teaches that a person must be in a state of Sanctifying Grace at the moment of death in order to be saved. Sanctifying Grace is conferred at Baptism, and is lost when a soul commits a mortal sin. A mortal sin is a deliberate and serious transgression of God's law. Sanctifying Grace is regained when a person confesses his or her sin in the Sacrament of Penance. If a person repents of his or her sin before he or she dies but is unable to obtain the actual Sacrament of Penance before death due to reasons outside of the person's control, the person's sin is forgiven by nature of the person's desire to receive it. The Roman Catholic Church teaches that through the graces Jesus won for humanity by sacrificing himself on the cross, salvation is possible even for those outside the visible boundaries of the Church. Christians and even non-Christians, if in life they respond positively to the grace and truth that God reveals to them through the mercy of Christ, may be saved (an attitude often referred to, in the case of non-Christians, as "baptism of desire"). This may sometimes include awareness of an obligation to become part of the Catholic Church. In such cases, "whosoever, therefore, knowing that the Catholic Church was made necessary by Christ, would refuse to enter or to remain in it, could not be saved."
    So there you have salvation by belonging to a church. Salvation by ritual or wish to have one. Yes, we have other enormous disagreements as well, like if it is the Bible alone that is our authority or if it is the Bible and the tradition. But this is the one that makes it impossible for us to say that we share the same faith.
  384. In Short.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Short,
    Creationists Say :
    God Created Man & Man Invented Evolution

    Evolutionists Say :
    Evolution created Man & Man Invented God.

  385. Uh? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    So we have to accept that words can be redefined to probe whatever we want to probe?

    That is nonsense frankly.

    If one wants to follow textually what the bible says then one day is one day, you can't both have your cake and eat it.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  386. Excuses, excuses, excuses. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    If the transmission of knowledge from god to us poor humans is so unreliable, then how religious peeople can use it a source of scientific knowledge?

    Sorry, but the more people try to find justification for the complete shambles that creationism is, the most ludicrous it sounds as a credible explanation of how things work.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Excuses, excuses, excuses. by authority69 · · Score: 1

      It's not an excuse, it's an explanation. Please try to pay attention.

      First, I didn't say God's communication with humans was unreliable. In fact, I said it worked quite well. Obviously better than Slashdot since you missed that point in my post despite the fact that it was written in simple English. Sorry if your native language isn't English, but you obviously thought yourself skilled enough to read and reply, so you're fair game to me.

      Second, as for using the Bible as a source for scientific knowledge, I don't think that should be done and never proposed such. The Bible is supernatural in nature. While it contains some information not discovered by science until many centuries later and has undoubtedly prompted research in other areas, overall it is not a scientific book. Creation, and much of what is recorded in the Bible, is impossible to explain fully with natural sciences. Evolutionists and atheists will fill in the gaps with guesses and their own limited understanding, I fill in the gaps with the supernatural. It's beyond me and I'm afraid or ashamed to say that. I'm not arrogant enough to say I know how it all happened.

      The whole point of my previous post was this: I was simply explaining why applying American thought to an English translation of an ancient Hebrew text written by an ancient Hebrew author doesn't always make sense to the reader. To properly understand the text, it must be read with an understanding of the cultural and linguistic context in which it was written. The same principle applies to the works of Shakespeare. It's a little easier since there isn't the need to translate the language first, but to fully understand what he's writing about, you have to understand the culture he was writing in and to and the linguistic styles he was using.

      If you weren't so ignorant of what you are trying to argue against, perhaps you could have made a coherent statement.

    2. Re:Excuses, excuses, excuses. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that was thumperific. Want a biscuit?

  387. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by chuckw · · Score: 1
    Nice re-iteration of the talking points. Now let's veer back into reality. Theories can and should be taught in schools (you are aware that gravity is still considered theory right?). What should be kept out of *SCIENCE CLASSES* is things that are not falsifiable. YEC (Young Earth Creationism) and creationism in general eventually come down to faith, no matter how you slice it, and faith is not falsifiable. Faith belongs elsewhere in schools (yes, even public schools), but not in science classes.

    In science, asking the recursive "why?" question eventually leads to "I don't know, it requires more research". In creationism, the recursive "why?" question always leads back to faith. Faith is not falsifiable, hence it is not science and should not be taught as such.

     

    ..Chuck..

    --
    *Condense fact from the vapor of nuance*
  388. Re:So where are the cave drawings? by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

    Leaving aside the interesting issue of whether there actually are any ancient depictions of dinosaurs vs mythological beasts, the premis that any such depictions prove than man and dinosaurs coexisted is totally illogical (never mind proved wrong by the fossil record).

    We know that chinese villagers, for example, built fences out of dinosaur bones that had been uncovered, and it's not be surprising if dino skull finds were the basis for dragons. Knowledge of long extinct dinosaurs isn't limited to modern man - only understanding of them is.

    There's no reason to suppose that early man of *any* age failed to observe surface finds of dinosaur bones that had weathered out of rocks. No reason also to suppose that as hunters and butchers they were too stupid to know how a skeleton corresponded to a living animal.

    An ancient picture of a dinosaur no more suggests that dinosaurs were alive then than a modern picture suggests that they are alive now.

  389. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by nobuddy · · Score: 1

    "(By the way, I'm a Christian, and one who holds to the young-earth ideas. I'm working on a Physics minor and have a great deal of interest in Quantum theory (I hate string theory, hope it dies a horrible painful death) and physics in general."

    Leave school before you waste anymore of daddy's money. Go to Seminary, where your utter lack of the basics of science will actually help you instead of hinter you.

  390. Silly Slashdot by vulgrin · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows that God does not exist, due to the existence of the Babelfish.

    People used to go to sideshows with three legged men and Platypus boy. Didn't mean that they were really three legged men. Just another side show to milk money from the rubes - and what better way to do that then to pray on their beliefs. (pun intended)

    --
    I sig, therefore I am.
  391. Oh goodness. What bunch of logical confussion. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Creationism is very specific about who created what. Hint: it is not talking about humans thinkering with genes in a fish.

    The most fundamental idea behind creationism is that all beings were created simultaneously in a puff (if a divinity is involved or not is frankly beyond the point). This is demonstrably false, there is absolutely no observable fact whatsoever supporting this.

    Assuming, without conceding, that hydrocarbons and DNA limits the number of ways life evolvs, this still does not invalidate evolution theory. The materials of evolution may be limited (and this who knows, we have observed life in only one planet, and once in a while we are surprised by new discoveries) but the mechanism that uses those materials works and needs no outside intervention of any creature, god or whatever you wnat to call it.

    Who is to say the universe is intelligent? Well, define intelligence and tests to check if one is in play. Evolution is full of examples of dumb turns and jumps which show that it is a blind, random process.

    Unscientific is going babbling about an "intelligent Universe" without any proof more substantial than wishful thinking or baseless speculation.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  392. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by authority69 · · Score: 1

    No, which is why I don't advocate adding the words and works of George Bush to the Canon of Scripture. Any other stupid questions?

  393. Yes. So what? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    http://www.actionbioscience.org/evolution/benton.h tml

    There are plenty of methods to accurately measue the age of rocks and fossils.

    What is your point exactly anyway?

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  394. Nonsense. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    I am not religious and have absolutely no problem to learn about creationism in the correct context where it belongs: that of religious beliefs.

    In a biology class creationism should be kicked out immediately, since it is not science.

    Each individual should decide what is more important to him, but if you go to a science class you should go in the expectation that things that are not based in demonstrable facts and the scientific method wont interfere with your education.

    If parents (idiotic ones) belive that evolution clashes with their beliefs, they can change school, remove the child from the science class or provide more religious education. What is completely unadmissible is that science is compromissed because a few Ayatollahs can't stomach the way science works.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  395. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well first. Stop referring to it as a "museum". I prefer to call it a theme park.

  396. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by grub · · Score: 1

    Why are one man's delusions worthy of being put in a holy book and another's not?

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  397. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the Believers truly believed these were all approximations, they wouldn't be so diehard to take every.single.word so literally.

  398. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by authority69 · · Score: 1

    I can say that my side is built on the side of reason and science, simply because it is. But it is not pure science. You reach a point where science simply cannot explain how something happened, so you fill in the gaps with guesses and assumptions. I fill it in with a supernatural explanation. Which is why I will agree with you that Intelligent Design doesn't belong in the science lab. How would you do experiments on "God spoke and it was"? But a privately funded museum? Come on now. Not every museum has to be about science. Ever been to a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not museum? There are plenty of other museums showing (only) the other side of the argument as well.

    so long as it is done in a properly academic and honest context You can start by being honest about evolution as the origin of Man. It's just as much a guess as Intelligent Design yet you and your kind gladly dismiss Intelligent Design as fairy tales and wishes while propping Evolution up as the only "logical, reasonable, and scientific" choice. Teaching Intelligent Design is really nothing more than teaching about the gaps in Evolution Theory and leaving them to a supernatural power. Frankly I'd be glad just to see the gaps in Evolution Theory being taught without the reference to the supernatural, but unfortunately that's not what we're seeing in many places. The faults in Evolution Theory are glossed over and the supernatural explanation is attacked and degraded. In the end, it is just a platform for anti-religious ramblings, which I think we can agree have no place in classroom.
  399. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by pslunsford · · Score: 1

    Funny stuff. I had a good laugh after reading this. Where do you find these great comic writers?

  400. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by smagruder · · Score: 1

    Actually, they are invalid for "proving" 1 = 2. That was my point. You created a mathematical fallacy.

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  401. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by smagruder · · Score: 1

    Yes, 1 x 1 = 2 x 1/2 (what you just said), but that doesn't make 1 = 2.

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  402. Re:Not all knowledge is uncertain by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    "Invalid", "fallacy"?

    Believe what you like.

  403. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    But it is not pure science. You reach a point where science simply cannot explain how something happened, so you fill in the gaps with guesses and assumptions. I fill it in with a supernatural explanation. Which is why I will agree with you that Intelligent Design doesn't belong in the science lab. How would you do experiments on "God spoke and it was"? But a privately funded museum? Come on now. Not every museum has to be about science. Ever been to a Ripley's Believe-It-Or-Not museum? There are plenty of other museums showing (only) the other side of the argument as well.

    It is "pure science." Science sometimes makes "assumptions" as well, when it is sensible and useful to do so. However, the assumptions tend to be based on strong, supporting empirical evidence. This is what a "theory" is. Nothing about science says "this is absolutely, positively, for certain how things are." Science is a model of the universe assembled by a certain set of methodologies. Science has given us a model (evolution by natural selection and similar processes) that is a predictive, falsifiable explanation as for how life has developed into all of the living forms observed today. It is backed by heaps of good evidence, has made many possible many successful predictions and as yet, has not been disproven. Specific details are still being worked out, or are in dispute, but this does not evidence against the theory (for example, you can "assume" gravity exists from the evidence without knowing exactly how strong gravity is -- not knowing the precise strength of gravity is not evidence against its existence) but in broad terms, common descent is accepted as scientific fact within the pertinent fields with a fairly high degree of confidence.

    Because of the time scales that evolution operates on to produce large scale morphological and physiological changes, and the limited amount of time that modern science has existed, and the short lifespans of humans, it has not been possible for us to observe the living evolution of something like a species of bacteria to something like a trilobite, for to follow the evolution of a "lower" ape to something like a chimp or human. However, that's not the only valid method of observation. Science has provided us with "proofs" of the mechanisms that show how changes like this can occur, and by indirect observation (referring mainly here to the fossil record) and logical extrapolation, we can reach a logical conclusion that such large scale morphological and physiological changes have occurred by the specified mechanisms (natural selection, etc.)

    This "assumption" that we are commonly descended is based in science -- it is science (and I will remind you that science is the the only logical, well-established method we have available to us for figuring out the natural world) and thus, is quite reasonable.

    Invoking the supernatural is not reasonable, because there is no evidence to support the specific supernatural claims being made.

    On the issue of the Creation Museum being a museum, I am of the opinion that museums should strive to provide information that is as accurate as possible. This goes for the Ripley's Believe it or Not museum, as well as the Coca-Cola museum, museums of history, natural history, art, or anything else. Their primary focus does not have to be scientific, but when the claims made by the museum broach the domain of science -- that is, when they have presentations that make claims about the natural world (such as whether or not dinosaurs or humans side by side) and present them as fact, they should have the intellectual integrity make sure the picture they present is consistent with our best scientific understanding, and not depict scenes that have been thoroughly discredited by science.

    For example, I have no problem with Ripley's Belief it or Not museum, assuming they have presentations that educate people on a fact such as, "this man have 12 fingers" and that if they giv

  404. Er, uhm. Nope. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    If you are a christian you should be thouroughly ashamed of yourself.

    Read the ten commandments please.

    Even an atheist like me knows some of them.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  405. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

    There are a couple clips of Neil deGrasse Tyson's presentation rom the Beyond Belief 2006 conference on YouTube that highlights the danger that adopting a philosophy of ignorance like "intelligent design" rather than continuing a robust scientific inquiry, even for highly intelligent individuals.

    They're beautifully insightful and worth watching, in my opinion, and relevant to the direction our conservation has taken, so I'll link them here: Part 1 & Part 2.

  406. Re:On the other hand, they also make great Bourbon by edunagin · · Score: 1

    Creationism is falsifiable. The Genesis creation story makes some very specific claims about the way everything was created which should have predictable effects on the fossil record.

    Neither the Creation Theory nor the Evolution Theory exclude one another. It is only those on both sides of the theories that exclude the other. Is it not interesting that both sides choose to allow emotion to enter into their arguments.
    GO BACK TO THE EVIDENCE FOLKS!

    The Bible does NOT say the earth is only 5000 or 6000 years old. The Bible does NOT say a day is 24 hours. Both issues are silent.

    The Evolution Theory does NOT say that all this began from an accidental spark to ignite the Big Bang. The Evolution Theory does NOT say how it all started. Both issues are silent.