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Ben Stein's 'Expelled' - Evolution, Academia and Conformity

eldavojohn writes "Painting the current scientific community as just as bad as the Spanish Inquisition, an extended trailer of Ben Stein's "Expelled" has a lot of people (at least that I know) talking. It looks like his movie plans to encourage people to speak out if they believe intelligent design or creationism to be correct. In the trailer he even warns you that if you are a scientist you may lose your job by watching 'Expelled.' Backlash to the movie has started popping up and this may force the creationism/evolutionist debate to a whole new level across the big screen and the internet." adholden points out a site called Expelled Exposed, which asserts that 'Expelled' "is simply an anti-science propaganda film aimed at creating controversy where none exists, while promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students."

1,766 comments

  1. Which do you believe? by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc.

    On the other side, we've got.... an ex-Nixon speechwiter/game show host.

    *sighs* - I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too (there seems to be an extraordinarily high overlap between the two groups).

    Oh, and he Godwins himself at 2:40 in the linked video. Discussion over.

    --
    There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    1. Re:Which do you believe? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 0, Troll
      --
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    2. Re:Which do you believe? by El+Puerco+Loco · · Score: 5, Funny

      *sighs* - I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too yes, the climate is beginning to look more human isn't it? i thought i was the only one who noticed.
    3. Re:Which do you believe? by Iftekhar25 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too
      It's anthropogenic climate change. Man-made, not man-like.
    4. Re:Which do you believe? by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      yes, the climate is beginning to look more human isn't it?

      Dammit - I've just read too many 'information doesn't want to be anthromorphisized' sigs recently :-)

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    5. Re:Which do you believe? by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc."

      Having worked with a great number of scientists in my life, I would not note them for lack of bias or neutrality. In fact, I'd say scientists are noted for their strong opinions and personal bias'.

    6. Re:Which do you believe? by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's anthropogenic climate change. Man-made, not man-like.

      Perhaps climate change wants to be man made?

      (seriously, thanks for the correction).

      --
      There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    7. Re:Which do you believe? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 0

      Actually the weather does have free will.

      No, hear me out.

      Free will means that you are not bound to act in a particular way based on initial conditions and some laws. So an automaton that was programmed and had to follow its programming would not have free will. Naively, a Newtonian system is deterministic - give the initial conditions and the laws of motion we can predict its behaviour at any point in the future. For simple Newtonian systems like the solar system that is true. But for slightly less simple ones, chaos takes over and we cannot. The weather is complex enough to be chaotic. You can't determine the future state of the weather from the current state because of chaotic effects. Even if you understand the equations that govern it, any initial errors in the current state will cause the predictions to rapidly diverge from reality.

      And hence it has free will like us, but not like the solar system or the automaton.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    8. Re:Which do you believe? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      You could consider the climate change with more respect than that. It hurts it to be negated that way, it wants to be heard !

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    9. Re:Which do you believe? by jpellino · · Score: 1

      On the one hand, Ben Stein usually presents what seems to be a finely developed knack for insight. When I saw the hints of the trailer I figured he would come down on the side of rational thought and this would be an indictment of ID/CS. Then the trailer ran through to the end.

      Yikes.

      On the other hand, maybe he gets the debate on the front page in a popular vein. Could be time for him and Dawkins in a live MTV cage match.

      --
      "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    10. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that's hilarious!

    11. Re:Which do you believe? by hesiod · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Chaos != Free Will. You said yourself (basically) that it will react in a certain way, given certain input. Just because it is too wildly changing does not mean it is not predictable; we just haven't the computing power, nor information, to make such predictions.

      Of course, the same could be argued for human free will.

    12. Re:Which do you believe? by bhima · · Score: 1

      This is something I noticed about a year ago and find fascinating. I canâ(TM)t decide if this is some sort of outright rejection of science or a more selective phenomena where they reject certain parts of science where it interferes with their world view.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    13. Re:Which do you believe? by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Are we using the same definition of bias? Having a strong opinion is not bias, if it is a sound conclusion of the evidence. Bias is starting with the conclusion and selectively gathering the evidence to support it.

    14. Re:Which do you believe? by Ascoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Free will means that you are not bound to act in a particular way based on initial conditions and some laws. I'm not sure your definition of free will is exact enough. Will implies intent or desire. Weather may be non-deterministic but that's a far car from concluding it has free will. Plus it seems that assessing if something is deterministic requires one knowing all the "initial conditions and laws" that govern. Knowing a few historical conditions and assuming a few rudimentary laws, could make any deterministic system seem chaotic.
    15. Re:Which do you believe? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And the whole point of the academic system, peer review, having your director check what you publish & most importantly reproduction of results, aim to keep personal bias in check.

      After all your not going to spend 5/10 years working on something you think might be wrong.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    16. Re:Which do you believe? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 4, Funny

      On the other hand, maybe he gets the debate on the front page in a popular vein. Could be time for him and Dawkins in a live MTV cage match. And Dawkins is taking a beating, but whats this... Stephen hawkin has entered the ring and smashed stein over the head with a chair, looks like stein is out for the count.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    17. Re:Which do you believe? by spamking · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Amen

    18. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      slashblog.on.nimp.org

      Oh, Ha ha. Very funny.

    19. Re:Which do you believe? by Lord+of+Hyphens · · Score: 1

      Hawking needs a robotic exoskeleton to make that plausible... unless you say he has developed telekinetic mind powers.

      --
      "I've spent my whole life figuring out crazy ways to do things. It'll work." -- Montgomery Scott, "Relics"
    20. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still, can't be any worse than the trash Micheal Moore makes. At least Ben Stein has some credibility.

    21. Re:Which do you believe? by joelstobart · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll bite.

      Over tens of millions of years don't you think that lots of quirky things have happened on this planet? The soup theory is one of many; basically they are all theorising potential answers.

      You have just espoused that "logic" says something that no evidence exists for, did it?
      Genius.

      And how is that "much more logical" than combining chemicals, electricity, high and low temperatures, over billions of years, happening to produce spontaneous life? Have you seen animals that live next to undersea vents?

      I think that scientists are well aware of the God argument. Many believe in God. But I don't think most scientists find there research stimulating if the only answer they are 'allowed' to give is "God Knows"?

      If God exists please post me some lab reproducible examples.

    22. Re:Which do you believe? by electrictroy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Bzzz. You might want to take a moment to read Thomas S Kuhn's "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions" which describes how some scientists WILL try to suppress contrary theories, as a way to protect their own career.

      As example, scientists once thought the planets moved in perfectly-circular orbits, but when observations showed that was not true, these same scientists refused to believe the data. It took several years (and the death of the stubborn scientists) for a new generation to propose ellipitical orbits. The refusal to accept new data is called "protecting your paradigm" aka your belief system, even in the face of facts that challenge it.

      Scientists often do this to protect their lifelong work and/or career, rather than admit they are wrong.

      --
      The government is not your daddy. Its purpose is not to raid middle-class neighbors' wallets and give it to you.
    23. Re:Which do you believe? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      On the one hand, Ben Stein usually presents what seems to be a finely developed knack for insight.

      Uh, since when? Seems to me he's been on the wrong side of most issues since at least his days in the Nixon administration. He continues to be a Nixon apologist, so delusional that he holds the reporters who uncovered Watergate responsible for the rise of the Khmer Rouge.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    24. Re:Which do you believe? by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem is, scientists are NOT objective. They are highly biased. They do work to shut down anyone with a dissenting opinion. The study of Climate Change is BIG money in the scientific community. If it were discredited, then millions of dollars of grant money to study it would dry up. Ben Stein just happened to use a movie to bring this to light. He is pulling a Michael Moore.

    25. Re:Which do you believe? by spisska · · Score: 5, Informative

      Having worked with a great number of scientists in my life, I would not note them for lack of bias or neutrality. In fact, I'd say scientists are noted for their strong opinions and personal bias'.

      Of course scientists have strong opinions, and of course they have biases. This isn't a problem. Einstein, for example, was a fierce opponent of quantum mechanics -- the 'spooky action at a distance' doesn't fit with c as a speed limit.

      But the fact is that one of the primary goals of just about every scientist is to challenge or overturn the conventional wisdom. And to so in a way that is observable and disprovable. You don't get a ticket to Stockholm by echoing the community.

      Similarly, every true scientist values being proven wrong, because that is what advances our collective knowledge. A scientist who who has never been wrong, or who doesn't appreciate being proven wrong, is a poor scientist indeed.

      But on the same note, challenges to established scientific principles must themselves be scientific, and that is the problem here. This creationist doctrine, whatever term proponents choose to call it, is fundamentally non-scientific -- even anti-science. If a theory can't produce hypotheses, can't be tested, can't be disproven, and can't make predictions, then it's not a theory and certainly not science.

    26. Re:Which do you believe? by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Okay. Thanks for providing a great example of BAD SCIENCE.

      I am skeptical about evolution. The thing is that right now the majority of evidence is that evolution is real and explains a lot about how life has changed over the history of the planet.
      I am skeptical about creationism. So far every talk I have listened to on creationism has had more error in science than I can shake a stick at.

      If you are not skeptical then it isn't science. If you are not open to the possibility that you are wrong then it isn't science.

      As far as global climate change from human CO2 production. Yes I am very skeptical. I don't think they have nearly enough data to prove it. The way the climate change faithful keep saying this or that disaster or storm was caused by global warming really doesn't help. Snow in Bagdad this winter and record cold and snow in many places this winter also are interesting data points.
      Heck I am even for cutting CO2 production just in case because frankly as the old saying goes "It can't hurt".
      But the people that claim that Man made global warming is a proven fact are also spouting off bad science.
      Being skeptical is a good thing and good science.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    27. Re:Which do you believe? by MightyYar · · Score: 1, Funny

      Meh. I click on all your dangerous crap, and it's never very interesting. Maybe I should turn off NoScript?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    28. Re:Which do you believe? by Poltras · · Score: 3, Insightful

      By extension, do we have free will? Given certain input, much people becomes predictable...

    29. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You also don't have any proof of God's existence.

      Yes there is a religion and a book based around some guy who lived on earth about 2000 years ago. But that's not proof that he was the son of God.

      We also don't have any proof that it was the same guy who came back to life, for all we know he had a twin that nobody knew about. Written text is not proof, lies can also be written down and passed along for future generations.

    30. Re:Which do you believe? by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure your definition of free will is exact enough. Will implies intent or desire. Weather may be non-deterministic but that's a far car from concluding it has free will. Plus it seems that assessing if something is deterministic requires one knowing all the "initial conditions and laws" that govern. Knowing a few historical conditions and assuming a few rudimentary laws, could make any deterministic system seem chaotic.

      Yes, but you realize human beings may be the same, right? There have been studies showing that our conscious mind only rationalizes our actions after-the-fact. This implies that while we have far less "free will" than we might at first believe. Something to think about, anyway... I am not certain that I agree (who wants to believe that? Does't make it less true, though), but I thought I'd throw it out there anyway.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    31. Re:Which do you believe? by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 2, Informative

      The proof is Christ, a living being who lived here 2000 years ago. Whose humble life changed the course of human history(and the Roman empire)

      Karl Marx's humble life changed the course of human history due to people following his teachings. Doesn't make him the son of an all powerful supernatural entity.

      --
      "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
    32. Re:Which do you believe? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Neither.
      Scientists: philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity is a load of crock. Look at any new scienctific theory or even the is pluto a planet or not debate. They are in it to make themselfs look good (Just like the rest of the human race) Many of todays scienctific concepts are not around because of strong numbers but force of will, mixed with good numbers. (but the force of will normally gets others to come up with the good numbers). The scienctific comunity has never lived those ideals they push. They are just as petty and emotional as the rest of us.

      The other side: They are afraid of anything that challanges their way of thinking (just like the scientists) and are unwilling to take a look at the numbers and realize that the theory is currently the best fit, and unable realize good science needs to take the God (Magic) factor out of the equasion, because threw the scienctific process God cannot either be confirmed or denied so you need to take God and the Bible out of the list of varables. And go by more solid evidence. Now theory is not fact but some theories are stronger then the other and the stronger theorys should be taught because they make the most sence.

      But the fact the good sciencetist are getting ostersized for intelegent design (the most liberal version of such) where they replace the word "random" with "God's intent" (which for a being of infinate wisdom and intelegence can seem random to us) is kinda going over the edge.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    33. Re:Which do you believe? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Free will means that you are not bound to act in a particular way based on initial conditions and some laws. I'm not sure your definition of free will is exact enough. Will implies intent or desire. Weather may be non-deterministic but that's a far car from concluding it has free will. Plus it seems that assessing if something is deterministic requires one knowing all the "initial conditions and laws" that govern. Knowing a few historical conditions and assuming a few rudimentary laws, could make any deterministic system seem chaotic. Ok, I'm not seriously suggesting the weather is conscious - I don't see any evidence for that. But non deterministic behaviour does seem to be one of the components of free will.

      And you're right that if you didn't know some of the rules a deterministic system may seem chaotic. But I don't really believe that there are 'hidden rules' that will be discovered that will suddenly make chaotic systems become predictable. The unpredictability seems to come from a sensitivity to initial conditions, and I can't see how discovering new rules would help.
      --
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    34. Re:Which do you believe? by MightyYar · · Score: 2, Funny

      Call me old-fashioned, but I still believe there is only one true God. And he lives in this lake. And his name is Zorgo.

      (apologies to The State)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    35. Re:Which do you believe? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Yes there is corruption ofc, but the Peer review system means that unless, somebody at every recognised journal wants to keep you theory down, its unlikely to happen.
      What most ID 'scientists' do is get the science part of their research publishes (such as failures in explanation of protein folding), then complain that nobody will publish their ID research.

      The peer review system isn't immune from abuse but it does work.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    36. Re:Which do you believe? by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Having a strong opinion is not bias, if it is a sound conclusion of the evidence. Bias is starting with the conclusion and selectively gathering the evidence to support it."

      It is also the filtering of evidence and interpretation of evidence so as to favor one's viewpoint. Quite common in our science today.

    37. Re:Which do you believe? by MiniMike · · Score: 1

      I knew someone would say that, having read the previous post...

    38. Re:Which do you believe? by Teran9 · · Score: 1

      Please supply this group of scientists with a proto-world and a few billion years in order to complete the experiment. Okay, and where did this higher power come from? If you do not have all the answers, then you can not expect someone else to have them. You sound like a five year old asking why the sky is blue.

    39. Re:Which do you believe? by blueg3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So if I provide just a single example of when a group of scientists did change their mind, does that make this balanced?

      Also, does my example need to also be from ages past, or would your prefer something reasonably modern?

    40. Re:Which do you believe? by cloakable · · Score: 2, Funny

      This is strongly confirmed in the one human who rose from the dead

      Citation needed. More than one book, please.
      --
      No tyrant thrives when every subject says no.
    41. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's called religion.

    42. Re:Which do you believe? by tbannist · · Score: 1

      [People] often do this to protect their lifelong work and/or career, rather than admit they are wrong. There, fixed that for you.

      Although, I do find it amusing that religious groups are calling scientists dogmatic.
      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    43. Re:Which do you believe? by Teran9 · · Score: 1

      Bueller? Bueller? Yeah right. Credibility.

    44. Re:Which do you believe? by DavidM01 · · Score: 0

      You are right we don't have proof, it also doesn't mean that what is in the Bible isn't true(or that my personal experience means nothing). Its really a choice isn't it: Do you believe Christ is who he claimed to be or do you believe he was a liar? If you weren't there you must apply faith one way or the other. In any event there is no evidence for abiogeneis, and yet it is peddled as science. Odd that you have no problem with this. Even Dawkins admits that life could not have just magically appeared, so I am not sure whose side you are on in that argument.

    45. Re:Which do you believe? by PortHaven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "This isn't a problem. Einstein, for example, was a fierce opponent of quantum mechanics -- the 'spooky action at a distance' doesn't fit with c as a speed limit."

      Very true...

      And recently, we've begun to discover much regarding our concept of c and light, etc. Ironically, I've been open to this for nearly 20 yrs. Thanks to a preacher who also happened to be quite fond of computers and physics introducing me to some early studies of scientists questioning these precepts.

      However, discussion with others (ie: science professors) on this matter was dismissive. Now, it's becoming common discussion.

      "But the fact is that one of the primary goals of just about every scientist is to challenge or overturn the conventional wisdom."

      Nothing wrong with that...

      "And to so in a way that is observable and disprovable."

      I'd say a lot of it is not observable or disprovable, perhaps insightful. Theories such as infinitely expanding and collapsing universe, universes. And various other ideas often taught have serious lacks on disprovability. But there is no issue in teaching or discussing these in class.

      "A scientist who who has never been wrong, or who doesn't appreciate being proven wrong, is a poor scientist indeed."

      Well, a scientist who has never been wrong...either isn't a scientist or is a darn good one. That said, the general point of your statement I quite agree with.

      "This creationist doctrine, whatever term proponents choose to call it, is fundamentally non-scientific -- even anti-science."

      This is where I disagree. First off, I think that hypothesis and tests can be cited for intelligent design. I think statements to the nature of discovery of design patterns across species and various levels is just one good prediction for testing. No worse than Darwin's proposition that transitional forms should exist.

      "If a theory can't produce hypotheses, can't be tested, can't be disproven, and can't make predictions, then it's not a theory and certainly not science."

      Many things that fall in this category are taught in the science classrooms of public school....with no qualms.

    46. Re:Which do you believe? by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      *sighs* - I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too yes, the climate is beginning to look more human isn't it? i thought i was the only one who noticed. I'm sure it gets awfully hot inside of the fursuits.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    47. Re:Which do you believe? by jav1231 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      *sighs* - I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too (there seems to be an extraordinarily high overlap between the two groups). WTF does that have to do with anything. Oh and notice how clever that it's now called "climate change" since the last 10yrs the average temp of the Earth has actually cooled. Seems even climate theory can evolve.

      The Earth's climate is changing. Guess what? It always has. And will despite mankind.

    48. Re:Which do you believe? by danskal · · Score: 1

      People get very confused about free will, because they believe it must be somehow seperated from the brain. But the brain _is_ the mind, and vice versa. So the fact that you can see a given decision being made in a neural process (even if it happens before we are conscious of the fact) makes no difference to the "free will/no free will" argument. The conclusion should not be: "Oh no! Perhaps there's no such thing as free will", but instead: "Aha! So that's what free will looks like!"

      The more interesting question is "how free is free will? We are only as free as our body allows us to be. Our decisions are based on memory/experience, pheromones, hormones and other chemicals, brain/neural structure we are born with.... so in conclusion, freedom is as freedom does (but I don't have any problem with that).

      To understand "my free will" you have to understand what you mean by "me". And that's not a simple question.

      But we digress.....

    49. Re:Which do you believe? by hallucinogen · · Score: 0, Troll

      Actually there's awful little evidence to support his existence. Go investigate! ;)

    50. Re:Which do you believe? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The proof is Christ, a living being who lived here 2000 years ago. Whose humble life changed the course of human history(and the Roman empire). Lots of men have changed history. That is not proof of creation.

      No it isn't logical that a cell can be created by chance. Not a human cell, no. But some kind of self-replicating organism... Why is that illogical? Why is it logical that a supreme being simply always existed, and one day a few billion years ago suddenly decided that he would make a cell? That's a major cop-out, and will never add to man's understanding of the natural world.

      Your link, by the way, is a bit bizarre. No one is talking about e coli just showing up one day. E. coli would have had ancestors, just like us. It's also really, really strange of you to divide the universe up into 1 second intervals and then multiply by the number of atoms in the observable universe and call this atom-second a "chance". First of all, you have no basis for that arbitrary unit. Second, seconds are arbitrary units based on the rotation of the earth. Third, the OBSERVABLE universe is likely much, much smaller than the entire universe - which to date appears to be infinite in size. Stick infinity into your equations and see how they stack up.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    51. Re:Which do you believe? by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      Opinion is bias if it's in a statement that does not start with "in my opinion" ...

      Anything else, scientist or not, becomes bias. And it's worse in a scientist who presumes to speak as an authority in a subject matter that s/he merely has an opinion about.

      It's really no different than a priest/minister talking to a lay believer and saying "God is ..." when s/he should have said "I think God is ...". In cases where it's a sound conclusion of the evidence (i.e., backed up by peer review), sure, "I think" or "I believe" or "It's my opinion that" are not required prefixes.

      Heck, even if it is a sound conclusion of the evidence, yet the scientist has not performed the experiment directly, nor read the data to be among the peer reviewers, a prefix is still required, though it may be different: "It seems to be the consensus that ..." or "the latest studies are reported to say that ...". With great authority comes great responsibility to wield that authority responsibly. Anything else is just as misleading as snake-oil conmen of yesteryear.

    52. Re:Which do you believe? by DavidM01 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      First, if you accept that God exists then he created time so saying he 'waited' to create our observable universe is nonsense. Second, if creating the simplest of life was by chance WHY can we not reproduce it or even one of its 'ancestors'(which mysteriously have never been found). Lastly, the earth was formed 4.5 billion years ago, yet there is evidence of life 3.5 billion years ago. This even further constricts the life sprang from nothing hypothesis. You want to play the 'everything is defined by science' game until it doesn't suit you. PS. Fun fact: There are three elements in physics time, matter and energy. These are the first three things mentioned in Genesis chapter 1.

    53. Re:Which do you believe? by smidget2k4 · · Score: 1

      I believe there have been a few documentaries on this subject.

      I found to be very informative and enlightening. However, I was confused by the multiple Jesuses, but I don't like to question things.

    54. Re:Which do you believe? by 9InchRails · · Score: 1

      >>On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses ... I think the important thing to note is that evolutionary scientists do in fact have a philosophy. Evolution isn't any more science than ID. You cannot dogmatically assert that either is true, because you cannot observer nor test either process.

    55. Re:Which do you believe? by Angostura · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ... and any scientist who actually showed in a brilliant scientific tour de force why human-mediated climate change was not and could not happen would receive fame, the offer of many lucrative tenured posts and probably a Nobel prize. There are tremendous benefits in science if you can be the first to over-throw the orthodoxy in a scientifically rigorous manner.

    56. Re:Which do you believe? by timeOday · · Score: 1

      It is also the filtering of evidence and interpretation of evidence so as to favor one's viewpoint. Quite common in our science today.
      But for every scientist doggedly clinging to a highly dubious theory (probably because he invented it), there are couple more trying to make names for themselves by displacing that theory with one that better fits available data and / or makes more testable predictions.
    57. Re:Which do you believe? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      The problem is, scientists are NOT objective. They are highly biased.

      I guess it depends. A scientist is a person who applies the scientific method. If someone is not being objective, then they aren't following the scientific method, ergo they are not scientist.

      Sure people are biased, including people who understand and apply the scientific method to other things. The real problem here is that people place credibility in job titles and educational certificates because our system has failed to educate them about the scientific method, how it works, why it works, and how to apply it to find the most likely truth, regardless of who is presenting data.

      I'd argue that what we have here is not a problem with science, but that most people are not scientists when it comes to looking at the information presented by people, whoever is paying their salary.

    58. Re:Which do you believe? by Sam+Cook · · Score: 1

      Good question! Evolution is a big topic, so lets narror the subject to our origins. First of all I will preface this by saying that I am a creationist, but please keep reading. As for the question, both camps have to have faith. Speeking solely about the origin of life and the universe, there is no way to prove either. Scientific law says that life comes from life. It also says that matter cannot be created or destroyed. So where did it all come from???? Creationists believe in a God that says He created it all, and futher says that He has always been here. That doesn't make human sense. Our understanding of the world is that everything comes from somewhere. Both have the same ultimate problem. As for me, I see too many evidenses in nature and my life to believe that it is all an accident. I'm a computer programmer and consider myself intelligent. I see logic in the design. But in the end, I have faith in my God. But so does the evolutionist, just in something else that cannot be proven.

    59. Re:Which do you believe? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually there's awful little evidence to support his existence. Go investigate! ;)

      Apparently you need to investigate harder. There is very little argument at this point over whether Jesus existed or not. Wikipedia has an article which details historical sources used to reconstruct the existence of Jesus independent from the religious views about him:

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

      Whether you believe him to be the Son of God or simply a man who started Yet Another Religion(TM), not too many historians will take the position that he simply didn't exist.
    60. Re:Which do you believe? by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      Look at any new scienctific theory or even the is pluto a planet or not debate. They are in it to make themselfs look good (Just like the rest of the human race) Many of todays scienctific concepts are not around because of strong numbers but force of will, mixed with good numbers. (but the force of will normally gets others to come up with the good numbers). The scienctific comunity has never lived those ideals they push. They are just as petty and emotional as the rest of us.

      Please provide one, just one example of a scientific theory being generally accepted by the community based solely on the basis of popularity or the force of will. And please define what you mean by "good numbers." As a practicing scientist, I haven't the slightest idea what you mean by this.

      The Pluto issue is not an issue of theory at all, but one of classification. And the problem is a lot more subtle than you're making it out to be. And while we're at it, please explain how the debate over Pluto's classification is designed to make anyone look good.

      Note: I'm not claiming that scientists are without egos and bias, and I'm not saying that scientists don't make mistakes. I am claiming that you are making misleading statements about scientists and the scientific process that are are not backed up by evidence.

      I do think your characterization of creationists is essentially correct, but lumping in the scientists with them as having the same fears does not match the available evidence. If scientists were truly afraid to have their ideas challenged, there would be no scientific progress, ever, and there would be no scientific journals where scientists publish their work, because most challenges come about through publishing in journals. In other words, your characterization is just plain wrong.

      But the fact the good sciencetist are getting ostersized for intelegent design (the most liberal version of such) where they replace the word "random" with "God's intent" (which for a being of infinate wisdom and intelegence can seem random to us) is kinda going over the edge.

      There are no good scientists that are being ostracized for holding creationist ideas. There are some people with a strong scientific background who have pretty much stopped doing any credible science and started promoting non-scientific ideas as science, and they are receiving valid criticism for it. Replacing "random" with "God's intent" is not a scientifically valid thing to do, and if you really understood the scientific process, you would understand why it isn't a valid idea.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    61. Re:Which do you believe? by drerwk · · Score: 2, Informative

      Independent of the Chaos/Free Will comment - I am compelled to point out that thanks to QM (See Bell's Theorem) that you can not know and predict outcomes - no matter the amount of computing power you have.

    62. Re:Which do you believe? by gwait · · Score: 1

      Oh rubbish: (They are in it to make themselfs look good (Just like the rest of the human race)).
      You have a sad life if you truly believe all humans are so selfish.

      Scientists are human, and are as fallible as any other group of humans.

      Science itself is a tool that makes predictions about the natural world, using the scientific method. Nothing more or less. It's open to anyone to challenge any science being done, but only by using the scientific method and publishing your results.
      IE making stuff up by pretending the bible should be taken literally doesn't count, or saying that "God told me so" also doesn't count.

      Intelligent design - show us the science SUPPORTING it and real scientists might get interested.

      All the intelligent designers state "I can't imagine how anything so complicated could be accomplished without an intelligent designer". A lack of imagination doesn't prove their point.

      They also latch on to any bit of uncertainty in evolution as if they found the holy grail and shout - "See - this part of evolution is wrong, so it all must be wrong! Haha!"

      A mountain of truly scientific evidence is there to support evolution. None what so ever to support intelligent design.

      What's really at work here is a power struggle between the religious extremists and a modern education for the control of the minds and money of the fundamentalist Christian population.

      Keep em in the dark, uneducated and afraid, and you own their wallets and their hearts. That's what intelligent design is really all about.

      --
      Bavarian Purity Law of Rice Krispie Squares: Rice Krispies, Marshmallows, Butter, Vanilla.
    63. Re:Which do you believe? by ryguy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I am all for being responsible with the environment but saying that "It can't hurt" is dead wrong. It can hugely hurt the economy, imposing restrictions that usually do more harm to the environment than good. It demonizes manufacturers, the American people, and any wealthy country.

      I heard on the radio (they speaking about a clip from Dateline NBC) this morning that the socialist Bolivian president plans on filing suit against wealthy countries to make up for the fact that the glacier that they get their drinking water from is melting due to "global warming".

    64. Re:Which do you believe? by Creepy · · Score: 1

      Actually, from my experience knowing a liberal minded doctoral student (in history) that dropped out with only his thesis left due to close-minded professors, I'd say you really are spending 5/10 years sucking up to the establishment. If you add any insight in a US school, make sure it's US centric - he basically got tossed out by suggesting Communism could have succeeded if it weren't for the economic burden of the Cold War. He was not suggesting that Communism was better or worse than Capitalism, only that it was viable.

      The whole issue boils down to one thing:
      Q) can we prove Intelligent Design without reasonable doubt?
      A) No.
      So should we teach it? Go ahead - in church.

      When you have certain or near certain proof, bring it to schools, but leave the specific God out of it, unless you can prove without a doubt that the design was by a Christian God or Allah, or Buddha, or any other specific God (or gods). The biggest problem I have with the ID people I have met is they ONLY believe it is the Christian God and yet no Christian has ever proven to me that, say, Allah deserves any less respect as potentially being the true God (having faith and believing it is a different matter - for church). A school that is not supposed to have religious bias needs to respect that. Somehow I don't see that ever happening - the fanatics in Kansas would never allow it and make sure it's Christian only.

    65. Re:Which do you believe? by pe1rxq · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't.

      Before we start our discussion would you be so kind to state with a few rational arguments why your idea of 'Jesus Christ the savior' deserves more attention from me than the flying spaghetti monster?

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      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    66. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, am I to assume that you've seen the movie then, and wondered why so many of those supposedly "neutral" scientists were so adamant about the impossibility of intelligent design, or some of the witch hunts conducted against scientists who said it might even be remotely possible? It is not so much that people disagree on this issue that bothers me, but the way in which the disagreement is conducted by people I would expect to be reasonable and rational, and the way in which those with what is obviously the minority viewpoint in science are blacklisted and attacked by their peers in ways that are frighteningly and rabidly Orwellian. What people seem to be forgetting is that Expelled is not a movie about creationism. It's a movie about free speech and the open exchange of ideas, specifically in the scientific community, which centers on the evolution/creationism debate.

    67. Re:Which do you believe? by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      >since the last 10yrs the average temp of the Earth has actually cooled.

      No, it hasn't. 1998 was an especially hot year, but the trend over the last 10 years has been increasing, just like the 10 years before that.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    68. Re:Which do you believe? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1, Insightful

      At this point claiming Jesus never existed is just ridiculous. There's more evidence corroborating his existence and many of the things he did than there is for a lot of other historic people from the same time period. Yet, because they aren't nearly as controversial, everyone's perfectly happy to assume that he didn't exist and they did. (Example evidence link so save me from typing all of it here)

      What's so bad about Jesus anyway? Oh no! He paid for your sins and wants to take you to heaven when you die. That *is* bad! I've never seen an atheist get pissed off about Buddha or something. I'm just curious what all the hate is about.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    69. Re:Which do you believe? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      here you go, religious people discussing anthropomorphic weather:

      http://www.christianforumsite.com/tropical-systems/10567-2008-hurricane-season-storm-names-info.html

      (it's a joke, laugh)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    70. Re:Which do you believe? by inasity_rules · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Actually, I'd say free will can be predictable. If you throw a stick and your dog chases it, you did not make your dog chase it, but you know it will. Scale it up and make it more complex for humans. You can always choose not to chase the stick... But then we know you're gonna do that too... :) I think the "free" part just implies that the choice is there.

      --
      I have determined that my sig is indeterminate.
    71. Re:Which do you believe? by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Place blame is what is wrong. Unless Bolivia has never used fossil fuels they are every bit as responsible.

      Compared to the risk cutting CO2 seems like the low risk option. The simple truth is unless India and China start cutting it really doesn't matter what the US and the EU does at this point.
      But that is a matter of opinion since I don't have the hard data to back it up.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    72. Re:Which do you believe? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      However, discussion with others (ie: science professors) on this matter was dismissive. Now, it's becoming common discussion.

      The thing there is that there's only so much time (and money) that can be spent. Once a theory starts looking pretty solid of course you'll find fewer and fewer people willing to spend the time and effort discussing its validity. Eventually you *have* to accept things in order to progress.

      I'd say a lot of it is not observable or disprovable, perhaps insightful. Theories such as infinitely expanding and collapsing universe, universes. And various other ideas often taught have serious lacks on disprovability. But there is no issue in teaching or discussing these in class.

      The theories make predictions. That these predictions may currently be beyond our abilities to test is neither here nor there, further advances may enable us to perform those tests. The difference is that creationism doesn't make testable predictions - all you can do is prove whether or not there is an intelligent designer. In other words, prove or disprove the existence of God.

      Many things that fall in this category are taught in the science classrooms of public school....with no qualms.

      I'm sorry, but can you name some? Your earlier example, of the nature of the universe (ever expanding, expanding/collapsing, etc) *is* testable, at least theoretically. Just because we can't go sit outside it and watch doesn't mean that we can't make observations that will (one day) provide an answer one way or another.

    73. Re:Which do you believe? by Tiger4 · · Score: 1
      "I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too"

      That is AnthropoGENIC climate change, you ignorant clod!

      Clearly you are completely unprepared to discuss the scientific merits of a Nixonian speechwriter's arguments with regards to the origins of man and the universe if you cannot distinguish between climate change that Comes from man from climate change that Looks like man. Its Obvious!

      --
      Behold, this dreamer cometh. Come now, and let us slay him... and we shall see what will become of his dreams.
    74. Re:Which do you believe? by cloakable · · Score: 1

      May you reap much good karma from that comment :) You deserve it.

      --
      No tyrant thrives when every subject says no.
    75. Re:Which do you believe? by jameswing · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I still have not been told why Creation and Evolution can't both be true. For the people that say that evolution dosen't happen onpe your eyes, species including humans are constantly changing to adapt to their surroundings. the bible dosent say that one day there was nothing, and the next everything was here (well it does metaphoricaly, but also says it not really a day). Eveything else in nature follows the rules or physics and chemistry, so why wouldn't God follow the same rules in creation, in the form of Evolution. I think it fits perfectly. God said let there be light --> Big bang, Created Heaven and Earth --> Earth formed in just the right spot, Created Man --> Evolurtion. As there is no proof for Creation (just faith), and there is a lot of evidance pointing towards evolutions, There is clearly something there. I don't see why people cant make this connection as easily as I did when I was 10.

    76. Re:Which do you believe? by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      You mean a living being which might have lived 2000 years ago.
      About the only proof we have of that guy really existing is 2000 years worth of idiots screaming 'its true, he really existed'. (you included)

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    77. Re:Which do you believe? by Thangodin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, that was a scientist, Galileo, who didn't have the math to explain elliptical orbits and fudged his data. Since even the idea that planets moved around the sun was very unpopular at the time, and Galileo didn't have any peers, the peer review process didn't actually exist to check his work. When Newton shot this down, nobody complained.

      Kuhn has been exaggerated, and even his original claims do not fit the history of science well. Scientists tend to be conservative, and wait for strong evidence in support of a new theory so that they don't get taken in by the fringe. What Kuhn does not mention, of course, is that fringe theories that are just dead wrong outnumber valid theories a hundred to one, strongly justifying this approach (ID is an example of the far lunatic fringe.) His story of multiple Copernican Revolutions is also wrong. A Copernican Revolution occurs when a valid scientific theory arrives which brings a solid foundation to further research. There is at most one in each scientific field of research--examples include the original work of Copernicus (which became the basis for Galileo, Newton, and eventually Einstein), Darwin's theory of evolution, plate tectonics, and DNA. Prior to these advances the field is a chaotic mash of data with no means of organization, only guesswork. Einstein's work was not a Copernican revolution, but a refinement of existing physics into the very large and small scales. He did not prove Newton wrong.

      What makes Kuhn so popular is the narrative of the lone genius who, in David and Goliath fashion, takes on the powerful and corrupt empire to change the world. According to this narrative, science is just a majority opinion defended by political maneuvering. This is utter bullshit. The fastest way to win a Nobel prize and establish your career is to prove other scientists wrong--but for that, you need evidence. ID doesn't have any. Not a single scrap. ID isn't a scientific theory, but a well financed marketing campaign masquerading as one, presenting this narrative and a soggy heap of postmodernist drivel to encourage and exploit ignorance.

    78. Re:Which do you believe? by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      Actaully, one of the top scientists at NASA made a public statement that he didn't believe that the current climate changes were caused by human activity. He was forced to retract this statement or lose his job. Log on to the National Science Foundation web site and check out the number of grants and the amount of money being spent to "study" climate change. You will see that the guys recieving that monay want to keep it flowing and will try to discredit anyone who threatens to cut off that funding.

    79. Re:Which do you believe? by happyemoticon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It depends on what you mean by free will.

      Some people are incompatibilists - this means that they believe that they believe free will is incompatible with determinism - that if you weren't morally suspended, as some theologians might say, and completely free to choose either way, it wouldn't be free will. Some then go on to say that this is proof that free will does not exist, and some are then inclined to say that this means we do (but this are hard to frame in terms of science for obvious reasons).

      Others, however, have the idea that free will and determinism are totally compatible. As John Milton's God said, "Just because I knew what they'd do doesn't remove their free will." Basically, any time you make a decision, that's free will, and a decision is but the result of the inputs fed into a computer, albeit a vastly complicated, conscious, very buggy computer.

    80. Re:Which do you believe? by alan_dershowitz · · Score: 1

      Similarly, every true scientist values being proven wrong How about every true Scotsman?
    81. Re:Which do you believe? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      First, if you accept that God exists That's a pretty big assumption. I'll grant you that he COULD exist, but I see no phenomenon in the natural world that demands that a God exist.

      then he created time so saying he 'waited' to create our observable universe is nonsense. You are begging the question. Who or what created God, so that he could create time? Why did he decide to create time? Why wasn't he happy with things the way they were? He went to an awful lot of trouble creating everything - seems unlikely that someone would just choose to do that for no reason.

      Second, if creating the simplest of life was by chance WHY can we not reproduce it or even one of its 'ancestors'(which mysteriously have never been found). We haven't learned how yet? Would you have argued in the 1700s that flight is not possible because we haven't figured out how to do it?

      And how can you say that current life's ancestors haven't been found? What is the fossil record then?

      This even further constricts the life sprang from nothing hypothesis. Constricts it? You mean restricts the time in which life could have arose? Yes, somewhere in a billion years, life would have arisen. You think a billion years is too short?

      You want to play the 'everything is defined by science' game until it doesn't suit you. If you say so. I never said "everything is defined by science". I will state that science is the best way to explain the natural world, and that supernatural phenomena are not necessary to explain the natural world. I do not rule out the possibility that a supernatural world exists - just that it does not seem to interact with the natural world.

      PS. Fun fact: There are three elements in physics time, matter and energy. These are the first three things mentioned in Genesis chapter 1. Fun fact. According to Einstein, matter and energy are variations of the same thing, and time is not an element but part of spacetime. Genesis does not even hint at relativity.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    82. Re:Which do you believe? by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      You are right. As far as who pays their salaries, it is grants from the National Science Foundation that fund much of the climate research. As long as they keep paying these guys to "study" climate change, they will keep saying that it is catastophic and that they need more money for funding.

    83. Re:Which do you believe? by davolfman · · Score: 1

      That said, if they're as neutral as they say there's nothing to fear. They shouldn't be hostile towards it, it's just preaching to the choir. Unfortunately there's a bit or tribalism here, even on the scientific side. It's not rational, but it's there.

    84. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's something beautiful about quantum mechanics: there is no absolute determinism, so that no matter how much information we have, we can't always predict physical systems.

      I had a physics book that waxed philosophical on the implications of quantum mechanics on the ideas of free will...

    85. Re:Which do you believe? by ktappe · · Score: 1

      Having a strong opinion is not bias
      Actually, I think it is. A "strong" opinion means your opinion is highly resistant to change, regardless of what new data emerges to challenge it. A simple "opinion" is one borne of facts alone and would not need a "strong" qualifier. The only reason to bring "strong" into the mix is to include desire for a certain outcome, which would lead one to resist changing that opinion, which would make it bias. QED.
      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    86. Re:Which do you believe? by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Free will means that you are not bound to act in a particular way based on initial conditions and some laws.

      No, that's "indeterminism". A lot of indeterminism is randomness. Whether or not free will is indeterministic or deterministic is a subject of great dispute.

      Naively, a Newtonian system is deterministic - give the initial conditions and the laws of motion we can predict its behaviour at any point in the future. For simple Newtonian systems like the solar system that is true. But for slightly less simple ones, chaos takes over and we cannot.

      Even chaotic systems are deterministic; they're just unpredictable. Now, Newtonian physics allows for indeterminism, but not for reasons of chaos. Here's a discussion of that that's probably over your head. Executive summary: Newtonian physics allows for point masses to come in and out of spacial infinity.

      And hence it has free will like us, but not like the solar system or the automaton.

      That's the worst argument I've seen in my life.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    87. Re:Which do you believe? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 3, Funny
      chaos is: short term predictable, long term unpredictable.

      random is: short term unpredictable, long term predictable.

      Nobody studies random chaos, as there's nothing to predict.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    88. Re:Which do you believe? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Someday's Slashdot mods... you.

      Briefly...
      There is some evidence that the people who wrote the bible wrote what they knew to be true (so they were credible witnesses as far as it goes since many of the verifiable parts of their stories check out).
      There is some evidence that the supernatural stuff about jesus was already rumbling around that area in several other countries attached to several other dieties.
      There is some evidence that some of the books of the bible were not written by one person.
      There is some evidence that some books of the bible were suppressed by the early church.
      There is a lot of credible evidence that modern christians are anti-truth because they ignore vast mounds of physical evidence because it contradicts genesis. They have been caught lying and suppressing the truth. They are not acting christ like.. or even disciple like. They do not value the truth. They do not respect honest seekers of truth.

      Why the hostility? Well as a non-believer, I had people trying to ram religion down my throat for most of my life-- it generated a lot of hostility on my part. I just wanted to be left alone to live my life.

      Could christianty be true? Sure. Could several other religions be true? yes. Did the followers of failed religious believe them to be true? absolutely. Would some of them have died for their faiths. absolutely.

      "Going to heaven" is very different than most people think. If your entire personality ceases to exist and only an animating spirit/soul sans personality goes to heaven, then most people would view that as the same as death. So most people really don't believe christianity anyway... they engage in a mental kung-fu and think that if some part of them survives completely sans their personality then that's okay... heck, let me clone their bloody cells and keep those alive forever-- would that be immortal life? Christianity is always portrayed in the media as if the people's personality survives.

      There is only hearsay evidence that he "paid" for sins. John Smith has a great little religion going based on hearsay information too. Do you believe his religion?

      Still. the moderation was probably unfair. That's life.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    89. Re:Which do you believe? by hahafaha · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Just to set the record straight:

      I am both a strong atheist and an ex-Christian. From everything I've read, I am compelled to say that Jesus probably did exist, but much of what is said about him is not true (not just the supernatural, but a lot of the events, too).

      The reason that someone can dislike that which Jesus teaches (at least, according to the Bible) is plenty:

      First of all, he forgives people's sins. This is an incredible concept, and one that I hadn't even considered until reading Christopher Hitchens' incredible book God is not Great (http://www.amazon.com/God-Not-Great-Religion-Everything/dp/0446579807). If you consider the incident with ``let the sinless throw the first stone'', you are advocating a society in which guilt is determined only by those who are not, themselves, guilty. That is ludicrous, particularly if Adam's original sin is taken into account.

      Second, Jesus is advocating a quasi-communistic, merchant-less society. This is prevalent throughout all of his writings. ``Go sell all you have'', the incident in the Temple, etc. etc. Again, this is naive and ridiculous.

      Third, Jesus is remarkably self-centred. He is saying that we must leave our families and follow him; if any of our friends or family says something against Jesus, we should leave him.

      Fourth, Jesus has caused innumerable amounts of death and suffering. Perhaps he did this involuntarily, but it still happened.

      There are many other reasons, but I am too tired to list them.

    90. Re:Which do you believe? by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

      Well I don't have to chalk it up to chance. How about this explanation: A prophecy written hundreds of years ago says that Bob will speak a certain phrase at his execution. Bob knows this, so speaks the phrase at his execution. Of course, how do you even know christ said that on the cross? Your only source is the gospels, the earliest of which was written at least fifty years after the events it describes, and which were all authored by people who had a clear bias and were seeking to promote christian belief. I would also argue that it does NOT detail exactly what happened to him. It simply says his enemies had surrounded him and pierced his hands and feet. crucifixion had been a widespread method of execution for hundreds of years prior to christs time, so a reference, in a prophecy which offers no real detail, to someone being crucified, is hardly overwhelming evidence for christs divinity. And by the way, the Psalm is written in first person and makes no specific reference to christ. Just becaus you believe it refers to christ does not make it so. It might refer to David Koresh for all you know.

      I am curious about something. You seem to believe in cristianity very strongly. Why christianity? After all, every claim you make about christianity (prophecies, prophets, changing history ) could be made for any number of religions, from Islam to Zoroastrianism. What makes you so sure your choice of invisible cloud being is correct, and all the others are wrong?

      --
      "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
    91. Re:Which do you believe? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It's interesting that you mention organisms next to oceanic vents. Those are discussed in Dr. Walt Brown's book "In The Beginning". You should check it out. Buy.

      He presents compelling explanations for nearly everything that science is struggling to understand - sedimentary layers on mountains, lack of dust on the moon, the origin of life. Throughout his book he relies on scientific studies performed by evolutionists. He does this to prevent anyone from claiming that his facts are contrived.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    92. Re:Which do you believe? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      I actually think the fact that you believe that the existence of a higher being `is much more logical' than anything is what is funny, in a sad way. In the end, your line of thought is nothing more than reasoning from ignorance: I do not know, therefore X exists.

    93. Re:Which do you believe? by DavidM01 · · Score: 0, Insightful

      "And how can you say that current life's ancestors haven't been found? What is the fossil record then?" I said the ancestors of E Coli and other simpler organisms. If these precursors were hardy enough to survive and change into everything else, wouldn't there be more record of their existence? Yes I believe a billion years is far too short to construct something even as complex as E Coli by random chance with the ability to survive, reproduce and adapt. Dawkins agrees, btw. Obvious fact: The theory of relativity wouldn't have been of great value 5-6000 years ago, genius. The point you missed is that its there in the first chapter and verse. 1. Heat 2. Slime 3. ????? 4. Life

    94. Re:Which do you believe? by Artichoke · · Score: 2, Informative

      "very likely never existed"?

      Er, no. There are enough writings from early enough to make his existence a lot more probable than that.

      The usual trope "better attested than many other accepted ancient individuals" seems to be a reasonable summation.

      Don't confuse history with mythology. (All history deals with probabilities alone.)

      Now the nature of the individual Jesus referred to in the writings, well, there's an area for discussion. But please, not (non-)existence.

      --
      __
      Arse
    95. Re:Which do you believe? by credd144az · · Score: 1

      This may be a start to the explanation you are looking for: http://www.scq.ubc.ca/the-beginning-of-life-and-amphiphilic-molecules/ The early precursors for life were not made by chance, but as a part of the chemical development of Earth. It was not a matter or if, but when. The pieces were all here.

    96. Re:Which do you believe? by digitig · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Chaotic (in the mathematical sense) in no way implies non-deterministic. Just because step N+1 is completely determined from step N doesn't mean that you can predict where you will end up after a couple of hundred steps. It's not a question of finding "hidden" rules to make chaotic systems predictable. The point about chaotic systems is that even if you do know the rules they're not predictable (beyond the short term).

      Essentially, neither chaos nor non-determinism seems to help with the problem of free will. We don't like to think our actions are completely predetermined, but I for one wouldn't consider it much of an improvement to learn that there's a purely random component to my actions too.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    97. Re:Which do you believe? by methuselah · · Score: 1

      bias, is forming and opinion that totally disregards any information to the contrary even if the contrary information is irrefutable fact, or say glaring inconsistencies that totally contradict your premise.

    98. Re:Which do you believe? by superyooser · · Score: 1

      On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc.

      On the other side, we've got.... an ex-Nixon speechwiter/game show host. The neutrality of this post is disputed.
    99. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll
      I see what you did there. You act like it's understood by both parties that he 'paid for our sins and wants to take us to heaven'. You also imply there's hate for Jesus. Really, I don't hate him and I would guess very few people do. I just don't think he was God or that he had any power of salvation.

      I like a lot of his teachings, actually. But as Gandhi said, "I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians."

      How many Buddhists want to establish a Buddhist state religion and persecute nonbelievers?

      How many Christians?

      How many murders has the Dalai Lama called for? Not many. Take a look at Pat Robertson.

      Do Buddhists play a significant role in shaping U.S. culture? Not really.

      Do Christians often demand their beliefs be given special status? Are there clauses (now ruled unconstitutional by Torcaso v. Watkins, but they're still there) in several states' constitutions saying that one must believe in God to hold public office? Ever hear of Torcaso v. Watkins? Those people didn't just disappear after Torcaso, btw. They're still around. And now they make up stuff and put it in propaganda movies to get their weird beliefs accepted as fact instead of relying on the process of scientific inquiry, as they should (it works fine!).

    100. Re:Which do you believe? by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      Hawking needs a robotic exoskeleton to make that plausible... unless you say he has developed telekinetic mind powers.

      It's amazing what a bit of prayer and a miracle will do for someone...

      <DUCK!>

      :-)))))

    101. Re:Which do you believe? by spun · · Score: 1

      I don't think Christ is a liar, because he never wrote anything. All we have are other people's writings about him. And I think it much more likely that they were liars than that they told the truth.

      There is a lot of evidence for abiogenesis, just none that is conclusive, yet.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    102. Re:Which do you believe? by arb+phd+slp · · Score: 1
      I still have not been told why Creation and Evolution can't both be true.

      You aren't going to be told why they can't both be true. That you can't be told that is the whole point of the debate, and exactly what ID-proponents are failing to accept. The "Truth" of God is irrelevant. If it can't be proven one way or another it's not science, it's theology.

      --
      There's a perfect xkcd for my sig but I'm too lazy to look it up. sudo someone go find it.
    103. Re:Which do you believe? by Danse · · Score: 2

      In any event there is no evidence for abiogeneis, and yet it is peddled as science. It is science, and continues to be the subject of research. It is not peddled as fact, but is a theory that some scientists are working to prove or disprove. You'll have to forgive the scientific community for not throwing their hands up and declaring that God must exist because evidence of the possibility of abiogenesis hasn't fallen into our laps yet.

      Its really a choice isn't it: Do you believe Christ is who he claimed to be or do you believe he was a liar? You say that as if there aren't many other choices available besides those. People have attributed things they didn't understand to all sorts of deities or other supernatural causes throughout human history, even up to today. Yet we're supposed to believe that the writers of that particular story 2000 years ago were completely accurate. Yeah. That's just so much more believable than a scientific theory. At least the theory can be changed as needed and doesn't require me to commit myself to its proliferation and defense.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    104. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "creationist doctrine, whatever term proponents choose to call it, is fundamentally non-scientific -- even anti-science"

      Define creationism. That's a pretty big brush you paint there.

      Is archeology and seti non-science when it searches for signs of intelligence? Thousands of non religious men, throughout history have believed in teleology. This is where language breaks down and blinds peoples thinking.

      The truth is some group of humans came up with a philosophy of the nature of our environment and called this naturalism, you're confusing the philosophy of naturalism with science. Consider Cartesian universe vs Chaos and/or quantum mechanics.

      The philosophy of Naturalism assumes certain things about the environment and rules out any other perspective by fiat.

    105. Re:Which do you believe? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Quite common in our science today.
      Do you have any evidence for this, or are you filtering and interpreting evidence to favor your viewpoint?

      Sorry, had to do that.
      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    106. Re:Which do you believe? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      The peer review system isn't immune from abuse Yes, and in the Sternberg case it was the cdesign proponentsists who who abused it.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    107. Re:Which do you believe? by zehaeva · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Stalin changed the course of human history. So did Alexander the Great. As did Socrates. Mohammad changed the world. And so did this guy who became the Buddah. Consider that the vast majority of humans on planet earth do not believe in that humble man who changed the Roman Empire(I'm not sure how thats such a large deal, Caesar changed Rome as well). I find it silly to say that Christ changed the Roman Empire, Atila the Hun torn down the Roman empire which had a far greater affect upon the western world and ushered the dark ages. It takes a narrow view to see the changes brought about by just one man and refuse to see that he is but one part of a much much larger tapestry which is human history, which is a smaller part, infinitesimally smaller part, of the history of the universe.

    108. Re:Which do you believe? by Bootle · · Score: 2, Interesting

      we just haven't the computing power, nor information, to make such predictions.

      This is a pretty severe misunderstanding. A truly chaotic system will eventually diverge from your predictions, no matter how accurate your knowledge. More accuracy means your predictions remain valid for longer, but not forever.

      If infinite information existed (infinite precision numbers for example) then maybe, but I have a feeling that Heisenberg will come along to put the kibosh on those dreams...

    109. Re:Which do you believe? by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      I may be out of line, off-topic, or plain redundant, but I was under the impression that climate change wants to be free?

      --
      If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
    110. Re:Which do you believe? by Danse · · Score: 1

      As the previous poster pointed out, you could believe many things until you're proven wrong. If abiogenesis is eventually proven to be possible, I wonder what new belief you will grab onto in order to maintain your belief in God. Not that I think it's really necessary to do so. Many Christians feel that they must defend their belief in God against science. I don't find spirituality and science to be compatible or mutually exclusive. You can believe in God (or any other supernatural entity) and simply attribute science to him without any problem. The problem comes with dogmatic religion that is sometimes contradicted by science and has to either be explained another way, or the science must be rejected in order to maintain faith. Sad.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    111. Re:Which do you believe? by marketanomaly · · Score: 1

      *sighs* - I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too (there seems to be an extraordinarily high overlap between the two groups).

      It's "anthropogenic" gases that supposedly cause the earth's climate to warm. Sadly, most of the C02 haters out there don't really understand climate science or science in general.

      Actually, the debate over the effect of C02 on earth's climate is a much better example of the Spanish Inquisition type mentality of the modern scientific community than intelligent design.

      There is plenty real evidence on the other side of that debate, but the global warming boosters show a frightening lack of curiosity about what the other side has to say.

      This is probably because they never really understood this science thing in the first place. Science is about curiosity, investigation, discovery, and constant debate. Major scientific issues don't get worked out in a couple years.

      However, I think evolution has withstood the test of time. Using intelligent design as the example cheapens a very valid point. If the scientific community looses its curiosity it loses its soul.

    112. Re:Which do you believe? by TobyWong · · Score: 0, Troll

      If you consider the incident with ``let the sinless throw the first stone'', you are advocating a society in which guilt is determined only by those who are not, themselves, guilty. That is ludicrous, particularly if Adam's original sin is taken into account.

      You missed the point completely. Do you think you think the saying "people who live in glass houses should not throw stones" is a call to arms for brick house owners? Please.

      Second, Jesus is advocating a quasi-communistic, merchant-less society. This is prevalent throughout all of his writings. ``Go sell all you have'', the incident in the Temple, etc. etc. Again, this is naive and ridiculous.

      What is naive and ridiculous is your grasp of Christianity. You should have paid more attention in Sunday School. The "incident in the temple" had to do with the merchants defiling a holy place. If someone tried to set up a hotdog stand directly on top of your family grave site would you be ok with that? If you asked them politely (yeah right) to relocate would that make you a communist?

      I'm not even going to bother with your other points because they are laughably weak. If this is the type of attack that Christians can expect from atheists nowadays then they have nothing to worry about.

      --
      - Toby
    113. Re:Which do you believe? by coyote_oww · · Score: 1

      only the truly well-read will get that

    114. Re:Which do you believe? by joelstobart · · Score: 1

      I was referring to this http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/275738.stm when I was talking about Ocean Vents.

      I'm sure he [Walt Brown] has some "unique" perspectives. Although without peer-review of his work; I imagine that his musings will not get into the scientific body of knowledge.

      I recommend reading http://www.amazon.co.uk/Origin-Species-Charles-Darwin/dp/0517123207/ref=pd_sim_b_img_2 its a thoroughly good introduction to evolution.

    115. Re:Which do you believe? by computational+super · · Score: 1
      Oh, and he Godwins himself at 2:40 in the linked video. Discussion over.

      Sounds just like something Hitler would say.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    116. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [the movie] "is simply an anti-science propaganda film aimed at creating controversy where none exists, while promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students." ... and comments like this is exactly what the movie is about.

      Go watch it before casting pre-conceived judgement.

    117. Re:Which do you believe? by Danse · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actaully, one of the top scientists at NASA made a public statement that he didn't believe that the current climate changes were caused by human activity. First, he wasn't a scientist. He was an engineer turned administrator. Second, the quote that got him all the criticism was this:

      "I guess I would ask which human beings - where and when - are to be accorded the privilege of deciding that this particular climate that we have right here today, right now is the best climate for all other human beings. I think that's a rather arrogant position for people to take." Right before that, he said this, which seems to contradict what you're claiming he said:

      "I'm also aware of recent findings that appear to have nailed down -- pretty well nailed down the conclusion that much of that is manmade. Whether that is a long term concern or not, I can't say."
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    118. Re:Which do you believe? by GeffDE · · Score: 3, Informative

      This will get buried beneath other replies but maybe you will get something out of this:

      Chaos' technical name is "Sensitive Dependence on Initial Conditions." Any time a model is constructed, initial conditions must be fed into it before it is used in a simulation; those initial conditions are based on measurements and are therefore not infinitely precise, nor completely accurate. In certain systems, like weather, a small perturbation in the initial conditions causes a drastic change in the output. These systems are informally called Chaotic, but, in reality, they are just as deterministic as any other system because for a given input they give the same output.

      Weather is, after all, still just modeled by a set of equations; in fact, a passable model can be constructed with something like only 8 or 9 equations.

      --
      It has been a nervous year, with people beginning to feel like Christian Scientists with appendicitis.
    119. Re:Which do you believe? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      If these precursors were hardy enough to survive and change into everything else, wouldn't there be more record of their existence? I don't think that you understand the theory of natural selection. Just because they weren't suited for making good fossils does not mean that they weren't suited to the environment in which they arose. I think that the earliest fossils are photosynthetic bacteria - that does not make them the earliest life, just the earliest life that happened to make a fossil.

      Second, life doesn't "change into" something else. Mutations that prove to have some benefit towards survival or procreation tend to win out over time, that's all. In some environments, a species that is resistant to genetic change will win out and in others a species with a higher mutation rate will win out. It depends on the environment.

      Yes I believe a billion years is far too short to construct something even as complex as E Coli by random chance with the ability to survive, reproduce and adapt. Well, it's a good thing that e. coli didn't get created instantaneously and by chance. Instead, it evolved from simpler life forms. Remember, the first life wouldn't have had any competition at all. It wouldn't have needed an immune system, no defense mechanism, not even any way to compete for resources. Just a blob of self-replicating... something.

      Obvious fact: The theory of relativity wouldn't have been of great value 5-6000 years ago, genius. Relativity seems to hold up well everywhere except in black holes, implying that it probably describes everything back to only a short time after the universe came into being. Relativity appears to describe everything very well back several billion years. Do you have any evidence that relativity did not apply to our natural world 6000 years ago?

      The point you missed is that its there in the first chapter and verse. 1. Heat 2. Slime 3. ????? 4. Life Huh? I don't know what you are talking about. The first verse and chapter of Genesis? "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." How do you extract all of that from that single sentence? The Genesis account seems pretty much fiction to me. Everyone knows that the sun preceded the earth, so light would have been around before the earth was created. Even if you don't think that was the case, water life CERTAINLY predated terrestrial seeding plant life. You could probably re-order Genesis to get the events in the right general order, or you could just appreciate it for the fine myth that it is.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    120. Re:Which do you believe? by DarthJohn · · Score: 2, Funny

      Stop anthropomorphizing the climate. It hates it when you do that.

    121. Re:Which do you believe? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      But the fact is that one of the primary goals of just about every scientist is to challenge or overturn the conventional wisdom. And to so in a way that is observable and disprovable. You don't get a ticket to Stockholm by echoing the community.

      No, you have to call up an airline or travel agency first.

    122. Re:Which do you believe? by astrohopper · · Score: 2, Insightful

      QUOTE "Why the hostility? Well as a non-believer, I had people trying to ram religion down my throat for most of my life-- it generated a lot of hostility on my part. I just wanted to be left alone to live my life."

      Well my story is just the opposite. All my life I've heard people "preaching" about evolution because some guy with glasses and a lab coat told them so. Personally I just cannot take "the leap of faith" about the origins of life ; it seems so incredibly unlikely
      that one day a cell just "plopped" into existence with the ability to procreate, and then against all odds survived everything the galaxy will throwed at it for 6 billion years.

      Is it not perfectly sane to refuse a theory that has no PROOF about it's vital premises ?

    123. Re:Which do you believe? by Danse · · Score: 1

      The simple truth is unless India and China start cutting it really doesn't matter what the US and the EU does at this point. Sure it matters. It's just that it won't happen unless everyone commits to it because it is economically disadvantageous for those countries that commit to it unless all others commit to it as well. That's just the simplest initial issue. The other problems that start coming up after getting past that just make my head hurt to think about.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    124. Re:Which do you believe? by Bobb+Sledd · · Score: 1

      You mean like the parallel universes theory?

      --
      "They said I probly shouldn't fly with just one eye," "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
    125. Re:Which do you believe? by David.R.Benham · · Score: 0

      Ad hominem, that's always an excellent way to start a debate in scientific circles. If this is an example of neutrality, lack of bias, and objectivity, then I'm frightened.

    126. Re:Which do you believe? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Amazing. A +5 for going completely off the topic. What was the topic? Did Jesus exist. A: Resounding yes from all parties.

      Now that we have that settled, the mods are still abusing their mod points. Shame on them.

    127. Re:Which do you believe? by paiute · · Score: 1

      And why is Stein so worked up, anyway? After all, he's a Jew. He's going to Hell.

      I am your Lord Jesus Christ, and I approved this message.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    128. Re:Which do you believe? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      And for the record, Maxo-Texas, it's nothing against you. It's just a pet peeve of mine when the mods abuse their powers. It's perfectly acceptable for you to think what you want to think.

      But when the mods decide to silence someone who points out that historians agree on the existence of a historical figure? Well, that's the exact OPPOSITE of good science. The exact sort of behavior that I imagine those mods are angry at religious fanatics for.

    129. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > There is very little argument at this point over whether Jesus existed or not.

      It's pretty well-documented that self-proclaimed prophets were a dime-a-dozen back then. Obviously one of them got a group of educated (literate anyway) apostles worked up enough to start writing letters -- their authenticity isn't quite set in stone either, but someone wrote them about somebody at any rate.

      I think you'll still find plenty of historians who claim that the Christ figure in the NT Bible is an amalgamation of several characters. Certainly the mythology attributed to him was collected out of common folklore.

    130. Re:Which do you believe? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      This is where I disagree. First off, I think that hypothesis and tests can be cited for intelligent design. I think statements to the nature of discovery of design patterns across species and various levels is just one good prediction for testing. No worse than Darwin's proposition that transitional forms should exist.

      Please explain how that is a testable prediction of ID -- remember, the entire premise is that this could not have happened "naturally", meaning by chance. Sounds more like a test of convergent evolution.

      Many things that fall in this category are taught in the science classrooms of public school....with no qualms.

      Nonsense.

      The only thing that comes close is String Theory, and that is not taught as an accepted theory in lower schools, and only delivered in-depth in theoretical physics courses where the students know they are dealing with an untested hypothesis.

      Can you actually name a "science" that is untestable and taught in science class? Kansas and Florida schools don't count.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    131. Re:Which do you believe? by David_Shultz · · Score: 1

      Good discussion of the video on youtube:

      video 1)
      http://youtube.com/watch?v=MrY7WmbWSn8

      Video 2)
      http://youtube.com/watch?v=t-1KwNQAXrs

    132. Re:Which do you believe? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      It is also the filtering of evidence and interpretation of evidence so as to favor one's viewpoint. Quite common in our science today. If you know it's quite common, you shouldn't have any trouble producing a couple of dozen examples for us.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    133. Re:Which do you believe? by hahafaha · · Score: 1

      You missed the point completely. Do you think you think the saying "people who live in glass houses should not throw stones" is a call to arms for brick house owners? Please.

      OK, then, you tell me what is the intended point of the sinless throwing the first stone incident? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I've always assumed (and been taught) that it means that we should not judge others, because we are ourselves imperfect. This is clearly non-realistic in any organised government, but it's more than just childish and naive -- it's evil. The guilt of one person has nothing to do with the guilt of another. In a representative government, the society protects itself from those who pose a threat to it. The whole thing is rather similar to the absurd ``Why do we kill people who kill others to prove that killing is wrong?'' phenomenon. We kill people who kill others so that they don't kill us (and to give a warning to would-be killers of the consequences). I, myself, don't advocate killing (or, indeed, punishing) adulterers, but if we assume that adultery is an evil crime which should be punished, then not punishing her because we are guilty of some unrelated crime is a very bad philosophy.

      What is naive and ridiculous is your grasp of Christianity. You should have paid more attention in Sunday School. The "incident in the temple" had to do with the merchants defiling a holy place. If someone tried to set up a hotdog stand directly on top of your family grave site would you be ok with that? If you asked them politely (yeah right) to relocate would that make you a communist?

      That is bullshit and you know it. You are making it out as if the merchants in the temple were an isolated anti-religious group of blasphemers. The temple for the Jews was rather similar to the Forum for the Romans -- it was a meeting ground, a social place, and far more than just a holy shrine. Jesus took it upon himself to commit acts of vandalism and -- for lack of a better word -- terrorism, just to further his own nihilistic philosophy.

      Sir (for we all know that there are no women on the Internet), I would be glad to have (and would rather enjoy having) a civilised, enlightening discussion with you, but please, control yourself. There is no need to insult or taunt anyone. Respond to (and, by all means, mercilessly dissect) the argument being made, but leave the one making the argument alone.

    134. Re:Which do you believe? by abigor · · Score: 1, Troll

      There are no contemporaneous accounts of Christ's existence (ie firsthand eyewitness accounts written while he was supposedly alive). Please prove me wrong. If you can't show me any "writing from early enough", then show me his bones, some skin cells, anything.

      Actually, don't waste your time. There is nothing. The guy almost certainly didn't exist.

    135. Re:Which do you believe? by ultranova · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Chaos != Free Will. You said yourself (basically) that it will react in a certain way, given certain input. Just because it is too wildly changing does not mean it is not predictable; we just haven't the computing power, nor information, to make such predictions.

      Nitpick: a chaotic system is one where no leve of detail is insignificant. In order to make predictions arbitrarily far into the future, you have to know the state of the system arbitrarily accurately. However, quantum mechanics forbid you from knowing the state beyond a certain accuracy; consequently, a sufficiently chaotic system is impossible to predict arbitrarily far into the future, and no amount of computing power can change that.

      Not that any of this has anything to do with free will. That particular hornet's nest results from trying to apply a philosophical concept into particle physics. That said philosophical concept is ill-defined to begin with certainly doesn't help.

      --

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

    136. Re:Which do you believe? by abb3w · · Score: 1

      But on the same note, challenges to established scientific principles must themselves be scientific, and that is the problem here.

      Almost. You have to distinguish between the scientific principles that are theories, laws, hypotheses, and conjectures which must be thus challenged as you note, from the scientific principles that are the underlying methodology and philosophy of science. The ID-iots are taking advantage of a slightly sloppy demarcation between what is "science" and what isn't, and argue when you question whether or not what they're trying to do is "really" science, and bring up questions like experimental repeatability.

      Of late, I've found you can get a nicely formal definition useful for bludgeoning them senseless is to use as your underlying philosophical assumptions the Robbins Axioms, ZF set theory, and the Strong Church-Turing Universe Thesis. From there, via Wallace & Dowe's "Minimum Message Length and Kolmogorov Complexity" and Vitányi & Li's "Minimum Description Length Induction, Bayesianism and Kolmogorov Complexity", we get something that looks a lot like the scientific method of testing hypotheses against each other.

      The downside is that that doesn't care whether you got your theory by watching an apple fall or it came handed to you on Golden Tablets by a choir of Seraphim. On the other hand, most journals don't really care about that either, as long as you attribute the co-authorship.

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    137. Re:Which do you believe? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      So in your world view, demanding proof for abio-genesis is ignorance, and anyone who doesn't believe that man is the highest form of life is 'sad'.

      If you read what I wrote, you'll see that I never wrote that. I hinted that concluding that the existence of a higher being from the absence of evidence of abiogenesis is sad.

      Deciding that anyone who doesn't believe as you do as 'ignorance' is so clueless and ironic I can't even comment on it.

      Clearly, you did not understand my post. `Reasoning from ignorance', in my post refers to a well known fallacy, in which one deduces something from ones ignorance of something, as in "I can't believe this is possible, so it can't be true" or "I (currently) cannot understand how this can be so complicated, so the only possible explanation is this".

      Let me rewrite your last sentence for you: I do not know how to prove it in a lab, therefore X doesn't exist.

      It works the other way, really: If I can see (in a general sense) something in a lab, then I know it exists. I do not believe in what cannot be observed, measured, weighed, or deduced from its effects on other things that can be observed, measured and weighed.

      Do you believe in things that are unobservable?

      Believing in the Bible and Christ isn't ignorance, its faith in things which exist outside our ability to comprehend. Its pure ego and hubris to declare that nothing exists outside your ability to comprehend it.

      This again is unrelated to my post, as you read `ignorance' in a way completely unrelated to what I wrote.

      I am curious, have you made your presence known to the E Coli which inhabit our world? Until you do we don't exist, you know.

      This is absurd. I really do not have any problem with the existence of a god, in so far as it is assumed to have absolutely no influence in anything---a completely ineffectual God. Now, if you want to switch to a God on whose whims things occur, then it is a different matter, because now that could be observed, and so far no one has ever, ever, ever, ever, observed it.

    138. Re:Which do you believe? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Christianity is always portrayed in the media as if the people's personality survives. Because Life after Death (aka heaven) is portrayed in this way in the Bible. Jesus' parable of Lazarus (not his friend, just a common name) and the rich man strongly implies memory in the afterlife.

      Yes, this is just a parable, but it would be odd for Jesus to portray life after death this way even in a make-believe story if memory were not preserved/recreated after death. Christians believe the soul and the personality to be intertwined because they believe Jesus would know what he's talking about.


      Luke 16:19-31

      19"There was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every day. 20At his gate was laid a beggar named Lazarus, covered with sores 21and longing to eat what fell from the rich man's table. Even the dogs came and licked his sores.

      22"The time came when the beggar died and the angels carried him to Abraham's side. The rich man also died and was buried. 23In hell,[c] where he was in torment, he looked up and saw Abraham far away, with Lazarus by his side. 24So he called to him, 'Father Abraham, have pity on me and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, because I am in agony in this fire.'

      25"But Abraham replied, 'Son, remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony. 26And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, so that those who want to go from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from there to us.'

      27"He answered, 'Then I beg you, father, send Lazarus to my father's house, 28for I have five brothers. Let him warn them, so that they will not also come to this place of torment.'

      29"Abraham replied, 'They have Moses and the Prophets; let them listen to them.'

      30" 'No, father Abraham,' he said, 'but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will repent.'

      31"He said to him, 'If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.' "

    139. Re:Which do you believe? by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      I guess the U.S. National Climate Data Center's thermometers need recalibrating. Why don't you go do that for them, Einstein.

    140. Re:Which do you believe? by kellyb9 · · Score: 1

      There is a lot of credible evidence that modern christians are anti-truth because they ignore vast mounds of physical evidence because it contradicts genesis. They have been caught lying and suppressing the truth. They are not acting christ like.. or even disciple like. They do not value the truth. They do not respect honest seekers of truth. Wow - you're really trying to cast everyone in the same light. Saying Christians believe a lot of the items is above is highly inaccurate. I really don't identify myself as Christian, actually I would probably consider myself agnostic. A lot of these items depend greatly on the form of Christianity you are referring to. Catholicism, for example, does not interpret these accounts literally. Rather, they take them for what they were - pagan stories with a Jewish spin. There is a great danger in interpretting the bible literally - it wasn't really meant for that reason.
    141. Re:Which do you believe? by jesterpm · · Score: 1

      On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. Are you speaking of the creationists or the scientists with that statement? Because last I heard, giving thought to anything besides evolution means you are no longer a scientist. Am I to understand that this is the definition of being objective and lacking bias? Generally the creationists are the ones lacking bias. While the evolutonists demand only evolution be taught in schools, (most of) the creationists say teach both and let the students decide.

      while promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students. We are way beyond severerly handicaping American students. On a scientific viewpoint, we're teaching them to take and believe the information they're fed without testing it themselves.
    142. Re:Which do you believe? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that the vents haven't really answered any questions. Ever since they've been discovered people have wondered how life got going in such an environment. Now we've got the opposite problem. Now we've got life appearing on the ocean floor, dependent upon the heat from these vents and finding its way to the rest of the world?

      Origin of species - What makes you think I haven't read it? I love the assumption that all creationists must somehow be ignorant of all science - how else could we possibly still believe, right? We're all home schooled - is that it? We haven't gone through the same public schools and universities or had to participate in the same scientific processes.

      As an aside, Brown's book happens to be far from simple "musings". He's got a PhD from MIT. His entire purpose is to present a scientific body of evidence to prove his point. At any rate, isn't the whole point of the Ben Stein movie that regardless of the veracity of Brown's statements it'll never get into the "scientific body of knowledge" because the gatekeepers disagree?

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    143. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      *ahem* anthropomorphic means "in the shape of a human". The original poster meant anthropogenic. i.e. "caused by humans"

    144. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't get a ticket to Stockholm by echoing the community.

      You don't?

    145. Re:Which do you believe? by servognome · · Score: 1

      It is also the filtering of evidence and interpretation of evidence so as to favor one's viewpoint. Quite common in our science today.
      It's always common in science. People will trust their theory more than experimental results, because experiments have so many more variables that can throw them off.
      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    146. Re:Which do you believe? by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      The refusal to accept new data is called "protecting your paradigm" aka your belief system, even in the face of facts that challenge it. Heh. And here I was thinking that this was the very definition of "faith"...
    147. Re:Which do you believe? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Please provide one, just one example of a scientific theory being generally accepted by the community based solely on the basis of popularity or the force of will. And please define what you mean by "good numbers." As a practicing scientist, I haven't the slightest idea what you mean by this.
      String theory/Quantum Physics. Being much of the data requires a random varable. Many people in the sciencetific comunity Mocked the idea (Albert Einstine: God doesn't play dice). Now in an open comunity they would have taken the theory and looked at the numbers much more carfuly and sees that this theory even with the random elements seems to fit obersvations. For a large part these theory stayed alive by force of will continually forcing it back on topic. If the sciencetist who came up with the theory didn't have the same force of will, the sciencetist will say that is ludicrus and then they will go back to the lab thinking of something else.

      The Pluto issue is not an issue of theory at all, but one of classification. And the problem is a lot more subtle than you're making it out to be. And while we're at it, please explain how the debate over Pluto's classification is designed to make anyone look good.

      One of the arguments for the classifaction of pluto from not being a planet. Is by some professors I have been teaching Pluto is a planet for 20 years and I am not going to stop now! The same force of will that got there theory recongize is the same force of will that prevents them from admiting they were wrong.

      As for the change of vocabulary of changing Random with Gods, is just that a change in vocabulary. Common Expressions such as God Willing, mean there is a degree of Randomness to it. It is really more of a political smoothing then a change in the theory. Infineatly complex act of God vs. Random doesn't effect calculations. And if you can get very Religious Schools to do serious Evolutionary Research by just renameing a varable, then its good will outweigh its cost. We have for thousands of years equated anything that we don't understand as act of God. True Randomness is a ordering sequence that we don't understand. Much like the term "One Nation Under God" doesn't have to really mean the connection or beleaf in God but the fact we are Independant Nation Not bound by any other mortal authority. Much like many of the Soviet Satilight Countries were controlled by the Soviet Union, Not an Independent nation.

      There has been for the past couple generations to try to get God out of our language because there are different beleafs of Gods exisistance or not. But God is more then just a god, It is a powerful word Meaning the Top or Ultimate.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    148. Re:Which do you believe? by Artichoke · · Score: 1

      Paul's earliest writings (with a decade or so of Jesus' death) reference his face-to-face arguments with still living contemporaries of Jesus who had known Jesus.

      Given the New Testament writings require explanation, what is the most likely explanation? That they were entirely made up seems more preposterous than that they had at least a basis in some sort of fact.

      You can argue that the writings are an accretion of myths around a much humbler "real" person who was nothing more than an itinerant preacher, but the argument for the non-existence of Jesus just doesn't seem the most plausible.

      --
      __
      Arse
    149. Re:Which do you believe? by Toonol · · Score: 1

      Chaos != Free Will. You said yourself (basically) that it will react in a certain way, given certain input.

      In what way does this differ from humans? Now, I don't think climate has free will, because I think that requires some form of self-awareness... but everything, even our minds, is simply responding to inputs in accordance to physical laws. You can't make avoiding causality a condition for free will. That's magic.

    150. Re:Which do you believe? by Lurker2288 · · Score: 1

      You seem to be a bit off. Sensitivity to initial conditions is a condition of chaos, but not the whole thing. From wikipedia: "Sensitivity to initial conditions is often confused with chaos in popular accounts. It can also be a subtle property, since it depends on a choice of metric, or the notion of distance in the phase space of the system. For example, consider the simple dynamical system produced by repeatedly doubling an initial value (defined by the mapping on the real line from x to 2x). This system has sensitive dependence on initial conditions everywhere, since any pair of nearby points will eventually become widely separated. However, it has extremely simple behaviour, as all points except 0 tend to infinity. If instead we use the bounded metric on the line obtained by adding the point at infinity and viewing the result as a circle, the system no longer is sensitive to initial conditions. For this reason, in defining chaos, attention is normally restricted to systems with bounded metrics, or closed, bounded invariant subsets of unbounded systems."

    151. Re:Which do you believe? by hcjiv · · Score: 1

      But on the same note, challenges to established scientific principles must themselves be scientific, and that is the problem here. This creationist doctrine, whatever term proponents choose to call it, is fundamentally non-scientific -- even anti-science. If a theory can't produce hypotheses, can't be tested, can't be disproven, and can't make predictions, then it's not a theory and certainly not science.

      Therein lies the problem. Tell me how the hypothesis of abiogenesis in the primordial ooze is testable, can be disproven and what predictions it makes? Specifically testable predictions for which we do not already know the results.

      You have to apply the criteria without bias.

      BTW, this definition of scientific theory rules out much of archaeology as a science but I am okay with that. ;)

      --
      "The opposite of the religious fanatic is not the fanatical atheist but the gentle cynic..." - Eric Hoffer
    152. Re:Which do you believe? by pbhj · · Score: 1, Interesting

      1) The FSM was created by atheist zealot[s] and is well known to Slashdot users as a meme of the zeitgeist [buzzword bingo anyone!]. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Monster.
      2) Jesus lived approx 2000 years ago and is know to nearly all people of the world and is believed by at least 50% (according to population statistics on adherents http://www.adherents.com/Religions_By_Adherents.html) to be at least a prophet. [argument by majority I know]
      3) Christians and Hindus believe him, Jesus, to be God; Muslims to be a prophet; many other misguided souls believe him to be just a righteous man.

      That's enough for a "deserves more attention" enquiry.

      Interestingly both Jesus and the FSM (may his meatballs be ever spicy!) are well documented but you choose to believe a parody to have equal weight to an historic person. Delusional ever?

      I love responding to flamebait ...

    153. Re:Which do you believe? by moeinvt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "People get very confused about free will, because they believe it must be somehow seperated from the brain. But the brain _is_ the mind, and vice versa."

      That's rather presumptuous of you. I don't think it's a point of "confusion". The majority of people dispute (directly or implicitly) the mind-brain identity theory. Both Christianity and Islam have some concept of an "afterlife" and once you start talking about souls and spirits that transcend the physical body, the "free will" discussion is completely philosophical.

    154. Re:Which do you believe? by Bob-taro · · Score: 1

      C.S. Lewis said that based on biblical writings, Jesus must be one of the following 3 things: the Lord, a liar, or a lunatic. So yes, if you disbelieve His claims to Deity, then He sounds amazingly conceited.

      I think you are misunderstanding the parable about the woman caught in adultery. When Jesus says, "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone", his point wasn't (in my opinion) that the guiltless may condemn, but that none of us are guiltless! Jesus also taught, "Judge not lest ye be judged." You'll also notice that Jesus himself, though he is regarded as sinless, when the woman's accusers left said, "then neither do I condemn you".

      Jesus did say basically "leave everything and follow me" several times in scripture, and the very early Christian church does seem to have had a communal structure ("everyone owned everything in common"). But I don't see anywhere in scripture where this is said to be THE way to run society. The incident where He cleared out the temple doesn't seem to me to say that He hates merchants, just He doesn't want them IN the temple.

      --
      Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
    155. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christianity, especially early Christianity, promises a resurrection in the flesh, a physical reincarnation.

    156. Re:Which do you believe? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      Regarding your first point - There is a lot of back story that you have to familiar with (Mosaic law, etc) in order for this to make sense. Check out this - http://www.albanymaranatha.org/writings/grace.shtml

      Woah, regarding the temple - The money changers and other merchants were selling "holy" money and "holy" animals for Jewish sacrifice. They were charging ridiculous prices and ripping the people off. Thus turning God's "house of worship into a den of thieves". Although the Temple may have been *used* in the fashion you suggest that was *not* it's intended purpose. Even wikipedia gets the fact that this is not about communism. (Wikipedia obviously is not an authority on the bible).

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    157. Re:Which do you believe? by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      " . . .it seems so incredibly unlikely that one day a cell just "plopped" into existence"

      What if God did that?

      Just because science casts extreme doubt upon the literal interpretation of the Old Testament, doesn't mean that it's fundamentally incompatible with the concept of $deity.

    158. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, increased snowfall is a symptom of global climate change, since warmer air holds more water and hence produces more precipitation.

    159. Re:Which do you believe? by dclydew · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ah, but you are incorrect. Discordians study Random Chaos, non-random chaos, chaotic randomness and randomly chaotic studies.

      --
      Get a life, not a lifestyle. - Hikem Bey
    160. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No amount of computing power can circumvent the uncertainty principal.

    161. Re:Which do you believe? by bryguy5 · · Score: 1
      There is some evidence that the people who wrote the bible wrote what they knew to be true (so they were credible witnesses as far as it goes since many of the verifiable parts of their stories check out).

      There is some evidence that the supernatural stuff about jesus was already rumbling around that area in several other countries attached to several other dieties.
      In all the accounts there is also unanimous agreement that he at least appeared to perform supernatural acts with critics denouncing him as a magician or demon possesed - Talmud, Roman accounts. I am not familiar with reports of other contemporaries/dieties but am not suprised either as even the bible mentions other magicians, etc.

      There is some evidence that some of the books of the bible were not written by one person.
      True, Gospel of Mark, Luke, and John are fairly well established, although John may have been compiled and written by some of his followers instead. Authorship of Matthew is more up in the air. Even modern books have editors and help - remember writing was rocket science for the day and almost anyone would need a lot of help to pull of a piece as long as any of the gospels.

      There is some evidence that some books of the bible were suppressed by the early church.
      There is also writings that show us the debates and reasons these books were deemed heretical. The vast majority of them were written 100 to 200 years after the earlier gospels and had a tendency to remove Jesus from the historical facts and use him to promote gnostic or other theologies. Feel free to pull out the gnostic gospels and decide if they offer a more historical account.

      There is a lot of credible evidence that modern christians are anti-truth because they ignore vast mounds of physical evidence because it contradicts genesis. They have been caught lying and suppressing the truth. They are not acting christ like.. or even disciple like. They do not value the truth. They do not respect honest seekers of truth.
      Now this is a damming charge. And I can't simply deny that many modern Christians argue and debate based on faith rather than facts.

      This has a lot to do with History of course. Far from suppressing the truth the Church was the originator of Universities, higher education, and the scientific method. But along with a passion for truth and reason came an endless stream of debate, argument, bloodshed, and fighting. This gave rise to Evangelical movments with a "practical faith" with an anti-intellectual atittude - what you do is more important than what you say or debate. Despite many positive aspects of this movement (end of british slavery to name one), the church members started losing the firm rational backing on which their individual faith was based.

      For more on this read http://www.missionfrontiers.org/2008/02/PDFs/15-18%20Mangalwadi.pdf. Also a look at Britians Evangelical Movement http://www.missionfrontiers.org/2008/02/PDFs/11-14%20Rice%20Article.pdf

      I categorically refute the charge that Christianity is only for the ignorant. There are plenty of arguments that would lead a thinking man in the direction of faith and lead many cynics to realize christianity is not baseless nor stupid as they have sterotyped it to be.

      "Going to heaven" is very different than most people think. If your entire personality ceases to exist and only an animating spirit/soul sans personality goes to heaven, then most people would view that as the same as death. So most people really don't believe christianity anyway... they engage in a mental kung-fu and think that if some part of them survives completely sans their personality then that's okay... heck, let me clone their bloody cells and keep those alive forever-- would that be immortal life? Christianity is always portrayed in the media as i

    162. Re:Which do you believe? by dclydew · · Score: 1

      Documented? Other than the Bible can you find a single credible source that documents the existence of Jesus, Son of Joseph?

      --
      Get a life, not a lifestyle. - Hikem Bey
    163. Re:Which do you believe? by iivel · · Score: 1

      And I'd feel compelled to point out that this is due to only 2 related causes.
      1.) Uncertainty Principle 2.) Lack of a complete, accurate unified theory [hey, one may not even exist in the universe]
      Given an absolute understanding of all mechanics involved, and the exact starting position, velocity, etc. I believe it would be calculable [if there is a stringent set of underlying systems ... ala unified theory].
      Ignoring for the this argument, that you cannot know the original state QM doesn't prevent these types of calculations persay...we don't currently have a physical theory that can properly account for a deterministic universe, but it can't be discounted either ... we don't have any particularly strong theories to discount it.

    164. Re:Which do you believe? by Quattro+Vezina · · Score: 1

      *sighs* - I bet he's skeptical about anthropomorphic climate change too (there seems to be an extraordinarily high overlap between the two groups). Actually, the belief in anthropogenic climate change is the religion.

      Real scientists are threatened, harrassed, and intimidated into joining the cult. Don't believe me? Check this out.

      I reject both creationism and anthropogenic climate change.
      --
      I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
    165. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Personally I just cannot take "the leap of faith" about the origins of life ; it seems so incredibly unlikely Argument from personal incredulity. It does nothing to derail scientific theories of origins.

      that one day a cell just "plopped" into existence with the ability to procreate Straw man. Show me one theory of abiogenesis that assumes molecules just accidentally assembked to produce a simple single-celled organism.

      Is it not perfectly sane to refuse a theory that has no PROOF about it's vital premises ? Begging the question. Science has mounds of evidence supporting evolution, but I suspect you'll just assume I'm under their hypnotic spell in saying so. Look, the reality is we can observe life forms readily changing their DNA to adapt to environmental changes. All the Theory of Evolution does is extrapolate this to account for the diversity of life as we see it. It's theory based on observation, like every other branch of science.

      However, I will grant that it IS perfectly sane (though not necessarily correct) for a layperson to refuse to accept a scientific theory when he or she does not understand or trust the evidence.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    166. Re:Which do you believe? by hclewk · · Score: 1, Informative

      John Smith has a great little religion going based on hearsay information too. Do you believe his religion? John Smith as in the Pocahontas guy or did you mean Joseph Smith, a Prophet of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints? And me and 13.2 million(ish) other people resoundingly say "Yes".

      "Going to heaven" is very different than most people think. Lol. And you know because?

      People like you say, "Your religion is wrong, because you have no proof." Well, first of all I have a ton of anecdotal evidence that supports what my religion says. Is my personal anecdotal evidence enough to convince anyone else of the truth? Of course not. You'll have to find your own evidence.

      Secondly, I say to you, where is the proof that my religion is wrong?

      Also, I want to point out that I am Mormon (aka. I go to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints), and I believe that the earth was created in 7 "days", though I don't believe that said day was defined as one revolution of the earth. (Why would God define time by the rotation of a celestial body that wasn't yet created?)

      I believe that the account of the creation of the Earth in Genesis supports scientific findings of evolution.

      Also, let it be known, that when I say Religion, I mean denomination. Mormons are Christian.
    167. Re:Which do you believe? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      OK, then, you tell me what is the intended point of the sinless throwing the first stone incident? The so called sin was sleeping with the prostitute. Jesus wrote the names down of the people accusing her in the sand one by one who have had inapropriate relations with the prostitute. One by one they all left for fear of being punished for their own sins too. It was basically saying why do you punish someone for what you took part in. That is the entire premise behind Jesus arguing with them that they shouldn't be seeking to kill him now that he exposed their secretes. They should instead be following the teaching of Abraham and doing the work set out by him which would mean no adultery.

      That is bullshit and you know it. You are making it out as if the merchants in the temple were an isolated anti-religious group of blasphemers. The temple for the Jews was rather similar to the Forum for the Romans -- it was a meeting ground, a social place, and far more than just a holy shrine. Jesus took it upon himself to commit acts of vandalism and -- for lack of a better word -- terrorism, just to further his own nihilistic philosophy.
      It was established jewish law that you couldn't do anything on the sabbath. It was a day of rest (jesus was a Jew after all). It was the romans who let the people open shop on the sabbath. His actions where more or less of enforcing jewish laws.

      This is what the op meant by you didn't pay attention in Sunday school. It wouldn't surprise me if you have never attended church or attempted to understand the bible either old or new testaments and are going off of someone else's musing written on a web site somewhere. Either way, you have failed to grasp the very basic concepts of the two stories that you mentioned. You will find that they are clear and serve a purpose other then you have described if you took the simple task of understanding them and the concept behind them.
    168. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      assembked I need to proofread better.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    169. Re:Which do you believe? by Shirakawasuna · · Score: 1

      Ah, but then you get torn apart in review when you're too selective in your interpretations. The incentive for personal achievement, publishing, etc, is counterbalanced by complete shame if you are found doctoring data, a general sense of propriety, and of course peer review. You can pad your papers with classic academic-ese to inflate claims without lying per se, but that's about as far as you can get without some stinging replies.

      Note that this is different from personal advocacy of pet projects, etc, of which you are more familiar than most other people. That is healthy academic competition and quite unlike a general dogmatic orthodoxy, as you probably know.

    170. Re:Which do you believe? by cryptoguy · · Score: 1

      Let's see now... who's smarter, Al Gore or Ben Stein? No contest. Money muddies the water quite a bit. Follow the money, and you'll see why there are academics who line up with Gore. And, follow the money, and you'll see why some scientists line up with Stein. Bottom line, the scientists have not yet "proven" their case. Only those predisposed to their conclusions accept them as fact.

    171. Re:Which do you believe? by Watts+Martin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't apologize for the snark; it's actually a very valid question. There are examples of filtering and interpreting evidence so as to favor a given viewpoint in the publishing of even ostensibly peer-reviewed scientific papers, but these examples are nearly always driven by money, not by ideology: a pharmaceutical company or an oil company or a tobacco company funds research on a new drug or on climate change or on smoking, and darned if that research doesn't support the company's position.

      However, the idea that there's an irrational, conspiratorial bias against challenges to the theory of evolution is, to be very polite, dubious. Researchers who cast serious doubt on evolutionary theory using the scientific method, producing results that were consistent and repeatable, would surely get a whole lot of flak at first -- but they'd eventually be given Nobel prizes. That's the kind of thing that makes careers. The kind of thing that destroys careers is making extraordinary claims that fall apart under testing -- or, as in the case of intelligent design, making extraordinary claims that can't be tested at all.

      In a lot of ways, ID uses the same "logic" as any classic conspiracy theory: searching the "accepted truth" for any (apparently) unexplained gaps and shrieking Ah-HA! This disproves it all! Trying to fight these theories is a tedious and dispiriting proposition; you often have to try to bring your opponent up to speed on knowledge they'd need to have (and accept) to examine the evidence critically, and they're far from a receptive audience. And even if you manage that, there's going to be another "gap" they can find. And another. And if you have to eventually try and explain that data which isn't accounted by the theory is not the same as predicting a specific outcome which turns out to be wrong? Good luck with that.

    172. Re:Which do you believe? by Trinn · · Score: 1

      To make your statement true, the unified theory would have to also be a hidden-variable theory, which so far seems unlikely from what I've been able to read here on the periphery of such endeavors, but of course I could be dead wrong and we could get one tomorrow...its not like I know anything about tensors or whatever, I kinda stopped my math education somewhere around integral/differential calculus.

    173. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You can't determine the future state of the weather from the current state because of chaotic effects."

      Sigh... you have no idea what "chaotic" means in this case. It means that the weather is very sensitive to small changes in initial conditions. In this case, if we knew the exact state of the weather and had the computational power to run the equations, yes, we could predict it. However, not only do we not have the power necessary, our sensors are not accurate enough to determine initial conditions to avoid solution divergence.

    174. Re:Which do you believe? by Watts+Martin · · Score: 1

      It can hugely hurt the economy, imposing restrictions that usually do more harm to the environment than good. It demonizes manufacturers, the American people, and any wealthy country. This is an oft-repeated accusation, but here's something to think about: just as the environmentalists have their Deep Pessimists ("nothing we can do will fix the problem we're all going to die," essentially), the other side has its equivalent, which is basically "fixing this problem will cost so much it will destroy the world economy, so shut up." The former group gets knocked about, often rightfully, for their bad predictions, but what about the latter group? I don't know how old you are, but I was around for the 1970s, when we were told that the changes in production required to repair the ozone hole would bankrupt companies and destroy the world economy etc. etc. It turned out, though: not so much. In fact, businesses say "this regulation will destroy our industry" all the time. We've been told that about pollution regulations on power plants and on just about every mandated change in the auto industry, from seat belts to air bags to increased fuel mileage.

      The "worst case scenarios" for global climate change may be overstated, but keep in mind that the past track record of the groups saying we can't do anything about this because it'll bankrupt us all! is very, very bad.

      Another minor but "thing to think about" point here: the best way to address pollution of all kinds, including greenhouse gases, is to make processes more efficient. Everything that goes up the smokestack or out the exhaust pipe is definitionally waste. In the long run, going green saves businesses money.

      I heard on the radio (they speaking about a clip from Dateline NBC) this morning that the socialist Bolivian president plans on filing suit against wealthy countries to make up for the fact that the glacier that they get their drinking water from is melting due to "global warming". And I'm sure Hugo Chavez wants a pony, too.
    175. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Jesus must be one of the following 3 things: the Lord, a liar, or a lunatic. This fallacy is so famous it has a name: the False Trilemma.

      First of all, crazy people and people who tell lies sometimes tell the truth, and are sometimes generally good people. Second of all, Lewis intentionally omits the possibility that the gospel accounts are incorrect. Either the gospel authors could have lying to deceive, or they could have been genuinely mistaken.

      Also, even conservative scholars grudgingly agree that the "woman caught in adultery" story is probably apocryphal.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    176. Re:Which do you believe? by CustomDesigned · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Going to heaven" is very different than most people think. If your entire
      personality ceases to exist and only an animating spirit/soul sans personality
      goes to heaven, then most people would view that as the same as death. So most
      people really don't believe christianity anyway... they engage in a mental
      kung-fu and think that if some part of them survives completely sans their
      personality then that's okay... heck, let me clone their bloody cells and keep
      those alive forever-- would that be immortal life? Christianity is always
      portrayed in the media as if the people's personality survives.


      Your conclusions match those of orthodox Christians. As Paul puts it, "If
      Christ be not risen, our faith is in vain." That is why the resurrection of
      the body is a key Christian doctrine. Without that, the whole thing is
      rather pointless.


      At the time of Christ, Greek philosophy put a lot of stock in "ideals" (think
      Plato's cave). Hence, many early Christians rejected the resurrection of
      the body in favor of the more Greek idea of losing all that messy matter,
      leaving only the ideal essence. Some went so far as to claim that Jesus
      didn't actually exist physically, but was only an illusion to show us the
      ideal. These were called "Gnostics", and much of the new testament is aimed at refuting their ideas. As John says in his first epistle, "That which our eyes
      have seen, our ears have heard, and our hands have handled...".


      So the media depiction of "Christianity" is actually Gnosticism - and I am
      always shocked by how many Church members are actually Gnostics. But
      orthodox Christianity promises a resurrection of the body (and Christ
      is called the "first fruits" of that resurrection), *and* a new heavens
      and a new *earth*. I.e. life after death is supposed to have trees, animals,
      flowers, hugs, etc. For modern Christians, it implies a new universe.


      There are some strange aspects mentioned. For instance,
      Jesus says that "in the resurrection, they are neither married nor
      given in marriage". Which could either mean no sex, or sex no longer morally
      limited by marriage, or something even better than sex. Another strange
      mention: "there shall be no more sea". That one dismays me more than
      the no marriage - I love the ocean. I can only hope that the Designer knows
      what He's doing...

    177. Re:Which do you believe? by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

      but I have a feeling that Heisenberg will come along to put the kibosh on those dreams...


      Quite. Quantum mechanical models for alpha-decay of radioactive nuclei agree quite well with the Schrödinger equation, and unless there is something fundamentally wrong with the postulates of quantum mechanics this effectively means that the time it will take for any particular radioactive nucleus to decay is truly random. I.e, the moment upon which it will decay is not a well defined function of its initial conditions.

      Now, some people may argue that we can't ever know anything for certain, and that this includes if quantum mechanics is true or not. I will merely point out that such a statement is quite a naive interpretation of the philosophy of science, and that it can't in fact be true if logic is to be considered valid. Now if you really want to you could doubt the validity of fundamental logic. In case, will you tell Kant that he's a bastard when you see him ?
    178. Re:Which do you believe? by broter · · Score: 1

      "Christians and Hindus believe him, Jesus, to be God..."

      Hindus? Could you give us some references to support a polytheist religion believing a monotheist god?

      --
      "One man can change the world with a bullet in the right place."
      - Mick Travis, "If..."
    179. Re:Which do you believe? by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1

      " . . .it seems so incredibly unlikely that one day a cell just "plopped" into existence"

      What if God did that?


      That is the hypothesis put forward by Michael Behe. He envisions the first cell not as the very simple one envisioned by most evolutionists, but as a very complex one containing DNA for all the irreducibly complex mechanisms of life. That cell then began reproducing, and adapting to all the varied environments of earth via natural selection , with descendants losing DNA in the process (and gaining adaptive mechanisms that are not irreducibly complex).

    180. Re:Which do you believe? by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      It is also the filtering of evidence and interpretation of evidence so as to favor one's viewpoint. Quite common in our science today. It is quite common everywhere you have humans, which would include science. If you don't believe me, check out the long, long list of cognitive biases.

      The difference is that the scientists agree to play by certain rules that try to filter out the crap. It can take a while, because the truth is slippery, and humans were evolved for surviving, not research.

      But compare the progress in science over the last couple hundred years with progress in philosophy or theology or politics, and I think you'll agree those johnnies in the lab have done pretty well.
    181. Re:Which do you believe? by skatecat · · Score: 1

      First, Ben Stein is also a lawyer and a law professor. Next, if you were to actually watch the movie, you might see that it's not scientists on one side and Stein on the other. It's a bunch of prominent scientists, mathmeticians and other professors against the vanguard of Darwinists. Please, do see the movie and then you, like so many other ignorant commentators, might have something to comment on rather than simply insulting and erroneously characterizing Ben Stein.

    182. Re:Which do you believe? by Trinn · · Score: 1

      No they don't, and besides, I wouldn't know, I'm not one

    183. Re:Which do you believe? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      But record cold sure isn't.
      Unless the global change is cooling.
      There has also been record cold this year as well. But one year isn't enough data.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    184. Re:Which do you believe? by pe1rxq · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1 It doesn't matter who thought of it first or why... That doesn't make it any less or more credible.

      2 If I told a lie would it be any less of a lie if millions believed me? Or for that matter wether I tell it now or a long time ago?

      3 Same argument... The amount of people that take some guys existence for granted without any proof doesn't give the idea more credibility.


      Interestingly both Jesus and the FSM (may his meatballs be ever spicy!) are well documented but you choose to believe a parody to have equal weight to an historic person. Delusional ever?


      On that topic... besides that one book those christians keep talking about.... could you show me some actual evidence that he is an actual historic person and not just a mythical figure?

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    185. Re:Which do you believe? by cdpage · · Score: 1

      The whole premises of science is the search for proof... until then it is only theory.
      There is proof that organisms seemingly come from nothing... there is proof that they can survive the harshest of climates. There is proof of evolution/mutation...
      Sure it seem rather 'unlikely' that something 'plopped' out from no where 3-4 billion years ago to use in the not so scientific community. But since that long ago on much can be explained. Much can be theorized. and much can be Proved.
      plop is an interest word though... who's to say it didn't 'plop' in from an extremophile hitching a ride from another planet/meteor.
      should there be a divine plan, we are more likely a little part of it. rather than the whole part it.

    186. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc.


      this is a very, very naive view.

      let's bring this current... and talk about the scientific community and alleged global warming.

      the earth has cooled since 1998. the earth's temperature has been level since either 2002 or 2003.

      the earth's oceans have not risen in temperature, as predicted by global warming.

      all these empirical *facts* contradict global warming, so these unbiased scientists are out talking about how global warming isn't occurring, right? nope. many are still out preaching their well funded gospel in ignorance or deception.

      this winter was one of the coldest in recent history.

      heck, i just snowed in seattle - IN APRIL!

      this analogy is eerily similar because the trut is we simply don't know what the heck is going on the and the biased scientists can't readily admit it.

      this is true of macro-evolution, too. we just don't know because the data is nothing if not totally unclear.

      for example, the idea that there is 100% extinction of each and every of 100s of millions transitional entities is, on its face, absurd. yet, it must be so because not a single transitional entity can be identified today!

      crank up the ad hominem attacks, because you won't be able to attack the actual argument. even worse, you won't care...

      all that bias and all.
    187. Re:Which do you believe? by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      First off, I think that hypothesis and tests can be cited for intelligent design. Yes, one could prove that life was designed. But the intelligent design proponents have not yet offered testable hypotheses with greater explanatory power than the current model. Please encourage them to do so.

      If somebody could actually prove that, it would be the find of the century, and possibly the millennium.

      Be careful what you wish for, though. It could just as well be proof for the von Daniken-style space-alien uplift nuts or the Stargate fans, instead of the big sky daddy that the Discovery Institute people want to find. And if they find a message in Arabic or Punjabi or Farsi, it will be the Muslims, Sikhs, or Bahais celebrating rather than the Christians.
    188. Re:Which do you believe? by FnordX · · Score: 1

      That's the problem right there, "believe". I can "believe" that snakes grow on trees, and that honey comes from electrical outlets, but unless I can "prove" any of that, scientifically, I'm just a nut who likes to lick electrical outlets and is afraid of trees!

      --
      ____________________
      Clouds in the Sky,
      Water in a bottle
    189. Re:Which do you believe? by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      String theory/Quantum Physics. Being much of the data requires a random varable. Many people in the sciencetific comunity Mocked the idea (Albert Einstine: God doesn't play dice). Now in an open comunity they would have taken the theory and looked at the numbers much more carfuly and sees that this theory even with the random elements seems to fit obersvations. For a large part these theory stayed alive by force of will continually forcing it back on topic. If the sciencetist who came up with the theory didn't have the same force of will, the sciencetist will say that is ludicrus and then they will go back to the lab thinking of something else.

      Sorry, you don't understand quantum mechanics, and your grammar is so poor, that I'm not even sure what it is you are trying to say. But, in short, the example you give is actually the counter example of your argument. If Einstein's opinion were taken as gospel, then quantum theory would have been rejected simply by Einstein's force of will. Yet, it was not. It was the evidence that mattered, not anyone's force of will.

      And as for Pluto, again, this is not a point of theory. Whether or not Pluto is classified as a full planet, a dwarf planet, or a giant comet does not impact the theory of gravity, or any other theory in any way. This is not an issue of who is right and who is wrong, it's a question about how we should classify a thing in the absence of a good classification system. There is no right or wrong answer here that impacts any theory. Pluto will not stop going around the sun because we've decided that it is not a planet.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    190. Re:Which do you believe? by Panaflex · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to argue with your post - well written as it is. From the "faithful" side of the debate, however, a scientist proclaiming theological truth of God's death is just as ridiculous.

      It's like a biologist explaining engine design, or a historian explaining computational theory - it's rarely pretty. And when they utilize their scientific credentials to base theological assertion as fact, I think the outcome is obviously going to lead to bickering and finger pointing.

      For what it's worth - I see ID as a worthy theological topic. It is not a scientific theory, and while I encourage a good debate on the subject, I think we should recognize it for what it is. I don't want to discourage anyone from participating in this subject - but it's important to publish and debate in the appropriate forum.

      --
      I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
    191. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is more than a computer cannot represent an infinite precision number, due to the fact that a computer is a physical object.

      Philosophical discussions about the meaning of truth in this discusion are spurious. Moreover, the uncertainty principle is far more sweeping that you dismissively seem to be implying... best check yo'self be'fo you wreck yo'self!

    192. Re:Which do you believe? by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      I am all for being responsible with the environment but saying that "It can't hurt" is dead wrong. The less glib way to make his point is that given the cost and risk tradeoffs, it is worth some effort to cut carbon emissions until our science catches up and we know for sure. Think of it as buying insurance.

      It can hugely hurt the economy[...] This is probably incorrect. You could substitute carbon taxes for other taxes with minimal economic impact, and a great deal of progress in reduced emissions. The trick is to start immediately, so that we don't have to take particularly drastic action. With research and technology adoption, slow and steady wins the race. Replacing all our power plants in one year is hideously expensive, but replacing them as they wear out is in effect free.
    193. Re:Which do you believe? by johnlcallaway · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well my story is just the opposite. All my life I've heard people "preaching" about evolution because some guy with glasses and a lab coat told them so. Personally I just cannot take "the leap of faith" about the origins of life ; it seems so incredibly unlikely
      that one day a cell just "plopped" into existence with the ability to procreate, and then against all odds survived everything the galaxy will throwed at it for 6 billion years.

      Let me understand this ... you can't comprehend that on the millions of possible planets out there that it isn't possible for the conditions to have occurred during billions of years to create the first cells.

      But you can comprehend in an almighty force that is all knowing, exists everywhere, created this entire universe just for this one planet, put us on it, pays attention to the prayers of billions of people, and gives us free will, then punishes us for using it if we don't follow his rules. Which he can't seem to adequately communicate since there are what, about 20 different main religions, and over 1,000 different Christian sects??

      Your faith requires some real leaps of faith, where my beliefs just requires being able to say 'I don't know the answer to that'.

      The more I learn about other religions, the more I am convinced Christianity is just nuts and no different from believing in Santa Claus.

      --
      I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    194. Re:Which do you believe? by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      An Inconvenient Truth... ;-)

    195. Re:Which do you believe? by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "In a lot of ways, ID uses the same "logic" as any classic conspiracy theory: searching the "accepted truth" for any (apparently) unexplained gaps and shrieking Ah-HA! This disproves it all! "

      Which is also foolish. I'd just like to have open discussion. There were scientists who once believed man could not travel faster than 60mph.

      But a closed door to discussion breeds a dangerous ground. It is better to let one speak his folly and be judged than to demand silence and censorship.

    196. Re:Which do you believe? by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "The difference is that the scientists agree to play by certain rules that try to filter out the crap."

      Agreed...but I don't recall censorship and refusal to allow a topic to be addressed as one of those.

    197. Re:Which do you believe? by lord_dragonsfyre · · Score: 1

      I'd say a lot of it is not observable or disprovable, perhaps insightful. Theories such as infinitely expanding and collapsing universe, universes. And various other ideas often taught have serious lacks on disprovability. But there is no issue in teaching or discussing these in class. Be careful with terms like "observable" or "disprovable". We can't observe the creation of the universe, but the Big Bang theory does make testable predictions that we can observe, and thereby infer some level of evidence for it. If we observe a universe that matches the universe we would expect from a Big Bang event (which by and large, I think we have, though I know less about cosmology than about other fields), the theory gains credibility; if we observe a universe that doesn't, then it loses it.

      This is where I disagree. First off, I think that hypothesis and tests can be cited for intelligent design. I think statements to the nature of discovery of design patterns across species and various levels is just one good prediction for testing. No worse than Darwin's proposition that transitional forms should exist. Name one. Seriously, the ID creationist movement has been remarkably un-forthcoming about these testable predictions. The closest we've gotten are Behe's "irreducible complexity", which is essentially an argument from personal incredulity, every known instance of which has been debunked, and Dembski's "specified complexity", which is mostly just a hideous misunderstanding of information theory. There's a profound lack of solid, testable claims coming out of ID-c, and that's very telling.

      The so-called "design patterns across species" are being explored right now in the very cool field of evo-devo, by the way, and turn out to strongly support our modern understanding of genetics and evolution.
      --
      "I have spread my dreams under your feet, Tread softly, because you tread on my dreams." - W. B. Yeats.
    198. Re:Which do you believe? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I agree- and I responded to the parent poster in part because I thought the "Troll" moderation was unfair. I commented sardonically on the way that slashdot moderation is goofy some times.

      "Mods" are a community-- some are pro M$, some are pro linux, some are anti-religion, some are pro-religion, some are reasonable, some are pissed off this morning about something, some even misread and mis-mod.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    199. Re:Which do you believe? by rossifer · · Score: 1

      C.S. Lewis said that based on biblical writings, Jesus must be one of the following 3 things: the Lord, a liar, or a lunatic.
      There are still more alternatives than just that list.
      • Jesus may have been misquoted.
      • Jesus may have been several early leaders, and somewhere between 34 A.D. and 50-200 A.D. (when the Gospels were actually written), the story got "simplified".
      • Jesus may have been fabricated by the pre-gospel Christian storytellers, and what we have in the Gospels is a "best of" collection of stories about an apocryphal idealized founder of a religion.

    200. Re:Which do you believe? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Not really-- I dropped "some" in that sentence and you can't fix things on Slashdot.

      I have friends who are christians that do not try to suppress or ostracize folks who don't believe.
      I should have said "some modern christians" (and it is quite vocal and large minority)...

      Some folks believe in science and believe in god and just view that where they contradict each other that the bible is a metaphor or parable written by ancient primitive tribesfolk but that the essential truth (god exists, he cares about humans, he came to earth in mortal form and died so that we could live after death) is still true. I'm okay with them-- they are not putting out stupid crap like Ben Stien's movie.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    201. Re:Which do you believe? by rezalas · · Score: 1

      I find it entertaining that you all continue to insult people for belief in something you cannot see or prove, despite being the same people who cannot see or prove that a big explosion made existance by accident. I believe in God, its a theory, my theory, but I do believe it. You say there is no evidence to support it. Well, you say you dont and thats fine too. What isn't fine is saying I'm stupid or dilusional when parts of science are faith (as with the big bang). "we can't prove it yet" doesn't make it science, its blind faith. We are surrounded with things that cannot be explained, and when someone says "well, it could be god..." you accuse him of ramming a bible down your throat or being retarded. THAT however is the theoretical evidence supporting the hypothesis of God, the "little bits" that cannot be explained. Don't get me wrong, I acknowledge the idea of evolution and even accept it to be true. However, proof of evolution does not disprove God, infact I think that it helps prove there is a god because of how structured the universe is. You cannot say why gravity works. Sure, mass density pull yeah all that but those are additional functions to the object. WHY does it work? honestly, why? What made it so that gravity functions based on anything? Why does any of it function? In accepting the possibility of God you don't become less of a scientist, but in denying the possibility you DO show how close minded you've become. THAT is the point of the movie. You have become so close minded that you are performing the very supression that scientists fought to rid themselves of.

    202. Re:Which do you believe? by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're just plain wrong. I'm an academic. My field is in religion. That means it's my degree and I've spent many years studying the historical issues specifically and it's what I still do. I can assure you there is no good outside evidence for the existance of a real person named Jesus. If you actually read the gospels, you see that out of all of them there is only one gospel asserts that Jesus was ever an actual person. The other gospels have no concept of that.

    203. Re:Which do you believe? by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 2, Informative

      And let me furthermore state I don't know a single historian who would agree that he DID exist historically. Seriously you are just making this all up. For fucks sake this is my career.

    204. Re:Which do you believe? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      There are other contemporary egyptian babylonian gods who shared large parts of the christian mythos. Horus and osirus have a lot of commonalities with jesus.

      It depends on which folks you talk to about the personality/soul thing- but the folks I know that go to a very "technical" church that has a divinity school and goes into the root meanings of all the words back view this up. They find the view that steelers fans are all sitting around watching the steelers games from heaven to be goofy.

      Yea, it's ironic that early christians were strong seekers of the truth and put a lot of the ethical backbone of science down-- then later christians had a problem when physical evidence started contradicting maybe 5%-10% of the bible. A lot of the bible is verifiable and it is a reasonably good historical source. But some parts (creation myth) are in conflict with reality if you take them literally instead of metaphorically.

      As I said in my other post-- i should have said "some" again ("some modern christians")-- not all modern christians are actively anti-truth/knowledge. A large, vocal minority are- but a lot of them are decent folks who are trustworthy and who are mostly open minded (but still of rock solid irrational faith).

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    205. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer Hofstadter's view, in that free will operates on a different level - the level of emergent human consciousness - and therefore (in)determinism cannot apply to free will any more than a single water atom can be wet.

    206. Re:Which do you believe? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      You are missing the point. First MY SPELLING AND GRAMMER BESIDES THE POINT (I am not natually good at such and I cannot have a spell checker on my PC at this location... So deal)
      I am not arguing my knowlege in quantum mechanics. I am arguing that Sciencetist are Human beeings with the same emotional failings as the rest of humanity.
      For example...

      A. you state you are a Scienctist, A point to try to intimate me from pressing my point, Trying to use your credentials to make me look less qualified. I am a Consultant I often work with Scientists, who think they are so smart that they end up leaving a Programming Mess that I need to fix and make proper, because they are too proud of themselfs to ask a lowly IT Guy to fix a problem. See I can intimade back too. That brought us no where.

      B. You are arguing Details not the root issue of the Argument. The fact that Pluto is not a theory just a classification is inmaterial the point I gave was in fast to show how many sciencetist react to change. They act humanly not nessarly rationally. Often Arguing Details is a point of emotional responce not a logical responce. Just as the Creationist Cry Not enough fossil evidence. Unwilling to debate the big picture because you are stuck on a detail. You need to remember this is Slashdot not a Paper. I don't have the inclenation or Time to find primary sources and quote them.

      Your arguments are very Human and not very logical. You are attempting to discredit my Hypothis (it is not a Theory it is just my Hypothis, You know the first step in the sciencetific method that they teach us in like 8th grade). But remember Sciencetist are human and will act emotionally just as a someone who is a fundemtal religious, and will use every thing in their play book to proove their point, while ignoring issues that will make their view seem wrong.

      The problem I see is the argument of symantic not the science itself. Much of the anger from the sciencetific comunity is the fact that people are using God to explain Random Varable. For the most part that is it. And many of the Athiest Sciencetist are making a large fuss about it because they are pressuing their beliefs on others. Just like humans do. If I beleave in a God and assume that God is creating something infinatly complex that we as hummans cannot possible comprehend. Vs. just saying it is random, what is the difference, Nothing, as long it doesn't stop us to see if there are any more patterns in the randomness that could help us futher. The danger of using God to explain things is the fact that it put a terminator on further investigation, and God shouldn't be a factor in the equasion when there is a pattern to be found. But for Random and God they are both Termanating words. If it is truely random means there is no hope of further investigation in that area, just as God did it.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    207. Re:Which do you believe? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I agree that there is no true revelation other than personal revelation (i.e. if you tell me god told you something, I can't tell you from a madman).

      I don't feel the need to prove your religion wrong as long as it doesn't get into suppressing hard evidence, cutting funds for real science, violate the social contract (murder, taxes, child abuse, etc.) and so on. You and your buds can believe whatever goofy thing you want.

      "And I know because"... I only know what christians tell me. The ones who are serious and have a divinity school and the sources they have referred me to and a few books/articles I've read on the subject over my lifetime (which are all mashed together in my muddly mind) say this is the truth of their religion. It was surprising enough for me to remember. The soul separate from the "steeler's" fan.

      Of course, if you think about it- an ordinary human life stretched over eternity is probably a form of hell... at the end, you would be completely jaded- probably unable to fall in love any more, given eternity and human nature, over eternity, you would experience both infinite happiness and infinite misery and infinite boredom.

      Mormons are not christians. That's some goofy thing they started this century. I can worship a pineapple and say I'm christian but that doesn't make me one. Mormons do not believe the key passages of the bible and instead use a different definition for who god and jesus are. It is very weasely to do this and makes you mormons look bad to the rest. It is about as goofy as a Hindu religion somehow claiming they are christians too. Just accept the glory of your own unique beliefs and move on. Using tortured grammar and logic to say you are christians just isn't working among anyone I know.

      And sorry- it was joe smith, my bad. I'm sloppy a bit on /. its a discussion not a term paper but that was a pretty big error. Apologies.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    208. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once again, please read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus

      Also, remember that the Bible is a collection of many different sources. It's more like a compendium than a single book.

    209. Re:Which do you believe? by ricegf · · Score: 1

      If your entire personality ceases to exist and only an animating spirit/soul sans personality goes to heaven, then most people would view that as the same as death.

      Just in the interest of accuracy, Christianity (specifically 1 Corinthians 15 and Revelation 21) does not teach that some "animating spirit/soul sans personality goes to heaven", but rather that a Christian will receive a new "imperishable body" (15:42) amidst a "new heaven and new earth" (21:1).

    210. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....But the brain _is_ the mind, and vice versa....

      That is an assertion that is unprovable or at least has some evidence against it. For one, the so called out-of-body-experience accounts have certain things in common that point to the existence of some kind of consciousness apart from the operation of the physical brain cells. We call the products of thought "Intellectual Property" and have an entirely different set of rules for that than we do for tangible stuff.

      Products of thought haver a material manifestation, but are in and of themselves immaterial. Explaining in intimate detail the chemistry of ink on paper does not help a bit in explaining the work of Shakespeare or Beethoven. These immaterial products have their origin in an immaterial mind. The brain is only the hardware (wetware?) interface device, just as the material guts of a PC are the interface device for the immaterial software, which again is the immaterial product of the immaterial mind of the programmer. IP is immaterial and can only come from an immaterial source.

      Those who are not willing to acknowledge the existence of a realm or dimension that goes beyond the physical are not true scientists. True scientists will attempt to learn ALL truth about ALL of reality. Immaterial objects have a different set of laws than tangible things. True Scientists will endeavor to learn these laws, just as the study the laws of physics.

      --
      All theory is gray
    211. Re:Which do you believe? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Actually... Mormons are not Christian. Although this is a common misconception. Please, give the bible a read. Just read the gospel if you like (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John). It doesn't take all that long to get through them - and once you do, I think you'll realize the difference between Mormonism and Christianity.

      Please understand that I'm not trying to attack you; I'm just trying clarify something that's often misunderstood.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    212. Re:Which do you believe? by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      My bad, I meant to include a link to the bible - you can read it for free on the Internet - This starts you at Matthew

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    213. Re:Which do you believe? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Couple thought questions...

      Which is more likely to you...
      That a cell plopped into existence...
      or
      A different god (say Vishna) is actually the "real" god and created the universe?

      Does it make it less unlikely if you consider the following...
      A cell "plopped into existence" from several pre-existing parts (we have seen that "cell like containers" form naturally... RNA pieces form naturally... organic chemistry has "lifelike" sequences that don't make the cut to "life").

      And finally...

      Galaxies have between 10,000,000 and 1,000,000,000,000 stars.
      There are roughly 100,000,000,000 galaxies in the universe.

      So, even if we give only one chance per YEAR that life will arise (and start to evolve from there since there are always selection pressures on any population)..
      You have roughly
      1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 "chances" per year alone that life will arise.

      For the purpose of argument, let's say that only 1/100,000 solar systems is capable of supporting some kind of life...

      That would mean "only" 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 "chances" per year that life would arise.

      So if the odds were 1/1,000,000,000,000,000,000 life would arise in 1,000 places throughout the universe *every year* and that life would arise in 3 places in the universe roughly every day.

      Of course, bacteria and small celled organisms actually have many generations per day (unlike us larger species) so once they exist anywhere... small celled organisms are going to explode everywhere.

      So just realize how rare and unlikely you are saying life has to be to require a god to exist.

      And the earth is 4,000,000,000 *years* old. The universe is ~16,000,000,000 *years* old.

      It's extremely unlikely that one person will win the powerball lottery and yet... those odds are "only" something like 1/235,000,000 (vs 1/1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)

      ---

      And a fundamental problem is this...
      If the entire universe is empty-- then god created all that extra stuff for no purpose and cares about humans. Otherwise, if the entire universe is not empty, then god created all those other sibling races that he cares about just as much (and like all parents - perhaps he likes some better than us). He's almost certainly done the Jesus thing billions of times if he exist and the universe is not empty.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    214. Re:Which do you believe? by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      Yes, your spelling and grammar are beside the point, however, it does make it difficult to understand your point. Which was the point I was making. That is not a point of intimidation, that is a point of fact. You need to understand that!! If I can't understand you, then there's no point in furthering the discussion.

      When talking about a subject that requires expertise, you should defer to an expert on those subjects for which they have that knowledge. I did not state that I am scientist to intimidate you, I stated this fact to establish that I know and understand the issues involved. So far, you have not stated anything that indicates that you have the same level of knowledge about this subject that I do. If you feel intimidated by that fact, that's your problem, not mine. And by the way, I have a degree in computer science as well as physics, so don't tell me about scientists doing programming. I know how bad that can get. Honestly, I don't know what your native language and culture is, but I suspect you're accusing me of trying to intimidate you based on your background. This is not the case.

      I have made the point about details, because details matter. You're claiming that there is a group mentality within science (and you'll be surprised to find out that I agree with you), however you have not even come close to explaining what this mentality is or how it operates. You are completely ignorant of it, and the examples that you are trying to provide do not illustrate it, nor do they even illustrate the point that you seem to be trying to make. You're trying to point out a problem in the scientific process, but when asked to provide an example, you don't provide one that makes your point, that's why the details are important. Otherwise you're arguing a point from the ether that may not even exhist.

      I'm not discrediting your hypothesis, because you haven't even made one yet. You're making a whole mish-mash of claims without giving proper evidence. In short, you are discrediting your own hypothesis by not understanding and adequately supporting your arguments.

      The problem with replacing "randomness" with God is because it is imprecise, and in many cases, it simply wrong. Google for "God of gaps" and you'll find many explanations for why this is the wrong approach. It is more than a semantic issue.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    215. Re:Which do you believe? by Poltras · · Score: 1
      You want unfair? -1, Troll on my post, while I was the first to spawn a really good discussion on the topic... You got two or three +5 posts here, I've only got Trolled... :)

      Oh well, I've lived longer than enough to know you should never trust moderators on hot topics. I have karma to burn anyway.

    216. Re:Which do you believe? by AmericanGladiator · · Score: 1

      **cough** ad-hominem attack **cough**

    217. Re:Which do you believe? by dubl-u · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed...but I don't recall censorship and refusal to allow a topic to be addressed as one of those. Censorship? You'll have to point me to where these science johnnies are burning books, confiscating the presses used by the Discovery Institute, and arresting people who suggest modifications to the modern evolutionary consensus.

      Because what it looks like to me is that they're saying that in science journals, you should only publish solid science. And that when universities hire science professors, they should get ones doing good scientific work. And of course, that it's not worth wasting time on pseudoscience.

      In my mind, that's not censorship; it's professional responsibility. If they spent all their time jawing with people who had wacky ideas and little to no proof, they'd be up to their ears no just in creationists, but psychics, crystal healers, UFO believers, ghost hunters, Loch Ness Monster proponents, astrologists, iridiologists, and people with perpetual motion machines and 250 MPG carburetors.

      As a taxpayer, I'm paying scientists to get serious science done. That includes shutting the office door on kooks.
    218. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once again, please read: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus [wikipedia.org]

    219. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Jesus lived, but was not the god ...

      I was not the one who made that anonymous post you replied to. The things Jesus supposedly said are either true or preposterously false. If these things He is reported to have said are false, this falsehood certainly has had a huge effect on the life of humanity on this planet.

      But what if it is true? What if the Creator God DID come here for a short time as a human, as Jesus claimed? Why are we such an arrogant being that assumes that all reality can be grasped by our senses? What if the reality we can perceive is like the tip of an iceberg? If you had a time-travel device, how would you explain modern technology to a first century person? Our technology is still limited to our present time-space dimensions, but if Jesus really was God, He came from a realm totally different from ours.

      If you attempted to describe our modern world to such a first century person, they'd have to BELIEVE you or not, whatever you told them. You could maybe take some small items with you, and/or pictures, but in the end they would still have to BELIEVE whatever evidence you showed them and where you claimed your origin was. They might even deem some of the evidence you show them "supernatural".

      In the same way, we either MAY believe or not, whatever the record states about the coming and purpose of Jesus and who He is. He too showed powers and abilities which we call "supernatural". He demonstrated power over nature and even of death itself.

      --
      All theory is gray
    220. Re:Which do you believe? by orclevegam · · Score: 1

      Comparing the brain to a computer is a rather poor analogy, because the brain doesn't have software, rather it modifies its own state. In this way, it's less like a turing machine, and closer to a von neuman machine. If you must compare it to a computer, a better comparison would be an FPGA, but that's not even a very good comparison. The neurons that make up the brain are the physical medium it operates on, but the arrangement and inter-connections between those neurons, further modified by various chemicals are what determines its state, and thus the outputs to any given inputs. In many ways the brain integrates three different systems in order to function. The electrical of synapse responses, the chemical of neuro-transmitters, and the physical of axon and ganglion arrangements. Of these all three can be modified, either directly, or by modifying the other two, and it's demonstrable that these modifications then produce changes in perception of inputs, and on outputs as well. The system is really very easy to explain without having to force the concept of software into the whole thing. As for your tangent on material versus immaterial products, that's a complete and total red-herring and I'm not going to bother with it.

      --
      Curiosity was framed, Ignorance killed the cat.
    221. Re:Which do you believe? by rcallan · · Score: 1

      There's snow in Baghdad because hell is freezing over, that's unrelated.

    222. Re:Which do you believe? by Wubby · · Score: 1

      It is also the filtering of evidence and interpretation of evidence so as to favor one's viewpoint. Quite common in our science today. Ah, but isn't the strength of science that this bias towards favored evidence is removed when others try to replicate the work or find other explanations for a conclusion? A scientist may see evidence for a particular conclusion, but if he doesn't provide the means for others to try and prove him wrong(falsifiability), then he isn't following good scientific protocol.

      ID/Creationism/Religion does not do this. It never provides the means to determine the truth for yourself. It assumes that it is true and can not be changed.

      Those "fired" scientists said "2+2=5" and their fellow scientists asked how/why/please-explain. The the poor persecuted "scientist" stamp his feet and said: I don't have too, I just know it!

      He was then asked to leave because he failed at his job. He wasn't expelled, he flunked out!
      --
      Sig
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars
    223. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....an ex-Christian....

      That's an oxymoron. There is no such thing. Judas followed Jesus around for about three years and would have, by most appearances and maybe even have considered himself to be a Christian. According to Jesus, the only way a person can become a Christian is through a spiritual re-birth. Just as in the physical, you can't be "unborn", so too nobody can be an "ex-christian". All this means is that they never were.

      The Apostle John writes: (John 2:19) They left us, but they were not part of us, for if they had been part of us, they would have stayed with us. They simply made it clear that none of them was really part of us.

      If you call yourself an "ex-christian" you could have never been one, at least not by the biblical definition of that word.

      --
      All theory is gray
    224. Re:Which do you believe? by molo · · Score: 1

      Snow in Bagdad this winter and record cold and snow in many places this winter also are interesting data points. Remember that "global warming" is only when measured on a global basis. Individual areas may become either warmer or colder. Weather is a chaotic system. When you add energy to a chaotic system, you increase the severity of the swings (adding noise) in addition to raising the mean. Snow in Baghdad doesn't contradict global warming.

      -molo
      --
      Using your sig line to advertise for friends is lame.
    225. Re:Which do you believe? by denzacar · · Score: 1

      So "I know a guy who knows a guy who maybe did something" is a valid reference?

      Nice.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    226. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      .....The temple for the Jews was rather similar to the Forum for the Romans ...

      That is what it degenerated to, but not the design of God and the laws God gave through Moses. The temple was to be meeting place alright, but a meeting place between man an God, not like the Roman Forum. The temple was known to be "The House of God", not a marketplace.

      Jesus reminded His generation of that rather forcefully.

      --
      All theory is gray
    227. Re:Which do you believe? by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      Apparently.

      "Global surface temperatures have increased about 0.74C (plus or minus 0.18C) since the late-19th century, and the linear trend for the past 50 years of 0.13C (plus or minus 0.03C) per decade is nearly twice that for the past 100 years. The warming has not been globally uniform. Some areas (including parts of the southeastern U.S. and parts of the North Atlantic) have, in fact, cooled slightly over the last century. The recent warmth has been greatest over North America and Eurasia between 40 and 70N. Lastly, seven of the eight warmest years on record have occurred since 2001 and the 10 warmest years have all occurred since 1995."

      From: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/globalwarming.html

      Notice that ncdc in the URL? I wonder what that stands for?

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    228. Re:Which do you believe? by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      At some point you have to "believe". You either believe in a higher power or you believe what some human scientist says. Either way you have to believe something. Check out this article:

      http://www.godandscience.org/evolution/locke.html

      Remember that everyone has some sort of agenda. Be it a Biblical writer or a scientist, you would do well to know what their true intent in disseminating information.

    229. Re:Which do you believe? by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      I'm a hindu, and although I've never heard of any specific hindu denomination worshiping Jesus as the supreme deiety, it wouldn't surprise me if one exists; after all what's one more God among the millions that we have already, and almost all of them have their own sects worshiping them above the others.

      Evidence of this religious assimilation can be found at my local temple where among the myriad of icons on the walls can be found a picture of Jesus and Mary, donated by a local church, right next to a picture of the Golden Temple donated by the local Gurdwara, and I believe Hunuman is on the other side.

      Of course considering the history of Hinduism this should be of surprise to no one, the way it spread through the Indian sub-continent was by assimilating all the gods from various tribal and other religions and incorporating them into it's pantheon. Seeing as it's been going on over the last five thousand years, why should it stop now?

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    230. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "Oh, and he Godwins himself at 2:40 in the linked video. Discussion over."

      you must be proud of yourself. you discovered 2:40 into the video that the rest of it is entirely rubbish.

      "striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc."

      maybe if you want to be part of that group you should walk to the walk.

      but anyway, your name is Whiney Mac Fanboy so why am i even bothering? with a nick like that its obvious you lack the intellect to correctly process the information i am giving you anyway.

      i bet you had decent things to say about ben before you heard about this movie.

    231. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....mounds of evidence supporting evolution....

      For every single piece of evidence evolutionists bring up, a smart creationists can re-interpret that so called evidence to support what the Bible records.

      The facts are that the universe we observe, especially life, contains tremendous amounts of information. NOBODY has ever demonstrated that information can come from *any* other source than a mind. In the case of life, it is the mind of God. A 747 airliner or a computer were first thoughts in the minds of humans. The code in DNA, like any computer code originated in a mind by processes of thought.

      --
      All theory is gray
    232. Re:Which do you believe? by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      I did... but I said 'besides that one book'...
      And no some early church fathers opinion doesn't mean shit to me...

      But lets suppose there really was a fellow named jesus a few thousand years ago.
      Why should I believe he was the son of some god? (And you also haven't shown any evidence of that ones existence).
      The romands crucified quite a lot of people and I bet some of them claimed to be the sons of the weirdest things...

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    233. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ... people who tell lies sometimes tell the truth...

      So how do you know when a liar is telling the truth and when not? If you had a time-travel device, how would you try to convince people of the first century of your origins here in our time and space and of the technology we take for granted?

      If Jesus really is God and came from BEYOND time and space itself, how could he convince mere mortals of His deity and power? Jesus ultimately demonstrated this by conquering our worst enemy -- death.

      In either case, then and now, no matter how much evidence you presented, both you and Jesus would have to be BELIEVED by the audience.

      --
      All theory is gray
    234. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....I can only hope that the Designer knows what He's doing.....

      I'm sure that he does. In that new world, time itself will be different and what we call entropy will be no more.

      We cannot really imagine what it will be like: (1 Cor 2:9) 9 But as it is written, "Eye has not seen, nor ear heard," nor has it entered into the heart of man, "the things which God has prepared for those who love Him."

      --
      All theory is gray
    235. Re:Which do you believe? by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Simple google search of "Extrabiblical Jesus" turns up this link. http://www.christian-thinktank.com/jesusref.html

      It is well established that Jesus of Nazareth walked the earth. What is up to debate is whether or not he was the only begotten son of God.

      You sound like a rather angry person when it comes to Christianity so I am sure this will mean nothing to you closed minded people.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    236. Re:Which do you believe? by doggo · · Score: 1

      "Luke 16:19-31"

      Meh. From a book "translated" & compiled by a bunch of Englishmen a thousand or more years after the events recounted. Not credible.

    237. Re:Which do you believe? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      It is to the Christians though; that's the point I'm making. Since there are no writings from the early church saying that "soul" is merely "animating force" or "energy without thought", then it makes sense that Christians believe that memory lives on.

    238. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is bullshit and you know it. You are making it out as if the merchants in the temple were an isolated anti-religious group of blasphemers. The temple for the Jews was rather similar to the Forum for the Romans -- it was a meeting ground, a social place, and far more than just a holy shrine. Jesus took it upon himself to commit acts of vandalism and -- for lack of a better word -- terrorism, just to further his own nihilistic philosophy.

      Actually, from the point of view that Jesus, who was a Jew and was espousing a Jewish point of view, the money changers were blaspheming the temple. Worse, because you had to change money from Roman money to Jewish money to worship in the temple, they were basically charging a tax to worship. This was a very populist move on his part, but it was also good application of Jewish theology. Sometimes a little civil disobedience can be good politics and the right thing to do. Saying that turning over a few tables and threatening them away is terrorism is more than a bit of a stretch. And the word nihilistic just doesn't belong anywhere in there at all.
    239. Re:Which do you believe? by hahafaha · · Score: 1

      Sure, in that particular instance, no one cast the first stone because the people present all partook in the sin. But the underlying message of the story is that we should not judge others, because we are also guilty ``judge not lest ye be judged''. Also, Abrahamic law clearly states that adulterers should be stoned. Whether or not the other people were guilty is irrelevant; there may be a conflict of interest, but their guilt should not determine her punishment.

      As for Jesus enforcing Jewish laws: That is exactly my point! My problem with Jesus is that he takes upon himself to enforce laws, and selectively break them.

    240. Re:Which do you believe? by hahafaha · · Score: 1

      The difference is irrelevant. All that I meant by saying that I am an ex-Christian, is that I am familiar with Christian teachings. I may not have been a ``true'' Christian, whatever that means, but I am more than familiar with its doctrine, teachings, traditions, etc.

    241. Re:Which do you believe? by hahafaha · · Score: 1

      After posting the comment, I realised that nihilistic was in my head because of a completely unrelated conversation. And it was terrorism, if somewhat mild terrorism. My dictionary says that terrorism is ``The practise of coercing governments to accede to political demands by committing violence on civilian targets; any similar use of violence to achieve goals.'' That's precisely what he did!

    242. Re:Which do you believe? by FailedTheTuringTest · · Score: 1

      Jesus doesn't appear in Hindu scriptures, but many Hindus are quite happy to accept Jesus as a divine avatar or incarnation of Vishnu -- one of many such avatars, of course.

    243. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For every single piece of evidence evolutionists bring up, a smart creationists can re-interpret that so called evidence to support what the Bible records. But this is not science. Of course any and all observations can be re-explained to any desired explanation. But when experimental evidence consistently affirms testable hypothesis after testable hypothesis produced by a scientific theory, that theory becomes the de facto explanation.

      Attempting to provide alternate explanations without testable hypotheses are not good science. Just so we're clear, every single testable hypothesis produced by creationist scientists has been refuted by experiment.

      NOBODY has ever demonstrated that information can come from *any* other source than a mind. Um, maybe not to your liking, or to your narrow definition of "information" and "mind". DNA is simply code triplets for amino acids. It could conceivably be called information, but in reality it's just a simple chemical isomorphism. Further. it has been shown experimentally that bacteria can easily re-evolve the lactase enzyme when that gene is removed.

      A subtle but nuanced result of Godel's Incompleteness theorem is that what you call "minds" are no more powerful than sufficiently advanced computer programs. Creationists have produced zero evidence, beyond philosophical musings, that a mind needs anything to function other than the neural activity in the brain, and the fact that brain damage can effectively destroy a mind lends HUGE weight to the theory that a physical brain contains everything necessary to produce minds.

      Further, it is quite easy to write computer programs that readily "discover" new information in mounds of raw data. This is called data mining. And spare me the creationist rhetoric about "who wrote the computer program" -- computer programs are NOT biological organisms, though it is known by computer scientists that selection over incremental changes to computer algorithms can produce more complex, adapted algorithms.

      No, there is ZERO reason to even suggest that information can only be produced supernaturally. The hypothesis itself is totally unfalsifiable because we have no way of even knowing that the supernatural exists, let alone making absolutist truth-claims about it. This is pseudoscience of the worst kind.

      And please stop using the term "evolutionist" if you want to be taken seriously. It's a baseless framing device used by creationists in order to try and place it on an "even keel" with creationism.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    244. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1
      Quite the contrary. I could take people back with me to the present to demonstrate the veracity of my claims.

      Jesus ultimately demonstrated this by conquering our worst enemy -- death. So Jesus proved that he was God by doing something it's impossible to prove he did. Thank you for clearing that up.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    245. Re:Which do you believe? by m50d · · Score: 1
      What's so bad about Jesus anyway? Oh no! He paid for your sins and wants to take you to heaven when you die. That *is* bad! I've never seen an atheist get pissed off about Buddha or something. I'm just curious what all the hate is about.

      As the old saying goes, it's not Jesus I have a problem with, it's his fan club. The day I get harangued in the street by a Buddhist preacher I'll start hating on him too, but to date I've had a lot more grief from Christian's than all other faiths put together. After long enough, much as you might wish to rise above that level, you start to respond in kind.

      --
      I am trolling
    246. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Global warming doesn't mean that every place gets warmer. The overall temperature of the Earth's surface increases. During that process, imbalances are created in which weather extremes (both hot and cold) can become more extreme, thus hotter summers paired with colder winters.

    247. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Dude, I hope you realize how EXTREMELY offensive you're being here.

      In high school, I believed in the resurrected Jesus Christ as the son of the one and only God and somehow simultaneously fully God and fully human. I trusted in Jesus as my personal savior. I confessed my sins to him regularly. I debated with non-Christians and tried to win converts to the Lord. Every aspect of my life was dedicated to honoring Him in every single way. Not a soul who knew me back then would have said that if I were hit by a truck back then and died, that I would end up in hell.

      And yet you, sir, have the gall to tell me that very thing, that were I hit by a truck and killed, back in high school, I would have gone straight to hell. Based solely on the fact that I no longer believe now what I did then. If that isn't flat-out denial I don't know what

      Can you pry open my head and read my thoughts and tell me with 100% certainty that I am lying to you? Or are you simply going to resort to calling me a liar for no reason other than your holy text apparently tell you that it must be so?

      I mean, certainly you won't win many souls that way...

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    248. Re:Which do you believe? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I do understand but there was record cold all over the place. I say that we don't have enough understanding of climate to say that it is or is not happening.
      Here is one post http://www.dailytech.com/Temperature+Monitors+Report+Widescale+Global+Cooling/article10866.htm
      that seems to have valid data.
      And another
      http://www.dailytech.com/Researcher+Basic+Greenhouse+Equations+Totally+Wrong/article10973.htm

      But I will also state that I am not 100% confident in those stories or data. I am afraid that they outside my areas of knowledge.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    249. Re:Which do you believe? by dannannan · · Score: 1

      "Nobody studies random chaos, as there's nothing to predict."

      Lots of people have studied random chaos. Laplace, Gauss, De Moivre, Chebyshev, just to name a few.

      Nothing to predict? There are several amazing theorems of statistics that derive order from chaos, the central limit theorem being one of them.

      The weather is a popular example of a chaotic system. That doesn't mean there is nothing to predict; I can say that there is a near 100% probability that the weather in Seattle on Feb 17, 2010 will be cloudy and between 20 and 70 degrees F. With more data, you could make stronger statements.

    250. Re:Which do you believe? by clubby · · Score: 1

      Well my story is just the opposite. All my life I've heard people "preaching" about evolution because some guy with glasses and a lab coat told them so. Personally I just cannot take "the leap of faith" about the origins of life ; it seems so incredibly unlikely that one day a cell just "plopped" into existence with the ability to procreate, and then against all odds survived everything the galaxy will throwed at it for 6 billion years.

      Here's why I think you turned off your brain long before anyone with a lab coat managed to finish a sentence: EVOLUTION HAS NOTHING WHATSOEVER TO DO WITH THE ORIGINS OF LIFE ON EARTH.

      You're criticizing a theory for failing to explain something which it was never intended to address in the first place. It follows naturally from this that you are a tool, and no small one at that.

    251. Re:Which do you believe? by DetpackJump · · Score: 1

      That's why we have a peer review process.

    252. Re:Which do you believe? by DetpackJump · · Score: 1

      ooh, should have read down further

    253. Re:Which do you believe? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      As I said in my other post-- i should have said "some" again ("some modern christians")-- not all modern christians are actively anti-truth/knowledge. A large, vocal minority are- but a lot of them are decent folks who are trustworthy and who are mostly open minded (but still of rock solid irrational faith).

      Since Slashdot is an international site, we need to also remember that most of these anti-truth Christians (usually called "fundamentalists") are located in the USA, where they seem to be a near-majority of Christians here. Christians in other countries are probably wondering what's going on here in the USA with all this arguing about evolution.

    254. Re:Which do you believe? by ROMRIX · · Score: 1

      Dammit - I've just read too many 'information doesn't want to be anthromorphisized' sigs recently :-)

      Well that's what you get when you use two dollar words on a fifty cent budget.
    255. Re:Which do you believe? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I agree that the OP's comment on the temple incident is probably incorrect, but no one's answered his other charge about Jesus telling people to leave their families and follow him, and how this isn't a bad thing. If everyone did this, society would disintegrate.

    256. Re:Which do you believe? by Copid · · Score: 1

      NOBODY has ever demonstrated that information can come from *any* other source than a mind.
      Given your consistent inability to define information in a quantifiable way, I suspect that it will always be so.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    257. Re:Which do you believe? by Artichoke · · Score: 1
      The context here is establishing the probability of someone's mere existence. So yes, it can be inferred from the fact that they're referring to a third party and the trouble they got in to because of their beliefs about the third party, that the third party is more likely to have existed than not.

      You can't prove historical "facts" one way or the other, all you can do is establish a probabilities from internal and external evidence. Why make all the fuss over Jesus and go through all the hassles if they knew it was all entirely made up? There was a stir be made early on and it had its roots somewhere. Least unlikely scenario is that the itinerant preacher existed.

      --
      __
      Arse
    258. Re:Which do you believe? by tobiah · · Score: 1

      The term "Chaos" entered pop-culture with James Gliek's book
      "Chaos: the Making of a New Science".
      Sensive Dependence is commonly cited as part of the definition of chaos, which varies significantly. The term got a mathematical definition in 1975 from Li and James Yorke's paper "Period Three Implies Chaos", which stated that a dynamical system (function which eats its own output i.e. f(f(x))) with a period three orbit (f(f(f(a))) = a, f(a)~=a, f(f(a))~=a), will have all orbits, including "chaotic" ones (definition similar to Sensitive Dependence). Sharkovsky had done him one better showing what orbits exist given any orbit (ex. 9 implies 2).
      In any case "Chaos" lacks a concensus formal definition, while being widely used both by scientist and laypersons.

      The importance of Sensitive Dependenent systems to determinism is that any slight variation in measurement may produce very different results. Simply increasing the accuracy of measurement will produce different results. The conservative interpretation is that certain equations will always fail to correctly predict what they model because any slight inaccuracy in measurement used for input will deviate widely from the true result. Couple that with the Heisenburg Uncertainty Theorem which gives a lower bound on accuracy of any simultaneous measurement of position and velocity, and you've got a pretty good characterization of the theoretical limits of certain mathematical models.
      The liberal interpretation is to conclude that because a certain branch of mathematics fails under certain circumstances, then we must have free will.

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
    259. Re:Which do you believe? by drerwk · · Score: 1

      The uncertainty principle means you can not measure the full initial state. Not sure what you mean by "Lack of a complete, accurate unified theory... Given an absolute understanding of all mechanics involved, and the exact starting position, velocity, etc"
      Bell's Theorem tells us there are no hidden variables - so there is nothing hidden which if we knew we could make the predictions.
      There will be a unification of GR and QM, but it will not invalidate the QM and GR regimes that we are familiar with, which disallow a return to the Newtonian clockwork.

    260. Re:Which do you believe? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      For every single piece of evidence evolutionists bring up, a smart creationists can re-interpret that so called evidence to support what the Bible records.

      Yes, they are quite accomplished liars.

      NOBODY has ever demonstrated that information can come from *any* other source than a mind.

      Define "information". Which has more, a solid black image or a random arrangement of black and white pixels? Does a snowflake contain more or less information than the molecules from which it formed?

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    261. Re:Which do you believe? by rthille · · Score: 1


      The thing is, there still is some question as to whether he even existed.

      http://www.secularhumanism.org/library/fi/flynn_25_1.htm

      Much less as to him being any sort of god. Not that I've ever heard any sort of logical consistency when someone describes their 'god(s)' to me.

      But go ahead and keep believing what you want. I'll stick with reality though.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    262. Re:Which do you believe? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Yet you will not admit that Scientist are human being and are just as susceptible to emotional outburst and reasoning just as everyone else. There is what my observations seem to show with people who receive great awards or honors (PHD is one of those rewards, justly given for the amount of work you do to earn the degree) is that it more often then not goes to their head and makes them blind to "Real Life".
      The Issue of Intelegent Design vs. Evolution is really more politics then science, and a lot of scientist jumped into this political debate under the title as scientist. I agree Random is the best term for the science. However bitterly arguing a change in semantics of using God instead isn't worth all this arguing.
      The bitter argument back and forth will not resolve and actually become more separated. Evolution was widely accepted (more then it is now) in America and the group of people who disagreed with it were a minority, most religions accepted the fact of evolution and was OK with that because the argument of the "randomness" wasn't brought up or taught, the older/basic theory of survival of the fittest. Then further study showed that mutations caused evolution to run a bit quicker then it expected, and the mutation was Random. Now that is the sticking point. Just a silly word of Random. Then scientist started strictly correcting people who replace Random with God. And what happens people feel that Science is trying to take over religion. So there is public lash back even from people who were OK with evolution are swapping sides because they feel the right to defend their religion, so they will take a step back from progress. Now Scientist see this, and take this as a threat to there area of study and emotionally push the other way taking a hard line with Science, and precise grammar of it, an emotional reaction to a threat.
      Now if they taught more clearly (Both Sides) and less emotionally they realize how silly it is be so strict on Random vs. God, in terms of syntax. The hard line has done more harm them good. It pushes Religion further away from using science as a means of understand how the world works, and it pushes the general public away from scientist who often need public support for grants to fund their research.
      But the bitter attitude on both sides just keep on making it worse.

      One thing I have learned in the professional world, is that sometimes you need to make concession even though you are right in order to get the most good done.
      If we all knew the absolute truth about everything I am sure no one would like it. God may be the wrong term, but it allowing people to use it with minimum protest, OK for people to believe it and talk about it openly. Just not a good term for an academic journal.
      We have public schools changing their books, political outcry, even huge slashdot discussion on this topic, all because one side cannot accept the term Random and the other cannot accept the term God.

      I am not a Scientist well I have a degree in Computer Science so I am one in a fashion. But for most people the impact of evolutionary science and full detail understanding isn't needed. What most people kinda need to know. Life diversified from other organizations who had some mutation (Either from random occurrence or an act of God either way we are unable to predict it) that made it better for them to survive and gave them better chances of breading, and passing that mutation to the next generation.
      Yes it is grossly simplistic but that is what most people kinda need to know. So they can understand at least in a high level why putting their tax money for research is worth while, To better understand evolution is to better understand ourselves and could lead to engineering better drugs, or lifestyles methods that best fit our way of life. But if you fight over a tiny detail you can loose it all.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    263. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's so bad about Jesus anyway?
      1. 1) It's impossible for a virgin to have a baby.
      2. 2) Nobody can rise from the dead.
      3. 3) Water can't turn in to wine.
      As in, the entire story strains credulity, and you are a fucking moron if you take it as true. Seriously - I'm not pulling punches because you really aren't thinking straight if you think this bullshit actually happened, and if you don't, then you're not really a Christian.

      I've never seen an atheist get pissed off about Buddha or something. I'm just curious what all the hate is about.
      That's true; FWIW, most atheists don't hate Jews the way they hate Christians, either, though they generally think most religious people are equally delusional. I think I can explain. It's because Buddhists, Jews, and most religions other than Christianity (and Islam, though that gets shat on enough anyways these days) don't try to a) force us to share their beliefs and act as if we are being assholes for not joining in their mass delusion, b) impose their morality on the rest of us as law, or c) literally redefine science because their fucked up tiny midwestern minds are too incapable of considering the possibility that they are wrong to allow experts to teach science that is actually useful.

      If you fuckers would stop getting in our faces, we would stop getting in yours. We did not start this fight, okay? Scientists are not trying to pass laws mandating the teaching of evolution in Sunday school classrooms. The religious are the ones that want to change science, not the other way around; we are happy to leave religion to your feeble minds while we solve real problems.
    264. Re:Which do you believe? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      He too showed powers and abilities which we call "supernatural". He demonstrated power over nature and even of death itself.

      According to reports of exceptionally dubious reliability. There are reports of the Trojan War too, and Troy actually existed, but I'm not going to start praying to Poseidon. (That would make Baal quite upset, and nobody wants that).

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    265. Re:Which do you believe? by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1


      Well, that's only your opinion.

    266. Re:Which do you believe? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You will find that Jesus broke Abrahamic law and encouraged his own law. That's pretty much the big differences between Christianity and jewish rituals now. Well, that and the belief that jesus was the lord. But his teachings were all about abrahamic laws are not being relevant anymore. He introduced the idea of forgiveness if someone repents for their sins.

      But you see, there is an entire religion surounding him. He was supposedly sent to make the changes. To absolve us for our sins and offer a choice instead of a forcing. His moral was that man shouldn't judge for god- that is left for god to do.

      As for your point, it isn't that he selectively broke them as much as he changed them. At least for his followers. He was the lord- Immanuel god with us (or thought that he was). Look at it more like a king changing the laws at his own whims to suit his own needs. I'm sure there are plenty of examples of this throughout history.

    267. Re:Which do you believe? by Copid · · Score: 1

      I don't think that anybody is stopping the discussion from taking place. They're keeping the discussion out of schools, and they're not looking too fondly on people who take the discussion to the popular press rather than doing actual research, but I don't know of any pro ID research that created new knowledge, was submitted to the appropriate journal, and then rejected without good reason. If somebody can point it out, I'm all ears.

      There's an important distinction to be made between squelching discussion and making sure that the discussion is held in the proper forum. An academic who, rather than doing real work in the scientific community, goes to the popular press with, "My colleagues are full of shit! Here's evidence that I never submitted to them for peer review to prove it!" or worse, goes straight to primary school textbooks with no vetting, usually gets the smackdown from his colleagues. I don't think that it's really that unjustified. That kind of behavior is a classic hallmark of crackpottery and is unbecoming a good researcher.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    268. Re:Which do you believe? by Copid · · Score: 1

      At any rate, isn't the whole point of the Ben Stein movie that regardless of the veracity of Brown's statements it'll never get into the "scientific body of knowledge" because the gatekeepers disagree?
      It also doesn't help that Brown and company prefer to publish books for the popular press than actually try to get their work through peer review. Not getting into the mainstream of science becomes a rather self-fulfilling prophecy in those cases.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    269. Re:Which do you believe? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      By extension, do we have free will? No.
      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    270. Re:Which do you believe? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      As John Milton's God said, "Just because I knew what they'd do doesn't remove their free will." Maybe so but it would put culpability for their actions square in the hands of the God who created them.
      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    271. Re:Which do you believe? by mikey1134 · · Score: 1

      Ready whenever you are...

      --
      <gir voice> I love this sig... </gir voice>
    272. Re:Which do you believe? by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      Kuhn's is one perspective. It's true that bad scientists will ignore inconvenient data and letting them grow old and die is one way to remove an outdated viewpoint. They are acting against the scientific ideal though, and institutions like universities are specifically opposed to dogma.

      To imply that a theory as widely used (and proven, but never mind that) as evolution is held dogmatically in the face of contrary evidence requires a ludicrously vast conspiracy spanning nations and thousands of individuals.

      And quit it with the "Bzzz". It's inflammatory and unbecoming even when you're not shamefully oversimplifying the history of astronomy.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    273. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes yes yes, the guy is obviously a dandy speechwriter out to make a buck. But if you think about it, all of Darwin hangs together nicely except for the rather mysterious extreme symmetry of the DNA molecule. And also some weird aspect of the human mind that seems to have a concept of something it calls the Divine. I mean don't deny it - large % of the Pop does have an innate sense of this kind. Vastly misused, misunderstood, manipulated, by 95% of Hum., but it does seem to be there. The (logical) Mind as known to us all yes arises totally from Darwin - those who Thought Wrong simply didnt get to reproduce - easy - but it sort of half looks like someone somewhere came in and implanted some weird ideas along the line. Also what on earth evolutionary use is the sense of the divine? Its a weird extra addition. And at the same time you can imagine cells agglomerating into existence from random sludge stuff, yes, - amoeba are sort of blobby type enterprises, cells could have grown from simple the-only-people-who-survive-long-enough-to-reproduce-are those-who survive-long-enough-to-reproduce - yes, hideously and perfectly elegant to the inquiring scientific instinct - but the gyrating crystalline perfection of the DNA molecule? Could that really have developed from random chance - some kind of crystallization? But doesn't it seem too fabulous to have emerged from chance? On the other hand Gawd knows it probably did and I just cant see how that came about. And must have done so with the first single-cell org's (is that right? Do they have DNA?). There is an immense temptation to believe that Darwin is right about the sludge becoming order but that somebody may have slippedin and interfered somewhere along the way. And perhaps that character decided to slip in a sense of the divine into this fabulous molecule when he engineered it. So we all suffer from it today. And some will insist that the whole world was made by the divine (because they cant see wood trees, woodsman or the horseman of the apocalypse even if it were staring them in the face) just because someone from outside slipped in aeons ago, added the DNA structure - and left his signature on it for us to believe there was a god. Taking this to a new level, Bob Dobbs, former sec to M McLuhan - probably now moved on as I have not received his emails in over a year - states that wot is woz iz that the Booteans (from some star or area called Boetea or such) did just that - implanted wotchermightcall independent free consciousness in humans about 26k years ago. Fun, eh? So we have a propah Darwinian model, but after the Chimpanzees someone came and interfered? So the dumb half of the Pop perceived this and insists on calling it God, losing the point, etc, because it's right brain stuff and mean to be non-Cartesian anyway - so they invent religion based on this sensation that's in almost all of us ... hence the Pope....god bless him .. that was implanted by some experimenter from far away who now directs crop circles and laughs at us. Fun. Would like to be not anonymous, but cant figure how. I am S B Fry of Brazil, UK and US sf@miracleread.com

    274. Re:Which do you believe? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1
      I think you misunderstood what I said. If it's random chaos, you cannot predict it. Ever. By definition. Except for discordians (Hail Eris!)

      Central limit theorem deals with randomness (short term unpredictable, long term, turns into normal distribution). Nothing chaotic.

      As for chaos, one can make rough guesses (ie: predictable shor term), as "it will likely rain tomorrow", or "it will likely we warm in two years in the summer". But take questions such as ``will it rain in 5 months?'' or ``will it be warm in the summer in 10000 years?'' and the chaos emerges: unpredictable long term.

      Sure there are strange attractors, but the state of the system is never -exactly- the same---and the wild swings make the whole picture unpredictable long term.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    275. Re:Which do you believe? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      If you call yourself an "ex-christian" you could have never been one, at least not by the biblical definition of that word. In that case how can you or anyone else call themselves Christians? Many self proclaimed ex-Christians were at least as faithful and devoted to Christ and the teachings of the Bible as you are. If you claim they were never Christians even back when they though they were and would have given up everything for that belief then who can claim to be a true Christian?
      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    276. Re:Which do you believe? by alshithead · · Score: 1

      "*ahem* anthropomorphic means "in the shape of a human". The original poster meant anthropogenic. i.e. "caused by humans"

      Funny, I always thought it meant using human characteristics to define animals or objects. I guess we're both right (http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/anthropomorphic) although I'll continue to consider my definition as the primary.

      --
      I reserve the right to think for myself. Others' opinions are optional. Puppy on lap = typos...not illiteracy.
    277. Re:Which do you believe? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I can tell you with certainty that it will be warm in the summer in 10000 years. You may sue me for whatever I have if it isn't.

      Since I'm not a Scientologist, I guess I won't really care...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    278. Re:Which do you believe? by TempeTerra · · Score: 1
      I think your post has been well answered already, but I would like to add:

      First off, I think that hypothesis and tests can be cited for intelligent design.

      Such predictions are notoriously un-forthcoming.

      I think statements to the nature of discovery of design patterns across species and various levels is just one good prediction for testing.

      That's an interesting statement, for one thing it suggests a lazy creator who cut'n'pasted between species, but I digress. If I understand what you mean, convergent evolution already has it covered. The idea is that there are only a few sensible ways to perform some tasks, so even distantly related species should develop a similar form or strategy.

      For instance, sharks and dolphins which are VERY distantly related but occupy a similar niche should have evolved similar structures because there is only really one way to be a free swimming predator at the top of the food chain. Evolution would predict that such species should be functionally similar, but would disagree on vestigial details and arbitrary developments which do not effect fitness. As expected, dolphin skeletons show their ex-quadruped heritage and sharks are cartiliginous despite being outwardly similar. Even more telling, sharks wiggle side-to-side to swim, while dolphins wiggle up-down (I am not a biologist, 'wiggle' may not be the correct technical term) - an arbitrary difference which supports the idea that the two species evolved independantly for a similar function.

      Theories such as infinitely expanding and collapsing universe, universes. And various other ideas often taught have serious lacks on disprovability.

      An expanding universe suggests things about how distant astronomical objects should appear, so it is testable. You should have mentioned string theory, which is largely untestable - but rightly catches a lot of flack for it.
      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    279. Re:Which do you believe? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Well Hinduism isn't really polytheistic for one thing. Brahma is the one creator god and all the other gods are avatars (manifestations of various aspects of Brahma). Jesus (or Buddha or Mohammad) are also accepted by some as avatars of Brahma.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    280. Re:Which do you believe? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I don't think the gatekeepers disagree with the idea, what they disagree with is that the theory offers no testing points. A scientific theory has to offer you some way for a test. Some sort of testable plan how it is done, preferably repeatable for those that want to test it. Kinda hard in this case since we neither have a spare Earth (for the evolutionists) nor godlike powers (for the creationists).

      Also I guess one beef they have with the theory of intelligent design is the approach. Instead of collecting information and evidence, and trying to formulate a theroy based on it, they come from the other side: A set theory which they then start collecting evidence for. This already kinda creates a rather selective climate. When you look at the theory of evolution, you'll see Darwin collecting information about the various species and then got the idea that there may have been some sort of development. It's not like he went out on his ship with the theory that there has been evolution and he started searching for clues and evidence for it.

      Even under the most objective conditions (and, pardon if I am so blunt, trying to find proof for a religious matter hardly has that luxury), when you start with a theory and then try to gather information for or against it, you will end up with more supportive evidence. Also, I have the feeling that the proponents of divine creation don't really look for anything that might threaten their theory. And that's hardly scientific.

      This leads to my next point, I don't know any explanations for the various findings that speak against the creation theory. Fossils of "early humans" (homo erectus, homo australopithecus, etc). Fossils in general. Continental drift and sedimental layers. Just to name a few. And no, "god made it to test our faith" is no answer to that. These are questions that need an answer, since they're here and they're here to stay, so you need some way to explain those things (and maybe others, I'm no expert in that matter).

      Because this is how science works. A theory is pitted against evidence against it, and the theory has to "survive" that evidence. Either by reshaping the theory and adjusting it so it can encompass the new evidence (the theory of evolution has done that quite a few times. Especially with the dates it offers. The appearance of the human alone has been redated by a few millenia quite often) or by explaining it within the existing theory. If it can't survive the evidence, the theory fails. The problem with God is now, how do you test something against God, an omnipotent and omniscient extradimensional being? You can simply state "god did it, because he wanted it to be that way" and the other side has to believe it or not, but has no way to test it. In what way is that scientific?

      That's what's lacking in the theory of divine creation to be considered a scientifically valid theory. A way to test it. I do agree in one thing: The theory of evolution is not perfect. It has its holes. It has its missing links and its weak points, its parts that we cannot explain yet. But so far I don't see anything that outright dispells it and contradicts what we know so far. Science is not about proof, it is about disproof. And you cannot disprove God.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    281. Re:Which do you believe? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I do believe that Jesus thought he was what he claimed to be. Interpret this in whatever way you like.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    282. Re:Which do you believe? by pbhj · · Score: 1

      The only two non-christian writings I know about are Tacitus and Josephus. You'll have to research the details.

      If you can prove from 2 sources anything about anyone else 2000 years ago I'd be interested to hear it!

      I don't suppose my personally testimony of my experience of God will sway you, it wouldn't sway me if it hadn't been my experience.

      http://alicious.com/my-testimony-about-jesus-christ/

    283. Re:Which do you believe? by jaminJay · · Score: 1

      Psychohistory, anyone?

      --
      Leela: "Is all the work done by children?" Alien: "No, not the whipping."
    284. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where is the proof that my religion is wrong?

      Also, I want to point out that I am Mormon


      Since you asked...

      The book of Mormon claims that American Indians descended from the Hebrews, which there is ample DNA evidence to disprove. Nobody outside of the LDS church accepts the existence of the Lamanites.

      Native Americans are descended from Asians, Joseph Smith was wrong. Sorry.

    285. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is what preview is for!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! GOD!!!! Learn how to us a program before you claim IDIOCY!!!!!!!

    286. Re:Which do you believe? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      quick note: kuhn's "structure" isn't anything like a be-all and end-all of philosophy of science, and the field has moved on since his time. /end of note

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    287. Re:Which do you believe? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "It is well established that Jesus of Nazareth walked the earth."

      The link you provide only cites one writer who wasn't a Christian, i.e. Josephus, and the two passages that mention Jesus (the Christian one -- Josephus mentions several other people with the same name because it was a very common one) are by no means universally accepted as having been written by Jesephus himself.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    288. Re:Which do you believe? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      If you can prove from 2 sources anything about anyone else 2000 years ago I'd be interested to hear it!

      I know it's not me who the question was addressed to, but a silly yet valid example from the top of my head and more than 2 millenia ago: Socrates. if we're talking about the existence of the historical person, there are three contemporaries that have left sources supporting his: xenophon, plato and aristophanes, and there are probably more sources that I don't remember. some more serious examples would be alexander of macedonia and gaius julius caesar. unlike jesus, these guys actually have contemporary eyewitness accounts of their existence. so, there -- any other challanges?
      --
      Deus est fatalis
    289. Re:Which do you believe? by The+Aethereal · · Score: 1

      Nothing convinces people that something might be true faster than people trying to shut down any discussion of it. It is one thing for scientists to say "intelligent design is wrong". It is another to say "OMFG that scientist talked about intelligent design, fire him, quick! Nobody talk about what he said!"

      The same is true for climate change. When you start firing climatologists who say that global warming might not be as bad as once thought, or that perhaps humans have less of an impact than some say, it makes it look like something is being hidden.

      I must admit that my science education does not go above college Bio 101, but all of my science classes left me with the impression that discussion was a good thing.

    290. Re:Which do you believe? by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Actually if you would read more regarding Josephus you would find that the second passage mentioned there, the one that is (in my opinion doctored), you will find that the contestation is that one has been doctored which is documented in the link I gave you. This is an issue with many historical references, however even tossing out the doctored one you still have his other section of text which IS actually widely accepted.

      Even thus, the situation you are describing, that Christ did not exist (as a man or god) is a stretch even for atheists. Because the alternative is you are saying that a religion jumped out of nowhere, from a man no one ever saw, that people were willing to die in the most horrific methods of the day, be ostracized from their families and culture, for no gain. Yes there was a Christ, who he was is contestable, but the fact that he walked and breathed is just a part of history. Some people are just religios about the idea of wiping his existence out...another interesting debate for another day; if he was just a man then why is there such a ferocious need to wipe out his existence, you don't see that from many other historical figures.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    291. Re:Which do you believe? by NulDevice · · Score: 1

      The problem seems to be that the discussion took place, the ID'ers didn't like the outcome, so they decided instead to paint themselves as victims of some vast conspiracy, or people who aren't getting the attention they need to develop their "theories."

      This happens a lot. It's like a those crackpots who always trumpet that they've created a perpetual motion machine or found a way around the laws of thermodynamics or whatever, and when the basic math shows errors they howl about some conspiracy by the uranium industry or whatever. The difference is ID has a well-funded public-relations arm that helps put out films and hundreds of press releases. Science has an uphill battle against that sort of thing, since evolutionary theory doesn't sound-bite well, requires rigorous scrutiny of data and findings - and issuing press releases and going "to the people" doesn't have those problems.

      --

      ----
      "I used to listen to Null Device before they sold out."

    292. Re:Which do you believe? by SkippityDooDah · · Score: 0

      Obviously you haven't seen the full movie, and obviously absolutely nothing Ben Stein has ever done matters to you because he's "an ex-Nixon speechwriter" to you. Think much? If you'd seen the movie, you'd know that a very clear connection is made between Nazi eugenics and Darwinism taken to the extreme. You'd also know that the poster boy for Darwinism, a sneering elitist, is taken apart by Stein in a short discussion, and reveals that his only answer to the beginning of life on Earth is panspermia! It started organically elsewhere, turned into space travelers, then came and started it here. It's an excellent film and the sneering "certainty" that you expressed is exactly the kind of clustered dummyhood that is killing academia.

    293. Re:Which do you believe? by riondluz · · Score: 1

      It's one thing to be a skeptic when asked to accept as fact for which solid proof is lacking.
      But it's something else entirely to completely overlook the obvious in order to deny the intuitive, gut-level suspicion that solid proof may not be absolutely necessary.
      Forget the Evolution-vs-ID argument for a second and focus on climate change and warming only:
      100 years of unfettered industrialization, 100 years of unrestrained population growth, 100 years of dumping our contaminants in our own back yard; now that's a FACT.
      Look at the current state of our reefs, or the complete depletion of ocean stock (90% by some accounts), or the rapidly melting perma-frost,
      or hell, take a look at LA on a 'good' day.

      Empirical evidence alone should be enough to convince even the most dense among us that humankind has had the unique priviledge of laying waste to that which is most dear. If there is a God, i suspect that they are un-pleased that we carry on this tiresome debate instead of getting w/the program. And if there is not a God, then we're left to our own device and truly screwed.

      --
      resist propaganda
    294. Re:Which do you believe? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "This is an issue with many historical references, however even tossing out the doctored one you still have his other section of text which IS actually widely accepted."

      From what I've read, there seems to be a 50/50 split about whether either of them is authentic.

      "Even thus, the situation you are describing, that Christ did not exist (as a man or god) is a stretch even for atheists."

      1) I didn't say he didn't exist, so that's a straw man.
      2) I'm not an atheist.

      "the alternative is you are saying that a religion jumped out of nowhere"

      I did not say this. Note though that unless you are willing to claim there was a factual basis for Thor, Apollo, Baal, and and various other pagan gods, you must also accept the fact that many religions have existed which appear to have sprung either from nothing, or very little.

      "people were willing to die in the most horrific methods of the day, be ostracized from their families and culture, for no gain."

      Many pagans also died for their beliefs, often in horrific circumstances and in very large numbers for no apparent gain.

      "Yes there was a Christ, who he was is contestable, but the fact that he walked and breathed is just a part of history"

      It is part of religion, not history. Note that I'm not claiming this proves he didn't exist, but rather that there isn't much proof that he did.

      "if he was just a man then why is there such a ferocious need to wipe out his existence, you don't see that from many other historical figures."

      Who has made a ferocious effort to wipe out his existence? There might be a few of the more rabid atheists who do this, but my position is that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and most of the claimed evidence has turned out to be mediocre rather than extraordinary.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    295. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....who can claim to be a true Christian?...

      Anyone can CLAIM anything at all. According to Jesus (not me), a Christian is someone re-born by the power of the Holy Spirit. Just as in the physical a person cannot be "un-born", so not in the Spirit. When God gives His gift of His Spirit to dwell inside, it is forever. God doesn't take His gift back. It is unconditional and forever. It is a gift not something earned. No one goes to heaving by good behavior and no one goes to hell by bad behavior.

      Rom. 11:29 For the free gifts and calling of God are without repentance.

      Jesus also said: Matt 12:33 Either make the tree good and its fruit good, or else make the tree corrupt and its fruit corrupt; for the tree is known by its fruit.

      Anyone who has the Spirit will bear fruit, as described in: Galatians 5:22-23 But the fruit of the Spirit is: love, joy, peace, long-suffering, kindness, goodness, faith, meekness, self-control; against such things there is no law.

      If someone claims to be a Christian and at least some of the above characteristics show in that person's life, that gives good evidence that their claim is valid. Notice that fruit is in the singular, a single fruit of the invisible Spirit of God manifested in these visible ways.

      --
      All theory is gray
    296. Re:Which do you believe? by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      50/50 isnt too shabby for historical accuracy ;) Consider the works of Plato and Aristotle ;) Also consider that there are implications either way on Christ's authenticity because that would mean people would have to admit that Christ is real, then possibly actually have to think about the subject. Easier to just say he didn't exist at all. Of course there are also people who want to believe it really bad.

      1) I didn't say he didn't exist, so that's a straw man.

      Not a straw man, I think you misuse that term here. the OP stated "could you show me some actual evidence that he is an actual historic person and not just a mythical figure?" Which I did show evidence, which was quickly refuted by yourself. The problem is, the eyewitness's of Jesus were largely turned Christian and their writings Canonized if they had any legitimacy to them. Unfortunately today that means they are discredited.

      2) I'm not an atheist.

      Sorry didn't mean to imply that, I was speaking of Atheists as an example of a group that try to discredit religion at every chance, not you personally.

      I did not say this. Note though that unless you are willing to claim there was a factual basis for Thor, Apollo, Baal, and and various other pagan gods, you must also accept the fact that many religions have existed which appear to have sprung either from nothing, or very little.Most of those religions were brought up over time as stories of events were embellished. Pagan gods usually granted some kind of power that people were trying to get. Also, no other religion has the documentation Christians/Jews/Muslims have. Thus why it is so fun to debate the subject. Christianity, Judaism, Islam, are singularly different from every other religion in this area.

      Many pagans also died for their beliefs, often in horrific circumstances and in very large numbers for no apparent gain.

      Citation needed.

      It is part of religion, not history. Note that I'm not claiming this proves he didn't exist, but rather that there isn't much proof that he did.

      Sorry there bud, he is definitely a part of history. He just happens to be a religious figure as well. You will be hard pressed to find historians who say otherwise. Considering the loss of information of the day, there is a lot of information on him. If this is not enough, then the historical figures I mention above might as well be mythological.

      Who has made a ferocious effort to wipe out his existence? There might be a few of the more rabid atheists who do this, but my position is that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and most of the claimed evidence has turned out to be mediocre rather than extraordinary.

      It does not require faith or a extraordinary circumstance to consider the extra biblical writings to be enough that Christ existed. Now I will be with you in that evidence of his divine nature outside of the bible is always less than mediocre. But his divine nature is not what we are arguing here, simply the evidence of existence of a man named Jesus walking the earth. Not to mention that even now we are contesting his authenticity yet don't apply the same level of scrutiny to other historical figures. If there were not a religion tied to him no one would debate historical documents. Yes, there is an unusual push to eradicate Jesus from any public setting, no push to rid us of the greek gods prevalent in society, talking of buddah and Muhammed is encouraged. However, any Christ figure is quickly ridiculed and torn down, why such hatred singularly toward this one Figure of peace and humanitarianism? Read your news, people re-writing history about Christ's teachings involvement in our constitution or equal rights movements. People tearing down monuments, slaughtering his followers in the millions, and on and on.

      For that matter I will let you check out the other references to christ's existance, here is a better listing rather than the

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    297. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus was a common name and Christ was another term for prophet.
      There were plenty of "Jesus the Christ"'s around.
      Just no magic ones....

    298. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...According to reports of exceptionally dubious reliability...

      Well in the end you don't have to BELIEVE anything recorded in the ancient writings. However, just know that there are more written copies of the ancient scripts of the Bible than all other ancient records combined.

      The dead sea scrolls show that the scripture documents handed down by repeated copying survived essentially unchanged, despite all that copy work.

      --
      All theory is gray
    299. Re:Which do you believe? by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Actually, there is a third thing.

      This computer that predicts the future by modeling the universe, is in fact itself part of the universe. It would thus have to be able to predict its own result faster than it can predict it.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    300. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...DNA is simply code...

      Has any code, say for a computer or Morse code or any code ever come into being apart from the processes of thought?

      DNA has been called the blueprint of life. A blueprint is a representation of a house or machine. It is neither a house nor a machine, but represents the INSTRUCTIONS of how the workers are to build the object depicted by that blueprint. The DNA contains instructions how to build an organism. Both the information on the blueprint and the DNA code originated in a mind.

      When you give someone instructions on how to do a task, you are imparting INFORMATION to them. Hopefully, they will then use that information to accomplish what you have willed in your mind.

      (..Further, it is quite easy to write computer programs..)

      Has any useful computer program ever come about outside of the activity of thought arising in a mind? Information can be hidden, even encrypted. If you write a letter on your computer and encrypt it, does the encrypted letter not still contain all the information of the original clear text? Information content and information accessibility are not synonymous. If you mine data or recover encrypted text with the right password, you are not creating information, but merely making that already existing information useable.

      --
      All theory is gray
    301. Re:Which do you believe? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      From your link:

      "However, modern scholarly discussion and support is very limited."
      "The idea of Jesus as a myth is rejected by the majority of biblical scholars and historians."
      "Richard Burridge and Graham Gould stated that they did not know of any "respectable" scholars that held the view today."
      "Robert E. Van Voorst has stated that biblical scholars and historians regard the thesis as "effectively refuted"."
      Grant writes "To sum up, modern critical methods fail to support the Christ myth theory. It has 'again and again been answered and annihilated by first rank scholars.' In recent years, 'no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non historicity of Jesus' or at any rate very few, and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger, indeed very abundant, evidence to the contrary."
      Charlesworth writes "No reputable scholar today questions that a Jew named Jesus son of Joseph lived; most readily admit that we now know a considerable amount about his actions and basic teachings ...",

      Oh yeah, that's brilliant. (eye roll)

    302. Re:Which do you believe? by danskal · · Score: 1

      ....But the brain _is_ the mind, and vice versa.... That is an assertion that .... at least has some evidence against it. I don't actually think that that is true, not scientifically at least.

      For one, the so called out-of-body-experience accounts have certain things in common that point to the existence of some kind of consciousness apart from the operation of the physical brain cells. We call the products of thought "Intellectual Property" and have an entirely different set of rules for that than we do for tangible stuff. Products of thought haver a material manifestation, but are in and of themselves immaterial. I didn't think I would, but I actually disagree here, too. Products of thought always have a physical manifestation, or they don't exist at all. Either they are encoded in your brain, or in my brain, or in someone else's brain, or they're encoded in some sort of language (which most likely is incomprehensible to aliens) in radio waves, letters, on your harddisk. But these representations are only given meaning when they are decoded by our brain cells. Otherwise, they have no more meaning than a chicken-shaped cloud.

      Explaining in intimate detail the chemistry of ink on paper does not help a bit in explaining the work of Shakespeare or Beethoven. That's your claim, I refute it. The complexities we are able to interpret depend totally on our neural structure. That's why some people prefer hip-hop.

      These immaterial products have their origin in an immaterial mind. The brain is only the hardware (wetware?) interface device, just as the material guts of a PC are the interface device for the immaterial software, which again is the immaterial product of the immaterial mind of the programmer. IP is immaterial and can only come from an immaterial source. But the software is always encoded in a language in some physical representation. It is only given meaning when it is read either by a programmer (someone with the right neural configuration), or by the appropriate CPU. The fact that it is represented by electrons, magnetic domains or small pits in a cd, and not bigger things like rocks and trees, makes no difference.
      As for IP.... as I understand it, IP pretty much doesn't exist, unless it is encoded either in some brains, or at least in a patent somewhere.

      Those who are not willing to acknowledge the existence of a realm or dimension that goes beyond the physical are not true scientists. True scientists will attempt to learn ALL truth about ALL of reality. Immaterial objects have a different set of laws than tangible things. True Scientists will endeavor to learn these laws, just as the study the laws of physics. I don't say it is impossible, but there is no evidence for it, and no need to include it to explain things properly. Occam had it right on that one. There is never a good excuse to induce magic to explain how something works.... just ask an honest magician.
    303. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Does a snowflake contain more or less information than the molecules from which it formed....

      The information is not contained in the molecules, but in the relationships and forces they operate under. The information in a novel or musical score is not determined by the chemistry of the ink on paper, but by the arrangement and meaning of the symbols placed by one intelligent mind communicating to another mind.

      The codes in DNA are carried by the arrangement and order of the four amino acids. The codes of bits on a computer disk determine information, not the magnetic structure of the disk itself.

      Information often transmits INSTRUCTIONS in how to accomplish an objective determined in the will of a mind. When you teach you kid to ride a bike, you are transmitting information that is hopefully, eventually transmitted into a MEANINGFUL result. So then another characteristic of information is that it is meaning and purposeful.

      (..Which has more, a solid black image or a random arrangement of black and white pixels?..)

      Neither of these images carries any information because the do not convey meaning and/or purpose to any mind. ALL information is ultimately destined to be evaluated by a mind.

      The beauty of a sunset or of a cuddly kitten were DESIGNED to be appreciated by our minds by the designer of all minds.

      --
      All theory is gray
    304. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      ...DNA is simply code... OK that is a blatant example of removing my comments from their original contexts. Please try to comprehend my entire post and not take out little snippets here and there. The relationship between DNA and amino acids is a simple chemical isomorphism: there is a one-to-one relationship between nucleotide triplets and amino acids. The isomorphism can be realized using a purely mechanical process.

      Instead, you seem intent on tripping me up with my language usage rather than argue any actual points.

      If you mine data or recover encrypted text with the right password, you are not creating information, but merely making that already existing information useable. But by that definition of information, everything in the universe (the force between two electrons, the distance between Earth and the Sun) can be called as information! All information automatically exists at all times! So your clever formulation of "information must come from a mind" is exposed for what it really is -- a simple assertion that "nothing can exist without being created."

      And even so, you still have a machine that found the information where a human could not.

      Has any useful computer program ever come about outside of the activity of thought arising in a mind? Again you seem to be persistently and deliberately dull.

      I can create a mathematically one-to-one mapping between numbers and strings of letters, such that every finite string of ASCII characters is represented. If I just create a computer program to walk through those numbers and attempt to run the corresponding programs, and spit out a "1" every time a program that solves some specific problem or another is found, I can "create" useful computer programs using a purely mechanical process. No "mind" was involved in the actual search for these functions. It is just brute force scanning of properties of natural numbers.

      Considering that there is massive documented research indicating that:
      1. The emergent qualities of thought, emotion, and reason commonly called "mind" are fully contained within the physiology of the brain, and
      2. A "mind" is no more powerful than a computer program with enough RAM and CPU cycles at its disposal,

      You run up against two problems. First of all, your implicit assertion that minds are supernatural requires loads of evidence, of which you have none. Second, if minds require hardware, what "hardware" is running God's mind, and how did it "get there"? You now have a problem of infinite regress.

      Both the information on the blueprint and the DNA code originated in a mind. Evolution makes three important points: that self-replicating molecules have a certain "efficiency" with respect to their environment, that self-replicating molecules sometimes "make mistakes", and that sometimes mistakes make these molecules more efficient. Once an abundance of self-replicating molecules is available, you simply have increasingly sophisticated self-replicating molecules as a result of mistakes in replication conferring increasingly greater efficiency.

      That chemical isomorphisms between DNA and amino acids via mRNA exists in nature is true and indisputable, regardless of whether these molecules exist anywhere in the universe or not. Given enough generations, a self-replicating molecule may make a mistake in replication that causes it to cooperate with non-self-replicating molecules in order to take advantage of an as-yet-undiscovered chemical isomorphism, thereby gaining an edge in its self-replicating efficiency.

      In other words, it has to at least be physically impossible for self-replicating molecules to arise spontaneously; otherwise, symbolic isomorphisms, something you cannot deny is a type of information, can indeed arise from a non-mind. Again, I ask you only the following: prove to me that it is physically impossible for self-replicating molecules to arise spontaneously through random chemical reactions and I will take your claim of "information cannot come from a non-mind" seriously.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    305. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ..never a good excuse to induce magic to explain how something works..

      If you could time travel to the time of Christ or even even a few centuries into the past, you'd have a hard time to explain modern technology or convince people there that you really came from the future. They'd think your technological demos are magic.

      Turning water into wine, multiplying bread, raising the dead and all the other "miracles" we read about in the Bible are "supernatural" to us, only because even today we don't have the technology to explain these "miracles".

      All of what we call "reality" comes to us via our senses. Even the physical things which our senses tell us are "real", are nothing more than charges in motion separated by mostly what we think is empty space. Is a thought or an idea less real than the chair you are sitting on?

      (..the software is always encoded in a language in some physical representation..)

      Yes, but I can run the same software in vastly different kinds of hardware. It is the software, the equivalent of thought, that makes a computer do its job. We can load some OS and all its software into a VM and that software cannot tell nor care what the underlying hardware is.

      If we can load the complete "personality" of a computer into some higher performing hardware or virtual machine, is it not possible to conceive of God having the technology to someday load our complete personality, everything we are and think into some better hardware, not subject to death? Is it so impossible to conceive of God having the technology to by some means transmit the software (soul) of a human being onto a cosmic hard drive or other backup device, for the time when He will reload that software into some new hardware no longer subject to failure and death.

      (..but there is no evidence for it..)

      There is plenty of evidence that cannot be perceived with physical instruments. We know that non-tangible things like compassion, love, beauty, generosity or their opposites are also real and in some measure have a greater effect on us than the physical objects conventional science deals with.

      --
      All theory is gray
    306. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...I can create a mathematically...

      Sure you can, in your mind, using intelligence, not randomness.

      (..The relationship between DNA and amino acids..)

      tells you no more about the information or codes the DNA carries than the chemistry of paint on a canvas tells you about the Mona Lisa.

      (..But by that definition of information, everything in the universe (the force between two electrons, the distance between Earth and the Sun) can be called as information!..)

      It is rather amazing that these forces, parameters and relationships are CALCULATED by someone to amazing precision. For example, we measure the mass ratio between a proton and an electron to be 1836. Any other ratio, and there could be no life. The distance between the Earth and the Sun, their respective masses and the power output of the sun are all finely tuned to make life possible. I have a hard time to believe that all these and many more such fine tunings are random accidents. To me that takes more faith in randomness than faith in a transcendent, intelligent Creator God. Apparently you and many others have more faith in random chance combined with lots of time than I can muster.

      (..if minds require hardware, what "hardware" is running God's mind, and how did it "get there"?..)

      You ignorantly assuming that God is a physical being with physical limitations like us. God came to us from beyond time and space, and confined Himself, for a while, to the same limitations of time and space and became mortal like us. Jesus was His human name. He told his followers that God is an eternal Spirit, whatever that means.

      If you could time travel to that time, how would you try to communicate where you came from and the technology you are familiar with? Any technology demos you did would be deemed "supernatural miracles". Now you would still be a mortal being confined to this time-space physical condition we call reality. There would be no way you could "prove" that you are a human from the distant future. All you could really tell people there is that they should BELIEVE you are telling the truth. You might be labelled an evil magician and put to death by the standard method of execution of that day, crucifixion.

      Jesus, as the God-Man, faced a far greater obstacle. Coming from beyond our dimensions, He too did technological demos, including conquering death. Even today, we still call the things we read in scripture "miracles" and tend to doubt what is written. Therefore, to an infinitely greater extent, we too are only left with belief, faith in accepting who Jesus claimed to be and what He said and did -- or rejecting Him and His message.

      --
      All theory is gray
    307. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      *sigh* I see no reason to continue on with you. You consistently ignore my arguments and twist my words out of context to fit your agenda. You are not willing to learn from others and are only interested in screaming your "good news" like the Bible says in the hopes that someone will convert.

      Have a nice life.

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    308. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      On second thought, I will continue this discussion if you do the following things for me, for they are the crux points of my previous argument, and your "information/mind" argument depends on them being true:

      1. Prove that it is physically impossible for self-replicating molecules to arise spontaneously through random chemical reactions.
      2. Prove that randomly changing self-replicators cannot stumble upon chemical isomorphisms.
      3. Prove that there is anything that can be called "mind" that is not a function of real, physical hardware.

      Please do this without reference to God, your "information/mind" argument, or the Bible, which is circular reasoning.

      If you cannot do that, your "information/mind" construct is no more than an argument from personal incredulity, and nobody will ever prove you wrong to your own satisfaction because you are in utter denial.

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    309. Re:Which do you believe? by tfoss · · Score: 1

      This is where I disagree. First off, I think that hypothesis and tests can be cited for intelligent design. I think statements to the nature of discovery of design patterns across species and various levels is just one good prediction for testing. No worse than Darwin's proposition that transitional forms should exist. Then please cite some hypotheses from intelligent design. Your half meta-statement is not useful as a hypothesis.

      ID requires an designer of unknown power/motivation/sense of aesthetics. Thus you can always resort to the 'thats the way the designer wanted it' argument to explain anything. This has no predictive power, and can therefore not be the basis of a hypothesis.

      The theory of evolution makes many testable (& tested) predictions, and has been shown to be as true as the theory of gravity.

      -Ted
      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    310. Re:Which do you believe? by Squeedle · · Score: 1

      I think a better way of putting it is: there is no way to prove that anything before right this very moment existed and was not actualy just conjured up wholesale and put in place a moment ago. It's been said for ages - the Buddhist philosopher Nagarjuna said it too. This is the case because the only way to prove otherwise is to go outside your own mind and this is of course, absurd.

      But really, to me this is mostly mental wanking. Of course we have to agree on some level of objective reality otherwise we wouldn't be having this discussion in the first place, because we'd just be talking to ourselves. Then again, some people insist that's exactly what's going on. I can't tell the difference, so I don't treat it as being something other than what it appears.

      A second point I wanted to make: currently a computer simulation != biology, agreed, but with advances in quantum computing, it may be that we can create simulations which are, for all practical purposes, "real" universes with "real" physics and "real" beings and "real" biology - at least, to the things inside them, and they may have no way of knowing that they are "just" a computer program. They could invent all sorts of things to say about their "creator(s)" which aren't true at all. Does this make us Gods then? Does this not have some implications for this universe? I mean, maybe we're just some kid's homework assignment ;)

      I like the point about how it's true that organization can come from disorganization, but overall you must recognize that this organization in one area means increased disorganization in another. Earth evolved more complex organisms precisely because our sun is there, putting the energy into the Earth's system, and possibly also due to contamination by cosmic rays, comets and asteroids. So Earth is not a closed system. The sun is losing its energy converting all those hydrogen atoms. The sun gives life to us while it dies, to put it more romantically. So this does refute the creationist argument that you can't have increased organization without supernatural interference.

      I hope I didn't repeat anything. Too many comments to read.

      --
      Love, Squeedle
    311. Re:Which do you believe? by silverkniveshotmail. · · Score: 1

      You want unfair? -1, Troll on my post, while I was the first to spawn a really good discussion on the topic... You got two or three +5 posts here, I've only got Trolled... :)

      Oh well, I've lived longer than enough to know you should never trust moderators on hot topics. I have karma to burn anyway.

      Just because your trolling was successful doesn't mean that you weren't trolling.
    312. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Prove that it is physically impossible for self-replicating molecules to arise spontaneously through random chemical reactions...

      I am not a chemist, but an electrical engineer so I cannot really speak on that. Even granted that there may be some self replicating molecules, that is still a very very long way from even only a single living cell, in terms of complexity and functions.

      (..Prove that randomly changing self-replicators cannot stumble upon chemical isomorphisms..)

      Again, that is question for a chemist and I am not qualified to address that.

      (..Prove that there is anything that can be called "mind" that is not a function of real, physical hardware..)

      I am not a neurologist either, but as an engineer I do know that there are certain similarities and characteristics common to the brain/mind system and the computers hardware/software system.

      Computer software is created in a human mind, as is the hardware. However it can be shown that software, analogous to the mind is independent of a particular hardware. I can run a Windows program written originally for an x86 type hardware on a PPC Mac which has entirely different hardware and even a totally different OS. The entire "personality" of the Windows programming and the Windows OS itself is transportable to, theoretically _any_ hardware. Most of Apple's old PPC programs run unmodified on the newer Intel based Macs.

      Software as such is independent of certain physical constraints. Material objects having mass cannot attain the speed of light. However it is common practice to load software (a form of information) as an immaterial product of mind, onto a light beam or radio wave and transmit that data at light speed.

      Since information, thoughts, ideas as such are immaterial constructs of mind, they are not subject to material constrains and therefore are also independent of any particular physical brain. You may have had the experience of having the same thought or simultaneous blurting out the same words or ideas as someone else you were interacting with. We do not know for sure how that happens sometimes, but I do know it has happened to me at times. Can thoughts transfer from one brain to another by a channel outside of what we call "normal"? How about quite consistent accounts of "out of body experiences" (OBE)?

      What is the speed limit for thought? Since thoughts are not material and cannot be modulated (at least not yet) onto a physical carrier, we don't really know. In my imagination I can travel to the most distant corners of the universe even though physically I am bound by time and place.

      I believe there is still a lot of research needed into the mind/brain system, since it is orders of magnitude more complex than any computer we can even dream about and operates on fundamentally different principles. There are however certain, rather striking similarities.

      --
      All theory is gray
    313. Re:Which do you believe? by Poltras · · Score: 1

      *sigh*

      My text:

      I don't, in the bible sense - Jesus lived, but was not the god you pretend he was. I would like to have a serious conversation as well, but you didn't sign in.

      Definition of trolling (from wikipedia, citing Indiana University Knowledge Base):

      An Internet troll, or simply troll in Internet slang, is someone who posts controversial and usually irrelevant or off-topic messages in an online community, such as an online discussion forum, with the intention of baiting other users into an emotional response[1] or to generally disrupt normal on-topic discussion.

      Topic (parent of my post):

      Who here does Not believe the Jesus Christ came to this earth and saved us basically from ourselves. I would like to have a serious conversation with you.

      Now. I was on topic with parent, on topic with the general discussion about Expelled, started a conversation, it was not irrelevant answering a question parent asked, and I invited parent to discussion - albeit he was Anonymous Coward, thus there was no way for him to have a discussion, and I pointed that out. I may have made an error saying Jesus was a god, but I wasn't really far off. My mistake.

      Now please put forward in what ways I was trolling. That meme to say that a successful troll is still a troll is wrong in this case: the discussion that spurred was on topic and was not targeted toward me.

    314. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...I could take people back with me to the present...

      That assumes that the hypothetical time travel device permitted this. If it did not you'd still have to be believed on the basis of what you could do to try to get the people to believe you.

      Jesus gave a very instructive glimpse into the heavenly realms in the story of the rich man who died and poor Lazarus. You can read it in Luke 16:20-31.
      He concludes it with "And he said to him, If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, they will not be persuaded, even though one rose from the dead."

      That tells me a simple fact: If someone doesn't WANT to believe, no amount of evidence will convince them.

      --
      All theory is gray
    315. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhhmm, that's exactly what timeOday said (except for your comment on how common it is in science today which I do not agree with)... are you sure you read the text you quoted??

    316. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...area means increased disorganization in another...

      So when you apply your mind AND energy into ordering the mess in your room, in what or where is there a decrease of order? In the attic or garbage can?

      (..you can't have increased organization without supernatural interference..)

      So again when you tidy up your room, by the application of thought and planning as to where to put stuff, what to keep and what to toss, and then applying your muscle energy to actually carry it out, where does the supernatural enter in? It may seem sometimes it takes a supernatural effort to clean up the mess, but it really isn't at all anything extraordinary.

      Now smile! Have a good day!

      --
      All theory is gray
    317. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you are right. I would say that this is a very human trait at work, to be afraid. Do you agree that this can happen to both "science people" and "religious people"?

      The important issue for me is that the two groups are very different in the way they tackle new ideas as a group.
      The scientist as a group do all agree that changing of one's perspective is an integral part of what science should do, and does, where as religious groups all agree to varying extent that everything important is already explained by a single book, or a few books, and therefore resist change quite adamantly.

      If you do not agree, how do you explain everything Kepler to Darwin and Newton to Einstein or less well-known geneticists of today have done to our world view, *all* through history opposed by religious groups?

      In my view, there is a *very* big difference on the amount of opposition new ideas are met with in the two different "groups", stating what you just said about people in science is sort of a red herring if you ask me.

    318. Re:Which do you believe? by silverkniveshotmail. · · Score: 1

      That meme to say that a successful troll is still a troll is wrong in this case: the discussion that spurred was on topic and was not targeted toward me.

      My mistake, you weren't the troll. you were the one who got lured by the troll. sorry.
    319. Re:Which do you believe? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "50/50 isnt too shabby for historical accuracy ;) "

      I agree entirely. However, the fact that a controversy exists means that the question of whether we are dealing with a real man is still open, although the fact that new texts are periodically being discovered in unusual places means that it may not always be.

      "Not a straw man, I think you misuse that term here."

      You wrote the following:

      "the situation you are describing, that Christ did not exist (as a man or god) is a stretch even for atheists"

      I did not describe a situation where Jesus did not exist, but one where the evidence for his existence is at best debatable. It was therefore entirely correct to use the term "straw man" for your answer.

      "The problem is, the eyewitness's of Jesus were largely turned Christian and their writings Canonized if they had any legitimacy to them. Unfortunately today that means they are discredited."

      The problem is actually the fact that we don't have very much at all that can be directly attributed to eyewitnesses, or for that matter anyone who'd spoken to an eyewitness.

      "Citation needed."

      http://www.edwardtbabinski.us/history/hypatia.html

      "There were systematic massacres [of pagans]. One ordered by [Christian emperor] Theodosius in 380 in Thessalonica was unique. The pagans were invited to `games' at the Circus. The entrances were blocked and the soldiers of Theodosius killed 15,000 women and children for the true glory of Christ"

      http://www.mountainman.com.au/essenes/article_060.htm

      Many incidents here.

      "Sorry there bud, he is definitely a part of history. He just happens to be a religious figure as well. You will be hard pressed to find historians who say otherwise."

      You'll be even harder pressed to find historians who say he was _definitely_ part of history. Many claim that a preponderance of evidence indicates he was _probably_ a real historical figure, but few of the neutral ones would say that it's definite,

      "Not to mention that even now we are contesting his authenticity yet don't apply the same level of scrutiny to other historical figures."

      I think we do apply an equal level of scrutiny to other historical figures from the period. We know for example that Alexander The Great existed, and have a pretty good idea what he looked like because there were many statues of him built during and after his life, cities were named after him also during and after his life, and many chronicles from widely different sources were written during Alexander's "eyewitness" period. Most Roman emperors are equally well supported by both physical and historical evidence, likewise Egyptian Pharoahs, etc.

      "If there were not a religion tied to him no one would debate historical documents."

      If there wasn't a religion based around him, there wouldn't be any historical documents about a Jewish carpenter who, like tens of thousands of other completely anonymous people that nobody except their friends and families cared about, fell afoul of the Romans and ended up being executed for it.

      Note also that religions all over the world and throughout history have a notable penchant for incorporating both completely fictitious elements, and ones that are aggregates of others, some of which get "borrowed" from older religions and then modified to fit with whatever dogma the religion is based on. It's not therefore either surprising or a sign of bias for historians to question whether the central figures in any religion are entirely or partially mythical.

      "no push to rid us of the greek gods prevalent in society, talking of buddah and Muhammed is encouraged"

      1) Nobody is trying to claim that the Greek gods anything other than myths.
      2) Buddhists don't care what anyone else says about their religion or the various figures that are a part of it.
      3) Discussion of any

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    320. Re:Which do you believe? by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the excellent reply, all well founded arguments and would be a joy to debate further but alas this thread is long enough, at least now I know you are educated in the matter rather than someone simply dismissing the idea of a historical Christ completely; thus this discussion has probably been more for my edification than yours. It would be fun to run across more people like you in coffee shops ;)

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    321. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1
      I see that when you are in your element, you begin to dialog a bit more like you know what you're talking about. Thank you. Let's please continue this trend. Also, just FYI, you can use <quote>quote tags</quote> to have Slashdot highlight your quotations for you so you don't have to use ellipses, which are slightly distracting. But moving along.

      For your first two answers, I take it then that you simply assume they are false because you have never experienced "information" coming from a "non-mind". But if the two are are assumed to be true, then under that assumption, your premise, "information cannot come from a non-mind" is false, because chemical isomorphisms are a form of translating, reliably, back and forth between two chemical structures (remember I am using an IF here so please do me the courtesy of not taking this statement as a whole out of context; this is your only warning). It is the second structure, the sum total of amino acid chains, that forms the building blocks of all non-DNA life. Thus the burden of proof is on the one who insists that "information cannot come from a non-mind" to show, at the very least, how at least one of these first two propositions is impossible. If science does eventually demonstrate those two premises true beyond a shadow of a doubt, your assertion is invalid; however, if science eventually demonstrates either premise impossible, your assertion still certainly stands as an open question, but is not proven true, because those two premises are but one specific counterclaim to your generalized assertion.

      However it can be shown that software, analogous to the mind is independent of a particular hardware.

      Not quite. Software is totally incapable of being "run" without the right mechanisms available to run it. On a Mac PPC, there must be a virtual machine emulating the hardware of an Intel chip for windows software to be runnable. Ever try to run windows software natively on a Linux machine? There's a compatibility layer called WINE that runs some windows software on Linux, but there are a lot of Windows programs that simply don't work, or don't work well, within WINE, because the compatibility layer is incomplete due to the software of Windows being closed-source. The important thing to note here is that on the right hardware, most software still needs supporting software (the operating system) to keep it "hardware-independent", and on the wrong hardware, it needs not only the supporting software but a compatibility layer (a VM or an emulator) to run at all!

      And, perhaps more importantly, software pretty much cannot run at all--to be sure, it can exist (and in some sense all software exists at all times, as I will show below), but it cannot run--without some hardware in the first place. So, while from a high-level perspective software is not hardware specific, that by no means makes it hardware independent; i.e., this has not shown that software can run without hardware to run it (which, as you have already asserted quite bluntly, must be true for there to be a god-mind external to our concepts of spacetime).

      Admittedly, I can look at some programs and try and read them, line by line, and sort of "run" them in my mind. However, I have not seen sufficient evidence to show that I am doing this in something "external" to my brain, so again, this appears to be a case of software running on hardware.

      Computer software is created in a human mind

      I clearly demonstrated above a dumb, insightless process that can produce any computer program a human can through brute force, given enough time and memory requirements. Just because I created the master program in my mind is immaterial -- the important point is that I have demonstrated a brute force process that knows nothing about the symbols it is manipulating but nevertheless "figures out" useful computer programs.

      It is quite easy to see that given enough time and resources, every comp

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    322. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      So when you apply your mind AND energy into ordering the mess in your room, in what or where is there a decrease of order? In the attic or garbage can? I know we're involved in some pretty heavy discussion in another branch of this thread, but when you apply your mind in converting disorder into order, you are creating disorder by metabolizing simple sugars in order to power both your brain and your muscles. Ever try to think after a day or so without eating? The delirium you feel is your body temporarily shutting down higher-level neural functions to lower brain metabolism and conserve energy.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    323. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Ever try to think after a day or so without eating? ....

      Personally I feel crummy if I don't eat, whether I do much thinking or not. Those sugars get metabolized even when you're asleep. It's just a normal function of your body. So how much of this metabolic "disorder" is added when you do finally get around to cleaning up? Probably that is much harder to quantify than the nice looks of your place after you get done with all that expenditure of brainpower and muscle effort.

      The whole point is that undirected energy alone doesn't result in a clean room or a 747 airliner. You also have to add intelligence in order to get either.

      --
      All theory is gray
    324. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      So how much of this metabolic "disorder" is added when you do finally get around to cleaning up? Brain scans show someone participating actively in an activity that requires thought has higher metabolism rates than someone relaxing.

      Those sugars get metabolized even when you're asleep. You also dream when you're asleep, which means mental energy is getting expended and entropy is increasing as sugars are metabolizing while the "order" of your dreams is created.

      Your body has to keep up a baseline metabolism (increased entropy) to keep your body from shutting down completely (decreased entropy).

      The whole point is that undirected energy alone doesn't result in a clean room or a 747 airliner. The point is, the result of the second law of thermodynamics is that expended energy and thus increased disorder elsewhere are necessary for increased order. That is what is meant by a closed system -- that the overall entropy increases, yes, even when you clean your room. Compare the mental energy required to clean up your room to the mental energy required to clean up the wreckage of the World Trade Center post-9/11. It's safe to say a LOT more glucose molecules got converted into CO2 and H2O to clean up THAT mess than to tidy up your room, especially if you know ahead of time what goes where, which means you've expended some of the mental energy forming a model for

      No, intelligence does not somehow "escape" the second law of thermodynamics. It doesn't mean expended energy yields increased order, otherwise your brain could not exist at all, chemical reactions could not occur, and the computer that you are typing on could not exist.

      Consider that a frozen puddle fits a depression in the road perfectly, because in addition to an expenditure of energy on the part of the water, there was a directing force (gravity) and physical constraints (the sides of the puddle). You can pick it up and it will keep the shape of the puddle. Some uneducated people might marvel in awe at the skill of the designer who shaped the ice so perfectly to match the depression.

      Or consider that a train, running on a track, is forced into a single direction and will reach its destination without any intervention. Again, there are guiding forces (the energy from the engine) and physical constraints (the track).

      Or consider as I have indicated before, that two hydrogen molecules and one oxygen molecule will recombine spontaneously with enough energy input to create two water molecules (please, without the whole design tangent this time). Note that in addition to increased entropy (heating of the molecules), and the energy expended when the three molecules recombine (due to the exothermic reaction), there were additional guiding forces (electromagnetism) and physical constraints (in an abundance of H2 and O2 the likelihood of the three molecules colliding appropriately becomes very slim).

      Nobody had to intelligently shape the ice to fit the form of the pit. Nobody had to intelligently bring hydrogen and oxygen together. Nobody had to keep correcting the train to stay on course, and yet order arose from disorder without intelligent intervention in the midst of the process. But this is part of the premise I'm arguing with you in the other thread, that these "guiding forces" and "physical constraints" are not necessarily the result of intelligence.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    325. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1
      Agh. Again with the unfinished thoughts.

      which means you've expended some of the mental energy forming a model for Forming a model for a clean room in your brain, requiring that you expend less mental energy cleaning up your room each time.

      But again, if evolution violates the second law of thermodynamics then so does intelligence.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    326. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Are you implying I don't want to believe? That if I wanted to believe, I would?

      I suggest you read up on whether belief is actually a choice.

      http://atheism.about.com/od/atheismquestions/a/beliefchoice.htm

      Christianity is a huge emotional stronghold for me. If I saw one good, compelling piece of evidence, I would believe again. So far you have presented me with nothing but tired, poorly presented apologetics and logical fallacies and failed to offer a shred of useful evidence supporting my believing in your God.

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    327. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      Wow, that was a long and good reply. Thanks.

      You are basically confusing the mere existence of software/mind and the actual RUNNING or actualizing thereof. Of course software requires some sort of hardware to execute and so does mind need some sort of "wetware" ie. brain to actualize it.

      Since we are physical beings, confined to a physical universe, for us it has to be that way. Products of the mind can and do exist, whether they are at the moment in an environment for their realization in a form we can perceive or not.

      If I start a given program in your computer and then unplug all input and output devices from it, the software can still be running or not. You will never know. Does a tree fall in the forest if there s no observer? Of course it does. Immaterial information can certainly EXIST apart from being in an environment wherein in can be executed.

      Software/information can be shown by experiment to be an immaterial massless entity. A new, blank HD will weigh no more (or less), once you load Gigabytes of data on it, even using the most sensitive weighing apparatus available. A printed page with a given number of letters on it will always weigh the same, no matter how you arrange those letters.

      (..Just because I created the master program in my mind is immaterial..)

      No it is not immaterial, because your "master" program is not random and specifically instructs the computer to produce whatever output you specified. Just because your program may invoke a pseudo random number generator to make its output unpredictable, at least to a degree, it nevertheless does exactly what you instructed it to do. A normal computer is a deterministic device, the output of which will always be a repeatable function of its inputs. It may be very difficult at times to determine all the variables, but if you do know their values its output will always be the exactly predictable.

      We presently think a quantum computer may be different here, but I don't think so. It may APPEAR to be non-deterministic because we, at least at this time, CANNOT determine all of its variables. The very act of trying to find out their values by trying changes the variables.

      (..It is actually possible to modulate matter itself into a light wave..)

      No it is not. It possible to modulate an arbitrarily accurate DESCRIPTION or abstraction of matter, but not matter itself. Any description is still immaterial information. Nothing affected by gravity (ie. mass) can go at the speed of light.

      (..And these symbols must themselves have a carrier..)

      Yes they do, but only for us to be able to perceive them. Because we are presently confined our physical senses, this is true, but is not a requirement for information to exist. Again, think of the tree falling in the forest. A caterpillar has within it, all information needed to become a butterfly or moth. Until it actually does so, that information is there, although not actual and the caterpillar is forced to crawl around, rather than take to the air.

      In short then, you're right that software/mind requires hardware in order for us to sense/interact with it, but it can and does exist quite independently of our ability to perceive it.

      --
      All theory is gray
    328. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      it is not immaterial because your "master" program...specifically instructs the computer to produce whatever output you specified.

      Please show how my original argument supporting that claim is an insufficient defense rather than attacking it directly. Again the point there is a totally mechanical, uninsightful process can discover a new program that I myself could not. It cannot be said that the output programs are a direct product of my mind, because I may not even know how they work! It could be said that, since every number can be seen as its binary representation, converted to ASCII, and compiled and run as a computer program, that every number has a property of being a computer program or not, and that therefore in some sense the set [all computer programs that satisfy requirements R] must in some sense already exist, independent of any mind to discover it! I realize this is very high level stuff but I recommend this book for more information on the subject.

      All I provided it was a certain group of inputs and outputs, and all it does is compare the outputs of the computed programs to the given inputs. A simple equality comparison. A totally mechanical process that, given enough time and memory resources, produces computer programs I can't even fathom.

      So what we have here is an example of a mind, creating a non-mind, producing novel information. Again, that there is a non-mind when you walk up the stack doesn't change the fact that this it is a non-mind producing this information. In fact, I could create an arbitrarily long series of non-minds creating non-minds that finally produced novel, useful information.

      In other words, the most cohesive version of your argument is that from what we can observe, information appears to always be *eventually* traceable back to a mind. That being the case, though, your argument cannot distinguish between Deism, Theistic Evolution, or Creationism, because all three eventually trace back to a mind.

      And as I said before, the idea of chemical self-replicators eventually making a mistake which causes them to take advantage of chemical isomorphisms to increase their self-replicating efficiency, if proven true, puts your argument in jeopardy.

      But i fear we have hit "agree to disagree" territory here. I just hope I can convince you that my views are not without thought.

      A printed page with a given number of letters on it will always weigh the same, no matter how you arrange those letters.

      Well, this is just a nitpick, but each of those individual letters would have some weight and the printer won't exactly output the same weight for the same letter every time. More importantly though, the ink or toner is a physical entity and does not support your claim.

      Software/information can be shown by experiment to be an immaterial massless entity.

      Assuming light is not considered a material carrier just because it is massless. Even so, even in that case it has a carrier bound by physical laws. If I were to modulate my entire mind onto a light beam, it would have to stop "running" until someone demodulated it somewhere else capable of "running" my mind. But again, it all seems to require a physical carrier to run.

      Because we are presently confined our physical senses, this is true, but is not a requirement for information to exist. Again, think of the tree falling in the forest. A caterpillar has within it, all information needed to become a butterfly or moth.

      Again, that is a description of a physical carrier. DNA is a physical object, and the resulting proteins generated from that DNA are a more generalized physical object, still containing all that data in a different form, its

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    329. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      no one goes to hell by bad behavior Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't the standard Christian theology that everybody goes to hell for bad behavior?
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    330. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      ...at least, by default?

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    331. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Again, that there is a non-mind when you walk up the stack doesn't change the fact that this it is a non-mind producing this information. That should read: "Again, that there is a mind when you walk up the production stack doesn't change the fact that it is a non-mind producing this information."
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    332. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Are you implying I don't want to believe? That if I wanted to believe, I would?...

      In a way yes, in a way no. We read this in Mark 9:23-24 - Jesus said to him, If you can believe, all things are possible to him who believes. 24 And immediately the father of the child cried out and said with tears, Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief.

      You too can cry out to Him: Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief.

      The account of "doubting" Thomas after the resurrection of Jesus is very instructive:

      John 20:24-29 But Thomas, one of the twelve, called the Twin, was not with them when Jesus came. 25 The other disciples therefore said to him, We have seen the Lord. But he said to them, Unless I shall see the print of the nails in His hands, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into His side, I will not believe. 26 And after eight days the disciples were inside again, and Thomas was with them. Jesus came, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst and said, Peace to you! 27 Then He said to Thomas, Reach your finger here and behold My hands; and reach your hand here and thrust it into My side; and do not be unbelieving, but believing. 28 And Thomas answered and said to Him, My Lord and my God! 29 Jesus said to him, Thomas, because you have seen Me you have believed. Blessed are they who have not seen and have believed.

      You too may, though filled with doubt, but may, like Thomas, call Jesus Lord and God in worship. Be careful though that you really mean it, for it carries with it that you are freely giving Jesus the right to run your life, rather than you running it as you have up to now. It's not so much your emotions that hold you back but your Will. Jesus too had to struggle to submit His will to the will of the father. He literally sweat blood in Gethsemane over the prospect of the horrible suffering that humble submission would bring.

      In our human way of operation we say: Show me and I'll believe. God turns that around and says: Believe and I'll show you.

      --
      All theory is gray
    333. Re:Which do you believe? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief. But, see, this is something I did quite frequently during my de-conversion. Many times. I figured if there really was an omnipotent God and he truly wanted me to believe in him, then he knew exactly what it would take to convince me. So I did what some nonbelievers do not: I "tested the spirits" so to speak. And despite that, my unbelief has grown. Everything I experience has started to fall into place with a naturalistic explanation.

      I know that you and other well-meaning Christians want to tell me that door is there and it's my job to walk through it, but after so many prayers met with silence I can't help but question whether there's even a door there to begin with. But I'll tell you what I tell other people: maybe someday something unmistakable will change my mind and I will come to belief. Maybe not; I just don't know. So far nothing has.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    334. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't the standard Christian theology that everybody goes to hell for bad behavior?...

      Actually no, people go to hell because of unbelief. We read:

      John 3:16-18 -- For God so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. 17 For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but so that the world might be saved through Him. 18 He who believes on Him is not condemned, but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of God.

      You cannot go to heaven because of your good works and you cannot go to hell because your bad deeds.

      A condemned, obviously guilty criminal on death row is told he has a pardon from the governor waiting for him, on condition of admitting to the crimes and accepting that pardon. If that criminal refuses to believe and thereby not accept that free pardon, is that the fault of the governor or state when he ends up in the execution chamber?

      We humans are ALL condemned to eternal death sinners and are all offered an everlasting pardon and freedom. The conditions are admitting we have committed crimes (sins) against a perfect and holy God and accepting, believing and trusting Him who offers the pardon, as made possible by the sacrificial death of Jesus.

      After that acceptance, a Christian may still fall and sin, even many times, but the desire to sin and enjoy its pleasure disappears. We now have the freedom to do acceptable works of God, because we are already bound for heaven. We do not now or ever, earn the right to become the children of God. That is a gift of grace we may accept or refuse.

      --
      All theory is gray
    335. Re:Which do you believe? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...and I will come to belief...

      As long as there is breath in you, it is not too late. God has a time and place where and when you will experience you own personal crisis and will after that KNOW the truth. Like the prodigal son Jesus speaks of, you may have to eat some pig food and come to the end of your self and your own efforts. However, the Father is waiting for you with open arms.

      Even in the Old Testament God says this:

      Jeremiah 29:13 And you shall seek Me and find Me , when you search for Me with all your heart. 14 And I will be found by you, says the LORD;

      Notice He doesn't say MAY find, but SHALL find. That is a personal certain promise the eternal God makes to you also. Actually it isn't so much that we find Him, but He finds us. That was true right there in the garden when God went looking for Adam who was hiding from God. Adam did not look for God, but God came looking for Adam.

      God knows where you are and your state of mind right now. He WILL call you on HIS schedule and you will know when He does. I hope and pray that when that call comes, you will answer affirmatively and with joy.

      --
      All theory is gray
    336. Re:Which do you believe? by spamking · · Score: 1

      Wow . . . thanks for that worthwhile moderation.

      I hope it was worth the effort.

    337. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course you can predict outcomes! What do you think happens every time you sit down? Or stand up? Or draw a breath? Or eat a few grams of potsssium cyanide?

      QM's statistical, perturbative approach aggregates into classical mechanics; QM did not invalidate classical mechanics except in the limit of small objects. One can make entirely accurate predictions using just (deterministic!) Newtonian mechanics on everyday objects like cars, bridges, and household plumbing.

      Newtonian mechanics are fully predictable, and obviously allow for the prediction of outcomes with total confidence, but Newtonian mechanics do not work at all energy and length scales. GR works better than Newtonian mechanics in the limit of large objects (but not large particle energies), QM works better than Newtonian mechanics in the limit of small objects and large particle energies.

      Statistical mechanics is not necessary for making entirely accurate predictions using classical thermodynamics -- it's just that classical thermodynanics does not satisfactorily explain why these predictions are correct. Stat mech does, by exploring the aggregation of quantum behaviour into macroscopic phenomena. Statistical thermodynamics also convincingly makes the same predictions as classical phenomenological thermodynamics, accounting for quantized energy, and the behaviours of the quanta, which extends classical predictions mainly by providing reasons why a particular thermodynamic system has a particular free energy level.

      A more fundamental answer to your assertion "you can not know and predict outcomes - no matter the amount of computing power you have" is that of course you can, but "you cannot make simultaneous predictions of conjugate variables with arbitrary accuracy".

      This answer has nothing to do with Bell's theorem.

    338. Re:Which do you believe? by denzacar · · Score: 1

      [quote]Why make all the fuss over Jesus and go through all the hassles if they knew it was all entirely made up? There was a stir be made early on and it had its roots somewhere. Least unlikely scenario is that the itinerant preacher existed.[/quote]
      Ever heard of Clark Kent? Or Superman? How about Bruce Wayne or Batman? Or John Clayton, Lord Greystoke or Tarzan?
      Or lets make it even simpler - Santa Claus? Or Boogeyman?

      Wanna take up the "Why the hassle if they don't exist?" argument again?

      As for least UN-likely scenario...
      Last time I checked, something or someone can not be considered real unless proven so.
      The IDEA of his/hers/its existence can still have an effect on us, because we are sentient beings and we live in our minds first and foremost.
      But try applying that to dogs or cows. Not to mention something non-living as cars or rocks.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    339. Re:Which do you believe? by jpellino · · Score: 1

      I didn't say he was right, I claimed he often seems insightful.

      The Nixon stuff would be the part not covered by "usually".

      --
      "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    340. Re:Which do you believe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just fyi, when people wave that particular wikipedia article at you you can reply with e.g.:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Historicity_of_Jesus&oldid=207422460#.22Non-historicity_effectively_refuted.22

    341. Re:Which do you believe? by Artichoke · · Score: 1

      The characters you reference are all in the fiction category. References to Jesus in the early writings don't cast themselves as fiction, but purport to be referring to a real person. So the analogy doesn't match and the burden of proof surely lies with the case for non-existence. The hassle argument stands AFAICS - why suffer for a pretence? They may have been deluded to the nature of Jesus, (though even then they don't appear to have a fixed opinion early on) but someone's existence is harder to mistake. You can't get proof for historical events, so within a historical context I'm not sure what proof you would be happy with. Do you disbelieve in all characters who are only referred to in documents of the Classical period? Seems to be an unwarrantably extreme sceptical position. If you are willing to accept the probable existence of other Classical era individuals whose only record is documentary, then why the exception in this case?

      --
      __
      Arse
  2. You're 20 days too late... by cosmicaug · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You are 20 days too late to take these lying clowns seriously.

  3. A toast by Canosoup · · Score: 3, Insightful

    to Expelled, a movie full of ad hominems, half truths, non sequiturs and promoting ignorance!

    --
    Hey! Look a Distraction!
    1. Re:A toast by macbuzz01 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      We are talking about 'Expelled' not 'An Inconvenient Truth'

    2. Re:A toast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Has anyone actually watched it? I mean really.

      I listened to an interview w/ Stein. He pointed that Scientists' are creating about a trillionth of a second after the big bang. The question is what about before? Stein simply argues for a discussion about ID. That there some inherent design vs. it is purely an accident. He does not point to some religious creationism.

      Fundamentally the issue is a matter of philosophical issue. Was the big bang and succeeding events an accident or the product of some sort of design. Science really can't answer that. But, the issue should be open for discussion. Looking at the comments here already demonstrate what Stein was talking about in his interview.

    3. Re:A toast by oxidiser · · Score: 1

      Well... what do you expect? This is a site for technophiles and scientists. Not a ton of people in ID's corner here. Scientists are naturally skeptic but being a scientist AND being open to the idea of ID is difficult at best.

    4. Re:A toast by ericspinder · · Score: 1

      I believe that your saying, Stein's theory is that God controls all things, including evolution. Of course if he put it that succinctly, the opening credits would last longer than the movie, so I'm guessing that the rest of the movie he just throws around a lot of muck, and see what sticks to the walls. Kinda like a typical political race.

      I hope that he had time for my fringe theory; God invented the universe in order to create the ultimate chili recipe. Once achieved, he'll 'big bang' again, and work out the best golf swing.

      --
      The grass is only greener, if you don't take care of your own lawn.
    5. Re:A toast by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      "Scientists are naturally skeptic but being a scientist AND being open to the idea of ID is difficult at best."

      Indeed. It's much like how being sighted and open to the idea of the sky being green is difficult at best.

    6. Re:A toast by yakmans_dad · · Score: 1

      Intelligent Design primarily wants to argue from ignorance: "I don't understand the processes behind this phenomenon, therefore God." That's not the strongest rhetoric possible, and it definitely isn't Science.

    7. Re:A toast by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      No, that's not it at all. I see people make that point again and again, that believing in creation means that you can no longer make scientific discoveries and question how things work. That's a strawman argument, and it shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the point at hand. In fact, the debate isn't so much creation vs evolution as it is creation vs abiogenesis.

      Creation is not an argument from ignorance. First, a disclaimer: I am not defending the whole ID movement (because, yes they do indeed bend or fabricate science "fact" to fit their political agenda). Creation is compatible with science, if viewed as the Bible teaches stripped of what I like to call "Bible philosophy". Modern ID is neither compatible with the Bible nor with science. It's a POLITICAL movement using religion to leverage popular support. Or maybe it's a religious movement using politics to leverage popular support. Same difference, religion and politics are a bad, bad mixture.

      The modern political movement that calls itself ID is flat out unscientific, and at best takes liberties with the Bible. For example, does the bible say that the earth or universe is 6000 years old? No. Does the bible say that all life came about in six literal days? Only if you are uber literal, but then if you apply the same literal stance elsewhere in the Bible, you are insane to believe a word of it anyhow. In fact, that's how critics of the Bible attack it, but taking things out of context or taking everything literally. Regardless, the ID movement does more harm to its own cause than anyone else needs to. You don't need to shoot someone who just shot himself in the foot repeatedly. Ok, disclaimer over. Back to the point at hand.

      If one believes in creation, one can still question how things work and make discoveries. Believing in creation is accepting evidence at hand. How can that be said? Because: in any other context, when we see design (i.e. order, structure) we rightly infer that it was designed. Order implies a designer.

      Sure, some things appear to be chaotic. But even then, physical laws still apply. And laws imply a lawmaker. Why do I have to keep repeating that?

      It's not a matter of saying "ah shucks, that's really complex and we can't explain it, so we'll just use our elastic clause: God did it!" It's simply recognizing that since there is so much order in the universe, that someone must have had a hand in it. It's just like accepting that there is so much evidence for relativity that it is reasonable to conclude it's true. Believing a creator exists is a product of evidence (and just because the evidence is abundant and obvious to even a child doesn't mean it is not evidence!) People here talk as though it's simpler to ignore abundant evidence and believe in no creator and then come up with cute false analogies about flying spaghetti monsters and orbiting teapots and whatever else the latest Dawkins book says. If you are going to assert that a creator doesn't exist, you have to go to great lengths and grasp at straws and what-ifs and maybes and over-the-course-of-billions-of-years to explain life and order and convince yourself and maybe even others that you killed God. Which option sounds like mythology to you?

      I have never heard of a scientific experiment where life was created from nonlife, and even then, a scientific experiment implies that there was someone there monitoring and encouraging the process. If such an experiment exists, share it. Until that experiment happens (and it won't), there is absolutely NO SCIENTIFIC BASIS for believing in abiogenesis (and without abiogenesis, one cannot leave a creator of some kind out of the picture, evolution or not). Heck, even the classic Miller-Urey experiment couldn't produce *life*; it only produced some amino acids. Sure, that's the first step...but one step a journey doesn't make. Scientists in a laboratory replicating the optimal conditions *assumed* to have existed a very long time ago and almost succeeding but not quite is no

      --
      blah blah blah
    8. Re:A toast by yakmans_dad · · Score: 1

      The contentious issue between Intelligent Design and Science isn't Creation. It's Evolution. Creation is outside the domain of Science. ID wants to mix the issue up, but Creation is irrelevant to Evolution.

    9. Re:A toast by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      Nice ploy. Just move the issue, then. "Oh, you see, that's a separate branch of study." Evolution, without explaining the origin of life, is like buying a half-eaten doughnut. If you believe in abiogenesis, then you necessarily believe in evolution. If you believe life was created, then evolution becomes very tenuous. You must choose one, and follow through to the natural conclusion. Evolution, as it is currently taught, *depends* on abiogenesis. Evolution is critically injured by the notion that life is a product of a creator, and that's precisely why evolutionists ridicule the idea of a god.

      --
      blah blah blah
    10. Re:A toast by yakmans_dad · · Score: 1

      You've got yourself a movie there. No science, but you've got yourself a movie. And a grudge.

    11. Re:A toast by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      No grudges. You can think what you want. I don't ridicule you, all I ask is the same in return. When did science mean that you are in agreement with the majority of people? I thought science was about accepting evidence without bias, no matter where it leads. If my views are so unscientific, feel free to debunk them. Do you really think I'd argue this point on /. from a position of ignorance? I have read talkorigins.org and other sites like it. I have studied evolution. I used to believe evolution and abiogenesis, until someone asked me the same things I just asked you. I had to be honest with myself and let go of something I thought to be correct. It's easy for you to sit there and dismiss me, but frankly you haven't addressed a single point. That's ok, cause I am not going to convince you and you are not going to convince me unless you can produce some groundbreaking research I haven't read about. I invite you to try, and don't point me to talkorigins. The thing with sites like talkorigins.org is that they address ridiculous claims made by the ridiculous ID movement. This movement is the world's largest exporter of strawmen, and countering these does nobody any good except that it wastes time of the ID community as well as the "scientific" community.

      No movie, either.

      But I guess either are better than a half-eaten doughnut ;)

      --
      blah blah blah
    12. Re:A toast by Foggerty · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The big bang and origins of life have nothing to do with evolution. Descent through natural selection describes how life evolves, it doesn't actually touch on what is, lets face it, astrophysics. And nor should it.

      And yes Steien DOES point to a god. ID is just Creationism with a new look. Google for the PBS documentary on the Dover School Trial and you'll see what I mean.

    13. Re:A toast by Gideon+Fubar · · Score: 1

      I completely disagree. Scifi was what got me into actual science as a child. The concept of Intelligent Design is close to my heart.. and that of Occam's razor. To paraphrase a tired, useless argument: we're far more likely to have been made by aliens than to have appeared out of nothing.

      --
      http://www.xkcd.com/354/
    14. Re:A toast by Gideon+Fubar · · Score: 1

      You might want to read up on Determinism. Perhaps then you can come up with an argument that isn't 2500 years old.

      --
      http://www.xkcd.com/354/
    15. Re:A toast by deserttrail · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, you talk about abundant evidence, but I couldn't pick any out of your post. The only thing I see is loose implications like "order implies a designer." Maybe I'm dense, but I just don't get it. To me, it seems logical that anything able to design the universe must have order itself. By your logic, since it has order, it must have a designer as well, which also must have a designer, which also... I'm sure you get the idea. Lets just assume for the moment that the designer can just "be." But wait, why can we assume that for the designer, but not the laws of physics?

      Maybe I missed what you said. Overall, I agree with your general point about orthodoxy being bad in science, or in anything, but I didn't see anything in your post amounting to anything more than "I (we) don't understand it, so God did it" (despite your claims to the contrary).

      --
      Be civil to all; sociable to many; familiar with few; friend to one; enemy to none. --Benjamin Franklin
    16. Re:A toast by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, you talk about abundant evidence, but I couldn't pick any out of your post. The only thing I see is loose implications like "order implies a designer."

      Look around you. Think of the natural laws that exist. Think of life itself. I am not saying that it's so complex and I don't understand it and therefore it must be created. I am saying that we DO understand it, and the more we understand it the more we realize how complex and, pardon the expression, how well made it is.

      Anyplace else you see a complex device (or any device, for that matter), you do not logically assume that it came about by accident. You assume it was made somewhere, in a factory or something. Please explain to me how this logic breaks down when we are talking about life itself.

      As for your point about who designed the designer, etc...abiogenesis proponents face the same dilemma. Ok, so all matter came from a singularity, which was infinitely dense and infinitely small. Where did the singularity come from? See? It's the same problem. At some point, one must just accept that we can only see so far back. Abiogenesis proponents have to accept some original...something. In that sense, they are no different than people who believe in a god. Both claims are untestable, unfalsifiable, and therefore unscientific. You cannot apply the scientific method to the origin of life, be it god or anything else. A limitation of the scientific method, human limitation, or is it just the boundary of what is knowable? Don't ask me!
      --
      blah blah blah
    17. Re:A toast by Copid · · Score: 1

      Nice ploy. Just move the issue, then. "Oh, you see, that's a separate branch of study." Evolution, without explaining the origin of life, is like buying a half-eaten doughnut.
      Does the same failing apply to Newton's work for not explaining the origin of matter?
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    18. Re:A toast by Rebelgecko · · Score: 1

      Has anyone actually watched it? I mean really. Ironically, they've actually kept people from watching it, including someone who they interviewed for the movie!
      --
      CATS/Diebold '08- All your vote are belong to us!
    19. Re:A toast by deserttrail · · Score: 1

      Look around you. Think of the natural laws that exist. Think of life itself.
      If you can say that the creator can just be, then you must allow me to say that the laws of physics can just be. You can't discount something on the basis of complexity while using something much more complex to explain it.

      Anyplace else you see a complex device (or any device, for that matter), you do not logically assume that it came about by accident. You assume it was made somewhere, in a factory or something. Please explain to me how this logic breaks down when we are talking about life itself.
      A factory is a good guess for the device and can potentially be verified. A natural process is a good guess for life and can potentially be verified (or at least shown to be possible). It would be intellectually lazy to say that since abiogenesis hasn't been proven *yet* that it will never be proven, therefore God did it. This is what you essentially said in your prior post. There's no reason to stop there when we can find a simpler answer.

      As for your point about who designed the designer, etc...abiogenesis proponents face the same dilemma.
      I was really hoping for an answer here, but instead you just redirected. I didn't ask about abiogenesis, I asked about the designer's designer's designer. You're trying to explain complexity with an even greater complexity. Can you not see the problem with this, where the logic breaks down?

      I'll take physics, mathematics, and theories, right or wrong, over a shoulder shrug and an "it's just not knowable." At least they are trying. And just to be technical, abiogenesis != big bang. I know people like to conflate the beginning of the universe and the start of life on Earth, but they really are two separate events. One's truth does not depend on the other's.

      I apologize if this came out a bit snarky. I really don't mean it that way. I really appreciate the civil manner of your posts and I'm sorry I'm not as good as putting down my thoughts as you seem to be.
      --
      Be civil to all; sociable to many; familiar with few; friend to one; enemy to none. --Benjamin Franklin
    20. Re:A toast by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      If you can say that the creator can just be, then you must allow me to say that the laws of physics can just be.

      Fair point, and I think that's where we differ. You see me as adding some additional layer onto the existence of physical laws...I see your viewpoint as accepting the results without seeing beyond to what established those laws. I think here is the fundamental difference.

      Sure, we can verify the existence of a factory. But suppose we were to come into contact with some piece of extraterrestrial technology that is way more advanced than us. We'd never be able to verify that it was made by someone or in some factory. But would we just conclude it came into existence all by itself? Of course not. We'd assume it had a designer and a manufacturer.

      As for abiogenesis, I have no problem with people trying to replicate it (even if it were to be replicated, it is replicated by *someone*, ergo, a creator). I don't think abiogenesis can be proven, but if scientists want to try, I applaud their Sisyphean task. Who knows? They might just discover something useful.

      I don't think I redirected anything. I understand what you are saying about a creator needing a creator, and so on, ad nauseum. I am just pointing out that at some point, you have to accept things as just being without knowing why, be it physical laws, a singularity, a creator, or a flying spaghetti monster. I know origin of life and origin of the universe are different areas of study. But both grapple with the same essential problem, namely, you start with *something*. Where did this *something* come from? I don't see a logical flaw, I only see the horizon of human understanding which, in time, will expand one way or another. In other words, we *will* know how we got here someday.

      The tone of your post doesn't bother me. I too appreciate being able to debate with someone who is willing to have an intelligent discussion. I do not expect to convince you of anything. All I want is for someone to see that not all folks who believe in creation are anti-science cave dwellers. There are logical reasons and deliberate thought behind what I believe, and I do not think my viewpoints are at odds with science. I appreciate and enjoy science and discovery. I just cannot accept the notion that all we see around us came into being by accident. Some things happen by accident. But the more we learn about life, I don't see how one can be intellectually honest and deny the existence of a creator. One has to separate the notion of a creator from the churches and their dark ages and the modern ID movement who do more harm to the notion of a creator than just about anyone else. I am not talking religious doctrine or dogma. I am just applying the same logic we apply elsewhere in life to life itself.

      If you want to accept that physical laws just exist, or that all matter came from a singularity, or that life spontaneously arose from nonliving matter, fine. One may accept those as possibilities, but then I do not see how one can be so certain that there is no creator.
      --
      blah blah blah
    21. Re:A toast by deserttrail · · Score: 1

      ...accepting the results without seeing beyond to what established those laws.
      I'll accept that we differ on this and neither opinion is more valid than the other. I just don't see the need for the natural laws to have a lawmaker. That's what makes them "natural" ;) To look beyond those laws, in the way that you do, falls into the realm of philosophy and I've never really been much of a philosopher.

      As to finding a piece of alien technology, if it were much more advance than ours, would we be able to identify it as technology? As they say, any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. Do you have any doubt that there would be mountains of people proclaiming that it was created by God and given to man by Him? I don't. When faced with the unknown people tend to turn to the comfortable. For some people that would be God, others would say it must be alien tech, but still others would say that it must be a natural phenomenon because aliens can't cross the interstellar distances to be on Earth. Really, I think there'd be tons of disagreement about what it was and how it was made.

      Yesterday's Sisyphean task is today's accomplishment. Many people have believed that many things have not been possible and been wrong. If we had listened to those people, where would we be today? I'm glad that, even though you don't believe it's possible, that you don't actually want anyone to quit trying. I disagree, however, that even if they succeed, it still implies a creator. If they are able to replicate it by generating an environment that could have been naturally occurring, then they merely created the environment. This goes back to abiogenesis can be true without a natural creation to everything before it.

      I place myself firmly in the Agnostic category. The existence or non-existence of God is not something I (or anyone) can prove, disproved, or imply. Given that, I think it's best to assume a natural process for everything (yes, I know what happens when you ass-u-me :P). It's too soon to declare that assumption invalid. There's always more to know and to put a "God did it, the rest is unknowable" (or even "the Big Bang happened, the rest is unknowable") on something is purposefully giving up on potential knowledge. Just think of where the world would be if we had done that whenever some person or even a majority of people thought it was sufficient.

      Let me reiterate that I have no problem with there being a creator. I just don't think it's helpful to assume it to be true when trying to figure out how things work. In other words, how does knowing that an alien device has a creator help you understand how it works?
      --
      Be civil to all; sociable to many; familiar with few; friend to one; enemy to none. --Benjamin Franklin
  4. Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There was a debate? When?

    Oh, right, in America. Oh you silly Americans. I guess the age of the American Empire is truly over. You're hell bent on driving your population into the next Christian Dark Age, while China is preparing to whip your ass. Good luck with that.

    1. Re:Debate? by aramis34143 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Remember, everyone. Debate is bad. Even listening to arguements counter to your own beliefs might pollute the purity of your intellect. Shout as loudly as you can until the bad man goes away.

    2. Re:Debate? by eclectro · · Score: 1

      next Christian Dark Age, while China is preparing to whip your ass. Good luck with that./quote.

      You mean after they're done whipping the ass of all those in Tibet? Which Dark Age are you speaking of??
      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    3. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shout as loudly as you can until the bad man goes away.
      Oh so you're familiar with the tactics of the ID crowd?

      Scientific and political debate is valid. ID is neither Science or Politics. So where, exactly, should the debate be? There is no debate: it's a bunch of evangelicals trying to re-ignite a debate that happened at the turn of the 20th Century and which was resolved. Is it valid to debate Marxism as a valid socio-political theory? No: because it's been tried, the debate was had and it's been proven not to work. Same deal with Creationism: the only difference is that a small group have dressed it up and called it "Intelligent Design" to make it look like a new debate. Well, that isn't going to fly with me.

      I'll respect your beliefs and I'll even debate them with you if it's going to be a valid debate. I'll also call you out if you're talking crap. ID isn't valid science, it isn't worth debating, it is crap. Let's all be hones and call a spade a spade.
    4. Re:Debate? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      China is much further into a theocratic dark age than America. It's just that the theocracy is based on Chinese nationalism. The net effect is that lots of PRC scientists believe that -

      http://www.chinahistoryforum.com/lofiversion/index.php/t3575.html
      For nationalistic purposes, many Chinese scholars maintain that Peking Man evolved indigenously in north China, rather than sharing an origin point in Africa like other human ethnic groups.

      Which I think is nonsense. If we don't all share a common African ancestor, how come we can interbreed? As someone else puts it

      By my understanding, it is almost a statistical impossibility for the same species to originate independently in several places at once. Modern Chinese are, without a doubt, Homo sapiens, as are all other humans, by the only objective test for species: Chinese and all other humans can interbreed and give birth to fertile children. Homo erectus was a different species from Homo sapiens. If Chinese were descended from a different species, they ought to be even more different from Homo sapiens than Homo erectus was, and therefore not interfertile with other people. But this is not the case.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    5. Re:Debate? by jandrese · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, it's time to set up a formal debate with the Flat Earth guys--don't supress them man! You are just biased in your round Earth worldview! Sure, they'll handle themselves just about as well as creationists in such a debate (at least when the real scientists come prepared), but that's no reason not to keep going back and debating it over and over again.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    6. Re:Debate? by StreetStealth · · Score: 1

      "Oh, those dullard Americans and their closed-minded theocratic state!"

      Thanks for your valuable and uniquely insightful contribution to the discussion. It's good to know you're watching out for us.

      --
      Your mind is clear / The things that you fear / Will fade with how much you / Believe what you hear
    7. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would agree with this but Europeans run around chewing on herbs going to naturopaths and being scared of GMO food, Sure our ethanol "revolution" is part of the problem but if europeans weren't obsessed about organic and natural (whatever that means) foods we would have about 10%-20% more grains from the same crop acreage.

      So lets not pretend the religious ignorance is the only type of ignorance out there. And remember that Organic and non-GMO foods are rich people starving poor people and cutting down "natural" places because of ignorant fears.

    8. Re:Debate? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      It is quite a stretch to equal the status of Marxism qua socio-political theory and Creationism!

    9. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no, no. You totally misapprehend the situation.

      Using social pressure and stupid Christian antics, intelligent Americans are being compelled to move to the coasts (specifically, New England, the Pacific Northwest, and California) where they will be as productive and happy as possible. At the same time, stupid Americans are being forced to congregate in the South and the Midwest, where they can do the least amount of real harm, and where we can squeeze the largest amount of productive work out of them (in between hog roasts and monster truck rallies).

      There was much research about how to do this ethically (i.e. without having any armies of rednecks shoot up the place), until finally a psychologist named Englebert Flan uttered his famous line, often quoted, in a Monday morning status meeting: "Well, what if we just annoyed everyone until they did what they were supposed to do?"

      A think tank composed of the snootiest members of the Harvard psychology department was convened to find the most irritating policies the government could engage in, in hopes of driving population movement effectively.

      So far, I think they've been doing pretty well.

    10. Re:Debate? by DriedClexler · · Score: 0

      I was thinking along those lines ... when I was watching a portion of a PBS documentary on the Dover trial that was on youtube. They were using a bunch of clips to show all the security measures taken for the president (and therefore his importance) while doing a voiceover talking about religious fundamentalists ... it wasn't clear what the images had to do with the voiceover at first, and I think that was intentional. It also made me think of Dune for a bit, and then a flash of insight came through:

      "As the ruler of an empire, you want your people to be fanatic enough to support you without thinking, yet be able to shut that mood off long enough to design good missiles."

      I know, I know, I'm not the first person to have that insight. But it gave me a greater understanding of the line Bush has to walk.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    11. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right. We should give the half-naked nut job down the street screaming about the end of the world the same respect we give rational scientist with life-long achievements.
      Wait! you don't spend hours upon hours of your time listening to random nut jobs?? HOW DARE YOU! INTOLERANT!

    12. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much to the chagrin of creationists, Pasteur demonstrated scientifically that life does not just spring from non living matter. Much to the chagrin of evolutionists trying to demonstrate abiogenesis, live does not just spring from non living matter.

    13. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is sad... Its a sad day when one states their beliefs/ideas, and a whole group of others decide that that challeges their worldview. So the Others decide to go about mocking this first group. thats all I see here. stuff that on any other topic would be marked -1 flamebait is now marked +4 insightful. THIS is whats wrong with our world. all the other stuff is secondary. Making fun of other peoples beliefs merely tells me you are not certain of your own. especially when you are unwilling to state your own opinion. (kinda like those guys that have huge tires, and DON'T mudride tells me they have small penises.)
      oh, and just so you know, if you aren't attacking Expelled for no real reason (especially if you haven't seen it) then I'm not talking to you. same goes for the other side of the debate.

      --
      were're going down, in a spiral to the ground.
      no one, no ones gonna save us now.

    14. Re:Debate? by clichescreenname · · Score: 1

      Oh, right, in America. Oh you silly Americans. I guess the age of the American Empire is truly over. You're hell bent on driving your population into the next Christian Dark Age, while China is preparing to whip your ass. Good luck with that. Yeah, but we have Jack-Fucking-Merritt on our side, bitches!
    15. Re:Debate? by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      I just got to the bottom of the +5 comments. This article is relatively old by /. standards, what is amusing to me is that only 1 comment was made regarding the movie in a positive light. Given the number of comments in this forum I would say we have a decent sample of academic individuals...the question we should be asking now is what does this mean in light of the debate. I don't think the /. editors will read this comment but I would be very very interested in seeing some statistics of comments that are pro religion being moderated up or down, versus comments being made anti religion being moderated up or down. Me being a /. reader since '02 I would say that pro religious comments are severely discriminated against on /. I have even had people mod me down then go through my comment list modding down comments I made weeks before.

      So Whereas I dont agree with the film in its entirety, I do agree with the point that once the keywords, Jesus, or God are mentioned, immediately the minds close to ideas and gauntlets are put on.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    16. Re:Debate? by m50d · · Score: 1

      That's the best you can come up with? Sorry, that's about USA 1 China 6 from where I'm standing (Europe).

      --
      I am trolling
    17. Re:Debate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me being a /. reader since '02 I would say that pro religious comments are severely discriminated against on /.

      Some religions receive quite a lot of benefit from the moderation system. The cult of global warmers are modded up constantly. So it all depends on your religion.

    18. Re:Debate? by discogravy · · Score: 1
      I realize this was not really your point, but tangentially: non-Americans will be spared the wrath of China's economic power because why?

      As another aside, American Christian extremist nutjobs and European Muslim extremeist nutjobs aren't all that dissimilar -- American Christian nutjobs are slightly less inclined towards violence, from what I can gather, but even then, I don't know that it's all that great a difference.

    19. Re:Debate? by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      touché

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  5. One point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If evolution or non-creationism is correct, and by having a dialogue people are convinced of this fact...then what is the problem? After watching the extended trailer that is the feeling I came away with. Ben's point is that discussion is not being permitted in academia, and in fact the opposite is happening, it is being suppressed.

    1. Re:One point... by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Ben's point is that discussion is not being permitted in academia, and in fact the opposite is happening, it is being suppressed. How is "being suppressed" the opposite of "not being permitted"?

      If you claim to be an open-minded scientist, wouldn't this line of thought be contradictory? I'm not suggesting that you go so far as to change your beliefs at the first sound of something different, but don't claim to be open minded when you're not.
      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    2. Re:One point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Because a) there is no scientific merit to Creationism, thus there is no sensible or honest scientific debate to be had & b) the controversy over Evolution finished over a century ago, but has recently been dragged back up by Fundamentalist Christian groups to further their own political agenda. Even the Vatican accepts Evolution is perfectly compatible with Christian belief. It's only a minority of very loud people who happen to have money who even want a "debate". Everyone else is long over it.

    3. Re:One point... by rainsford · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except there is a discussion in academia, Ben Stein just doesn't like the outcome of that debate so he claims it's "unfair". Scientific debate isn't the Skull and Bones society, anybody can join in if they have some good points to make and some good arguments to back them up. All I ever hear from folks like Ben Stein is how they are being unfairly excluded from the debate...yet rarely have I actually seen them making any attempt to join in. Since this is Slashdot, I can't end this post without an analogy...so here goes. Forget we're talking about science and think about the place where you work. Imagine there is someone who shows up late, leaves early and doesn't get a lot done while he's there. Now imagine that person spends basically all his time at the office complaining that it's unfair how he's not getting promoted and that the boss has it in for him. That's how I feel about Ben Stein here.

    4. Re:One point... by Oxy+the+moron · · Score: 1

      I think the argument you are going to get here is that it is futile to argue/debate something which cannot be proven in a scientific context.

      As an example... I believe that 2 + 2 = 4. That can be rather easily proven by taking two cookies, adding two more cookies, and seeing that the result is four cookies. Why should we have arguments/debate over whether or not 2 + 2 = 5? You might believe it to be true, but it can't be proven and, to my knowledge, no proof for it exists. Teaching a different belief here does nothing.

      Now going back to your point, let's compare Evolution and Creationism. There exists some degree of scientific proof of the existence of Evolution. Maybe not entirely convincing evidence going back to origins of man, but at least in a smaller context, such as the past 50 years. Compare that to evidence of Creationism, or the basis that everything was created by God. The majority of that evidence is anecdotal; it's one's interpretation of the world around you. The evidence isn't largely based on the scientific method, and I can't clearly describe why I thought plant X or animal Y was a part of God's creation aside from "that makes sense to me." While that is perfectly acceptable for some, it isn't for others. In my opinion, schools, as a whole, are to be places where the former (scientific evidence) is to be taught.

      (I'm a Christian for FWIW. I just think that everything needs to have its place. If you desire a school where debate against Evolution is welcome, there are plenty of private schools that fit that mold.)

      --

      Proudly supporting the Libertarian Party.

    5. Re:One point... by CompCons · · Score: 1

      Ah... but 2 + 2 does in fact equal 5 for large values of 2. :-)

    6. Re:One point... by CRCulver · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Even the Vatican accepts Evolution is perfectly compatible with Christian belief.

      While certain churches believe evolution is compatible with Christianity, they nonetheless believe that evolutionary changes occured through the will of God. This idea, that evolution is ultimately directed by a higher power, not just some meaningless progression of chemical states, is supressed in academic discourse.

    7. Re:One point... by SuperByelich · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I agree to a point, but why not allow the debate in public schools if both are not proven? School should be a place where students are tought to think on their own, and derive their own conclusions to things which are not fact. So why not have all the different ideas of creation there for the taking, and let them come up with their own conclusion rather than shoving only one theory down their neck?

    8. Re:One point... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > How is "being suppressed" the opposite of "not being permitted"?

      "being suppressed" is the opposite of "being permitted". Way to read, Einstein.... err, Darwin.

    9. Re:One point... by CRCulver · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Scientific debate isn't the Skull and Bones society, anybody can join in if they have some good points to make and some good arguments to back them up.

      That's not the case at all. People without certain qualifications should be shut out of the scientific process. There's simply not enough time to deal with all the cranks and nutjobs. Luckily, in many fields there is a system in place to ensure that only people who aren't going to waste your time can be published and debated, but outsiders can still find some support if their ideas have merit.

    10. Re:One point... by ScienceDada · · Score: 0, Troll
      "yet rarely have I actually seen them making any attempt to join in"
      This is absolutely untrue.

      Even without seeing the movie, scientists like Michael Behe are viciously attacked even when they try to have a rational, evidence-based discussion. Stein only uncovers many other cases (of which Behe is not even mentioned) where even worse attacks have taken place.

      The fact is, Stein actually made a movie that is entertaining and uncovers a real problem. Unlike recent docugandas (even award winning ones), Expelled is an answer to a controversy that media coverage has failed to give "the other side" virtually any hearing. Contrast this with Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth," any of Michael Moore docuganda rubbish, or even Spike Lee's "When the Levees Broke."

      The really powerful message in "Expelled" is that Stein explicitly points out that the philosophy behind two schools of thought are this:
      • 1. Life necessarily emerged spontaneously, with mutation and natural selection being the sole mechanism
      • 2. Life emerged, but mutation and natural selection is insufficient to account for life as we know it; therefore there must have been some intelligence involved with the design of life as we know it
      The clever thing Stein does is capture Richard Dawkins on camera admitting that life as we know it may have been designed by aliens (who, of course, would have ultimately evolved via mutation and natural selection).
    11. Re:One point... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that by having a dialogue, people do not become convinced of this fact.

      Once people with acceptably good thinking skills understand the subject, continually "debating" with people that prefer to continue to reject reality is a waste of time. They are more than happy to waste enormous amounts of time, but most scientists aren't terribly interested in spending their careers arguing well-understood biology with fundamentalists.

    12. Re:One point... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      While certain churches believe evolution is compatible with Christianity, they nonetheless believe that evolutionary changes occured through the will of God. This idea, that evolution is ultimately directed by a higher power, not just some meaningless progression of chemical states, is supressed in academic discourse.

      I suspect you mean scientific academic discourse. Because it's not science. I'm sure people are free to write about such things in theology. Would you complain that scientific institutions supress the "theory" that the Universe was created six minutes ago, with God creating everything as it appears - or the "theory" that there are pixies at the bottom of your garden?

    13. Re:One point... by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      I suspect you mean scientific academic discourse. Because it's not science. I'm sure people are free to write about such things in theology.

      The separation of inquiry into science, philosophy and theology was a mistake that Christians, as well as those of certain religious traditions, understandably seek to undo.

    14. Re:One point... by snkline · · Score: 1

      Nothing is ever "proven" in Science. The Theory of Evolution has more god damn evidence for it that Relativity and QFT combined.

      The point is Evolution is well supported as both a fact (Evolution happens) and a Theory (that the process of evolution over time lead to the diversification of life on Earth). Creationism has no support except a bunch of bronze age texts which are contradicted by most all physical evidence.....

    15. Re:One point... by jwlidtnet · · Score: 1

      While certain churches believe evolution is compatible with Christianity, they nonetheless believe that evolutionary changes occured through the will of God. This idea, that evolution is ultimately directed by a higher power, not just some meaningless progression of chemical states, is supressed in academic discourse. ...but what you cite isn't Intelligent Design. Intelligent Design isn't "evolution guided," where some nonspecific, metaphysical entity might have guided the progression of evolution. Even if this were the case, discussion of this "possibility" in academic discourse would essentially be a fruitless exercise in warring idealisms, as the actual scientific process wouldn't change.

      No, Intelligent Design is distinctly different. ID says that certain aspects of life as we see it cannot have come about from natural processes. Again: cannot. It then proceeds to interject itself into the many, many gaps still extant in biological understanding, seizing upon ephemera and declaring "Aha! This is irreducibly complex! You cannot find a natural explanation for this!" Attempts to find an explanation--a manifestation of scientific curiosity, a continuation of the investigatory process of science--are, according to intelligent design, absolutely fruitless, and you shouldn't even bother, because the intelligent agent designed the bacterial flagellum and you're never going to find a solution. Stop looking. And if you do find a solution...well, onto the next gap.

      ID isn't the detached, "purposeful-evolution" entity that you describe. Few scientists and academics would have any real problem with your version, I'd think, because it has absolutely no actually effect on the progress of science (perhaps outside of instilling in it a distinctly anthro-perfective focus). ID is different.
    16. Re:One point... by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      "yet rarely have I actually seen them making any attempt to join in"
      This is absolutely untrue.
      Even without seeing the movie, scientists like Michael Behe are viciously attacked even when they try to have a rational, evidence-based discussion. Stein only uncovers many other cases (of which Behe is not even mentioned) where even worse attacks have taken place.

      Oh, wait.

      You mean the very same Michael Behe who was, among other things, discredited in court?

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    17. Re:One point... by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Ben's point is that discussion is not being permitted in academia, and in fact the opposite is happening, it is being suppressed. Yes, biologists who reject evolution are being suppressed and rejected by academia... In much the same way that astronomers who reject the heliocentric view of the solar system and geographers who suggest the earth is flat and geologists who still cling to the expanding earth theory over plate tectonics tend to find their careers going nowhere and their views getting suppressed. Honestly, if you actually come to the table with some real solid and credible evidence (but, given the weight of evidence aginst you, it's going to have to be damn good) rather hand-waving and vague "yeah, but what if" statements then academia will probably listen. In the meantime, you can expect a little ridcule.
    18. Re:One point... by ScienceDada · · Score: 1

      Yes. "Discredited in court," just like DNA evidence in the O.J. Simpson case. That is the same Behe.

    19. Re:One point... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      agree to a point, but why not allow the debate in public schools if both are not proven? School should be a place where students are tought to think on their own, and derive their own conclusions to things which are not fact. So why not have all the different ideas of creation there for the taking, and let them come up with their own conclusion rather than shoving only one theory down their neck?

      Presumably you're talking about a science class. In that domain, evolution is proven. Irrefutably. Only those who stick their fingers in their ears and say LA LA LA loudly (or believe every word of the King James Bible was carved in a stone by God Himself) can say otherwise. Read a book. Go to a natural history museum and look at the evidence.

      The Pope himself does not advocate Creationism. Neither does the Dalai Lama. Only fundamentalist Americans (and the Taleban) have the gall to convince themselves that the world is an elaborate hoax by God who planted all the evidence of billions of years of evolution and geology as a test of faith.

      Idiocy like this virtually forces intelligent children away from faith and into atheism.

    20. Re:One point... by gwait · · Score: 1

      Check out the article on Scientific American:

      http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=six-things-ben-stein-doesnt-want-you-to-know

      If it's true that Ben Stein faked major parts of the show, but people take it as truth, then that is harmful.

      It comes down to which camp you trust for accurate and reliable information - the truth - no less.

      --
      Bavarian Purity Law of Rice Krispie Squares: Rice Krispies, Marshmallows, Butter, Vanilla.
    21. Re:One point... by ChromaticDragon · · Score: 1

      There is a proper forum for every discussion. (Ec 3)

      As such, it would seem rather appropriate to suppress "directed evolution" in academic discourse. This really seems more appropriate in a philosophical or religious forum, not necessarily published science academic literature.

      Ignoring the current reality of the clear connection between Christian based Creationists and Intelligent Design proponents, it doesn't seem clear how to separate "directed evolution" from "we don't understand it yet" and from various religious debates of the nature of this higher power.

      How exactly would one demonstrate "directed evolution" in a scientific manner such that it doesn't fall into the same non-falsifiable, non-testable, non-predictive mess that is ID or the easily discredited Watchmaker Hypothesis? Although I may applaud your Belief (eg. Religion) of God-directed Evolution, I am seriously troubled by the likely overlap of this and a God of the Gaps theology.

      Next, although I would hope Science could just remain Science, people are very aware of the political tactics of the Creationists. These folk have an agenda. Given that many Creationists fall prey to the logical fallacy of Appeal to Authority, it only aids their political goals to permit them to publish these sorts of things. Given the larger goals are so onerous (eg. redefining Science in elementary school education, etc.), few wish to aid them in any way.

      But lastly, these people may also be suppressed because their work may not appreciate the vast number of examples of Evolution working in a crazily, chaotic fashion.

    22. Re:One point... by ChromaticDragon · · Score: 1

      #1) Evolution is term that encompasses many things. It is observed and observable FACT. It is a collection of various Scientific Theories. You need to be able to teach where/when/how it is fact and what the Scientific Theories are. You don't do justice to this when you simplify Evolution down to a counter to (one particular view of) Creationism.
      #2) Most Creationist proponents aren't really eager to have all the Creation stories/myths/beliefs/views discussed. There would be a whole lot more than just the typical Genesis based one. Although this would be interesting, it would be in a Humanities/Religion course, not a Science course. Why is it hard for anyone to see that unless you really are willing to give equal time to all religions that you're truly just advocating your own religion?
      #3) The various Theories should be discussed, not so much so students can "make up their own mind" but so they can understand the merits of such and understand why nobody really believes Lamarck anymore. The goal of what you seem to deem "shoving one theory down their throat" is to ensure people don't waste a ton of time rediscovering stuff their forebears have already hashed out. Case and point - go and read The Origin of Species. I think you might be amazed how things Creationists wish to debate were adequately handled there... many decades ago. Anyone even making the suggestion you have made probably has no idea how overwhelming the evidence is for Common Descent.
      #4) No Scientific Theory is ever "proven". This should be taught. Unless people understand how the Scientific Method works and what a Scientific Theory is, they'll never appreciate the fact the various things like Creationism and Intelligent Design aren't even Scientific Theories at all and cannot even be compared to Common Descent as such.

      #5) ???
      #6) Profit

    23. Re:One point... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      The statement `it occurred through the will of God' does not mean anything. It is absolutely impossible to check its validity not its falsity. It states something about a being whose existence we have no way of confirming, much less verifying that it has a will. There is no indication of the way in which `ocurring' works, and it provides absolutely no hint on how to tell what will `occur through God's will' or, really, on how to tell anything.

      It is simply the kind of statements one expects the Church to emit, in view of their pride not allowing them to say they are wrong.

    24. Re:One point... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      I agree to a point, but why not allow the debate in public schools if both are not proven?

      The fact that is is not proven (neither can be proven, so that's sort of a truism, but anyways...) is not enough to justify spending time and money on them. There are lots of other things that are not `proven': are you proposing the FSM be incorporated to the science curriculum?

      The criterion for inclusion in the science curriculum is not `it has to be proven' (if it were, the science curriculum would be empty).

    25. Re:One point... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      If evolution or non-creationism is correct, and by having a dialogue people are convinced of this fact...then what is the problem? After watching the extended trailer that is the feeling I came away with. Ben's point is that discussion is not being permitted in academia, and in fact the opposite is happening, it is being suppressed. Only if you drink Ben's koolaid.

      Behe pontificates on ID from the shelter of his tenured position. His colleages find him an embarassment, but don't have any ability to suppress him.

      Gonzalez failed to make tenure, possibly because he spent his time writing a book on religious apologetics rather than doing honest astronomy. At any rate, he *did* neglect his astronomy. The choice was up to him.

      The only thing that's lacking in academia is an ID proponent who will support his position with evidence that will pass even the most casual scrutiny.

      Do you realize that most US scientists are Christians, and would (presumably) be delighted to find honest evidence that their beliefs are supported by nature? But like (presumably) most Christians, most of them are honest and won't get in line behind a crackpot who uses dishonest rhetoric to "prove" some conclusion they happen agree with.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    26. Re:One point... by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Even without seeing the movie, scientists like Michael Behe are viciously attacked even when they try to have a rational, evidence-based discussion. Stein only uncovers many other cases (of which Behe is not even mentioned) where even worse attacks have taken place.

      His argument, irreducibly complexity, was an interesting argument. But it is essentially a negative argument, and a large body of evidence refutes his argument. Yet, he ignores and dismisses any evidence that contradicts his argument as "not good enough". For example, in his book, he specifically states that scientists have never and can never describe how evolution explains the human immune system. When presented with papers and books from many scientists about that same subject, he dismissed them all as inadequate. That doesn't help his case. He also does not help his case when he says that in order for ID to be accepted, science would have to redefined to include astrology as science.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    27. Re:One point... by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Imagine there is someone who shows up late, leaves early and doesn't get a lot done while he's there.

      Actually with ID, it's more appropriate if that person was never interviewed or filled out paperwork, but showed up to work one day demanding a paycheck and benefits.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    28. Re:One point... by ANCOVA · · Score: 1

      Because hearing the same nonsense a thousand times and more is very, very annoying! Remember the M$ clippy?

    29. Re:One point... by evil_aar0n · · Score: 1

      What kind of Slashdot analogy is this? There's no car in it. You know, the "honk honk, and the vroom vroom."

      --
      Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
    30. Re:One point... by pyrr · · Score: 1

      The theory that aliens designed life as we know it on Earth is utterly unfalsifiable. Dawkins likely wasn't so much admitting anything, as throwing around other fantastic theories. It's just another flavor of the Flying Spaghetti Monster hypothesis. It has precisely the same degree of falsifiability as the notions presented in the Holy Bible regarding the existence of God and his creation of everything, and it's intentionally absurd to satire theism. It doesn't matter that everyone knows that FSM is a satirical fabrication, that's the entire point: even though it's a known falsehood, nobody can disprove the existence of the FSM. It cuts to the quick of why Christianity, despite some additional provenance in that people have truly believed in it and its principal actors for a few thousand years, is in exactly the same boat.

      Dawkins is being intellectually honest in "admitting" that something unfalsifiable could've happened. In Dawkins' world, aliens (remarkably advanced beings, but nothing supernatural) are a more probable explanation than the ludicrously unfalsifiable belief in the supernatural. Dawkins is only being less-than-objective in his complete discounting of the possibility of God. That's still unfalsifiable, but Dawkins is so opposed to the God Delusion that he just discards the notion outright. I don't like that about him, even though I share much the same view-- I'll respect the remote possibility of an unfalsifiable theory...but I consider that to be such a black mark against it that I really won't dignify it with a point-by-point refutation or any status in a debate.

      Ben Stein, on the other hand, is being intellectually dishonest as he pushes his completely unfalsifiable theory and creatively edits footage to make it look like his opponents' theories are just as unfalsifiable. It's not clever, it's disingenuous if Stein is purporting to try to foster an intellectual debate. It's a strawman. Nothing more, nothing less.

    31. Re:One point... by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      If evolution or non-creationism is correct, and by having a dialogue people are convinced of this fact...then what is the problem? The problem is that's not what happens.

      First, scientists generally should shun bad science. It's great to have wild ideas, but if people can't back them up, then they are just slowing down the people who actually have the chance of getting somewhere. Scientists should have to answer reasonable questions, but they are not obliged to argue with idiots all day.

      Second, even letting the nuts in the room gives them unearned respect. An African witch doctor may think that Harvard is discriminating against him by not having a Department of Witch Doctoring, but that's tough. Funding and publishing that stuff gives it an appearance of legitimacy that is has not earned.

      Third, kooks with a political agenda (<cough>Discovery Institute</cough>) use even a few accepted papers to create the appearance of a scientific controversy where there really isn't one. Then they use that to manipulate the political process. E.g., the "teach the controversy" bullshit. See The Manufacture of Uncertainty for more. It's the same trick tobacco companies used for years.

      So it would be great if we could sit down and have a dialog about this. However, as far as science was concerned, the honest dialog around these points was over half a century ago. It's like some nut coming in and saying Einstein was wrong, and Newtonian mechanics works just fine. As one scientist said about something else, intelligent design is not even wrong.
    32. Re:One point... by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 1

      Just to correct you - he doesn't "discard the notion outright" - I just saw him on Bill Maher and he says he's "99.999%" sure, but saying its 100% wouldn't be valid because its unfalsifiable. Of course, that's going off my memory of the show, so if I got that wrong, someone please correct me :)

    33. Re:One point... by ScienceDada · · Score: 1

      Quite the contrary, Dawkins was offering that life on Earth could have been designed... but that the life that designed it must have ultimately evolved from a spontaneously evolving form. He has taken his logical assertion that ultimately there is no designer.

      This illustrates the point that Ben Stein makes overwhelmingly in the film: Neo-Darwinian assertions are religious (or alternatively a competing worldview) and is controlling the platform of scientific discourse just as religious worldviews have throughout history. Hence the title of the film Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed.

      The only way a Darwinian/Neo-Darwinian assertion could be demonstrated is to observe it through experiment. This has failed to happen... so it could equally be asserted that Neo-Darwinism is also unfalsifiable by your argument and is therefore a statement of faith. Stein points out that this is a gross inconsistency that the Neo-Darwinian adherents continually refuse to admit.

    34. Re:One point... by pyrr · · Score: 1

      At least he offers that much for the sake of accuracy. ;) I don't always like the hard line he takes against religion and the existence of God, taking atheism almost to the degree of zeal as a bonafide religion, but at least it sounds like he's consistent in applying the principles he preaches.

    35. Re:One point... by pyrr · · Score: 1

      On the contrary; the theory of macroevolution is falsifiable in theory, given time. It is an extrapolation on a readily-observable known, falsifiable mechanism (microevolution). It demands change, if species prove to be immutable over the next several millennia, then macroevolution could consider itself falsified. I don't think artificially accelerated selection to force the process of change necessarily constitutes falsifiability by way of proving the mechanism (or utterly failing to do so), but it's a good start.

      On the other hand, the mechanism for Intelligent Design/Relabeled Creationism Nonsense is utterly unfalsifiable. Nobody can ever prove a creator/designer didn't exist. In that that's the root of Creationism/ID, there is no way to prove that false, extrapolation or not. Even if species prove over the long run to be subject to macroevolutionary changes, it is STILL impossible to prove the absence of a creator. Even though macroevolutionary extrapolation probably couldn't conclusively prove the hypothesis regarding the origin of life on Earth should it prove itself as the future unfolds (that much is unfalsifiable given all technology we're able to dream of at this time, regardless of how you look at it, since the origin of life is a historical event and not a method that can be experimentally tested), it cannot disprove the possibility of an unfalsifiable creator. And that is the difference.

    36. Re:One point... by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      anybody can join in if they have some good points to make and some good arguments to back them up

      Oh come on now you KNOW that isn't true, there are some string theorists and dead patent clerks that got/get a good amount of heckling.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    37. Re:One point... by ScienceDada · · Score: 1
      ...

      On the contrary; the theory of macroevolution is falsifiable in theory, given time. It is an extrapolation on a readily-observable known, falsifiable mechanism (microevolution). It demands change, if species prove to be immutable over the next several millennia, then macroevolution could consider itself falsified. I don't think artificially accelerated selection to force the process of change necessarily constitutes falsifiability by way of proving the mechanism (or utterly failing to do so), but it's a good start.
      Millenia? Hardly. It is only falsifiable over an enormous time-frame (i.e., millions if not billions of years) not millenia. Conveniently (or perhaps coincidentally) the timeframe continues to grow every time "discoveries" are made. We already have many millenia worth of data which has been incapable of demonstrating macro-evolution. Thus, falsifying Neo-Darwinism is impractical or unfeasible in a laboratory, despite 100 years of opportunities to do so.

      The methods used in ID are an approach that can falsify Neo-Darwinism, and this is the threat to the Neo-Darwinist community. That is why it is being supressed (according to Stein).
    38. Re:One point... by domatic · · Score: 1

      Infeasibility in practice and unfalsifiable in principle are two different things. One of those differences is that what can be done in practice is subject to change. Another, and more importantly, you can specify conditions in principle sufficient to disprove the assertion. In this case, not observing speciation over commonly accepted evolutionary timescales under the sort of situations which generate evolutionary pressure mean that evolution is falsifiable in principle even if that particular test isn't very feasible (This doesn't rule out other tests. I suppose one could hurry things up a bit with some cobalt-60, some fast reproducing bacteria, a variety of foodstuffs, heat, cold, any stressor you care to play with actually, and antibiotics.)

      On the other hand, I can't definitively falsify God or any other Intelligent Designer to you care to posit. Aliens intelligently designing us billions of years ago is equally problematic. I can marshal any number of arguments and make the case for such a being improbable to any number of degrees but I cannot rule it out once and for all even in principle (so-called "strong atheists" err in this btw). Try to explain to a kid about Santa Claus too soon and you'll see what I mean: "You have to BELIEVE in Santa to be able to see him!" That could actually be so but that makes Santa unfalsifiable; on the other hand if anyone can see Santa's Workshop if they but trouble to visit the North Pole then THAT particular part of the Santa Claus mythos is falsifiable. Even if Santa's workshop were located on the other side of the Milky Way, it's existence is still falsifiable in principle even if the test is infeasible.

      Incidentally, I suspect using an unfalsifiable Designer to undermine evolutionary biology is a rhetorical equivalent to dividing by zero: You can prove/disprove ANYTHING that way. The IDers are going to have to do better than the tarted up God Of The Gaps arguments they've been using. Almost all ID I've seen is posited in terms in shooting holes in evolution. I see very little in the way of actual observational or experimental science. After all, what are these naughty academics going to do? Not let you publish in their journals or play their other reindeer games?

      ID has yet to be any sort of scientific threat (politics on the other hand...) because it is lacking in actual positive scientific results. And really, how can it result in science? The chief work product is an assertion that this or that phenomena MUST be the work of a Designer because we can't think up any other way it might have happened. That may make for a variety of theology but I'm having a hard time finding actual science in it.

    39. Re:One point... by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      Quite the contrary, Dawkins was offering that life on Earth could have been designed... but that the life that designed it must have ultimately evolved from a spontaneously evolving form. You misunderstand his point.

      Even if we can show intelligent interference in the course of evolution, that doesn't prove the creationists right. Extraterrestrials are just as good an explanation as Jehovah (or Allah or Brahma or Zeus). And in fact they're better, because even if we could prove that somebody messed with human genes, evolution is still the most parsimonious explanation of the source of the entity or entities designing things. It's a simple application of Occam's Razor.

      The only way a Darwinian/Neo-Darwinian assertion could be demonstrated is to observe it through experiment. This has failed to happen. That's incorrect. For example:

      Darwin himself never heard of DNA, but applying Darwinian theory would suggest that there would be a variety of interesting relationships between DNA patterns and our morphological and paleontological classification of animals. And that relationship has been proved out extraordinarily well, and ever more so with the rise of cheap sequencing.

      Of course, it could have been very different. If we had found no evolutionary relationship in the DNA, it would have demolished Darwinian theory. If we'd found a copy of the Pentateuch, that would have been fabulous support for ID. Equally so if we'd found a map to Betelgeuse with a note suggesting we drop by for a visit. As it is, the neo-Darwinian synthesis is way ahead on points.
    40. Re:One point... by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      No, its not. That idea is irrelevant to academic discourse and is purely philosophical.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    41. Re:One point... by pyrr · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, I suspect using an unfalsifiable Designer to undermine evolutionary biology is a rhetorical equivalent to dividing by zero: You can prove/disprove ANYTHING that way.

      Thanks for putting another spin on what I was attempting to explain, I really like the divide-by-zero analogy. That captures the essence of the falsifiability requirement perfectly. The dividend is basically the inquiry you're seeking to ask, the hypothesis would be the divisor, and the quotient would be the conclusion. Even if the quotient is infinitely larger or small that it's difficult to arrive at and approaches infinity, it's still a valid quotient. Have a non-falsifiable zero divisor, then the wheels fall off and you get a rather meaningless, undefined, and illogical conclusion.

  6. skepticality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I can recommend the recent Skepticality pod cast on this topic (#74). There are interviews with shermer and dawkins that give some insight to how this movie is constructed.

    It is available at skepticality.com and reposted and richarddawkins.net

    1. Re:skepticality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This content requires the QuickTime Plugin

      Seems like they would like me to worship non-free software. That's totally against my religion.

  7. Bueller? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bueller? ...
    Bueller? ...
    Bueller?

  8. Save Ferriss! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Beuller? Beuller?

  9. Controversy? by neochubbz · · Score: 2, Funny

    Meh... As long as both are prefixed with "theory of", who cares?

    --
    Charming man. I wish I had a daughter so I could forbid her to marry one. -Arthur Dent
    1. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Meh... As long as both are prefixed with "theory of", who cares?

      Um... because evolution can be observed, and any rational mind can understand the mechanisms by which it works, and the magic-man-in-the-sky "theory" make no provision for testing, cannot be evaluated as anything other than wishful thinking, and teaches kids not to engage in critical thinking.

      Your willingness to tolerate creationism in school as long as they call it a theory is actually worse than the delusions of the people who put it forward in the first place, because - by themselves - they come across as ignorant loons. You're giving them credibility.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:Controversy? by Dann25 · · Score: 1

      Thats exactly the problem. You are comparing apples and oranges. A scientific theory is one based on the scientific method and not just some wild opinion. The theory you speak of, is anything anyone wants to pull out of their ***. Would you want equal time given to my opinion that the earth is the center of the universe or the scientific theory (yes its a scientific theory) that the planets revolve around the sun?

    3. Re:Controversy? by PortHaven · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Um... because evolution can be observed"

      Really, I have yet to see any evolution be observed in my can of peanut butter. And heck, I've given it the advantage of tons of organic matter.

      Oh wait...it's supposed to be observed over millions of years. Even though we constantly have discovered where x variant of animal is thought to have been derived from y. But then we later find y concurrent or even before x. Leading one to conclude that if anything. We're not witnessing evolution but a continual loss of species to extinction.

      But then again, survival of the fittest dictates that in the end there will be only one species within the environment. Yes, people like to point to symbiotic relationships. This is only necessary until a species can supersede the symbiotic relationship inherently by itself.

      "Your willingness to tolerate creationism"

      Let's not tolerate creationism but at least consider intelligent design. If you look at the genetic code, the similarities the re-use of design patterns. Any true scientist who is not bias should at least accept the theoretical prospect of design within the evidence that we have observed.

      In truth, I think scientists are afraid. They're afraid that if they admit there are aspects and evidence of design that they will be condoning creation as a whole rather than the simple design aspect. And then I think a few just are afraid of admitting to the possibility of design as it reflects on their being and existence personally. And that my dear, is a cowardly scientist who would rather be blind than face a mere possibility of his fear.

    4. Re:Controversy? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      My "theory" is that i created man this morning, between my breakfast and my coffee.
      is that a theory, probably, is it bullshit, also true, is it a scientific theory hell no! It provides no basis for empirical testing.

      ID thinking is the kind of thinking that leads you to believe that the universe popped into existence exactly as it was a 10 seconds ago, 10 seconds ago, it does actually explain the universe better than any cosmological theory, its logically infallible, and as a bonus it cant be disproved. If you start teaching ID in schools (as anything other than philosophy/Religious studies), where do you stop intelligent falling, turtles all the way down theory, brains in a vat?

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    5. Re:Controversy? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I'm sure any true scientist would immediately consider any theory of intelligent design if was as testable and supported by evidence as their current theory of evolution is. Sadly it is absolutely nowhere near this standard and more in the realm of idle speculation.

      You'd think if God wanted intelligent design to be accepted by the scientific community he'd simply write out the complete theory on a bunch of stone tablets and have them magically delivered to the top of a mountain or something. The fact that he hasn't done this is clear proof we are not meant to take ID seriously.

    6. Re:Controversy? by wanerious · · Score: 1

      "Um... because evolution can be observed" Really, I have yet to see any evolution be observed in my can of peanut butter. And heck, I've given it the advantage of tons of organic matter. You've picked an odd example, because peanut butter is an interesting anhydrous medium. Indeed, it is hard to get peanut butter to spoil or grow much bacterial life.

      Oh wait...it's supposed to be observed over millions of years. Even though we constantly have discovered where x variant of animal is thought to have been derived from y. But then we later find y concurrent or even before x. Can you point to even one example of this?

      But then again, survival of the fittest dictates that in the end there will be only one species within the environment. You exhibit a startling lack of education in biological science. There are many possible environments and different resources that cannot all be exploited by one species.

      If you look at the genetic code, the similarities the re-use of design patterns. It is not surprising that descendants will inherit those traits from their parents that enabled them to successfully procreate, or at least didn't *keep* them from procreating.

      In truth, I think scientists are afraid. *All* of them? There are thousands of biologists and zoologists. Where in their schooling do they pick up this fear? Is is spoken of publicly between them, or is it a closeted shame? I know lots of these cowardly scientists, and they seem to bear the cross of this secret fear cheerfully well.
    7. Re:Controversy? by electrictroy · · Score: 1

      You act as if they are incompatible.

      My college advisor was a Cosmologist, and although he supported the theory of the Big Bang and published many peer-reviewed papers in journals, still believed in God as the architect of it all. After all, the matter that makes-up the universe had to come from somewhere.

      Scientists don't know where it came from. But religious people do (based upon their faith).

      --
      The government is not your daddy. Its purpose is not to raid middle-class neighbors' wallets and give it to you.
    8. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it's supposed to be observed over millions of years

      No, it can be observed hour by hour. If you'd like to do a little test, we can expose you to all sorts of little life forms that used to be easy to kill with simple anti-biotics, but which - in some cases, only months later - are now genetically different, and have adapted to survive that treatment. As those bacteria (and in some cases, parasites) reproduce, there are observable mutations involved. Some of those mutations result in an altered version of the critter that happens to tolerate things that might kill those versions that mutated in a different way. If the chief cause of end-of-the-line death in strains of bacteria happens to be anti-biotics, then we're watching that life form, via simple natural selection, adapt its way around that threat. If you don't have the patience to learn how to look at the longer-term histories of species, and can't muster the simple common sense to see how that would impact more complex organisms over time, then just ask any doctor to explain it to you. Hopefully, for your sake, that won't be in the context of actually having such an infection - because, unlike even just a few short years ago, when such bacteria didn't exist, it's getting very hard to kill them without also killing you. Just like everywhere else in nature, a new pressure must be brought to bear on a species that has evolved (rapidly, in this case) to overcome an older pressure.

      Let's not tolerate creationism but at least consider intelligent design

      They are the same thing - both suggest the hand of an all-powerful imaginary magic super being with a sick sense of humor.

      If you look at the genetic code, the similarities the re-use of design patterns

      Don't you see? Of course commonly useful bits of DNA are commonly found. The stuff that works, at the basic level of providing for things like nerve growth, or respiration, or enzyme production, doesn't need to be evolved away from... mutations that shut down things like that tend to kill the offspring, and thus don't get passed along. The stuff that works, stays, and stuff that works better becomes more prominent through simple natural selection. If your ability to live long enough to reproduce depended on your ability to sprint to the nearest tree to avoid being eaten, then a mutation in your DNA that happens to produce a fractionally greater dose of adrenaline when you sense danger will give you an advantage over your brother, who might have a different, but less (for the circumstancecs) useful mutation. Guess who passes along the DNA after the predatory animals have come through your part of the woods? Mr. Faster Tree Climber. It might be a hundred generations before something even slightly as useful crops up again in that particular part of your clan's DNA, but as long as it's an advantage, it gets passed down the line. If its a liability (say, it also happens to increase your sensitivty to the sun, and thus causes early cancer), then it dies off. Of course, you know all of this. You're just invested, for social reasons, in the mythology side of things, and it's awkward for you to admit it.

      In truth, I think scientists are afraid. They're afraid that if they admit there are aspects and evidence of design that they will be condoning creation as a whole rather than the simple design aspect.

      No, they're just afraid of an entire new generation of kids growing up thinking that supersition, and belief if supernatural cause and effect might endanger our culture's ability to produce rational thinkers. You know, the sort of rationality that allowed us to build the systems over which you're reading this message, right now. You're proposing that we embrace a world view more or less like that which fueled the Dark Ages, or which applauded the burning alive of women, as witches, who knew that willow bark contains aspirin or who gave birth on the wrong day of the week, when it happened to rain really hard an

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    9. Re:Controversy? by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "You exhibit a startling lack of education in biological science. There are many possible environments and different resources that cannot all be exploited by one species."

      Nah....we just haven't reached there yet. Mankind is quickly surpassing many species in this regard to the exclusion of those species.

      "It is not surprising that descendants will inherit those traits from their parents that enabled them to successfully procreate, or at least didn't *keep* them from procreating."

      "Where in their schooling do they pick up this fear?"
      Probably in all those schools that currently don't allow discussion on anything that's disagreed with. (This doesn't just go for evolution. Try being a liberal with a conservative professor, or try being a conservative in a class with a liberal professor.) Often the case any discussion is far less about discussion and more so about intimidation.

      "they seem to bear the cross of this secret fear cheerfully well."

      It's easy to wear red in a room where everyone wears red. But my comment toward the fear, was not so much of fear to speak out. But internal fears...

    10. Re:Controversy? by Neeperando · · Score: 1

      Really, I have yet to see any evolution be observed in my can of peanut butter.

      I'm not sure whether this is a troll, but I'll reply anyway. Evolution can be observed, and not just indirectly. If you grow E. Coli or other bacteria in a petri dish you can watch it change over many generations as you expose it to various stresses (drug resistance, excessive heat, oxygen deprivation, what have you).

      Even in nature you see this happening. Why do you think Tuberculosis is making such a big comeback? It's because it has changed in recent years to be more drug resistent. This is the core idea of evolution.

      Another thing I'm not sure that people understand (on both sides of the debate) is that evolution is not simply a bunch of random mutations. There are many mechanisms that go into it besides just single nucleotide mutations (such as huge insertions/deletions of sequences, invasive chunks of DNA from viruses or other unknown sources, inversions of sequence on the strand). "Random" is a very loaded word here, and it doesn't tell the whole picture, even if it is technically correct (I don't whether it is).

      --
      Being a computer scientist means you tell people how computers should work, not that you know how they actually work.
    11. Re:Controversy? by wanerious · · Score: 1

      Probably in all those schools that currently don't allow discussion on anything that's disagreed with. (This doesn't just go for evolution. Try being a liberal with a conservative professor, or try being a conservative in a class with a liberal professor.) Often the case any discussion is far less about discussion and more so about intimidation. Either you've had terrible schooling, or have heard some horror stories. I am a professor, I've been in *lots* of classrooms on both ends, and such blanket statements are completely misrepresentative.
    12. Re:Controversy? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Does peanut butter have something to do with evolution, or are you confusing evolution and abiogenesis?

    13. Re:Controversy? by blueg3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This isn't a problem as long as you restrict God solely to the metaphysical, which is what most religious scientists do. (This is, I think, the effective stance of Catholicism.) If you don't use religion to make disprovable statements about reality, they're quite compatible.

    14. Re:Controversy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the magic-man-in-the-sky "theory" make no provision for testing, cannot be evaluated as anything other than wishful thinking, and teaches kids not to engage in critical thinking.

      For teaching kids not to 'engage in critical thinking' private religious schools in the US turn out graduates that are at least as good as their public school counterparts.

    15. Re:Controversy? by methuselah · · Score: 1

      can it be observed? or is or is it the result of trying to rationalize what is? what species have we observed a metamorphosing due to environmental and natural selection methods in oh say the last hundred years?

    16. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      can it be observed? or is or is it the result of trying to rationalize what is? what species have we observed a metamorphosing due to environmental and natural selection methods in oh say the last hundred years?

      How about in the last hundred months? I dare you to cut open your fingers and then use the stairway railings in your average hospital. You'll get a first-hand view of bacteria that have adapted nicely to almost all (or in some cases all) anti-biotics. These treatments, in some cases, are less than a few years old. They'd kill every bug at which they were aimed when they were firt used. Because of the short life cycle (and thus, very fast reproduction frequency) of these busy little examples, we're able to see genetic changes over very short periods of time. The result: Ten years ago, you had bacteria X, which would be die quickly in the presence of certain chemicals. Now, you have bacteria Y, which shrugs it off, no problem. That's mutation and naturial selection hard at work, right in front of your eyes, producing a new population of life forms that have adapted to a new pressure. Ask a hospital administrator if she finds natural selection, and the resulting new flavors of deadly creatures, to be an observable fact. Or, ask someone's widow.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    17. Re:Controversy? by Sciros · · Score: 1

      Indeed, to call creationism (aka "ID") a theory is to misuse the word in either of its connotations. If the colloquial sense is used, then it mislabels evolution. If the scientific sense is used, it mislabels creationism.

      Furthermore, any scientific knowledge that is taught in schools ALWAYS has to undergo extensive peer review, be verified to a large degree of certainty, and generally be regarded as "fact" (in the colloquial sense) by the scienific community at large. If you wanted to add something you discovered to what is taught in physics courses in high school, you can expect it to be very heavily scrutinized by the scientific community and generally go through a lengthy process before it even makes its way into a book, let alone to a board of education to evaluate that book.

      Creationists want to skip everything but the last step. They go straight to the boards of education, to the parents, etc. Because nothing they claim can legitimately go through any sort of scrutiny to begin with. They're basically trying to "cheat" their way into education.

      --
      I like basketball!!1!
    18. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      For teaching kids not to 'engage in critical thinking' private religious schools in the US turn out graduates that are at least as good as their public school counterparts

      You mean, those kids are able to ignore the mysticism that's taught in those schools' classrooms? Sure, that makes sense. At least some kids will always have enough native reason, and be able to resist the peer pressure that keeps religion alive, enough to come forth from a religious school able to see past the religion that runs it.

      Or do you mean, kids come out of those schools with a decent command of grammar, the ability to do math, etc? Sure. But if they aren't shrugging off the creation myths thoroughly on their own, then they're also coming out of those schools having been trained to tolerate acute contradictions in thier observation and understanding of reality. And when you take a young mind and train it to tolerate contradictions, then you're also training it to tolerate (or even embrace) hypocrisy, deceit, and much of what else ails our culture. Trying to put MORE of that into public schools, on the premise that the additional discipline that's permitted in private schools happens to produce more literate or well-mannered students and thus everything else about religious education must also be better somehow, is not a solution. Introducing some discipline and the expectation of good manners ALONG WITH real science in public education is the appropriate course.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    19. Re:Controversy? by BetaJim · · Score: 1

      Scientists don't know where it came from. But religious people do (based upon their faith).
      Religious people do not know either! Thinking that something is true based on wishful thinking (faith) is not knowledge.
      --

      "Drug related crime" is a misnomer, "prohibition related crime" is the more accurate and correct phrase.

    20. Re:Controversy? by kalirion · · Score: 1

      the magic-man-in-the-sky "theory" make no provision for testing, cannot be evaluated as anything other than wishful thinking

      Oh please, there's a very easy way to test this theory. In the afterlife. Any volunteers?

    21. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      or are you confusing evolution and abiogenesis

      No, he's just confused generally. If it didn't manifest itself at the level of public policy and in the voting booth, it would merely be pathetic. Instead, it's alarming.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    22. Re:Controversy? by methuselah · · Score: 1

      so when does it grow legs and crawl out of the primordial ooz on the the stairwell? that is a nice argument but it doesn't fly. it still a bacteria, virus, etc... it didn't become a new species based on a previous one. the rest you want me to accept as an extrapolation that based on what you observed here this that and the other rational event should take place. its hasn't happened in recorded history that I know of

    23. Re:Controversy? by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      ...teaches kids not to engage in critical thinking. Is this even the responsibility of science?

      Also, what is not "critically thinking" about pointing at a disparity and labeling it as such?
      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    24. Re:Controversy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's supposed to be observed over millions of years

      No, it can be observed hour by hour. If you'd like to do a little test, we can expose you to all sorts of little life forms that used to be easy to kill with simple anti-biotics, but which - in some cases, only months later - are now genetically different, and have adapted to survive that treatment. As those bacteria (and in some cases, parasites) reproduce, there are observable mutations involved. Some of those mutations result in an altered version of the critter that happens to tolerate things that might kill those versions that mutated in a different way. If the chief cause of end-of-the-line death in strains of bacteria happens to be anti-biotics, then we're watching that life form, via simple natural selection, adapt its way around that threat. If you don't have the patience to learn how to look at the longer-term histories of species, and can't muster the simple common sense to see how that would impact more complex organisms over time, then just ask any doctor to explain it to you. Hopefully, for your sake, that won't be in the context of actually having such an infection - because, unlike even just a few short years ago, when such bacteria didn't exist, it's getting very hard to kill them without also killing you. Just like everywhere else in nature, a new pressure must be brought to bear on a species that has evolved (rapidly, in this case) to overcome an older pressure. And have you found a new species of bacteria after your experiment?
    25. Re:Controversy? by LooTze · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, if you take Science and scientific thinking to its conclusion, belief in God is actually incompatible with it since the idea of God is illogical and untestable.
      However, many scientists grow up with religious customs, which they are comfortable with and therefore never take scientific thinking to that extreme. Plus in the vast majority of science, scientists do not confront God versus natural selection sort of debate - so they are never forced to make a choice.
      Apart from the untestability, the incompatibility becomes obvious if you study evolution and you actually "believe" natural selection - which insists things start simple and then add features. To fit this with an extremely complex being like God which pre-dates everything else is intrinsically impossible.
      Also, in your own example, you say "the matter that makes-up the universe had to come from somewhere". I am really surprised your advisor also invokes God for this purpose. There are (in my inexpert opinion, rather tenuous models - quantum mechanics and string theory) that provide a solution for getting something out of nothing.
      As of now, these are close to untestable right and arguably close to religion. But unlike religion, the aim is to make them testable and rule them in or out as possibilities.
      On the other hand, if you are satisfied with God created matter, then that raises the two-fold point - (a) what created God and (b) why do you need science, since pretty much everything can be answered by the same answer.
      But I say all this as a biologist. Maybe things are more logical in physics but once you look at the inner workings of an organism or a cell or even a single protein and the inherent sloppiness with which everything is strung together, there is no way you can go away thinking that it was made by an all-powerful Creator.

    26. Re:Controversy? by LordSkippy · · Score: 0

      If you grow E. Coli or other bacteria in a petri dish you can watch it change over many generations as you expose it to various stresses (drug resistance, excessive heat, oxygen deprivation, what have you). Not saying the theory of evolution is incorrect, but just one question: have we ever seen E. Coli (or other bacteria) become something other than E. Coli over many generations?

      The idea that one species can change into another species by this process is inferred, but not observed. Which is what I believe he meant with the peanut butter statement.
      --
      My karma is in a nose dive
    27. Re:Controversy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Newtonian physics was just as good...until we started getting into situations where it didn't provide all the necessary answers (e.g. If an object is traveling at a significant percent of light speed, or light travels too closely to a heavy body, or Hawking radiations, or about a dozen others.)


      Evolution is a theory--a good one, generally accepted, and mildly reproducible, but it's pieced together from spotty observations about the past, not a continuous flow of data.


      An equivalent question is "So, Big Bang theory...what was there before?" Good theory, explains a lot, but still has some definite shortcomings and holes.

    28. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Also, what is not "critically thinking" about pointing at a disparity and labeling it as such?

      The same "not critically thinking" that you're doing, right now. There is no disparity, because creationism is not science. It's not characterized as science, the "information" presented by its proponents isn't even in the format to be weighed as if it were possibly just bad science that needed to be reveiewed. There's no disparity in not considering it in a science classroom. It's like complaining that there is a painful disparity seen in how few opportunities students in a classical music class have to learn about the history and use of clown cars in post-war circuses.

      You're doing exactly what the creationist people always do: you're tap-dancing carefully around the actual issue and trying to change the subject by sounding huffy and indignant about being shortchanged in the science classroom. Never mind that you're not actually talking about science, and have nothing resembling science to discuss. That's the whole point, here. The creationism people have to keep flailing around and sounding maligned and playing the put-upon-Christian victim card as loudly and as often as possible so that no one notices the fact that they're completely BS-ing about their actual "complaint." They, of course, know that they're not really complaining about some branch of science being left out of the science classroom.

      They're complaining because they can't seem to talk most people into using public schools as instruments of their fundamentalist churches. They're certainly miffed about that, and that pesky clause in the Constitution. But they're miffed, and frustrated, and stamping their feet with all of the childishness of any kid having a tantrum... it's transparent, it's embarassingly unsophisticated, and the attempt at deceit is plain to anybody (including their own adherents) who bother to actually look. "Labeling" the absence of creationism in a science classroom as some sort of unfairness is ... deliberate, sustained lying. You know, bearing false witness. Isn't that one of them Big Ten oh-no-you-don't things published by Moses? I imagine that at least some True Believers would actually be a little ashamed about that. But then, what's a little more hypocrisy, right? Once you're in this deep, might as well go for broke.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    29. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      have we ever seen E. Coli (or other bacteria) become something other than E. Coli over many generations?

      How different does a variation on an organism need to be before you'd call it "something other?"

      Say, the difference between a Chihuahua and a Great Dane? They're genetically one millimeter apart from one another, but with manifestions that make them hugely different from one another in real life. As different, say, as two bacteria that have adapted to tolerate different toxins. A Husky would not thrive in a tropical jungle, and a Doberman wouldn't make it over winter in the tundra. One strain of bacteria can survive in the presence of certain chemicals, and a variation on it - genetically having drifted only a little ways off - can (and obviously does).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    30. Re:Controversy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... because evolution can be observed, and any rational mind can understand the mechanisms by which it works, and the magic-man-in-the-sky "theory" make no provision for testing, cannot be evaluated as anything other than wishful thinking, and teaches kids not to engage in critical thinking.

      Your willingness to tolerate creationism in school as long as they call it a theory is actually worse than the delusions of the people who put it forward in the first place, because - by themselves - they come across as ignorant loons. You're giving them credibility. I would really love to see how evolution is being "observed". They can't observe anything because their excuse for everything is that it takes millions of years, so we have to wait that long to see if anything is true. All the while they scrap for bones and try to form different species from misc objects. It's ridiculous. I don't see how Intelligent Design theory can be forced out of school when Evolution is a theory itself. Both should be taught equally in until someone proves one way or the other.
    31. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      They can't observe anything because their excuse for everything is that it takes millions of years

      No, that's the excuse you WISH "they" would use. There are bacteria thriving today, showing traits (such as resistence to antibiotics) that didn't exist ten years ago. Or even ten months ago. Evolution happens rapidly in life forms that reproduce rapidly (because each generation undergoes some mutation, and SOME mutations result in traits that make some offspring more successful, and more likely to reproduce). In organisms that only reproduce a few times over the course of decades (like us) it takes a lot longer to see changes.

      Stand a Yorkshire Terrier up next to a Bull Mastiff sometime, and see how much Wolf you recognize in each of those variations on the same nearly identical DNA. The mastiff goes back a thousand years or so more than the terrier, but neither go back very far at all. Variations on the wolves go back many hundreds of thousands of years. If you accelerate natural selection by personally choosing which mutated offspring get the chance to breed with which other ones, you can see the changes in the species that much more quickly. Ask any dog breeder that's been around for the last 40 years whether or not they've personally witnessed entirely new breeds take hold, and then shift further in response to circumstance. Where do you think domestic dogs came from, anyway? Adam and Eve had a pet or two that looked like a beagle? Actually, you probably DO think that, don't you.

      I don't see how Intelligent Design theory can be forced out of school when Evolution is a theory itself.

      Speaking of being forced out of school, have you ever actually opened a dictionary (let alone a science text) and wrapped your mind around a working definition of the word "theory," as it applies in such cases? Creationism isn't a theory in any sense of that word. It's mythology. You could say, of course, that you have a theory about the origin of species, and it includes an all-powerful Flying Spaghetti Monster. I'm sure you've heard of Him. If your standards for what should be considered a viable scientific theory are so thin and dull that you're willing to consider anybody's fairy tale as equal to repeatable, observable things right in front of your eyes, then of course you will also passionately defend the teaching of the FSM in science class too, right? There are also other mythologies found in, say, tribes in the African bush. They involve species being hatched from the severed testicles of various warrior gods.

      Which part of your science curriculum will be dedicated to exploring ALL of the other creationism tales that are every bit as valid as yours? Some people are convinced that the movie The Matrix is real, and everything around us is fake - a simulation. By your standards, that's a perfectly valid "theory." How many school days should we dedicate to that one? Ten? A hundred? More days than are dedicated to your favorite magic tale? Remember, there are hundreds, possibly thousands of such stories. Sounds like each day of a student's entire educational career is going to have to be dedicated to a different one. And of course, there are crazy people who come up with new ones every day. Kids may have to extend their stay in school just to keep studying all of the new ones that come up.

      Or, perhaps we could just look at the endless evidence around us, and watch life - from the bacteria-size critters on up to things that are bigger than you are - adapt and succeed (or fail to) as mutations occur. And move on to learning some other actual stuff, too.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    32. Re:Controversy? by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Your wasting your time, people will believe what they choose to believe and that is just an aspect of humanity that we have to deal with. You can logically lay out any side of an argument; what it comes down to is the sheer fact that people believe what they want to. It is not a matter of intelligence because intelligence just makes it all that much easier to justify something. You are asking that people be rational and that has never been the case with any group of people. Ever.

      Personally, I am a Christian and I hate movies like this because they make, what I call 'rational Christians' look bad. But movies like this just go to prove how obsessive people can get about what they choose to believe. Yes, "The Truth is Out There" and truth is not relative. However, I have seen insanely intelligent people argue debates from multitudes of beliefs and they cannot all be right. Which just means that there are a lot of really smart people out there who have duped themselves into a lie and you cannot rationalize them out of a belief. Everyone is guilty of this, Religious people, Scientists, Politicians, Agnostics, Rapists, Murderers, Atheists, Vegans, Abortionists, Humanitarians, and pretty much every other group out there.

      To sum up, Religious people do not have a corner on this bigotry, rather humanity does.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    33. Re:Controversy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      some parts of evolution, sure. not all, and not by a long shot. the planet should be littered with transitional entities still living today. the idea that each species went through millions of extremely small iterations and, yet, only the latest version was able to survive is actually quite silly. for one species. it is borderline insanity for the 100s of thousands of species.

      especially given that the iteration was derived out of much larger populations... which went extinct 100s of millions of times with 100% accuracy? come on - that's inexplicable.

      not to mention how a terrestrial ear would transform into an aquatic ear when any hybrid ear is a clear DISADVANTAGE in either environment and the animal would never be in both environments to get any kind of advantage.

      yes, the gradual selecting of genes already present is pretty easy to understand and verify scientifically.

      i'm not for teaching ID outside of philosophy or religion class, but let's not treat macro-evolution dishonestly with our heads in the sand.

      there isn't one provable transitional entity alive today... that's 100% extinction of each and every transitional entity - probably more than 1 billion of them. there is no rational theory to explain that b/c no theory says says *only* the fittest will survive and everything else must die. no two animals alive today have the same adaptability in any environment.

      so, who wants to posit why genocide of macro-evolutionary down chain entities has been the first act of every new macro-evolutionary entity?

    34. Re:Controversy? by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Just so your post wasnt wasted :)

      Let's not tolerate creationism but at least consider intelligent design They are the same thing - both suggest the hand of an all-powerful imaginary magic super being with a sick sense of humor. Actually they are the same thing but not in the way you said it. There is nothing saying that a race similar to ours didnt plant us here as a genetic experiment, don't you watch/read sci-fi? They may have evolved and decided to see how things would work with a genetically engineered crop. hmmm has the makings of a great movie....Or at least a good cheeseball one starring Bruce Campbell.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    35. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      only the latest version was able to survive is actually quite silly

      Are you so uninformed, or do you have your eyes closed so tightly, that you only see one type of primate alive in the world? Our closest cousins, the chimpanzees, are exactly what you say doesn't exist.

      the animal would never be in both environments to get any kind of advantage

      Right, because there aren't any reptiles that operate both underwater and on land (say, crocs, gators or many snakes), and there aren't any amphibians like toads and frogs. Nah.

      let's not treat macro-evolution dishonestly with our heads in the sand

      Amazing. You actually think that the person with their head in the sand is the scientist, and not the person who's so annoyed at having to actually think about this and the complexity involved that they just throw up their hands and say, "My brain can't handle thinking about long periods of time, so... it's magic! Which I will also cite as the reason that I should be allowed to have multiple wives, now that I think about it."

      no two animals alive today have the same adaptability in any environment

      Ah. You mean... that animals become specialized (adapt over time!) to the environment in which generations of them are bred, whether or not those conditions, over the last (for example) several generations are still the same? What ARE you saying, exactly? There are all sorts of animals that USED to be perfect for their environment, but which no longer are, and are also not yet extinct. Are you that hard up for money that you can't take a trip to the zoo for a look-see?

      who wants to posit why genocide of macro-evolutionary down chain entities has been the first act of every new macro-evolutionary entity

      Oh yes, please get a job teaching high school.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    36. Re:Controversy? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      Let's not tolerate creationism but at least consider intelligent design. If you look at the genetic code, the similarities the re-use of design patterns.

      Please explain this assertion. How, exactly, have "design patterns" been "re-used". Specifically, explain the physical processes involved in the "re-use" and the ultimate implementation of these "design patterns". Explain the entity or entities responsible for this implementation, state how this implementation was accomplished, explain how the original "design" was originally implemented and explain how you have inferred the existence of the entities who engaged in the alleged "designing".

    37. Re:Controversy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... because evolution can be observed

      Explain Paris Hilton and such. ;) Perhaps both evolution and intelligent design need to be chucked in the bin whilst we look for answer 'C'.

      I really don't understand why people are so passionate about their camps in this. We're probably a few 100 generations or so for conclusions on this matter. It's not really worth getting bothered over, IMHO.

    38. Re:Controversy? by Hooya · · Score: 1

      one of the best posts i've read in a long time. very eloquent and well put.

    39. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      its hasn't happened in recorded history that I know of

      Let's see... life has been evolving on this planet for a couple billion years, and we've been recording history for 0.0002% of that time (and I'm being very generous, there). We've been using somethign roughly approximating the scientific method, and had quality tools with which to observe the actual nature of things for roughtly 0.00003% of that time. Plenty of creatures WITH legs have continued to observably specialize in the last few thousand years, but legs - as an anatomical feature - have been with us for many hundreds of millions of years. Why you think that the adaptation of a particular single-cell organism would only be marked by the sudden appearance of features that took millions of years to appear in other evolutionary branche is beyond me. Well, no it's not. Because that's not really what you're talking about. You're hoping that by posting such a silly response, that you'll distract yourself from the real issue: that by admitting that you're a little uncomfortable with the fact that life is changing before our eyes, that you have to actually question a whole lot of the mysticism that you've also signed onto.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    40. Re:Controversy? by LordSkippy · · Score: 0

      How different does a variation on an organism need to be before you'd call it "something other?"

      Say, the difference between a Chihuahua and a Great Dane? They're genetically one millimeter apart from one another Genetically, they are both still the same species, domesticated canines, and as genetically different from each other as you are from me.

      Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying evolution is wrong. In fact, I specifically stated that I wasn't saying that! Evolution is a very good theory and model of how things work. The best explanation for how different species came about, and without the need to invoke super natural causes or deities.

      However, it is still just a theory. We've seen changes occur within species - both in the wild (moth coloring between wooded and urban areas) and in the lab (bacteria and fruit flies). However, that only verifies natural selection within a species and does not prove that one species can change into different species.

      It is implied to happen, but implication is not observed proof. To say otherwise is being scientifically dishonest. However, to use it as a model and basis for other research and to teach it in a science class is fine, because it is the best theory we have.
      --
      My karma is in a nose dive
    41. Re:Controversy? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      If you don't use religion to make disprovable statements about reality, they're quite compatible.

      And if you don't use the framework through which you understand existence to talk about existence, then that framework is pretty much useless, isn't it? And worse, since most people do NOT put it in such a tidy little box off (entirely) to the side of reality, their magical thinking DOES intrude on more practical issues, like how to evaluate the prospects of a brain-dead patient, or how to decide which textbooks make it into a school... where young minds are being shaped to do a lot more than just think about biology. And those young minds, trained to tolerate magical thinking (and the inherent contradictions and irrationality that comes along with it) are thus set up for a lifetime of nagging doubt about how they see and understand all sorts of things. If they're willing to sweep that under the rug, it can rot there, and cause all sorts of cognitive oddities later on. And those corrosive little flaws in a person's world view ARE incompatible with their development as critical thinkers on a host of other issues... from understanding the chances that they'll win the lottery, to consigning their cancer-having child to death via treatment-by-wishful-thinking. Let the camel nose of superstition in under the tent, and you'll got the whole camel.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    42. Re:Controversy? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      I didn't say it was common, but there are plenty of people that isolate religion to the metaphysical and seem to be perfectly reasonable people. While I don't count myself among them, there are many wholly rational people who are also spiritual.

  10. Curiosity... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't one of the points of the movie that while scientists espouse neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. that they are not actually following it?

    (Disclaimer --> haven't seen the movie or any trailers, the above was a genuine question for anyone who has actually seen the movie, and not an attempt to troll. Also the question should not imply that I agree with or disagree with the movie. It really is JUST a question.)

    1. Re:Curiosity... by TheMeuge · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Isn't one of the points of the movie that while scientists espouse neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. that they are not actually following it?

      Actually, this is just Ben Stein's great way of capitalizing on fears and preconceptions of the population. He literally produced a film that caters to the ignorant and the blindly faithful... without even a shred of evidence that he himself believes it.

      The movie will do great harm to the already eroded image of science and scientists in the U.S., despite presenting very flimsy evidence in the Michael Moore style of film-making (i.e. gross misrepresentations, half-truths, and outright lies, sprinkled with a dose of misplaced truth to prevent it from being rejected outright).

      Stein actually told the people he interviewed for the movie that he was making a completely different film (philosophy, I think). This is grossly unethical, but par for the course for current media. Frankly, I just didn't expect Stein to follow suit.

      As a scientist who believes in God, I am appalled at this film, and I think Stein should be ashamed of himself. Maybe if not for asshole exercises such as this, people would calm down and realize that unless you take religious texts literally, they address questions that are incompatible with science, and thus cannot possibly be in conflict with the latter.
    2. Re:Curiosity... by vegiVamp · · Score: 0

      Sometimes, a cigar is just a cigar.
          -- Sigmund Freud

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    3. Re:Curiosity... by aplusjimages · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Science will be fine. I don't understand all this concern about Science going away. The local atheist and "free thinkers" in my area claim science as something they can hold on to, like it's their religion.

      You can't take science away. Sure there are concerns of losing jobs, but according to the Expelled trailer it happens on both sides. Let's just remember that without science Ben Stein wouldn't have been able to make his movie.

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    4. Re:Curiosity... by KeithJM · · Score: 1

      . . . this is just Ben Stein's great way of capitalizing on fears and preconceptions of the population. He literally produced a film . . . This is a pet peeve of mine. The word "literally" rarely belongs in a sentence unless you are making a distinction between reality and something that is normally figurative. Save an animal shelter exploded, sending debris everywhere. Then it might literally rain cats and dogs. In this case. Ben Stein isn't the producer of the movie (from IMDB, it was Logan Craft and Mark Ruloff). The most you can say about Ben Stein is that he is literally in the cast of this movie. I don't disagree with your point at all, just the words.
    5. Re:Curiosity... by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      By the way, I tried to post a comment on that video.
      Hah. How naive of me.
      My comment, which was rather negatively intoned, is waiting for approval. Which, of course, it will not get.

      The film is obviously full of empty rhetoric, muddying the waters of scientific truth with fake free speech activism and other strategies of swaying the dumb and/or insufficiently educated.

      It is pathetic, and the comment approval procedure is just another sign of the bias. And guess what: if they censor my opinion, they act exactly the same as the people they criticize.
      Therefore, if nothing else, I can accuse them of hypocrisy and dishonesty. Which is proof enough for me.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    6. Re:Curiosity... by Hutz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're appalled at this film. Have you seen it?

      I continue to understand the film is an exploration of the academic/scientific community's enforcement of orthodoxy.

      I think people in the /. community are well versed with the "everyone is entitled to an opinion as long as it is mine" people in the world.

    7. Re:Curiosity... by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      Exactly, those scientists are covering up the truth!

      And it's not the only thing they are lying about!

    8. Re:Curiosity... by asilentthing · · Score: 1

      Right. I saw the movie last weekend and while there was what could certainly come across as an ID slant (if you wanted to view that way), the point I thought was trying to be put to the forefront is that of free scientific questioning of new theories.

      I thought the film did a decent job of making the case that this shouldn't be about religion - it should be about the scientific freedom to question any idea or theory.

      I thought it was a bit extreme with the Nazi Germany imagery and stuff... that was probably a bit too far. The analogy of a witch hunt probably would have served them better. But the films opposition is waging a strong internet war - commenting on blogs, getting people to start their own... but these people are still doing the same thing - assuming they are correct and not actually participating in a dialogue. Just attacking. I think most intelligent people would rather see a dialogue and decide based on real evidence which side is right - and I think that goes for most anything.

      The real problem is that science is continually trying to comment on the metaphysical/philosophical. I'm not sure that because some religious person subscribes to a certain idea (such as Intelligent Design) it automatically makes that idea invalid. I mean, there are plenty of religious people that believe Darwinian Evolution to be true and obviously that theory hasn't been invalidated.

      --
      --- these days, what with business and stuff, you gotta get your emails...
    9. Re:Curiosity... by hahafaha · · Score: 1

      I have seen the movie, the trailers and two parodies.

      The first point of the movie is that ``Big Science'' is suppressing dissent of Darwanian evolution (specifically, Natural Selection). It says that any scientist who even suggests credibility towards Intelligent Design is getting either fired or in some other way punished.

      Looking at both the evidence Stein presents for this, and other evidence not in the movie, I am compelled to agree. However, this is not a bad thing. Intelligent Design is an answer to a scientific question without any scientific evidence, and, more importantly, ignoring scientific evidence that points to the opposite conclusion. Personally, I think any biologist who agrees with Intelligent Design does *not* deserve to be called a biologist. Replace all occurrences with ``Intelligent Design'' with ``Flat Earth hypothesis'' and ``Biologist'' with ``Geologist'' or even ``Physicist'' and what's the difference?

      The second point of the movie is that there is a world of difference between Intelligent Design and Creationism. This may be technically true, but at this point, the differences are superficial and irrelevant. Intelligent Design says that an intelligent being, which knew what it was doing created not just us, but the entire world. This is a fundamentally theistic argument, but it goes further -- it attempts to answer scientific questions, and teach it to children.

      The third point of the movie is that natural selection is very reminiscent of Nazism (yes, yes, I know Godwin's Law, but the movie does it first). This is true (in the sense that Nazism is based on the Social Darwinism), but by the same token, one could argue that the scientific observation that animals fight out all their conflicts physically implies that humans do the same, and thus that observation is evil or wrong.

      The above is a fairly thorough summary of the main points of the film. Two other important observations:

      * The movie has an annoying habit of switching to a completely unrelated scene in order to highlight the phrase just uttered (e.g. ``He silenced me!'' cue cut to random 50s film in which some bully is beating up some kid yelling ``Say Uncle!'' -- this particular example didn't occur in the movie, but plenty like it did).
      * The movie presents the entire argument in the most incredibly biased, almost childish way possible. Richard Dawkins is the best example of this. When he is on screen, the lighting is noticeably dimmer, and there is actual demonic music in the background. There is a scene showing him getting cleaned and having make up put on him, I guess in order to show how much of a phony he is. There is a scene showing him getting out of a limousine. And, my favourite, in the main interview itself:

      First of all, Stein arrives late, as evidenced by the fact that he starts out the interview with ``Sorry to keep you waiting so long''. Second, he asks Richard if he believes in any god. When Dawkins says no, and explains why, Stein clarifies by making sure that he believes in neither Jesus nor Yahweh. ``I just told you,'' Dawkins says. He repeats the reasons. ``So you don't believe in *any* god?'' ``No''. ``Do you believe in the Hindu gods?''

      Lastly, Stein, in the overvoice, mocks and manipulates the words of distinguished scientists, including Dawkins. When Stein asked Dawkins if he can see any argument for design, the latter says that the only plausible argument from design is one in which some very intelligent and well-developed being from another planet came and designed *us*. He quickly adds that this doesn't solve the problem, because it would still raise the question, as to where the aliens came from. But Stein would have none of it. ``Richard Dawkins believes in aliens?!?!''

    10. Re:Curiosity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stein told his interviewees that he was making a documentary about "the intersection between science and religion". This doesn't seem disingenuous or unethical, as you claim. From one of his unhappy interviewees: http://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/ (see 4th paragraph) I also read this in an interview with Stein himself, but I can't find the link...

    11. Re:Curiosity... by SonicTheDeadFrog · · Score: 0

      Isn't one of the points of the movie that while scientists espouse neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. that they are not actually following it?
      I haven't seen the movie, but I can already say I've seen this kind of animosity without all of the requisite objectivity right here in the real world.

      Right here on Slashdot my karma was trashed and I was labeled a flamebaiter for politely suggesting this was going on. I dared make the point, as an admitted non-scientist, that as none of us was here to witness the origin of life that none of us has any more right to suppose what brought it about than anyone else. I followed this up with the suggestion that maybe the evolutionary science community wasn't being objective by "fighting" creationism with such fervor.

      I suppose the Darwinist community is just as human as the creationist community and after years of putting up with creationists' crap while the majority of society agreed with them, the Darwinists are out for a little revenge. I can't blame them, I guess, but I don't think it's fair to label that unforgiving zeal as science. Call it what it is - it's anger, it's revenge, it's payback, but it's not science. Science is the work, it's not the animosity against contrary viewpoints.

      As a creationist myself, I, for one, have always been respectful of Darwinists' viewpoints - just never to the point of being convinced by them. That, apparently, is a sin - assuming that Darwinists have an equivalent concept.
    12. Re:Curiosity... by abb3w · · Score: 1

      Isn't one of the points of the movie that while scientists espouse neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. that they are not actually following it?

      Neither neutrality, lack of bias, nor objectivity require lack of judgment.

      ID supporters merely cannot understand the writing on the wall: mene, mene, tekel, upharsin.

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    13. Re:Curiosity... by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is just Ben Stein's great way of capitalizing on fears and preconceptions of the population. He literally produced a film that caters to the ignorant and the blindly faithful... without even a shred of evidence that he himself believes it. ...

      As a scientist who believes in God, I am appalled at this film, and I think Stein should be ashamed of himself. Maybe if not for asshole exercises such as this, people would calm down and realize that unless you take religious texts literally, they address questions that are incompatible with science, and thus cannot possibly be in conflict with the latter.


      I'd never heard of Ben Stein until his name was on slashdot's frontpage. I figure if anyone watches his movie because of the slashdot effect, than he has decent marketing PR for his movie. Does George Lucas believe in the Force & Jedi? Well he does believe in it just enough to bring him truck loads of money. I can't really fault either.

      I blame those that start their beliefs based on movies. O.k. I guess there isn't any difference in basing your religion on a movie vs a book so I guess go ahead and start your new movie or video game based religion.

    14. Re:Curiosity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They do espouse neutrality in investigation and hypothesis creation. Once a certain hypothesis has proven to be false, pernicious, or just plain illogical, they are under no obligation to be neutral about their evaluation of it. Creationism is such a hypothesis.

    15. Re:Curiosity... by WNight · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Well, what have you done that's supposed to give you a relevant opinion?

      Wake me when the list is longer than "read the bible".

    16. Re:Curiosity... by Shirakawasuna · · Score: 1

      It wasn't just Ben Stein, actually, the driving force behind this film were various ideologues with cash and the producers. Many interviews were not carried out by Ben Stein at all. The film did, however, misrepresent its motives in order to get interviews by calling itself 'Crossroads: the intersection between faith and science' (or something along those lines). This is months after the domain expelledthemovie.com had been registered, mind you. I'm sure if they get enough heat for this they will eventually rationalize it in a way any conspiracy theorist can represent: 'How else could we have infiltrated the Darwinian orthodoxy to get honest views?'

      If I were religious I would find this movie doubly idiotic on a personal level, as apparently the central message aside from the Darwin-Hitler connection (seriously) and 'academic suppression' is how evolution (they use 'Darwinism' as an epithet) leads to immoral atheism, etc.

    17. Re:Curiosity... by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

      You can't take science away.
      Sure you can; just make it illegal to do it. For a case study, read up on "Lysenkoism", in which Joseph Stalin decreed that "science" was whatever he said it was, and any Soviet scientist who disagreed with him by raising "facts" or "data" was swept off to the Gulag.
    18. Re:Curiosity... by aplusjimages · · Score: 1

      So did that stop the American scientist from working? You can't stop Science.

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    19. Re:Curiosity... by EB+FE · · Score: 1

      Scientist ARE being objective. When or if evidence for a creator comes along, they'll gladly allow that be taught in schools. So far, ALL evidence supports the theory of evolution.

      --
      Vital papers will demonstrate their vitality by moving to where you can't find them.
    20. Re:Curiosity... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      I had the opportunity to have a look at the "Expelled Leader's Guide".

      The second page purports to talk about how new scientific ideas, "particular those that pertain to the origins of life" are suppressed. They try to support the viability of these alternate theories with the following data:
      91% of Americans believe in God.
      78% of Americans believed God created humans in their present form or guided an evolutionary process.
      Clearly, since they repeatedly attempt to use statistics about what people believe to lend weight to the value of a proposition, they're not at all interested in science. Anyone who tried such a thing among scientists should not be surprised to find their ideas suppressed -- science is about facts, not what people believe.

      Page 3 discusses cosmology. It entirely misstates the anthropic principle. In claims the anthropic principle states that if various fundamental parameters (e.g., the value of G) were even slightly different, life as we know it would not exist. This, then, indicates that the universe is the work of the divine. This is nearly the opposite of the proper interpretation of the anthropic principle -- all fundamental values *must* be such that life as we know it exists; otherwise, we would be incapable of observing it as such. (That is, we know, a priori, that the universe is capable of supporting humans, and any observation we make is required to confirm that.)

      Page 4 appears to point out the probability of a full working cell being created by random chance is unreasonably small. Certainly true, and certainly not relevant. This leads to...

      Page 5 is our friend, irreducible complexity!

      Page 7 mentions how racists use Darwinism to justify their views. I didn't read closely enough to see if they also bring up social Darwinism, which has almost nothing to do with evolution. I did notice they don't mention any unfortunate people who have used religion to justify actions most would disagree with.

      Page 8 is devoted to Godwin.

      Page 9 has a bit about how "evolution" is used to mean different things. I find it odd that, given that this very document has a page about cosmology, they don't cover that "evolution" is often used by creationists to encompass abiogenesis. If you really want a laugh, this page has "Is ID science?" The answer is clearly written by someone poorly-schooled in statistical mechanics.

    21. Re:Curiosity... by mikey1134 · · Score: 1

      The point of the movie is to claim that scientists who espouse neutrality and objectivity are conspiring to suppress evidence of intelligent design to forward a super secret atheist agenda... It apparently gets even weirder when they bring the Nazis and the Berlin Wall into it.

      --
      <gir voice> I love this sig... </gir voice>
    22. Re:Curiosity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a scientist...I am appalled at this film...

      I'm curious. Have you actually watched the film?

      If so, then great and nevermind. But if not (and you didn't mention that you had), then I'd respectfully suggest that you're illustrating the problem: So-called scientists often preach the "scientific method" out one side of their mouths while practicing assumptive judgmentalism based on personal prejudices.

    23. Re:Curiosity... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      As my math teacher at the university told us, science is not a matter of majority support, but one of right and wrong (he did that after asking what we think would be the outcome, which the majority guessed wrongly).

      The same is true in every aspect of science. What you believe to be right does simply not matter. A thousand years ago, nearly 100% of the people (in Europe, can't speak for the rest of the planet) thought that the Sun revolves around the Earth. The universe does not bend to the collective will of the people, though.

      What you want to believe is up to you. But that's anything but scientific, and it needn't be in any way connected to reality. And reality won't reshape just because someone, or even a majority, wants it to be that way. I'm fairly sure a fair lot of people didn't want the flooding in New Orleans a few years ago, and guess what: It still happened.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    24. Re:Curiosity... by trmcdougle · · Score: 1

      You can't stop Science.

      You can for a sufficiently powerful value of "You", i.e. God (were he/she/it to exist) presumably could, so couldn't it reasonably(sic) be assumed that God wants science?

    25. Re:Curiosity... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Except they lie, run rampant with logical fallacies, and pose anecdotal 'evidence' under scary music.

      It's horrible, and it's an embarrassment to the anti-evolution crowd. I mean the draw Darwinism*, atheism and Hitler together. You have to be a moron, or a deceiver to draw those conclusions.

      Plus it was created under deceit, and the is a lot of evidence that is was filmed with the goal of being anti-evolution.

      *Contray to what they will tell you, Darwinism is no evolution. We have progress far beyond that. It is critically important to note that, because mopst of the debates end up boiling down t a bunch of ad hominum attacks against Darwin. As if some things he was wrong about means everything was wrong, and the mountains of evidence and predictions are invalid.

      In fact, the moment that say 'transitional species' you know that don't even know what evolution is and are basing the argument on the same incorrect knowledge thats been floating around believers for decades.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    26. Re:Curiosity... by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      There's a reason your karma was trashed: you don't understand what evolution is. Hint: it has nothing to do with the origin of life, and to accept that evolution exists requires no specific acceptance or denial of *how* life began.

      Your description suggests that you also apparently don't even know what science is, which must make it easier to hold your creationist belief.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    27. Re:Curiosity... by SonicTheDeadFrog · · Score: 0

      I don't know when or where you went to school, but when I was taught about evolution, it was pretty much given as the explanation for the origin of life. Maybe the whole "primordial soup" thing has been tossed out since I last took a hard look at it. I don't scour science journals every week to keep abreast of all of the newest revisions to Earth's collective scientific beliefs, so maybe no soup now? That does make me ignorant, I suppose but by the same token, I doubt you regularly study the Bible and see how it applies to life in this day and age, so it makes you ignorant too - just of a different subject.

      I never claimed to have some great understanding of evolution, and, in fact, was asking someone to explain it to me. I wasn't rude or antagonistic and all of my responses were as thoughtful as I could make them. I fail to see how that warrants my karma getting trashed. But I probably don't understand karma - since we're so into reinventing things but not changing their names, maybe karma's just a big popularity contest rather than a thoughtful and objective critique of my postings.

      I'm clearly not a scientist, but I don't have to be one or even agree with one to understand what science is. I know very well what it is, but perhaps you don't? Or maybe the fundamental definition of science has changed into something more like a religion since I went to school? It certainly has enough zealots now.

      It's exactly reactions like yours that prompt things like Mr. Stein's movie. Maybe introspectively it looks different to you, but to me you seem insulting and spiteful. How else am I supposed to interpret you telling me that I'm so stupid that I don't know what science is in the first place and that my stupidity facilitates my belief in creation. You have really just proven my point here.

  11. Not the issue... by Pedrito · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He's missing the issue. The truth is, I believe some form of "intelligent design." But whether or not I believe it or a billion people believe it is irrelevant. Intelligent design, as has been discussed here and elsewhere, ad infinitum, it's NOT SCIENCE and should not be taught as science or as an alternative to evolution.

    On the other hand, if they want to teach it in a Religious Studies type class, I'm all for it. Go for it. That's precisely where it belongs.

    1. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would posit that Philosophy would be another class that it would be appropriate in (beyond the narrow religious studies classes). However I also don't see the harm in pointing out in the science class that "while evolution is the current leading scientific theory by a landslide, there are other non-scientific theories out there. If you want to learn about them take class X in the philosophy / theology course line."

    2. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I would posit that Philosophy would be another class that it would be appropriate in (beyond the narrow religious studies classes). However I also don't see the harm in pointing out in the science class that "while evolution is the current leading scientific theory by a landslide, there are other non-scientific theories out there. If you want to learn about them take class X in the philosophy / theology course line."

      I posit that we should teach the theological alternative to the theory of gravity: "God's hand holds us down to the earth." Or an alternative to the Germ Theory of disease - Satan makes people sick who don't pray hard enough. Quantum Theory? Naw, those are just "god bits". We can have science teachers tell kids that they can explore these "alternative", "non-scientific" theories in philosophy class. That will ensure a wonderful education for them.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    3. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1) I haven't heard any of those ideas prior to your post here.
      2) How is it bad to teach people what a significant number of people believe? How can you argue against something you don't understand yourself?
      3) You're essential argument boils down to (from what I read) "non-scientific = WRONG, therefore should not be taught in any capacity"

      My View: by hiding the fact that other theories exist you only harm the credibility of the leading theory once the individual finds out about the other views. (as a general rule, not just to be applied to evolutionary biology / intelligent design) /damnit I fed the troll.

    4. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My View: by hiding the fact that other theories exist you only harm the credibility of the leading theory once the individual finds out about the other views. (as a general rule, not just to be applied to evolutionary biology / intelligent design) /damnit I fed the troll.

      Your use of the term "theory" in this context shows that you have no idea what it means for something to be a scientific Theory. People who call intelligent design a "theory" are simply trying to convince your average Joe Sixpack that it is equally as plausible and on the some footing as the scientific Theory of Evolution. It is not. As far as I know, no other Theories currently exist to explain the diversity of life. No one is hiding other theories, because there aren't any. There are some fairy tales that were meant to try and explain it several thousand years ago, which in no way resemble a theory of any sort.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    5. Re:Not the issue... by peterjb31 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it. There is no science which disagrees with this, I see no reason why this couldn't be taught (for what it is) as a theory in a classroom. Your thoughts?

      --
      There is no place like /home
    6. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it. There is no science which disagrees with this, I see no reason why this couldn't be taught (for what it is) as a theory in a classroom. Your thoughts?

      Intelligent Design theory typically implies that not only did "someone" kick-start the process, but that it was a guided process. There is plenty of scientific evidence to show that natural selection, and not some kind of "designed guidance" was the driving force in evolutionary changes. Just as a very quick example, look at the design of the human eye... upside down, backwards, and with a huge blind spot caused by a cable of optic nerves. If it came about through incremental changes driven by selection, this is easy to understand. If it was created by a designer who guided the process, then the designer was an incompetent.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    7. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      If I rephrased to replace the first instance of the word theory with "idea", "view", or "supposition" would you then still have a problem with my stated view? /I accept your argument that use of the specific word "theory" in the GP causes confusion between the scientific term "theory" and the colloquial term "theory" and adjust accordingly.

    8. Re:Not the issue... by dc29A · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My View: by hiding the fact that other theories exist you only harm the credibility of the leading theory once the individual finds out about the other views. (as a general rule, not just to be applied to evolutionary biology / intelligent design) /damnit I fed the troll. ID is a scientific theory? No. It's someones acid trip while watching a movie about an acid trip. It has no scientific merit, it's not falsifiable and the hypothesis (See? I am not using the word theory.) is inherently false for a simple question that leads to an infinite number of designers: Who designed the designer?. Something no ID proponent can answer.

      ID is a hypothesis with *ZERO* evidence.
      Evolution is a scientific theory with *MOUNTAINS* of evidence.

      Let's not mix up one of our best scientific theories with some wild idea someone pulled out of their ass^H^H^H^H^Hbible.
    9. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      unless of course the designer was operating under a set of physical constraints such as those present in the real world... /ok I admit this time I was trolling... I apologize

    10. Re:Not the issue... by Pedrito · · Score: 1

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it. There is no science which disagrees with this, I see no reason why this couldn't be taught (for what it is) as a theory in a classroom. Your thoughts?

      Because it's NOT science. It's not even a theory (as you call it). It's pure conjecture with absolutely no scientific evidence. On the other hand, evolution is a theory based on an hypothesis and mountains upon mountains of evidence that support that hypothesis.

      There's absolutely no science that disagrees with the possibility that Quantum Immortality is a fact. But it's not science. It's philosophy. It's conjecture. So it's not taught as science (and hell, it's probably rarely taught). Yet it's entirely consistent with quantum mechanics.

      Just because something isn't impossible doesn't make it science, so that's why it shouldn't be taught.

    11. Re:Not the issue... by schon · · Score: 1

      However I also don't see the harm in pointing out in the science class that "while evolution is the current leading scientific theory by a landslide, there are other non-scientific theories out there. I *DO* see the harm - specifically the term "non-scientific theory" - a theory is *by definition* scientific.

      Seriously, 90% of the problem here is that the average person doesn't know what a theory really is.

      Propagating the misunderstanding of a science term in science class is where a lot of the harm starts.
    12. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You keep using theory like anything can be a scientific theory, in which case you're some sort of nutter. Nothing in a theology class or philosophy class can be tested, observed, or falsified, in any way, ever. They're not theories. They are fun little stories, simple ideas that attempt to fill in the vast blanks in history. But they are not rational scientific theories, and should not be held in the same class or regard as actual theories based on actual evidence. BTW, large groups of people think that slavery was ok, should we teach that? Should we teach that the earth is flat? Disease is caused by bad night air? Where do we draw the line between a reasonable explanation and hocus pocus? Oh, i know, why don't we draw the line at things that can we falsified, tested, observed, and updated based on new information? Seems like an easy test. No proof, keep it to yourself. I'm all for alternate theories. REAL Theories. Theories with evidence that can be reproduced. You don't like evolution? Fine. Show me something else based on evidence. Someone's word isn't going to cut it.

    13. Re:Not the issue... by munik · · Score: 0

      Evolution is based on the presupposition that only those things that can be observed, demonstrated, and explained can be shown to be true. That's a faulty presupposition. No one can observe and demonstrate the process of evolution. Nor can anyone observe and demonstrate the process of intelligent design. Only guesses can be made about what really happened.

      Of course, we can inform those guesses by observations about the current world, but they in no way can lift the theory to the status of belief. I think you agree it would be NOT SCIENCE if we hold evolution to be true (believe it to be true) if we cannot demonstrate it.

    14. Re:Not the issue... by maxume · · Score: 1

      There is no science that agrees with it either(that is, at the moment, there is no notion of there being any evidence that could be used to support the kick start).

      It could be treated philosophically or theologically, but not scientifically.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    15. Re:Not the issue... by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      Science lessons are science lessons and should not concern themselves with things which are not scientific. Otherwise why, having spent all term teaching the students about Gravity, wouldn't you mention that there is an old lady living around the corner from the school who thinks it all works with velcro or that the mad old drunk child abusing tramp who lives under the bridge thinks that gravity fails to work after 11 bottles of Sherry. If it doesn't have a scientific basis, and ID doesn't, then don't teach it in science.

    16. Re:Not the issue... by neoform · · Score: 1

      You clod, it's not God's hand holding us down on earth, it's angels, what do you think they exist for?!

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    17. Re:Not the issue... by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Yes we can, that sounds like a great idea, at my school we had a devout atheist physics teacher (mainly due to American bible belt and the fact he had his career halted by the headmaster who was CofE), but he would say stuff like "this is the scientific theory, there is...but you can learn about it in Religious Education, because it aint science", in fact I think that what all my science teachers would say! (well other than "GTFO, the fish was for dissecting not slapping people with")

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    18. Re:Not the issue... by dc29A · · Score: 1

      If I rephrased to replace the first instance of the word theory with "idea", "view", or "supposition" would you then still have a problem with my stated view? /I accept your argument that use of the specific word "theory" in the GP causes confusion between the scientific term "theory" and the colloquial term "theory" and adjust accordingly. Let's see:

      My View: by hiding the fact that other ideas/views/suppositions exist you only harm the credibility of the leading theory once the individual finds out about the other views. (as a general rule, not just to be applied to evolutionary biology / intelligent design) /damnit I fed the troll.

      So now you question the validity of the only scientific theory that explains evolution, and this theory is backed up with mountains of irrefutable evidence, with 'views' (read: opinions)? Great!

      I really wish doctors would prescribe 'prayer' as a cure for ill people who don't believe in evolution. Or maybe the doctor would throw out of the window what he learned and start meditating with the patient so the patient gets better. I mean, he believes, in his view, that meditation can cure a disease. What does it matter that 99.99% of other doctors would prescribe antibiotics, fuck them! Meditation baby! The cure of all disease!

      Who needs logic and reason when you can have 'views' and 'suppositions'?
    19. Re:Not the issue... by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be taught since it really has nothing to do with it. Whether or not somebody started the process does not help in working out how process runs. Evolution is the process at work, including conjecture about steering and interference only muddies the study of the process itself.

      Evolution only deals with the "how", and leaves the "why" up to philosophers and theologians.

    20. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      unless of course the designer was operating under a set of physical constraints such as those present in the real world... /ok I admit this time I was trolling... I apologize

      It's OK, I'll bite anyway. I could say that the income I make is actually supplied by pink fairies, but because they are working through the constraints of the physical world, they are supplying it to me through my place of employment. As Pierre-Simon Laplace said to Napoleon, "Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse". The pink fairy hypothesis is unnecessary, and indistinguishable from the reality that we observe and measure ourselves. So, I would argue, is the Intelligent Design hypothesis.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    21. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      to paraphrase "it is better to mandate that people put their head in the sand then to allow them to come to the only rational conclusion."

      I'm pretty sure that the vast majority of people who were presented with all the evidence in a fully unbiased manner (I recognise this is not possible, I'm talking hypothetically) and were left to make up their own conclusion, would decide "hey that evolution stuff makes a lot more sense"

      whereas if the same person was taught only the one view and then later found out that a second view exists would say "wait a minute... what else was I not told initially, something is wrong here... they must have not told me about it because it says something that hurts their view..."

    22. Re:Not the issue... by mcvos · · Score: 1

      I learned about a dozen different creation stories in my religious studies class. Mostly native American, Hindu, and that sort of stuff. It informed students, and didn't interfere with science. Great idea. We also learned all sorts of stuff about Buddhism and Islam.

      And this was at a protestant christian school. It's important to realise that school doesn't exist to brainwash you with whatever crazy ideas others want you to believe, it exists to inform you and make you think.

      In other words, philosophy or religious studies would be an excellent place to cover Intelligent Design, if only because students are bound to hear about it somewhere anyway. Better to inform them properly at school than to let them blindly believe crazy ideas from fundamentalists.

    23. Re:Not the issue... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it.

      No, it doesn't. Intelligent design postulates a designer who does much more than "kick starts" it, one that intelligently guides the process to an end it desires.

      If you want to discuss such a ludicrous idea in a sociology, history, or philosophy class, great. But it's not a scientific theory, and has no explanatory power.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    24. Re:Not the issue... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      I submit to you that if intellegent design did happen, then that is what we should study if we are to fully understand all the scientific secrets of the universe. Keep in mind that the theory of evolution is not even a valid theory by standard scientific principles. Scientists today approached science by "ruling out" intellegent design. This is a quite closed minded approach to studying anything. In true science, all possibilities are left open unless something can be proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

    25. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      You clod, it's not God's hand holding us down on earth, it's angels, what do you think they exist for?!

      I actually give thanks daily for His Noodly Appendage, which binds me to the earth and prevents me from floating away into the endless void.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    26. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      I submit to you that if intellegent design did happen, then that is what we should study if we are to fully understand all the scientific secrets of the universe. Keep in mind that the theory of evolution is not even a valid theory by standard scientific principles. Scientists today approached science by "ruling out" intellegent design. This is a quite closed minded approach to studying anything. In true science, all possibilities are left open unless something can be proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

      I hope you're being facetious, but I get this horrible feeling that you aren't. Could you please explain to me how the theory of evolution is not a valid theory as measured by standard scientific principles? It is as much a theory as the theory of gravitation, the theory of relativity, or the germ theory of disease. In order for something t be judged a scientific theory, it must do two things - mesh with a preponderance of observed evidence, and be able to reliably make predictions. The theory of evolution meets both of these criteria, while the hypothesis of Intelligent Design does neither. It explains nothing, it predicts nothing, and it matches no known evidence.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    27. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. He created us in His image, and we have only 2 hands, so God, in all His Omnipotence, can only hold down 2 people at once, or 4 if He uses His Divine Feet :D

    28. Re:Not the issue... by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      I hope you're being facetious, but I get this horrible feeling that you aren't. Could you please explain to me how the theory of evolution is not a valid theory as measured by standard scientific principles? It is as much a theory as the theory of gravitation, the theory of relativity, or the germ theory of disease. In order for something t be judged a scientific theory, it must do two things - mesh with a preponderance of observed evidence, and be able to reliably make predictions. The theory of evolution meets both of these criteria, while the hypothesis of Intelligent Design does neither. It explains nothing, it predicts nothing, and it matches no known evidence. Careful. IDiocy meshes just fine with the evidence (granted, mixing Young-Earth-Creationism with ID is done, quite often, and is just stupidity piled on top of retardism). This is because, as you so rightly pointed out, it explains nothing and predicts nothing, and so proponents of it can just keep moving the goalposts. When you can move goals, meshing with evidence is no problem.
    29. Re:Not the issue... by BigDogCH · · Score: 1

      Disagree with yourself much...

      "non-scientific = WRONG" Exactly. We shouldn't teach non-scientific stuff in a science class.

      We do teach other scientific theories.....however intelligent design is not a scientific theory.

      The church can cover religion, as well as any classes about religous beliefs. Nobody is trying to take away your religion, we just want it left out of the classroom.

      Is it too much to ask to keep the religious beliefs out of the science classes. It saddens me to look at how many people will accept intelligent design without a shred of evidence put in front of them, however they can see evolution in their own home and refuse to acknowledge it.

    30. Re:Not the issue... by Kintanon · · Score: 0, Redundant

      BLASPHEMER!! The Mighty Thumb Of Thor is what anchors us to this fair globe and prevents us being flung into space. I declare jihad on you and your family for your inflammatory and blasphemous assertions!!

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    31. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      Careful. IDiocy meshes just fine with the evidence (granted, mixing Young-Earth-Creationism with ID is done, quite often, and is just stupidity piled on top of retardism). This is because, as you so rightly pointed out, it explains nothing and predicts nothing, and so proponents of it can just keep moving the goalposts. When you can move goals, meshing with evidence is no problem.

      I would argue that ID does not match the evidence, given the number of less-than-ideal biological systems that exist. Evolution through natural selection may give an appearance of "design", but only a fool would look at it and call it "intelligently" designed. I agree with you, though; arguing this with an ID proponent is like repeatedly banging your head into a brick wall. They constantly change their definitions in order to facilitate their arguments.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    32. Re:Not the issue... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      In order for theory to be valid, there must be a test that can be applied to it that would disprove it and it must fail that test. Last time I posted about this, I got all sorts of answers like "just the fact that we are here today proves that we evolved". People assume that we all started from some pool of primodial soup and all life came from that, however, scientists cannot recreate the primodial soup. Neither can they create life from nothing. As far as intelligent design being a theory, it is easily observable that there is order in the universe. Everything that happens in the universe is subject to observable laws. To say that these laws came about by random chance is amazingly short sighted.

    33. Re:Not the issue... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, a theory is only scientific in the context of science. That is, there's no place in a scientific discussion for "non-scientific theories", and one should never use the term in a scientific classroom (doubling up on definitions).

      However, the word "theory" can be used in non-scientific contexts, where it has other meanings. So a theory isn't strictly scientific by definition.

    34. Re:Not the issue... by KYPackrat · · Score: 1

      Just as a very quick example, look at the design of the human eye... upside down, backwards, and with a huge blind spot caused by a cable of optic nerves. If it came about through incremental changes driven by selection, this is easy to understand. If it was created by a designer who guided the process, then the designer was an incompetent.

      "Old words". Good grief, at least come up with an interesting reason why ID isn't true.

      The image is upside-down and backwards because that's the way lenses work. Get a refracting telescope out without a correcting prism and the image is the same way. "I canna change the laws of physics, Captain."

      The surface-mounted optic nerve does have a function: light suppression. Deep-sea, low-light creatures have optic nerves behind the retina. Their eyes cannot deal with the flood of light caused by normal sunlight. Optic nerves on the surface of the retina absorb light that would otherwise flood the cones and rods without causing resolution loss or image distortion.

      The flaw of most "inelegant design" arguments is that they usually are arguments from incomplete information. The appendix was believed to be proof of both inelegant design and evolution, but it's part of our immune system's defenses against the contents of our colon.

      Technically, ID doesn't require a perfect Designer, just a Designer. If we're just the science project of some hung-over Masters student from Beta Centauri 4, that's still ID.
    35. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ID is a hypothesis with *ZERO* evidence.
      Evolution is a scientific theory with *MOUNTAINS* of evidence. Unfortunately that is untrue. In fact each side has evidences that rationally support it, neither side yet matches all of the scientific data.

      Now sure, we'll all agree that the larger share of the evidence is currently in support of the evolutionist model. But imposing a metric like that (weighing up which side is better supported) is not easy. It is better to publicly catalogue the problems with the standard scientific model (thereby inspiring specific progress), rather than to rabidly paint some black and white picture.

    36. Re:Not the issue... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      1) I haven't heard any of those ideas prior to your post here.

      There are plenty of people who believe that diseases are caused by demons or witchcraft, or believe in fairies or magic. So let's ask again - should all these be taught in science lessons?

      2) How is it bad to teach people what a significant number of people believe?

      It's not. I know, I have a wonderful idea - let's dedicate an entire lesson to "what irrational things people around the world believe in". We could call it, I dunno, Religious Studies lessons?

      No one is saying that "what people believe" should not be taught at all.

      The argument here, that you appear to have strayed from, is whether it should be taught in science lessons. I have this radical notion that science lessons should be for teaching science.

      by hiding the fact that other theories exist

      There are no other theories. There is one scientific theory, and a load of stories that people have made up.

    37. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In order for theory to be valid, there must be a test that can be applied to it that would disprove it and it must fail that test. Last time I posted about this, I got all sorts of answers like "just the fact that we are here today proves that we evolved". People assume that we all started from some pool of primodial soup and all life came from that, however, scientists cannot recreate the primodial soup. Neither can they create life from nothing. As far as intelligent design being a theory, it is easily observable that there is order in the universe. Everything that happens in the universe is subject to observable laws. To say that these laws came about by random chance is amazingly short sighted.

      Well, first off, you have just shifted your argument from evolution to all observable natural laws. You are also mixing up several things that are not necessarily related; the origin of life (e.g., primordial soup) is a different topic than evolution. Let's just concentrate on evolution for now.

      Evolution could be falsified by a single fossil turning up in the "wrong place" in the fossil record. With millions and millions of fossils found, not a single one has been found "in the wrong place" for evolution to be true. In addition, the theory of evolution has predicted transitional life forms that have then been found in the correct geological time frame in the fossil record.

      Now, to address your primordial soup comment - the fact that there is not a known answer for this does not necessarily imply that "God did it". Your "God of the Gaps" argument is quite traditional, and typically becomes more and more desperate as continuous increases in scientific knowledge make the gaps smaller and smaller. Read some books, take some science classes, and educate yourself on this issue, because you appear to be talking out of your ass at the moment.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    38. Re:Not the issue... by dc29A · · Score: 1

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it. There is no science which disagrees with this, I see no reason why this couldn't be taught (for what it is) as a theory in a classroom.

      Your thoughts? Hypothesis: Life is too complex to have evolved without aid. Thus an intelligent designer is required.

      (1) Our designer must have been WAY too complex to be able to create a universe.
      (2) Since complexity requires a designer, the designer itself *MUST* have a designer.
      (3) GOTO (2).

      Can one single ID proponent answer this simple string of questions?

      Who created our designer? And its designer? And its designers designer? And ... ####!33""$%%%
      STACK OVERFLOW
      NO CARRIER
    39. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      "Old words". Good grief, at least come up with an interesting reason why ID isn't true. The image is upside-down and backwards because that's the way lenses work. Get a refracting telescope out without a correcting prism and the image is the same way. "I canna change the laws of physics, Captain." The surface-mounted optic nerve does have a function: light suppression. Deep-sea, low-light creatures have optic nerves behind the retina. Their eyes cannot deal with the flood of light caused by normal sunlight. Optic nerves on the surface of the retina absorb light that would otherwise flood the cones and rods without causing resolution loss or image distortion. The flaw of most "inelegant design" arguments is that they usually are arguments from incomplete information. The appendix was believed to be proof of both inelegant design and evolution, but it's part of our immune system's defenses against the contents of our colon. Technically, ID doesn't require a perfect Designer, just a Designer. If we're just the science project of some hung-over Masters student from Beta Centauri 4, that's still ID.

      Ok, how about the fact that Homo Sapiens as a specis is prone to lower back problems and sinus infections? This is due to our having evolved from walking on all fours, to walking upright.

      You can posit a masters student from Beta Centauri having "designed" us, but at the end of the day, you come back to the question of, "where did that student come from?". Was he "designed" by someone else? Where does this regress of 'design' end? Because most people imply a supernatural 'creator' as the designer, that is what I typically argue against. If you want to argue about an extra-terrestrial designer, then by all means, let's. But unless you have a way to explain where that designer came from, it ends up coming across as either weak, or a desperate attempt to distance oneself from the religious nutcases who make up the ID movement.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    40. Re:Not the issue... by peterjb31 · · Score: 1

      The basis of the idea behind intelligent design is the belief in a God or other deity which has no beginning or end, in this case there is no need for a previous designer.

      --
      There is no place like /home
    41. Re:Not the issue... by dc29A · · Score: 1

      Homer: Not a bear in sight. The "Bear Patrol" is working like a charm!
      Lisa: That's specious reasoning, Dad.
      Homer: [uncomprehendingly] Thanks, honey.
      Lisa: By your logic, I could claim that this rock keeps tigers away.
      Homer: Hmm. How does it work?
      Lisa: It doesn't work; it's just a stupid rock!
      Homer: Uh-huh.
      Lisa: But I don't see any tigers around, do you?
      Homer: (pause) Lisa, I want to buy your rock. Instead of going to see a doctor next time when you are sick, go see the old lady next door and ask her 'view' and 'suppositions' about your illness, after all you need a second opinion, eh?. Oh and make sure you follow the old ladies advice about how to 'cure' your illness.
    42. Re:Not the issue... by dc29A · · Score: 1

      The basis of the idea behind intelligent design is the belief in a God or other deity which has no beginning or end, in this case there is no need for a previous designer. Really? that's not what the Dover trial defendants were pretending, in the court of law and in front of a judge. Behe and Co. made lot of strides trying to remove any reference of 'God' from Intelligent Design.
    43. Re:Not the issue... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      You have answered your own question. The fossil record does not show a link between humans and any other species. There are similarities, but they have never found the "missing link". The fossil record for horses was supposeed to be Eohippus, Mesohippus and so forth until you get the the modern horse. The problem is that each of those animals had a different number of ribs and the number jumped around for each type of animal. Lets consider the actual fossil evidence that caused the courts to allow evolution in the first place. It was a molar that was supposed to have belonged to an early human. Years later its was discovered that it was from an ancient swine. So there's your fossil record. Also, if you make another personal remark i.e. talking out my ass, I will not reply to any more of your posts. Either we can discuss the facts, or we can digress to name calling which I gave up in grammar school.

    44. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...is inherently false for a simple question that leads to an infinite number of designers: Who designed the designer? Well its not like the accepted scientific Theory of the Big Bang can explain what came before. That doesn't make it inheritly false.

    45. Re:Not the issue... by Deanalator · · Score: 1

      When I was in highschool (maybe 5 or so years ago), we learned it in a history portion of our biology class, along with 5 or so other theories proposed throughout the years to explain the origin of man.

    46. Re:Not the issue... by RyoShin · · Score: 1
      A lot of the debates I see over things like ID and such are based around the term "theory". You and I know what it means in a scientific term, but when Joe Sixpack hears "theory", what they really think of is hypothesis. From Wikipedia, the Scientific Method is:

      1. Define the question
      2. Gather information and resources (observe)
      3. Form hypothesis
      4. Perform experiment and collect data
      5. Analyze data
      6. Interpret data and draw conclusions that serve as a starting point for new hypothesis
      7. Publish results
      8. Retest (frequently done by other scientists)
      Joe Sixpack thinks of step three. Mr. Scientist thinks of step six (or so). The disconnection between the two groups is not just ideology but terminology.

      Sadly, though, the whole thing goes back to a lack of education all around, so perhaps this point is moot. Still, whenever I see/hear someone talk about "theory" I feel the need to tell them "No, you have a hypothesis, which can't be scientifically tested".
    47. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there are too many people who pose the dichotomy of ID or Darwinism. But the fact remains that BOTH *CAN* exist quite well.

      To throw out a few points that may carry what I'm saying a bit further:

      Monsanto has created (intelligent design) certain attributes that are applied to seeds to prohibit the ability for roundup to kill those plants. However, there are examples where their own seed has "drifted" with the wind to other fields, affecting other crops (darwinism), and their own seed has changed slightly.

      What's wrong with putting in place (intelligently, with science) certain types of life, and letting nature "run it's course" with everything from bugs, animals, humans and plants feeding off one another in a life cycle of sorts, necessary for their own respective sustenance?

      Aren't we (as a human race)trying to find ways to create new life forms, or resurrect them from coded bits of DNA found in fossilized pieces of amber, etc? We look at Mars at possible colonization, or perhaps the moon, and we're thinking of bringing in plants from earth to help with eventual oxygenation of those bodies. We may even modify existing plants to do something to that degree. My guess is that there will be further mutations that we cannot conceive of, due to interactions with other external forces.

      To eventual (possible) residents of those bodies, will there be any discussion of "intelligent design" or "Darwinism"? Or will it be seen simply as panspermia (transplantation of species from space and other bodies), and call it a day?

      I think the problem here is that people are unwilling to submit to the idea that there is a superior being (call it what you may) that may have directed life here on earth. People get too wrapped up in thinking that all life as it exists today had to have been created by someone, and others are saying that no, we emerged from some primordial ooze only. I think it's possible that life was created, and it evolved as the environment forced it to.

      I'm always puzzled by the phrase in the bible for Adam to go forth and RE-PLENISH the earth.

      (Genesis 1:28
      28 And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth. (KJV))

      FWIW.

    48. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      Ok, sorry for the ad hom. Will keep it less personal now.

      There are similarities, but they have never found the "missing link".

      This is a problem I typically run into when debating creationists or ID advocates. Before I go any further, are you the kind of person who is willing to look at the evidence, or are you into the "God of the Gaps" argument, where every transitional fossil simply creates two more gaps? If so, then nothing I can do or say will convince you, and I would be wasting both our time. If not, let me know and we can discuss further.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    49. Re:Not the issue... by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      It can't be taught as a theory in a scientific classroom because it it not a theory; it is a conclusion, a mechanism or a theology. But it is not a theory.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    50. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      Homer Simpson hardly qualifies as a rational person...

      however I do see that you are hellbent on asserting that anyone who advocates teaching of even the existence of alternate ideas / views / theories (in the colloquial meaning of the word) / whatever is inherently incorrect, and should not be allowed a chance to state their ideas. which I might add appears to be the basic point of the movie according to people in other posts...

    51. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who designed the designer?. Something no ID proponent can answer. And who created the matter that first 'evolved' into a simple life form? Did it just show up out of nowhere?

      Something no Evolutionist can answer.
    52. Re:Not the issue... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it. There is no science which disagrees with this, I see no reason why this couldn't be taught (for what it is) as a theory in a classroom.

      Pastararianism does not contradict evolution, it just suggests an invisible plate of magical pasta is secretly controlling the process in a way that cannot be detected. (Note it did not design evolution, it just secretly took over the already occurring process.) Since there is no scientific evidence to disprove this so I see no reason why it couldn't be taught as a theory in a classroom.

      The mega-block meat sacrifice principal suggests that if enough people do not spend their days encasing chunks of meat in Lego blocks while counting from one to seventeen over and over agin for the 1,000 year period from 1994-2994, then evolution will reverse itself. There is no evidence to prove this is not the case, so I see no reason why it cannot be taught in the classroom.

      Since intelligent design and Pastafarianism and the mega-block meat principal are on the same scientific standing, there is no reason all three cannot be taught in classrooms. you don't mind if we spend your tax dollars and waste your kids time doing so do you?

    53. Re:Not the issue... by peterjb31 · · Score: 1

      Actually I wouldn't mind spending my taxes on such teaching. I think I should change the term teaching to discussion. I know when I was in school we were encouraged to discuss what we thought about scientific theories, including ones which had no proof for them. I do not like the way that this kind of discussion is allowed when discussing computing future (quatumn and light based computing) but with evolution everything is very closed off.

      --
      There is no place like /home
    54. Re:Not the issue... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      I am open minded. I just happen to see so much evidence that God's hand is involved in things. Where you might say that a species underwent a certain change because of random chance and that the random changes enables the organisms with those changes to survive better, I would say that someone somewhere decided that the organism would better in its current form and directed the changes. I have several questions, but I would like to hear what you say about fossil chains for certain species increasing and decreasing the number of ribs they have as they evolve. It would seem that the smaller animals would have fewer ribs and gain more as their descendents became larger. It would seem even more plausible that they kept the exact same number of ribs, except that the ribs got larger in size to accommodate the larger size.

    55. Re:Not the issue... by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Technically Intelligent Design is best described as "conjecture". All scientific theories start out as conjectures. The problem with Intelligent Design is that the premises cannot be tested and/or falsified. As such it would always stay as conjecture and will never make it to ever become a full scientific theory. But the ID proponents want it as the same status as evolution which has survived 150 years of testing.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    56. Re:Not the issue... by Philosinfinity · · Score: 1

      Ever taken a philosophy class before? No, I didn't think so. Philosophy classes are not in place to promote scientific viewpoints. Philosophy is a subject where purely abstract arguments can be defined as valid or invalid, sound or unsound. It is a subject that allows you to take ideas and theories and arguments, evaluate the assumptions they are based on, and determine logical conclusions that follow.

      Let's look at a few philosophical areas of inquiry:

      • Ethics
      • Epistemology
      • Metaphysics
      • Mind/Body Issues
      • Religion
      • Aesthetics
      If you could outline the scientific context that each of these fundamental mainstays of philosophy are rooted in, I would be greatly appreciative.
    57. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      however I do see that you are hellbent on asserting that anyone who advocates teaching of even the existence of alternate ideas / views / theories (in the colloquial meaning of the word) / whatever is inherently incorrect, and should not be allowed a chance to state their ideas. which I might add appears to be the basic point of the movie according to people in other posts...

      No, teaching the existence of crackpot theories is fine, in the appropriate forum. Most people here are arguing that science class is not the appropriate forum. Science class is for science. If there is a valid scientific alternative, it should be discussed in the interest of the students. What we have here are NOT valid scientific alternatives, and as such, have no place whatsoever inside a science classroom.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    58. Re:Not the issue... by Thorgal · · Score: 1

      Maybe because evolutionists are not concerned with "creation of matter", but with "evolution"? Could that be so?

      --
      "Man in the Moon and other weird things" - wfmh.org.pl/thorgal/Moon/
    59. Re:Not the issue... by Philosinfinity · · Score: 1

      Read original post by parent and you will see (assuming you have a 3rd grade literacy level) that he explicitly stated the teaching of these theories in a philosophical context, not a scientific one. These are perfectly valid topics for a philosophy course, as the concept of "theory" in this area of inquiry present much less stringent criteria than science. IHBT HAND.

    60. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't get it, do you? The space ghost is offered to remove infinite regression following from an indefensible assumption of origins, but fails to do so. It simply creates an unnecessary first position that befalls the same apparent "absurdity."

      Formally, time has no meaning outside of the presence of motion. The naive intuition about time as a ceaseless spacial dimension is wrong. Before the Big Bang our conception of time in the universe makes no sense, and so for as long as there has been time there has been the universe. It shouldn't be taken for granted that time as we recognize it meant anything before the universe existed. It might have. The universe may be embedded into a larger space, whose rules completely escape us. However, the flaw is in the assumption that something must be created to exist. That assumption inevitably breaks down, and getting bored and eventually writing "goddidit" doesn't change that.

    61. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I don't believe I was clear - my issue was with the suggestion that we refer people to ridiculous pseudo-scientific ideas (ID) in a science classroom, regardless of whether or not they are teaching it. You can teach whatever you want in a Philosophy class; I just take issue with this whole "teach the controversy" crap, especially when there is no controversy. The "controversy" to which the ID crowd refers is a wholly-manufactured non-entity, and they are using it as yet another Trojan Horse to get their happy horseshit inserted into our classrooms.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    62. Re:Not the issue... by tomcode · · Score: 1

      We are already pushing hard to get the Theory of Intelligent Falling into the science books, but are finding it difficult to overthrow the existing dogma of atheistic gravity. I find it impossible to believe everything falls in the same direction by pure random chance!

      Also the Flying Spaghetti Monster is not a religion, it is a perfectly valid scientific critique seeking to fill gaps in the theory of Intelligent Design (which according to court-filed documents is also not a religion).

      --
      f u cn rd ths u cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgmng
    63. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Pardon my french, I am not a native speaker :)

      In true science, all possibilities are left open unless something can be proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

      :s/science/mathematics

      Science cannot 'prove' that gravity works the way it does (mass attracting mass), nor can it disprove that gravity works because invisible faeries push us towards the earth. Science isn't about 'proving' theories (quite the opposite, a scientific theory can never be proven, only be disproven), but finding the theory that best explains a certain phenomenon. Scientific theories must be falsifiable.

      Intelligent Design explains how the creatures on this earth came to be the way they are, but it introduces a new phenomenon; an as of yet undetected entity which manipulates the developement of living beings by means unknown to us. Clearly this entity is more complicated than the problem we began with: the entity is Intelligent (very likely more so than humans, since the entity's control over other living beings is way more advanced than anything we've managed to come up with). The entity is also undetectable by our current technology. Finally, since ID suggests life must have a creator, who created the creator?

      But I can live with all that. It should be obvious that general relativity is more complicated than Newton's law of universal gravitation. Yet we assume the former to be more correct than the latter. Why is this? Because GR explains things like a planet's orbit better than Newton's law; when using both to make a prediction, GR is closer to the truth than Newton.

      So why do we reject ID? It (perfectly) explains how life on this rock came to be what it is today. We reject it because it does not predict anything:
      Q: Why would species X be the way it is? A: The creator did it.
      Q: What will happen to species X when the environment changes in way Y? A: Nobody knows, ID puts no boundaries on the creator's actions at all, so he/she/it may decide to do whatever the hell he/she/it likes.

      Since ID can explain ANY situation, it does not explain anything. With ID, any future scenario is equally plausible. This means [u]ID is not falsifiable, which disqualifies it as a scientific theory[/u].

      Compare with Darwin's Theory of Evolution + our current knowledge of genetics (I will refer to this combination as Evolution from this point on). Evolution explains the developement of life, but not it's beginning.* Obviously a theory that explains how life develops but not how it starts is better than no theory at all. Evolution does not introduce any complicated new phenomena. It is, in fact, quite simple, requiring only that generation n+1 has slightly different qualities than generation n, and then using some kind of selection (natural selection in nature) to favor the individuals with qualities more suited to succesful reproduction over individuals with
      normal or below-average qualities.

      Evolution also makes predictions. Since changes between subsequent generations are relatively minor, we expect to find to find various 'in-between' states of a more complex quality. Furthermore, we expect each of the in-between states to either be better than the previous state, or to be just as good as the previous state. When the environment of a species (very slowly) becomes harder for that species to live in, Evolution predicts one of three things will happen:
      1) The species will become extinct.
      2) The species will evolve to handle the new circumstances.
      3) The species will move to an area where survival is easier (Actually this prediction is very similar to answer 1, since the species becomes extinct locally).
      We have plenty of data from the past to check if Evolution is correct (let me rephrase: not incorrect), and with species that reproduce very quickly (such as bacteria), we can even observe Evolution today. I think it would be safe to conclude that Evolution is falsifiable, and since there (currently) is no better scientific theory (that I know of) to explain th

    64. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      if you look back to the original post in this thread (I know its a ways back :-)) I didn't posit that they be taught in science class, I posited that the science class mention the existence of them and point anyone who is interested to the appropriate forum, that being philosophy / religion...

      were this mentioning accompanied by a statement that the other views do not meet scientific rigor be enough to make it allowable in a science class? what I am opposed to is not the refusal to teach it in science class, but the refusal to even mention it in science class...

      From what I remember of high school the flat earth "theory", the orbiting around the earth "theory" all still get mentioned at some point in the curriculum... how should ID be any different?

    65. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      I have several questions, but I would like to hear what you say about fossil chains for certain species increasing and decreasing the number of ribs they have as they evolve. It would seem that the smaller animals would have fewer ribs and gain more as their descendents became larger. It would seem even more plausible that they kept the exact same number of ribs, except that the ribs got larger in size to accommodate the larger size.

      The first thing I will say is that by referring to "fossil chains" you are somewhat misinterpreting the use of the fossil record. Fossils are used to show a family tree of branching ancestries and development of a broad range of species, not just the successful one that ended up as today's horse. The evolutionary model of the descent of today's horse differs greatly from the theory to which you refer (Eohippus -> Mesohippus -> Equus), which was developed in the mid-19th century when very few fossils had been found. I refer you here for a more complete discussion of the matter.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    66. Re:Not the issue... by Philosinfinity · · Score: 1

      Completely agreed... and to be perfectly honest, philosophers tend to be the ones who push scientific inquiry in new and exciting directions (Currently, this is afoot in the area of Cognitive Science). I do not mean it as a slight in any way to have the philosophers examine these line of thought prior to having the scientists do so. In fact, philosophers are best apt to determine testing methodologies, result interpretations, and logical extrapolations from the acceptance of such theories. However, I am very had pressed to see any likeliness that ID would be pushed from the philosophical community as a scientific, falsifiable, or even verifiable theory, much less one that in a logical and empirical sense could compete with evolution. In fact, philosophers have been discussing this very topic since Thomas Aquinas's argument of theological creation by complexity (the watch/watchmaker analogy). In that 450 year span, there has been no validation of that line of thought.

    67. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      From what I remember of high school the flat earth "theory", the orbiting around the earth "theory" all still get mentioned at some point in the curriculum... how should ID be any different?

      Ah, but here is where things fall down... flat earth, geocentrism, etc. are all mentioned in the context of "people believed this, but they were wrong, and here's why." If you want to teach ID the same way, then I am all for it!

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    68. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      how about if we adjust to instead of saying "heres why its wrong" we say "here's why it fails to meet scientific rigor" because while those two statements are VERY similar, they are not, in fact, identical.

      with the second phraseology I have no problems with it.

    69. Re:Not the issue... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      I would posit that Philosophy would be another class that it would be appropriate in (beyond the narrow religious studies classes).

      I can agree with you, but only in the context that Intelligent Design is a poorly constructed straw-man argument that philosophy students should tear apart as their first homework assignment.

    70. Re:Not the issue... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Actually I wouldn't mind spending my taxes on such teaching. I think I should change the term teaching to discussion.

      Oh they could be very interesting in a philosophy class.

      I know when I was in school we were encouraged to discuss what we thought about scientific theories, including ones which had no proof for them. I do not like the way that this kind of discussion is allowed when discussing computing future (quatumn[sic] and light based computing) but with evolution everything is very closed off.

      But in science class one should discuss scientific theories. I think it is important to discuss what is and is not a scientific theory in such a class. With quantum computing, one is discussing technology. With quantum theory versus string theory, one can debate the different theories and their support. That should not, however, be the same kind of discussion as evolution and ID, because only the former is a scientific theory. That is to say, the point of discussing such topics should be to show why ID is not a valid scientific theory and as such is not useful for the understanding of likely truth using science.

      Personally, I feel ID should be banned from science classrooms because there are too many science teachers out there trying to push their religious beliefs over the field they're supposed to be teaching. Choosing a less controversial comparison of scientific and unscientific theories is more likely to result in accurate teaching.

      As for discussion of evolution, there is more of it in the mainstream media than it deserves for rational people. How many articles do you see questioning the theory of gravity in the mainstream press? Within the scientific community I've never seen any rejection of a scientific theory that challenges evolution without any facts. It is just that all the theories that were even remotely probable alternatives were disproved hundreds of years ago and there haven't been any reasonable challenges of late. Seriously, what scientific theories that are alternatives to evolution do you think have not been given their day by the scientific community? I want a real example.

    71. Re:Not the issue... by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      If you have had a chance to digest the information regarding the lineage of modern Equines, I would be happy to continue on with your questions and statements regarding primate transitional fossils and the evolution of modern homo sapiens sapiens. Hopefully the revelation that you were quoting century-old science combined with the information in the link has made you rethink that position somewhat. If you want to take this offline, let me know. I am truly not trying to be a jerk, but am interested in continuing this. It seems that you have been fed a lot of misinformation by someone, and I just want to make sure you have all the real facts on some of these things.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    72. Re:Not the issue... by WNight · · Score: 1

      Correct. Wrong and Non-rigorous are not the same.

      But those ideas are all wrong. (Flat-Earth, ID, etc)

      Failing to meet rigor would be if I did a study and concluded (rightly) that birds could fly, but in such a way that my research/conclusions were sloppy.

      Finally, what you call science class is a high-school introduction (much like shop class) to the larger world of 'science'. It mentions history more than a higher level course to give students an understanding of how information is acquired without spending too much time on any given detail.

      In that sense, ID should definitely be mention in science class. And examined. And found wanting. Certainly a student should flunk an assignment if all they cite is Wikipedia, so too should they flunk if all they cite is the bible. It shows a misunderstanding of the purpose of that reference. Also, students should understand falsifiability - what could disprove a theory - and how a theory like "God did it" isn't falsifiable, and as such, isn't a theory. It's a hypothesis.

      Actually, I think science class would be stronger with more of James Randi's influence, so maybe I should encourage ID in the classroom. Day 1, ID. Day 2, Flat-earth...

    73. Re:Not the issue... by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      I have to congratulate you for cutting to the real issue. It's not creation vs evolution. It's creation vs abiogenesis.

      Although I believe in creation, I am not part of any ID movement. You won't find me trying to legislate my beliefs, but in the broadest sense of the word I believe in intelligent design. I have real issues with the ID movement, they are to belief in a creator as terrorists are to Islam.

      I'll answer your question as well as it can be answered. If you believe in some type of Big Bang theory, where did the singularity come from? It's really the same question. Both require one to accept the unexplainable (not unexplained; unexplainable) existence of something, be it a creator or some point that is infinitely dense and infinitely small. In other words, it's faith.

      I think belief in a creator is more reasonable. Here's why: Believing a creator exists is a product of evidence (and just because the evidence is abundant and obvious to even a child doesn't mean it is not evidence!) The evidence is order. In any other context, order and design mean that there is a designer. In nature, everything adheres to natural laws. These laws are the basis of science, they are the constants that allow scientists to make inferences based on past observations. Even things that appear chaotic adhere to natural laws. People here talk as though it's simpler to ignore abundant evidence (structure, order) and believe in no creator. These people then misplace the burden of proof and come up with cute and admittedly amusing false analogies about flying spaghetti monsters and orbiting teapots and whatever else the latest Dawkins book told them to think. If you are going to assert that a creator doesn't exist, you have to go to great lengths and grasp at straws and what-ifs and maybes and over-the-course-of-billions-of-years to explain life and order. You can then convince yourself and maybe even others who desperately need to latch onto *something* that you are just so damn clever you killed God.

      I have never heard of a scientific experiment where life was created from nonlife, and even then, a scientific experiment implies that there was someone there monitoring and encouraging the process. If such an experiment exists, share it. Until that experiment happens (and it won't), there is absolutely NO SCIENTIFIC BASIS for believing in abiogenesis (and without abiogenesis, one cannot leave a creator of some kind out of the picture, evolution or not). Heck, even the classic Miller-Urey experiment couldn't produce *life*; it only produced some amino acids. Sure, that's the first step...but one step doesn't get you far. Scientists in a laboratory replicating the optimal conditions *assumed* to have existed a very long time ago and almost succeeding but not quite is not enough to convince me that life came about on its own. Sorry. You'll have to do MUCH better than that. And I am inviting anyone reading this to do so. So come on, hit me with your evidence for abiogenesis. I'll be waiting.

      So, which option sounds like mythology to you?

      --
      blah blah blah
    74. Re:Not the issue... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      so it sounds to me like you and I are pretty much on the same page but arguing over semantics...

      the only issue I have with what you jsut said is that in order for science to irrefutibly call something "wrong" as you suggest it also has to be testable...

      essentially an untestable hypothesis (which we seem to agree fits ID) can never be said to be right or wrong... in fact thats the very reason why its unscientific (or at least one of them).

      really I think the vast majority of arguments in this area (as well as others involving scientists, pseudo scientists, and lay-people) would be resolved a lto quicker if everyone agreed on the definitions... unfortunately that never happens :_)

    75. Re:Not the issue... by zehaeva · · Score: 1

      HELP!! HELP!! I'm being repressed!

      sorry, it was the first thing that passed through my head.

    76. Re:Not the issue... by WNight · · Score: 1

      ID is funny because I proposed something similar to a religious friend in a debate years ago.

      "How do you know evolution is false? Maybe your god is making it happen?"

      How was I supposed to know it'd get popular?

      As for right/wrong, you are correct that because ID can't be shown to be right, or wrong, that it can't be said to be wrong. That's because we're focusing on the wrong meaning of the word wrong. It indicates factual incorrectness, but also worthlessness.

      A tautology is right, but worthless.

      "Which way to we go?" "The right way!"

      ID isn't incorrect (what predictions?), but is likewise worthless

      "What happened?" "Dunno, but god did it!"

      So ID is wrong whenever the context is a useful answer and right when the question is what christians believe. But worthless throughout.

      That said, I think the trick would be for people to avoid contentious words, especially when they aren't their group's word. Obviously a scientist will understand the implications of 'theory' better than a layman, and a religious person will have their own language. If the religious people choose to argue for hours about what atheists believe while ignoring the atheist in front of them trying to explain that it's a lack of belief, they're not talking about anything other than labels.

      If instead they discussed issues: "Whatever you call it - when you don't believe in X, ...." they might actually have a discussion.

    77. Re:Not the issue... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      Hey, we've got that Airborne stuff that brags on the box and in advertising about the fact that it was invented by a second grade schoolteacher (rather than some "scientist" in his "lab" up in his ivory tower)....

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    78. Re:Not the issue... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      There is no "evidence" for an untestable hypothesis. An argument like, "the eye can't be explained by evolution" would not be evidence FOR intelligent design even if it were true (which it isn't). All the ID arguments say essentially: "I don't think that the theory of evolution can explain this, or that", but they aren't giving any evidence FOR an intelligent designer, particularly not God, because... how can you? It's not possible.

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    79. Re:Not the issue... by KnowledgeKeeper · · Score: 1

      while evolution is the current leading scientific theory by a landslide, there are other non-scientific theories out there.

      There are NO other non-scientific THEORIES. God damn it, when will people learn what a THEORY is. It is exactly because of this usage of terminology we have such problems in the first place.

      I propose a remedy - everyone who mixes idea/hypothesis/whatever with theory should be slapped upside down and sideways. Presto, problem solved.

      --
      It is always better to be a first grade version of yourself than a second grade version of someone else.
    80. Re:Not the issue... by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

      I read your article and it was quite interesting. I found an article that I would like you to read as well.

      http://www.godandscience.org/evolution/locke.html

      I would like to discuss this issue further also. Too many times people get defensive about their position on this and true communication breaks down. Read the article above then lets discuss both.

    81. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      science is most imperfect. until we have precise proof of one theory or another we should always welcome all ideas. how does one learn if it is not by exploring all thoughts on any particular subject. a closed mind is a dead mind.

    82. Re:Not the issue... by prockcore · · Score: 1

      "I canna change the laws of physics, Captain."


      I'm pretty sure God can indeed change the laws of physics.
    83. Re:Not the issue... by spitzak · · Score: 1

      The surface-mounted optic nerve does have a function: light suppression

      Don't make yourself look more idiotic than you appear to be.

      The IRIS deals with light suppression. The eye can handle a lighting ratio of over 100,000 to 1 from brightest to dimmest area it functions in. You realize this is 6 or 7 orders of magnitude more than any filtering caused by the overlaying nerves and thus your explaination is so wrong it boggles the mind!

      You are just upset that the Octopus eye disproves the "well maybe it has to be that way" argument about why the eye is so grossly misdesigned. It is unbelievable how desperate all you evolution deniers will get to try to say you have an argument.

    84. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ben should back to the lab and do more of whatever those Political Scientists do.

    85. Re:Not the issue... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      How is it bad to teach people what a significant number of people believe?

      A significant number of people believe the sun goes around the earth.

      If you want to teach that in your living room you are free to do so. If you want to publish a newspaper or magazine teaching that you are free to do so. If you want a college course teaching that, or if you run a private high school teaching that, you are free to do so.

      In public high school science classes we teach an accurate overview of each field of science as understood and practiced by actual educated expert scientist professionals in the respective field.

      If you want to claim that a "significant number of people" in biology understand/practice biology in terms of ID and that it should be taught in high school bio, then you are ALSO implying that a "significant number of people" in astronomy understand/practice astronomy in terms of an electric powered sun, and that we should teach both fusion powered sun and electric powered sun in science classes.

      Yeah, the number of crackpot biologists who ascribe to ID is pretty well comparable to the number of crackpots astronomers who ascribe to an electric powered sun.

      In both cases the percent is zero-point-something minuscule fraction of a percent.

      There's maybe a half dozen or so big names that keep coming up of scientists trying to do work supporting ID. To be generous there's maybe a couple of hundred biologists who actually subscribe to ID. ID advocates are constantly pushing the idea that they have large numbers. In a raw number sense, yes, one might claim a couple of hundred is a large number. However in any meaningful sense THAT NUMBER IS STILL ZERO. To the nearest full percent that number IS zero. Zero percent. You have to drag in a decimal point and then you get something like zero-point-one percent.

      How can you argue against something you don't understand yourself?

      I don't know about the other poster, but yeah I actually have taken a look at some of their best attempt at putting out some actual science. I do understand it, and yes I am capable of arguing against it. However I don't really need to. Scientists peer-reviewed in and they identified specific fatal flaws in it. The science community has not accepted it, therefore it does not belong in high school science curriculums. It is not a legitimate part of any reasonable overview of biology as understood and practiced by biologists.

      You're essential argument boils down to (from what I read) "non-scientific = WRONG, therefore should not be taught in any capacity"

      People are welcome to teach non-science outside of government high school science classes, just as they are free to teach astrology. Both happen to be wrong, but in general individuals have the private liberty to teach things that are wrong.

      My View: by hiding the fact that other theories exist

      No one is hiding anything.
      High school science classes should present accurate overview of their fields. It doesn't matter if the sun actually *IS* powered by electricity. The accurate overview is that ALL(*) astronomers understand and practice astronomy in terms of a fusion powered sun. The accurate overview is that ALL(*) biologists understand and practice biology in terms of evolution.

      Where "ALL" means "for all SANE definitions and all SANE practical purposes". Where "ALL" means NINTY-NINE-POINT-NINE percent or somesuch.

      We don't teach flat-earth in high school geography or astronomy. That does not mean flat-earth is being "hidden" or "suppressed" or "oppressed".

      If and when 10% of biologists accept ID over evolution then high schools should probably devote maybe 5% of their time noting there is some disagreement and what the alternate is. ID should get EQUAL time to evolution only if and when 50% of biologists accept ID over evolution. And of course if ID were to head over 50% acceptance by biologists, then of course coverage of evolution would go down in an exactly mi

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    86. Re:Not the issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the emotional response to this movie and other criticisms of the theory of evolution and other theories of man's origin, it appears as though those who "believe in" evolution do subscribe to a religion. It is at the point where a person moves from viewing evolution as a theory to where they "believe in" it that it becomes a religious belief for them.

      Is it possible to challenge this religious belief without necessarily challenging science itself?

    87. Re:Not the issue... by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      The point is intelligent design basically agrees with evolution but suggests that someone kick started it. There is no science which disagrees with this, I see no reason why this couldn't be taught (for what it is) as a theory in a classroom. Your thoughts?

      Other than claiming that an Intelligent Designer uses evolution and a mechanism, can the Intelligent designer be tested for or measured directly? Or how can we put the ID in a lab?

      Another question is who Designed the Intelligent Designer who kick started evolution?

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    88. Re:Not the issue... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      2) How is it bad to teach people what a significant number of people believe? How can you argue against something you don't understand yourself?
      3) You're essential argument boils down to (from what I read) "non-scientific = WRONG, therefore should not be taught in any capacity"


      Actually, that's not what most of the scientific crowd is arguing. Few of them object to teaching about creationism; they just object to it being taught as science.

      A fairly good parallel that doesn't (usually;-) invoke religious attitudes is to look at the teaching of languages. About a billion people speak Mandarin Chinese, which you've gotta admit is a "significant number of people". And Mandarin is becoming sufficiently important that courses in it are appearing in schools all over the world.

      However, Mandarin isn't taught in Spanish or French or German or Russian or English classes. That would be obviously wrong; it should be taught in a Mandarin class. It makes no sense to teach languages X and Y together, unless X and Y are closely-related dialects of a single language.

      There are interesting cases like French, Spanish and Italian, which are close relatives, and have continuous dialects between them so that there's no natural language borders. But this doesn't mean that you teach all three as a single language (perhaps called "modern Latin" ;-). Furthermore, you don't let school administrators decide what can be taught in French, Spanish or Italian classes. You give that job to the teachers who understand the languages well, and who are willing to teach the standard dialects of each even when their own native dialect isn't the standard.

      This should carry over into subjects like science, math and philosophy. What should be taught in each should be determined by those who are well-educated in each subject area, not by bureaucrats or politicians.

      It's clearly understood among scientists that creationism doesn't qualify as science, and can't qualify until someone finds ways to test it scientifically. It does have a place in History of Science classes, as do other conjectures and hypotheses such as phlogiston and the luminiferous aether. (Some physics tests to mention the aether, and point out that Einstein didn't disprove it. He just showed that it wasn't necessary to explain the universe.)

      But since creationism hasn't been tested to the usual scientific standards, teaching it in a science class is inappropriate. It would be a lot like teaching Mandarin grammar in a Spanish class. This isn't to say that Mandarin grammar is "wrong"; it's just wrong when you're trying to speak Spanish. Spanish grammar would be equally wrong in a Mandarin class.

      Actually, this sort of understanding of right and wrong turns up all the time in the collaboration of science and mathematics. Mathematicians work routinely with "worlds" that can't possibly describe our universe. It's entirely correct to do this within the math arena. Thus, finite non-Abelian groups are an interesting mathematical topic, and a lot of work has been done on them. But if some physicists were to insist that the real universe is a finite non-Abelian group, we'd treat them as nut cases. Unless someone can come up with scientific tests that support such a hypothesis, it has no place in any physics class.

      This isn't just an entertaining parallel. There are physicists who argue that String Theory is on a par with religion, and doesn't (yet) deserve a place in serious scientific discussions or classes. When Quantum Mechanics first appeared on the scene, people made similar arguments. With QM, people found ways of testing it, and it passed pretty much all of its tests, so QM is now an accepted part of scientific theory. String Theory isn't there yet. But physicists are trying to find ways to test it.

      Now if we could just get the creationists to propose some good, scientific ways of testing their "theory" (which is actually just a hypothesis). If they want scientists to take them seriously, they should be doing this, rather than just trying to poke holes' in other theories. In science, debunking someone else's theory doesn't count as support for your own theory.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    89. Re:Not the issue... by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Nice response -- unfortunately, it didn't even come close to answering the question. And, as you did, I'm going to write a respone that completely ignores the offtopic questions that you pose.

      You suggest that it's impossible to have order without a creator, because "in any other context, order ... means there is a designer."

      Ok, fine. There's order in a snowflake. Was it designed? There's a semblence of order on, say, a sandy beach or a desert that has dunes and hills created by wind or water. Were those intelligently designed? Or were they just created through natural processes?

      "But!" most IDers (perhaps not yourself) will argue, "the designer created the processes that create that order!" Ok, I'll grant you that. Where did the designer come from? What created the designer? Another designer?

      And then, the standard response is that "the designer is infinite, and always existed." Well, that's awesome, but the problem is that it's not a very interesting answer. In fact, it's functionally no different than the assumption that the universe "just is," and that the reason order exists is because it *has* to exist for *anything* to exist. For those of us who are truly interested in where everything came from, "God did it" is a boring, uninteresting cop-out.

      And all of this ignores the fact that, and repeat after me please; in fact, repeat it until you understand it: EVOLUTION SAYS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF LIFE, OR THE ORIGINS OF THE UNIVERSE. EVOLUTION MAKES ABSOLUTELY NO PREDICTIONS ABOUT HOW LIFE COULD HAVE FORMED. Evolution starts with the base assumption that "life exists." If you want to insert your god in before evolution, and say that god created evolution, fine -- but it's still not an interesting answer, and it *STILL* isn't necessarily mutually exclusive with the theory of evolution.

      I really hate evolution debates. You've got one side arguing "X!", and the other side arguing "Not Y! Therefore Z!", and you have to spend most of the debate getting the other side to understand that X != Y, and if you manage that, then you have to explain that Not Y doesn't necessarily imply Z.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    90. Re:Not the issue... by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      well, you sure are angry. You can enjoy a good debate without getting your drawers in knots, did you know?

      As you stated, you and I are using what is essentially the same reasoning to support different beliefs. You are saying the order imposed by natural laws just exists and doesn't necessitate a creator. You quite rightly suggest that I believe that there is a designer who just exists without a designer. What is the difference? At some point, both of us are just accepting the existence of something. That's quite necessary, due to the limits of our understanding. Of course, you'll argue that your system of beliefs is perfectly OK with something existing without a designer and mine isn't. But that's really the same "boring, uninteresting cop-out" as saying there's just a creator with no origin.

      I know evolution doesn't deal with origin of life. How redundant of you to point that out, considering I made essentially the same point. I'll say it again: Oftentimes what is ostensibly a creation vs evolution debate is really a creation vs abiogenesis debate. Creation vs evolution is meaningless if you don't first address the origin of life. If life came about on its own, then evolution is the logical conclusion. If life didn't come about on its own, as in, it was created, then evolution is rather illogical. Evolution doesn't depend on any one theory of genesis, but evolution DOES require some origin of life on order to even happen. But, be honest: some form of abiogenesis is definitely more evolution-friendly than belief in a creator.

      My point was that as a scientific theory, a "natural" origin of life (abiogenesis) is quite shaky ground to build on, which in turn makes evolution quite illogical. Again, this debate isn't so much evolution vs creation as it is abiogenesis vs creation. It's just more convenient for you to argue the former argument, since evolution can be made to look plausible by scientists who have an atheistic bias whereas waving the abiogenesis flag puts you in the same boat as UFO wackos and scientologists.

      One more thing: I can understand why scientists have an atheistic bias. Religion (not God, religion) has harmed science and discovery more than just about anything else. Religion is typically quite illogical and at odds with science. My understanding of a God, though, does not make the pure notion of a creator at odds with science. In other words, don't lump all people who believe in a God/creator in with Religion. Believing that life was created by God DOES NOT prevent one from satisfying the quest for understanding. I believe in a creator, and am all for scientific discovery. What I am against is what is essentially science philosophy, the construction of belief systems based on current scientific understanding. A belief system is essentially bias, and science needs to be unbiased. Unprovable assertions about the origin of life are science philosophy, since nobody can observe the origin of life. Until we invent a time machine and witness the origin of life, any speculation about the origin of life is just that -- speculation

      As for your last paragraph, I agree. This is case-in-point. I wrote something, you didn't really understand it then proceeded to spout off a rant. Believe me, as much as you think you hold an intellectual stranglehold on this debate, I am equally frustrated at your inability to grasp the point I am trying to make. I provide logical arguments, and you ignore them and angrily reply to me attacking statements I never made.

      And, as to your sig, Jesus *was* a liberal and was also uninvolved in politics. People who try to legislate their beliefs should take note of that.

      --
      blah blah blah
  12. Great. by pathological+liar · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It was bad enough when it was just Moore being a pompous blowhard, but now we get to look forward to this kind of drivel from both sides of the aisle?

    1. Re:Great. by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "Mommy, he started it..."

      News => Tabloid
      Documentary => Propaganda
      World => Hell (or collapse of all matter if your prefer)

    2. Re:Great. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nope. Fundies have been doing this sort of things for years. They just
      haven't been doing it anywhere that Slashbots would have seen it. Moore
      was nothing new in this regard and might even have gotten some of his
      inspiration from stuff from the evangelical camp.

      So they've just graduated from comic books and VHS videos passed around
      sunday school classes...

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  13. Perhaps... by Oxy+the+moron · · Score: 1

    ... he should have just stuck to "Win Ben Stein's Money?"

    --

    Proudly supporting the Libertarian Party.

    1. Re:Perhaps... by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      ... he should have just stuck to "Win Ben Stein's Money?"

      I'm happy he's doing this. I thought he was just an semi-amusing dead-pan comedian before. Now I know the scum for what he is.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
  14. Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I though, and then googled him.

    So he's a comedian, a writer, a white-house speech writer, a law professor and a believer in intelligent design.

    Fine, another one of those scientist who think that being a scientist, they can have a scientific opinion on any subject out there.

    He's a lawyer, he can have scientific stances on law (if that's possible anyway ... I've always wondered why law is considered a science), but his opinion on intelligent design and evolution means diddly squat.

    Feel free to believe in an Old Man in the Sky, and to embrace ID. Just don't forget to mention that scientific evidence points the other way.

    --

    ---
    "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    1. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      Law can, and should in my mind, be considered a science because it is inherently logical.

      OK, the actual law itself may not be, but the application of it is. You take a rule or set of rules and then apply it using "If X is true, then Y must happen" type of logic. The wishy washy stuff happens and the science breaks down when you have conflicting rules... which unfortunately happens a LOT.

    2. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Laxitive · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't agree with this. Ben Stein's opinions aren't worthless because he's not a scientist - they're wrong because they just don't have the necessary support.

    3. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Laxitive · · Score: 2, Interesting


      There's a fundamental difference you're missing. The application of logic in law is always with a presupposed conclusion.

      A defense lawer applying the logic of law MUST apply that logic in a way that it shows his client innocent or deserving of leniency - and that's his job. A prosecutor MUST apply the law's logic such that it shows that the defendant is guilty, and deserving of the punishment being sought. The conclusions are predefined.

      Science is not (at least ostensibly) supposed to be like that. You apply logic and you get the conclusions you get. If you're trying to bend it and twist it to somehow fit your hypothesis, or take you to some predefined conclusions, then you're fundamentally subverting the process.

    4. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine, another one of those scientist who think that being a scientist, they can have a scientific opinion on any subject out there. He's a lawyer, he can have scientific stances on law (if that's possible anyway ... I've always wondered why law is considered a science), but his opinion on intelligent design and evolution means diddly squat.
      OTOH, that would also suggest that Dawkin's [an evolutionary biologist] has no business making pronouncements about people's rationale for their belief in God [variously religion, sociology, or psychology, maybe even cognitive science, but not biology]
    5. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      Law has its own logic. Nowhere else can the same substance simultaneously be "Known Human Carcinogen" and "Generally Recognized as Safe".

      Law held for a number of decades that physical blows could cause cancer.

    6. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actual scientists know enough to know they don't know enough to state their opinions as fact.

      Stein is no scientist.

    7. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by DarkOx · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually if you watch the film Stein does not necessarily believe in ID. He simple is wondering why so many scientists are so religious about evolution.

      He is posing questions like, Why do we teach kids the difference between laws, and theory and then act like evolution is a law?

      Evolution is really good at explaining how butterflies change color overtime, it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human does that not leave room for some alternate theories?

      In what way does the presents of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism?

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it. They should acknowledge the weak spots in any theory and look to finding the explanations. Stein's documentary could have been about a variety of other subjects. He is simply saying don't close the books until all the facts are in. There is nothing wrong with that its good science. Imagine if people had decided special relativity worked so well we need not bother look at string theory?

      Its the same thing. Anyone who takes issue with Steins message is being pretty petty and short sighted.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    8. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so Gore's view on climate change means??? Just because someone doesn't have a degree in something doesn't mean they can't make a compelling case for it.

    9. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Laws are passed by politicians trying to get votes. If that's not the perfect formula for a very ILLOGICAL system, I don't know what is.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    10. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Harin_Teb · · Score: 1

      true... I guess my view on this is that the practice of law (not something done by politicians, but something done by lawyers) is the attempt to apply rational logic to the illogical system... granted the whole "in the manner that fits the best interest of your client" bit renders the "scientific" aspect of it somewhat suspect.

      I suppose thats why the degree is a Jurus Doctrate and not a PhD...

    11. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by darkwhite · · Score: 1

      Law is not a science

      --

      [an error occurred while processing this directive]
    12. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      Law is *not* a science. It is a field just as demanding and just as logical, true. But calling something a science implies that it follows the scientific method of theory, experimentation, and validation. Law doesn't do that. Neither does 'Intelligent Design'.

      If Ben Stein is calling himself a scientist, then I can see how he could suffer the delusion that ID is science. He doesn't seem to know what science is.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    13. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if Ben actually worked in any of these disciplines him might
      get some insight. Instead he would rather heckle from the audience
      like those two old grumps on the Muppet Show.

      My Intro Anthropology professor in college was part of the original
      team that worked on Lucy so I could see how he might be inclined to
      take Evolution a little more seriously than just about anyone.

      As smart as Ben claims to be, he's being a real idiot.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    14. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by YeeHaW_Jelte · · Score: 1

      How can you disagree with something I didn't say?

      I said his opinions are not scientific, not that his opinions are worthless.

      --

      ---
      "The chances of a demonic possession spreading are remote -- relax."
    15. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by ZerothOfTheLaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh, gee, maybe if you do some research in the field of evolutionary biology, you may see that they in fact DO acknowledge their weak points, and they ARE studying them, to solve it. The problem with ID/Creationism, is that it prevents critical thinking. "Tell me, Bob, why are our vegetable fields not reacting right to this fertilizer you invented?" "Oh, God did it. I took some manure, prayed over it, and then when I did tests, I kept only the test that proved my prayed-over manure works better than regular manure!" "Bob, you're fired." ID/Creationism is NOT science. Anything that prevents proper, critical thought, is not science. Besides, your analogy is flawed. The right theory to go with special relativity is Quantum Mechanics, since it explains what happens when Special Relativity does not apply(which is on the micro-scale. Special Rel. applies on the macro scale). String Theory is still just a hypothesis with a bunch of math behind it. Go read http://www.talkorigins.org/ before you talk about something you don't understand.

    16. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple: because there is no other scientific theory that explains genetic diversity.

    17. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by protein+folder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it. They should acknowledge the weak spots in any theory and look to finding the explanations. Stein's documentary could have been about a variety of other subjects. He is simply saying don't close the books until all the facts are in. There is nothing wrong with that its good science. Imagine if people had decided special relativity worked so well we need not bother look at string theory? Except scientists are looking at the weak spots and trying to find explanations in evolutionary theory. There's still a lot we don't know about yet and there are a lot of interesting questions that remain to be answered. On the other hand, rehashing these old debates is not very productive.

      Its the same thing. Anyone who takes issue with Steins message is being pretty petty and short sighted. Except he's being misleading and his goal isn't to get scientists to look at ID, it's to get the public to think that they can't trust those evil godless scientists, because all they're doing is agenda-pushing. If you can get people to doubt objective facts, there's no limit to what you can do!
      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    18. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what way does the presents [sic] of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism?

      A theory doesn't rule out alternatives, it merely states that given the known evidence this is what most likely happened.

      So a theory of evolution doesn't rule out the possibility that the fact you have opposing thumbs is a result of Santa Claus' work. It's just that there's no evidence at all that Santa was in fact the one who gave you opposable thumbs. Therefore arguing the point is a waste of everybody's time. The same applies to intelligent design. No evidence --> waste of time.

      Of course, waste of time is relative, and some people are very keen on wasting their time AND money to argue the unprovable. Annoying, but unfortunately unavoidable.

    19. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by sheldon · · Score: 1

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it.


      So scientists should just accept Intelligent Design and allow it to be taught in public schools, because it would show they were open minded?

    20. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by MissingRainbow · · Score: 1

      In what way does the presents of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism?

      Instead of asking people, who disagree, to prove that there is no intelligent designer, why not people, who propose it as a scientific theory, provide some proof for its existence?
    21. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Sockatume · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Evolution" is as much a law as the first law of thermodynamics, and the laws of thermodynamics are theories in exactly the same way as evolution is. And anyone who spends any time in science knows this. It's all a work in progress. Do you know what evolutionary biologists do? They poke holes in evolution! They spend their whole time finding weaknesses, writing them up, discussing them, and trying to find better theories. That's science. By swallowing what the film says, you're giving the creationists - who have been rehashing the same arguments since the 1980s with no modification - a free ride.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    22. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by gr8scot · · Score: 1

      Law is not a science, but in the days that churches ruled instead of guided, study of nature included alchemy, the field of transforming other elements into gold. When religion runs the show, law doesn't follow reality-based methods of validation, and neither does (what's left of) science.

      --
      All 19 hijackers were known terrorists 09-10-2001. Lack of FBI intelligence does not justify warrantless wiretaps..
    23. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      Evolution does tell us how you get from one beastie to another. You can take a whole boat load of known species and toss together a philogenetic tree. Along each edge you see the genetic mutations that occured (in the model you built, not necessarialy in reality). Of course without DNA from fossils, and from all the intermediate species that didn't get fossilized, or at least the fossils haven't been discovered, all we have is leaf nodes, no (or few) internal nodes. Recently extinct species like mammoths and some of the human ancestors, we have partial DNA samples, at least. But mostly, we could be wrong about what the internal nodes were, and the order of some of the mutations. And in fact, likely are about most of them.

      So you can put humans and single celled organisms and chimps and fish and lizards and everything on this tree. Statistical models will give you a "possible" link and a "possible" series of mutations. Along an edge there could have been any number of intermediate species, and there's no real way to know the order of mutations within that edge. With greater understanding perhaps it will be possible to narrow things down, by observing that a certain combonation would not be viable, perhaps. I don't know. But this tree lets you say "this critter doesn't exist anymore, its the ancestor to all these things. one of those things was an ancestor to these other things. and one of those things was an ancestor to primates, etc." and with high confidence this is correct. It even tells you the maximum likelyhood for when mutations occured, although you don't need to tell us that might not be correct. We know it probably isn't correct. But until we can collect DNA samples from extinct ancestor species, it's good enough.

      ID is (or should be, I haven't look into it) that Evolution happened, but it was God who chose to make these mutations happen. Fine. I don't object, that's a valid religious hypothesis. It's not science though. Scientific observation is that give or take some variation, mutations are uniformly and independently random events. Perhaps God made these mutations happen in such a way that the overall distribution appears completely random when in fact it was designed, to test people's faith. Perhaps God was bored with omnipotence and decided to see how sweet of a universe he could build if he only allowed himself to change things by altering the outcome of random events. People do that with games. Half-Life crowbar challenge. Chronotrigger wooden sword challenge. But the belief that God controls all random chance, and is clever enough to do it in such a way that you never observe that it actually isn't random, isn't scientific. You can't prove it's wrong because the assumption is a being with infinite smarts is trying to make sure you can't prove it one way or the other. It doesn't predict anything other than what you know is what God wants you to know. It's no more meaningful from a scientific point of view than saying the entire universe was created right the instant you read this sentance, and all your memories prior to that are falsified so you don't suspect that you were only just created now. In fact why now? Why not in 3 years time? Perhaps the universe still doesn't exist and we're all just memories of our future (real) selves. Still don't exist yet. Any belief in a flavour of creationism further than what I described (God fixing the dice) is just steps towards the ultimate theory of only being created this instant. If life was created seperately, then it means the genetic evidence of speciation events and genetic divergance were created to trick people. Or I guess it means that God designed life with Gene++ and we're just seeing evidence inheritance and overridden operators. But he must dislike copy&paste because there is lots of reinventing the wheel in separate genetic lines that could have been solved with a quick Ctrl+C Ctrl+V. Maybe not. Maybe it was a team effort, maybe he got the angels to form coding teams and tackledifferent

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    24. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

      I should add to this something that is often forgotten in these discussions: There is no singular "Theory of Evolution". That's simply a shorthand for the myriad theories that describe different aspects of how and why evolution occurs. That evolution occurs in the first place is generally not in question. I can understand that the general population would not necessarily find it as common-sensical as the scientific community, because they don't have as much direct exposure to the evidence as they have to say, the evidence that gravitational pull exists, and that what goes up must come down. But it's more or less similar to scientists.

      However, as I said before, there are many theories concerning the hows and whys of evolution, some of which may be right, and some of which may be wrong. It's impossible for a single theory to explain everything that happened in development, as you suggested, "from protozoa to humans." It requires many theories in physics, chemistry, genetics, symbiosis, speciation, geology, and so on. It would be virtually impossible without a time machine and untold of amounts of observation to detail the exact, step by step evolution from prokaryotes to humans (and even that suggests that there's some sort of linear progression, which is not accurate). Regardless, evolution has not occurred in a vacuum.

      Scientists don't "keep out" ID because it might prove them wrong. They ignore it because it adds nothing to the discussion of how evolution works. It merely provides a god of the gaps. If you're in some kind of hurry to understand exactly where humans came from, you're free to insert god where you want as an explanation for the parts we don't understand yet. But if scientists just threw up their hands and said, "we have no way of understanding this--I guess God just did it" you wouldn't even be typing on that computer of yours, and that assumes you were lucky enough to survive polio as a child.

    25. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by jstott · · Score: 1

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it. They should acknowledge the weak spots in any theory and look to finding the explanations.

      Scientists are acting like scientists. When experimental evidence is contrary to a theory, they label the theory false and move on.

      ID is contradicted by experimental evidence (several things [eyes, some enzymes, etc] that, according to ID, are so complex they "could not" have evolved have been shown, through a combination of fossil and DNA studies to be, in fact, the result of evolutionary processes). ID makes basic predictions that have been proven to be false and therefore ID cannot be considered a meaningful explanation of anything.

      -JS

      --
      Vanity of vanities, all is vanity...
    26. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by tomcode · · Score: 1

      If that is really his point, then why all the references to the Spanish Inquisition, Hitler, and Eugenics?

      I thought his point was that God-fearing Christians are being purged from academia in order to indoctrinate children with atheist dogma.

      --
      f u cn rd ths u cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgmng
    27. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Lurker2288 · · Score: 1

      If a putative 'designer' worked through an evolutionary mechanism, then there's no problem. We can study living things and our theory of evolution will be an increasingly accurate description of what really happened (though it will never be perfect, because we can never be sure we've seen all the facts). In this case, it doesn't really matter if there's a designer or not--we'll see the same mechanisms in play either way.

      But most ID proponents actually believe that God takes an active role in creation, i.e., He reaches down and prods that paramecium into becoming something more. This is manifestly supernatural and would be generally inconsistent with a materialistic theory.

      But here's the trick: how do you differentiate between things we can't explain because they're supernatural, and things we can't explain because we just don't know enough? The ancient Greeks blamed thunder on cranky gods in the sky, but today we know better. Similarly, many of the examples Mike Behe presented of 'irreducbily complex' (i.e., designed) structures in molecular biology have already had evolutionary explanations developed for them.

      And I'm going to assume you haven't actually seen the movie, in which Stein draws a LITERAL connection between evolution and the Holocaust. Scientists are shown juxtaposed with goose-stepping Nazis. So yeah, I do take issue with that, as would most reasonable people.

    28. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Geno+Z+Heinlein · · Score: 1

      Evolution is really good at explaining how butterflies change color overtime, it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human... Why do you say that?

      I once asked a religious person who was busting my chops about evolution if she believed that children were identical to their parents. She said she did not. I asked her if she believed that some people live longer and others die sooner based on their individual characteristics. She said she did.

      I said then that she did believe in evolution, because at its heart, that's more or less what evolution is: natural selection resulting in change over long periods of time. She then said, "Yes, but you can't become a gorilla."

      So why these arbitrary lines? Why can't a paramecium evolve into a human? Why can't humans devolve into a more ape-like form? Why can't anything evolve into anything? Given that we see changes in life all the time, why would we believe there are some very specific points at which that change stops?

    29. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Actually if you watch the film Stein does not necessarily believe in ID.

      But he does believe in ID, as he has stated in the past.

      He simple is wondering why so many scientists are so religious about evolution.

      I disagree. He isn't wondering anything. He's intentionally trying to try to instill doubt by misapplying and intentionally misrepresenting the scientific method and consensus of professional scientists. He's also trying to make money.

      He is posing questions like, Why do we teach kids the difference between laws, and theory and then act like evolution is a law?

      Yeah, except he doesn't define what "acting like it is a law" means. The theory of gravity is not a law. Nonetheless, very rarely do we see articles questioning whether or not it is holding us on the planet submitted to peer reviewed journals or taken seriously by the media. The theory of gravity and the theory of evolution are on par. They both have mountains of support, have been refined over many years, have entire, very productive, branches of science founded upon their principals, and have long since crossed the threshold of reasonable doubt for the scientific community as a whole. The only reason evolution is a topic at all is because a small subset of religious "leaders" have been trying to use it to make people feel oppressed as a way to manipulate those people.

      Evolution is really good at explaining how butterflies change color overtime, it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human...

      Who says we did go from a paramecium to a human? Evolution simply states a method by which species change over time to adapt to their environments. Claiming a particular evolutionary route for a specific species is a different theory, albeit one predicated upon evolution.

      does that not leave room for some alternate theories?

      There is always room for alternative theories. All the theories presented so far, however, have not been supported by the data collected. ID doesn't even get that far. It isn't a testable theory and is scientifically nothing.

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it.

      I strongly disagree. Stein doesn't present any alternative theories. What action would he have scientists take to make them more accurately follow the scientific method? No, Stein is simply trying to create doubt in the minds of people, by implying impropriety and bias, while presenting no evidence of that.

      They should acknowledge the weak spots in any theory and look to finding the explanations.

      I once read a quote about evolution and gravity. A microorganism had been seen evolving to deal with a stress as part of a study. A person asked "doesn't this provide more support for the theory of evolution?" The reply was, "yeah, sort of the way when a metallurgist makes a new alloy and it doesn't go whizzing off the planet it provides more evidence for the theory of gravity." Frankly, while there is question about the details of how both gravity and evolution work in particular cases, providing an alternative to either of them would require the most extraordinary quantity of support. No such theory and support has been presented and ID does not even present an alternative, testable, hypothesis, let alone any evidence to support it. For that matter ID doesn't even falsify evolution were it somehow proven to be true.

      He is simply saying don't close the books until all the facts are in. There is nothing wrong with that its good science.

      No. He's trying to mischaracterize ID as science and place doubt in the minds of people as to how science works. He's trying to capitalize on a hot button issue by presenting a clever bit of rhetoric to try to make it seem as though evolution is not observed and used as the basis for working science every day. He's trying to provide a crutch for people who

    30. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by spinninggears · · Score: 1

      ...Evolution is really good at explaining how butterflies change color overtime, it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human does that not leave room for some alternate theories? This is exactly what random mutation w/ natural selection is good at explaining! That is why it is one of greatest scientific theories ever validated. The fact that small changes can accumulate over time to give rise to complex species is predicted by the theory, and confirmed by all the evidence.
    31. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Actually if you watch the film Stein does not necessarily believe in ID. He simple is wondering why so many scientists are so religious about evolution. So... just how many scientists *are* religious about evolution? How many feel differently about evolution than they do about chemistry or galactic rotation?

      He is posing questions like, Why do we teach kids the difference between laws, and theory and then act like evolution is a law? Huh? Methinks *you* don't know the difference between a law and a theory.

      FYI, evolution is -- if evidence means anything -- a fact. It happened. It still happens.

      The theory of evolution is a collection of well supported hypotheses that explain the mechanisms for that fact. (And most of those hypotheses are so well tested that we grant them provisional status as facts themselves. Just as we do in physics or chemistry or any other field of science.)

      Evolution is really good at explaining how butterflies change color overtime, it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human Actually it does (modulo your choice of species). You simply don't accept the mountains of evidence.

      Notice that that's a reflection on *you*, not a reflection on the fact or theory of evolution.

      does that not leave room for some alternate theories? a) Your personal rejection of the evidence has no bearing on the status of the theory of evolution.

      b) All fields of science leave room (in principle) for alternative theories. (Cf. Newton and Einstein.) What is lacking here is (b.1) any alternative theory, and (b.2) any need for one (outside the religious scruples of biblical literalists).

      Notice that when I say there isn't any alternative theory of evolution, it's with the knowledge that ID's claims do not constitute a theory. They can't even offer a testable hypothesis. Dembski can't even offer an inference algorithm that anyone other than himself can actually apply.

      That's not to say that there *couldn't* be an alternative theory. You're welcome to generate one yourself. But given the huge mass of evidence and the lack of need for a new theory, you might as well waste your time coming up with an alternative to atomic theory.

      In what way does the presents of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism? It *doesn't* rule out a designer.

      That doesn't give the ID pseudoscience legs though.

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it. No, he's propagandizing for creationists and Republican anti-science apologists.

      They should acknowledge the weak spots in any theory and look to finding the explanations. If you had the faintest idea what scientists do, you'd know that that is perhaps what the majority of scientists spend the majority of their time on.

      Stein's documentary could have been about a variety of other subjects. He is simply saying don't close the books until all the facts are in. When ID actually brings some facts to the table we'll examine them. However, their "science" to date has been about as dishonest as Stein's propaganda film.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    32. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, Stein is rehashing the same old tired points, which have been rebutted ad-infinitum by the scientific community. Evolution sure does explain "how you get from paramecium to human". ALL the evidence supports this conclusion. The law/theory argument is so hackneyed I can't believe people aren't embarrassed about making it. This is just yet another maneuver to get creationism into science classes, and everybody knows it. Creationsim isn't science people. Time to deal with that fact.

    33. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      The problem is that Stein assumes that when a scientist says "it's possible", it's the same as a lawyer saying "it's possible". It isn't. Coming from a Physics research background, I can tell you that the only time I'd hear "it's impossible" from one of my professors or coworkers is if they'd have the math to prove it so. Until then, it was "it's possible, even though I think it's about as likely as pink unicorns". I doubt Stein is talking about the same thing.

      Finally, what's his goal for stopping the discussion? When do we know all the facts are in? As a matter of fact, we don't. It's the Turing halting problem all over again. If he actually does argue that way, I'd say he's being disingenuous, and is setting the standards impossibly high.

      That's why I think his movie is nonsense - he starts with standard hedging from scientists, throws in a lawyer's approach about discovery, and concludes from those two items that scientists in general are cultish and prone to silence opposition.

      I have a lot of respect for him, but this is a total miss.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    34. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by danpsmith · · Score: 1

      In what way does the presents of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism?

      Am I missing something here? Who ever said that evolution ruled out an intelligent designer? It's not an origin theory. Why do we need a movie to determine something that we already know: evolution isn't an origin theory. If you want to take that up with someone, ask some big bang/similar theorists. Evolution isn't an origin theory.

      Another thing is, if people have such a problem with evolution, and they can find all kinds of holes in the theory, maybe they should create their own theory that explains more. Because that's how science actually works. A lot of the things you learn in a grade school science classroom have already been outdated but are still taught because the earlier theories display a large proportion of the behavior of the latter theories. But the theories are still taught because it makes sense for science education.

      What does Stein propose? Do away with science education, meandering on endlessly about how evolution in particular is a theory? Of course it's a theory. All of scientific research is all about the creation of theory, why does evolution deserve special attention? That's the problem, not that it's a theory.

      If people want to cherry pick which scientific theories, what knowledge their children should have, maybe they should fight that battle somewhere outside of the public school system. The people fighting this battle are the same idiots that want to deny teenagers sex education classes and then get outraged when teenagers get pregnant. Get real. People that are at odds with the pursuit of knowledge or truth and at odds with reality have no business telling the children of America what they should and shouldn't be taught. Maybe they should consider their dwindling church statistics as a review of their overzealousness.

      --
      Judges and senates have been bought for gold; Esteem and love were never to be sold.
    35. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      And his opinions don't have the necessary support because he has little knowledge of the topic. Whenever a professional speaks outside their area of expertise, their opinions are as good as anybody else's. Stein's area of expertise is federal trade law, not evolutionary biology.

    36. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by LogicalConclusions · · Score: 1

      Here's the problem, everyone thinks that just because they have a belief that they are entitled to it. Not only that because they are so invested in it, both with years or even a lifetime devoted to it that it is just as valid as someone else's.

      You might argue that both religious people and scientists are in the same boat on this issue, that is where you are wrong.

      By even attempting to have a dialog with the religious people, by even pretending to give their nonsense credence you embolden them and you waste time; you distract people from reaching the truth. I know for a fact this distraction is what these people want, they don't want the truth, they want what makes them feel warm and fuzzy and safe. The more people that believe it, the more they can surround themselves with it, the easier it is for them to believe the lie is true.

      I'm all for the advancement and evolution of knowledge, but only when it is testable, falsifiable, reproducible. This pseudo intellectual discussion of intelligent design is none of that.

      Why oh why do people need a "god"? Would your world be so cold, so meaningless, so immoral without it? And please explain what created your "god", because at some point the problem still gets reduced to something came from nothing. Evolution can quite beautifully explain how something can go from the simplest of things and through time can be something so much more. It even explains how paramecium can evolve into a human. Too bad people are simpletons and assume that the path is direct, they can't see the hundreds of millions of creatures that existed in the process and how each one was a little different. Then if you follow it long enough you can't even recognize how the current creature is related to one thousands of years ago.

      The reason scientists are lashing back is because they are operating at a level so much higher than the common person. It would be like arguing calculus (scientist) with someone who can barely work with arithmetic (average person). Without a certain foundation of knowledge you can't even have the conversation, nor should you be allowed to even have an opinion on the matter. Yet this is what the average/religious people believe. They seem to think that they can create reality through democracy, as if you can just gather enough people that also want to believe what you want to believe and through popularity can make it the truth.

      Ben Stein, and all religious people are petty and short sighted. So either put forth a new theory which better explains the diversity of life that is testable and falsifiable, or take your intelligent design theory back to philosophy where it belongs. It is not science, it never will be. In order for it to ever be science it will have to be something quite different than what it currently is...

    37. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by evil_aar0n · · Score: 1

      > Why can't humans devolve into a more ape-like form?

      You, sir, have obviously _not_ been to any rural Wal-Mart. This devolution is already happening.

      Hmm. On second thought, maybe they're homo- branches that were slow to catch up in the first place.

      --
      Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
    38. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the crux of the missunderstanding of evolution that allows people to believe in Intelligent Design.... Evolution is a law, not a theory... period.... There are several theories of evolution, such as Darwin's theory of Gradualism. These theories attempt to understand how Evolution works NOT whether it exists. The fact that a 150 year old theory is incomplete or incorrect does not say anything about the existance of evolution. Newton's theory of gravity was incorrect, does this mean gravity doesn't exist? I know it's totally useless trying to convince people who only believe things because of emotional need and twist any fact they can find to ignore the reality they can't deal with. Evolution is a fact, not because I want it to be, but because it is. This attempt to belittle the work and integrity of many thousands of scientists, is just sad.

    39. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      Its the same thing. Anyone who takes issue with Steins message is being pretty petty and short sighted. That is not all Stein is doing.

      If you catch any decent scientist casually and raise these points, yes, they will be happy to talk about them. Good scientists love other explanations. Even kooky ones can be fun to play with. And there are plenty of Christian scientists who do every bit of their work with the idea that God did it all. That view is entirely compatible with the theory of evolution.

      But what scientists take issue with is creationism and/or "intelligent design", which is dubious theology and terrible science.

      What the "intelligent design" crowd is up to is to get their theology taught as fact, when it is nothing close. By manufacturing the apperance of uncertainty they are trying to distort the political process.

    40. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by JesterXXV · · Score: 1
      Your post is largely misguided.

      Actually if you watch the film Stein does not necessarily believe in ID.
      Actually, he does believe in ID. Why else would the movie promote ID as the only alternative to evolution?

      Why do we teach kids the difference between laws, and theory and then act like evolution is a law?
      The difference between law and theory is pretty much semantics. Both refer to hypotheses which have been backed up by evidence. Anything called a "law" tends to be simple enough to be stated succinctly. The words do not indicate anything about the strength of the claims put forth.

      it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human
      Well, first of all, no one thinks humans evolved from paramecia. Both are extant species (i.e. leaf nodes on the evolutionary tree). What is claimed by evolution is that, if you could trace back far enough, paramecia and humans have some sort of common ancestor which has long been extinct. Secondly, evolution DOES offer an explanation as to how that common ancestor eventually led to human beings - via a long, long, long series of chance mutations shaped by natural selection over billions of years. Certainly evolution can't illustrate every single point along the path, but there exists mountains of evidence - fossil, evolutionary development, genetic, etc. - in support of evolutionary theory. ID, on the other hand, claims that God did it, and offers no viable evidence to back up that claim.

      In what way does the presents of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism?
      Evolution itself does not rule out an intelligent designer, but it certainly diminishes the role of one. The current theory of evolution is largely conceived of as an undirected series of events which doesn't require any intelligence driving it. If anything, the role of the designer must be confined to a so-called "first-mover" - an intelligence that set up the dominoes and then simply tipped the first one. This designer might have set up evolution as the dominos' mechanism, but that's not at all what Intelligent Design tries to claim.

      All Stein is doing is asking scientists to act like it. They should acknowledge the weak spots in any theory and look to finding the explanations.
      He is doing no such thing. He is not simply pointing out weak spots - any credible scientist will acknowledge truckloads of unknowns in the theory of evolution, but these largely consist of elements and mechanisms yet unexplored, or inconclusive evidence, etc. No, what Stein and his cronies are suggesting is to toss out the strong points in the theory! Simply because their doubts seem reasonable does not mean that they are! Every claim put forth by the intelligent design cabal has been dismissed by the evidence, and yet they continue to persist. The irony is that no design proponent appears to be open to the weak spots in THEIR theories.
      --
      Yo mama so fake, she failed the Turing Test.
    41. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You actually hit rather closely to my thoughts on this. However the truth of it is; if you watch this video close minded to anything touched on you with either believe it's the greatest thing or think it's the largest crock of bs. To me it just shows zealotry exists on both sides of the fence.

      I think anyone who embraces either theory or concept entirely is a fool, as stated several times you can't disprove ID/Creationism. It's not a fair fight since there is no TRUE way to test it, which is why it's largely ignored. However at the same time a lot of the assertions made for the success of evolution that are based on "facts" aren't always fully substantiated either. Unfortunately as mentioned before evolution is the best "scientific" explanation that we have, however that doesn't mean I'm going to hook my buggy up to it either since a lot of it's is based on extrapolated data and little verified geological or archeological data to substantiate it's claims (there are some, but nothing I've seen that made me say "that's it!").

      I also don't think Ben Stein is arguing evolution as a method for adaptation either, from what it sounds like he's discussing even further back into the creation of the cosmos. Sure, we have the big bang theory which isn't debated that heavily except by those that realize it has to have had a point of origin as well. So how did we get something out of nothing? Feel free to toss theories out there, I've yet to see one that the math wasn't off or when played in reverse didn't only delay the question of "ok so where did THAT come from?"

      So for me the jury is out, and quite honestly I could care less if the question was ignored and people were left to believe what they want. I understand the arguements against another "dark age" but the truth of it is; people are just as capable of doing horrible things to each other as they are to do great things on their own. NO MATTER THE JUSTIFICATION, people will continue to do so. We are quite the grab bag, and killing ones belief in something isn't going to stop bad people from doing bad things (and yes this is a debate in and of itself I know). There are plenty of godless individuals doing horrible things right now and no one bothers to cite that in a debate over why we need to remove the tooth fairy from our children's minds.

      My 2 cents, if you don't want to pocket it just leave it on the ground for someone else to pick it up.

    42. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Actually if you watch the film Stein does not necessarily believe in ID.

      He does belive in ID.

      He simple is wondering why so many scientists are so religious about evolution.

      For the same reason that so many scientists are so religious about the theory of gravity. It's the only theory. It has beeen tested many many times and, though revised and not complete, has had nothing come close to contradicting it. If there were millions of people that declared gravity was a religion and only a theory, I imagine that the scientists who beleive in the theory of gravity would come across as religious as well. It doesn't help that the people condemning the theory of gravity aren't actually putting up a testable alternative. The alternative is more akin to someone claiming that gravity doesn't exist because we are in a virtual reality created by a superior intelligence, and thus it's a programming parameter, and not an actual force.

      Why do we teach kids the difference between laws, and theory and then act like evolution is a law?

      Why do we call an unspported hypothesis a "theory" and then compare it with a well documented and supported scientific theory? The only reason he gets away with a crap argument like that is that the vernacular and scientific definitions of theory don't match, and his statement is a lie if you are consistent with the definition. But there is no requirement that the same word used twice in the same sentence have the same meaning, so he is instead making up strawmen and doing a really good job of shooting them down.

      Anyone who takes issue with Steins message is being pretty petty and short sighted.

      Anyone that takes issue with Stein's message is capable of rational thought on an irrational topic. He's playing to the emotions and making it look like an analytical analysis. That's the same thing that Gore was bashed for, but I imagine that most of the people clinging to Stein's message were the same people to bash Gore's Inconvenient Truth.

    43. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone with more than a 5th grade education understands that there is more to evolution than color changing butterflies.

    44. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      ID is not, I repeat not, a scientific theory.

      Nothing involving the supernatural can be, since by definition the supernatural cannot be tested in a rigorous and consistent way.

      As religious philosophy, ID is fine. But scientists are by definition concerned with science. And ID ain't science.

      That's what Stein, and apparently you, just don't get.

    45. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      Actually if you watch the film Stein does not necessarily believe in ID. He simple is wondering why so many scientists are so religious about evolution.
      Well, that and tarring a perfectly good scientific theory with guilt-by-association tactics and repeated references to the holocaust, but why throw the baby out with the bathwater?
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    46. Re:Who the hell is Ben Stein ... by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      Why do we teach kids the difference between laws, and theory and then act like evolution is a law?

      The difference between scientific laws and scientific theories is a strawman, the classification is mostly based on what the originator decided to call it. And do we teach the distinction in schools? Not where I'm from. What would the distinction be, anyway? Laws are just as open to being falsified as theories are. But don't take my word for it, I'm just pointing out that this issue has already been beaten to death.

      Evolution is really good at explaining how butterflies change color overtime, it does not explain how you get from paramecium to human does that not leave room for some alternate theories?

      Science is open to other theories, it's just that they all suck way more than evolution. Come up with a better one if you like, nobody's stopping you. And evolution does provide a plausible pathway from an initial biogenesis (a- or otherwise) to humans, it's just a matter of how definite you want the evidence to be before you agree to believe in it. The evidence is improving over time with research, and as I said there are no better explanations.

      In what way does the presents of evolution rule out an intelligent designer; might that designer have included an evolutionary mechanism?

      Evolution does not rule out an intelligent designer in the same way that it does not rule out ultra-powerful aliens, or the possibility that I had bacon and eggs for breakfast, they are simply not relevant because there is no evidence for them. Get some evidence, then we can talk about it.

      Sorry if I'm getting grouchy, it's a long thread even browsing at +4.
      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
  15. Academic Oppression by Woundweavr · · Score: 5, Funny

    Its not just "Darwinists" that force their anti-Jesus dogma on the education system. I had a similar experience in my childhood.

    Given a circle with a radius of 10, whats the circumference? Some would say thats its 10 * 2 * "pi"!

    But what is this pi? They can't even define it;its completely irrational! Meanwhile they suppress the controversy. When I put down a much more reasonable answer - 60, because the literal Bible tells me the circumference of a circle is 2*r*3, I was marked wrong! The Nazis used these numbers to build their war machine and concentration camps and its being taught to children far to young to understand its deceptiveness. Inquiring minds are led to a literally endless and patternless series of numbers intended to confuse and dull the mind.

    Teach the controversy!

    1. Re:Academic Oppression by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      If I ever wished I had mod points.... Well done!

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    2. Re:Academic Oppression by ScentCone · · Score: 0

      So, Jesus was an integer-only sort of guy? No ability or willingness to grasp the importance of ratios?

      You're either the best troll of the day, or... no. You have to be a troll. There's no other explanation.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:Academic Oppression by Fished · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't be silly... The Bible's measurement of those "Seas" was exactly correct: to one significant digit. I know a lot of fundamentalists althought I'm not one (I'm a part-time pastor), yet I don't know ANYONE who believes pi is exactly equal to 3. Everyone recognizes that that is just not the point of the Bible. It's like what I've always said: "I don't believe in the sort of {Bible,God} that the skeptics don't believe in, either." Stop beating up on straw men.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    4. Re:Academic Oppression by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      You have to be a troll.

      Well, that or a well-caffeinated satirist. That, I can appreciate.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    5. Re:Academic Oppression by glindsey · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It isn't a straw man, it's an analogy in the form of parody.

      The point is that the ridiculous "pi equals three because the Bible says so" is just as bad an example of cherry-picking as the folks who will quote specific out-of-context Leviticus quotes to "prove" that the Bible is against homosexuality, or point to Genesis and say it "proves" that the universe was created in 6000 years.

      You say everyone recognizes that "pi = 3" was not the point of the Bible, and yet there are thousands of Biblical literalists out there who do that exact same thing with whichever passages they find convenient, while hand-waving away those parts that contradict what they want to believe.

    6. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a number of possible reasons why they included an integer value in the Bible. One of the biggest possibilities is that it was simply rounded, which makes sense because it was for Hebrews to round off numbers to the nearest integer.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_approximations_of_%CF%80#Biblical_value

    7. Re:Academic Oppression by soilheart · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, because everyone knows that Jesus helped Solomon with his temple improvements =P

    8. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FWIW, the two figures quoted in 1 Kings need not be contradictory, or suggest that pi be anything less than an extremly complex number. It clearly says the object was 10 cubits around. Okay, check, got that. So, a piece of string, wrapped around the outside of it would be 10 cubits long. And... 3 cubits from Brim-to-Brim. Are we assuming that the outside of the vessell has no thickness? I'm no mathematician, but, if the walls were an inch thick, that's going to reduce the distance "from brim-to-brim".

      See, it all works. You just need to think about it.

    9. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just went and read the verse since I'm not familiar with it. Seems as though it is describing a metal part, not espousing the value of pie.

      If you stop to think for a second I don't think they had the technology to make a metal object so large that had a material thickness of ZERO. In fact I don't think we have the technology today either, although you could probably get pretty close.

      Your starting assumption is that the Bible is wrong. My starting assumption for any argument is that people are being honest and as accurate as they can be unless I see evidence or get the impression otherwise.

      Aside:
      I really enjoy reading these passionate bigoted debates because it's so easy to find technical mistakes as people jump on straw men ON BOTH sides. I'll probably find one for the other side further down this thread. I have a background in computer science and engineering and have worked in a tool and die shop in the aerospace industry. One of the ROOKIE mistakes in designing metal forming molds for sheet metal parts is to forget to take into account the THICKNESS OF THE PART!

      Oh yeah, and the book of Kings is Old Testament, way before Jesus' time.

      If you're going to debate seriously you've got to study both sides with an open mind.

    10. Re:Academic Oppression by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Okay, so let me see....

      Yes, if you use 10 cubit diameter (or 5 cubit radius) and use 2*Pi*r (or 2*3.14*5) you get 31.4 cubits. However, this can easily be accounted for by simple rounding to the nearest whole cubit.

      For example I have a large bowl. I make it 9ft 7.2 inches wide. It equates to a circumference of 30ft 1.7 inches.

      Except since we're just using a basis of feet as our measurement and not inches. We could easily and justifiably state that we had a diameter of 10ft and a circumference of 30ft.

      Oh my random dice...my Bible is so so wrong. Because it round the figures to the nearest whole measurements. *gasp*

      I should make fun of it and show how bias and stupid I am because this is done in science and statistics ALL the time. But yes my little bias' like to make me look real stupid in my attempt to make others look stupid.

    11. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I sick and tired of "intellectuals" using this to prove the bible wrong... if they just did a simple google search, they would see that based upon the description of the sea in 1Kings, it is correct.

      Here's the link (check out reason #2):

      http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v17/i2/pi.asp

      Of course this won't get modded up, because this is slashdot, and defending faith is like defending microsoft.

    12. Re:Academic Oppression by netcrusher88 · · Score: 1

      Well trolled. However: a Cubit is a highly inaccurate measure - although roughly 18 inches, it is measured according to the length of one's forearm - not an accurate measure by any standard. And if you adjust for significant figures, as at least one other commenter suggested, it is exactly right. Or if it's rounded, or...

      --
      There's an old saying that says pretty much whatever you want it to.
    13. Re:Academic Oppression by Woundweavr · · Score: 1

      I just went and read the verse since I'm not familiar with it. Seems as though it is describing a metal part, not espousing the value of pie.

      If you stop to think for a second I don't think they had the technology to make a metal object so large that had a material thickness of ZERO. In fact I don't think we have the technology today either, although you could probably get pretty close.

      Your starting assumption is that the Bible is wrong. My starting assumption for any argument is that people are being honest and as accurate as they can be unless I see evidence or get the impression otherwise.

      Aside:
      I really enjoy reading these passionate bigoted debates because it's so easy to find technical mistakes as people jump on straw men ON BOTH sides. I'll probably find one for the other side further down this thread. I have a background in computer science and engineering and have worked in a tool and die shop in the aerospace industry. One of the ROOKIE mistakes in designing metal forming molds for sheet metal parts is to forget to take into account the THICKNESS OF THE PART!

      Oh yeah, and the book of Kings is Old Testament, way before Jesus' time.

      If you're going to debate seriously you've got to study both sides with an open mind.

      According to the literal Bible theology, men did not simply write the Bible, God wrote it through them. Since God is incapable of error, the Bible can contain no errors.

      If we accept the Bible contains simplifications - for say the technological or scientific understanding of the culture that the Bible emerged from - then one no longer is espousing a literal Bible interpretation. This - much more reasonable - outlook allows that perhaps men who still generally believed that the rats who came out of the cracks in the walls were spontaneously generated by filth (as opposed to from other rats) weren't ready for a discussion of scientific theory that would not be proven until a few millennia(sic?) later. Similarly, if the Bible is allowed to be inexact, because exactness is a perfection - unless one see it as a general moral philosophy of what God wants one to do (primarily love one another in the Christian version) rather than a prescription on how to live each aspect of one's life.
    14. Re:Academic Oppression by Fished · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I think it's a pretty poor parody, since it really misses the point. The PI=3 thing is much like the earth being flat ... something that no one ever seriously advocated, yet is often brought up as "proof" of the Bible being useful for proving the absurd.

      In the second place, the Biblical case against homosexuality is a lot more than "out-of-context Leviticus quotes." The Bible consistently rejects homosexuality, in both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    15. Re:Academic Oppression by ScienceDada · · Score: 1

      Yes, do teach the controversy, like your retardted example. "The Bible" didn't say the circumference of a circle was 2*r*3. "The Bible" described a basin:

      Now he made the sea of cast metal ten cubits from brim to brim, circular in form, and its height was five cubits, and thirty cubits in circumference... It was a handbreadth thick, and its brim was made like the brim of a cup, as a lily blossom; it could hold two thousand baths.

      What does this mean? A basin shaped like a flower is imprecisely described, therefore you can insult the faith of Billions of people, to make a pathetic point: that assholes like you can make a religious discussion about anything, while claiming that religion is the problem.

    16. Re:Academic Oppression by Diomedes01 · · Score: 1

      I think it's a pretty poor parody, since it really misses the point. The PI=3 thing is much like the earth being flat ... something that no one ever seriously advocated, yet is often brought up as "proof" of the Bible being useful for proving the absurd. In the second place, the Biblical case against homosexuality is a lot more than "out-of-context Leviticus quotes." The Bible consistently rejects homosexuality, in both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament.

      So given your previous comment of "I don't believe in the {God,Bible} in which critics don't believe", here's a question for you... if the Bible is consistent in its case against homosexuality, do you believe that homosexuals are going to Hell if they are not repentant of their lifestyle? If so, I think we've learned all we need to know about you (i.e., your views are dictated to you by a millenia-old tome of myths). If not, I am interested in how you reconcile a modern day progressive viewpoint (homosexuality is OK) with a consistent message passed to you through the Bible.

      --
      "To hope's end I rode and to heart's breaking: Now for wrath, now for ruin and a red nightfall!"
    17. Re:Academic Oppression by Wisconsingod · · Score: 1
      There are many other pieces of information, considered by others here, but not referenced, that add together into more solid logic that the bible is accurate, but that pi is 3.14, not 3.
      These points of assumption when calculating pi = 3:
      1) Assumption that the rim thickness is 0 - False
      2) Assumption that shape of container was a perfect cylendar - False
      3) Assumption that cubits were an exact unit of measure. - False
      Looking down to verse 26,
      http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Kin%207:23-26&version=49
      we see more about this "Circle" in which it's brim is measured in handbreadths, eliminating assumption 1, and denoting a more precise measurement is available, weakening argument 3 . Verse 26 also states the brim shape, which dispels assumption 2,
      Our current calculations of pi based on a hollow "Ring" cylenadar (which is what the bible describes, not a circle, as a ring is "Circular"). The calculation of the area of a ring is:

      A ring or annulus with outer radius x and inner radius y has area pi*(x^2 - y^2). This difference, when measuring the inner rim as 10 cubits, and the outer circumference, allows for the thickness to adjust pi from 3, to the 3.14 accuracy.... see more math calculations below
      http://bibleprobe.com/pi.htm
    18. Re:Academic Oppression by Woundweavr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The PI=3 thing is much like the earth being flat ... something that no one ever seriously advocated, yet is often brought up as "proof" of the Bible being useful for proving the absurd.

      No one has ever seriously advocated the earth is flat? There's some papal writing you might want to check for that one. A literal reading does require it (Matthew 4:8, Daniel 4:10-11, Job 38:13, Job 37:3) but let's use another example. What about that the earth circles the sun (heliocentric model)? A literal reading of the Bible requires a geocentric viewpoint. See Joshua 10:12-13, Ecclesiastes 1:5, 1 Chronicles 16:30, Psalms 93:1, Psalms 19:4-6, etc etc.

      Scientists were persecuted for putting forth a heliocentric model despite scientific proof. Indeed, there are those who still advocate a geocentric viewpoint. People got over it. In every developed part of the world except the US, evolution is not controversial; their people got over it Its time we did the same. Evolution is fact.
    19. Re:Academic Oppression by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, wow you have solved it, no one ever realised that could be the case, you are so smart with your giant brain well done. oh wait just one small point, the verse specifically says that it was not measured that way, it was measured from the lip to the lip, and it also states it is perfectly round, not oval. So no prize for you.


      A much more retardedly obvious reason is that the author was just writing an aproximate description of some goodies, and didn't thing some squirrel brained monkeytards 1000s of years later would be following every single word like dribbling retards he probably thought people would be more interested in the miracles and teachings and shit like that and not obsessing over the scientific accuracy of a story.

      Last time I checked, articles of faith for Christians were the existance of God and that Jesus was the messiah, not that pi is 3, the world is flat and we used to live with grass eating tyrannosaurs.

      Creationists all need to get a life. I'd say there reason they obsess about it, is they lack faith, thier faith is weak and pathetic and need to try and prove to themselves that they believe, but the more they get wrapped up in thier rationalising, self deception and deranged logicc, the further they are from true faith so they just get more and more desperate. No wonder they are so fucked up.

    20. Re:Academic Oppression by glindsey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fine; disregarding the PI=3 thing, and any discussion of homosexuality in the Bible, the ID debate still boils down to taking the Bible (specifically the origin of man) literally versus taking it as an allegory. I still see strict literalists arguing that the universe was created in exactly 144 hours, six thousand years ago. I see people swearing that the Earth literally ceased rotating for a day in Joshua 10:13, and that all humanity except Noah and his wife were obliterated in the Great Flood (thus making every one of us their descendants and incredibly incestuous to boot).

      Heck, you get the argument that all humanity on Earth began from Adam and Eve, despite the fact that Cain is marked by God so that any man who finds him will kill him on sight (Genesis 4:15), leaves to settle in the Land of Nod, and in the very next verse (Genesis 4:17) he "knew his wife". His wife? Where the heck did a wife come from? Were Adam and Eve especially bizz-ay? Did God go around randomly creating other humans, and if so, why aren't they written about in Genesis? You'd think the dawn of the human race was important enough that God would make sure to include a heck of a lot more detail.

      My point is that you can't decide that some parts of the Bible are to be taken literally, and others are not -- never mind the fact that what we consider "the Bible" today has been translated and retranslated, by people both benign and malicious. One can argue that every single translator was somehow imbued with the Holy Spirit in the same manner as the original authors and thus produced an infallible translation... but that opens a whole new can of worms, as we have dozens of translations of the Bible right now that occasionally contradict one another.

      And if you aren't going to be super literal about the origin of man... then there's no argument. It's all semantics. God could easily have designed the Big Bang and the formation of the cosmos and the evolution of life to work out exactly as it has.

      In fact, that makes far more sense to me; why would He create this complex universe with its incredible mesh of physical laws, only to break them with miracles and supernatural occurrences? I'd think He'd work within the confines of what He had created.

    21. Re:Academic Oppression by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I think it's a pretty poor parody, since it really misses the point. The PI=3 thing is much like the earth being flat ... something that no one ever seriously advocated, yet is often brought up as "proof" of the Bible being useful for proving the absurd.

      Lots of people seriously believed the earth was flat. And it isn't brought up as proof that the bible is useful for proving anything. It is brought up because it is evidence that what is written in the bible can be objectively proved to not be true, so any claim that the bible cannot present incorrect facts is disproved.

      In the second place, the Biblical case against homosexuality is a lot more than "out-of-context Leviticus quotes." The Bible consistently rejects homosexuality, in both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament.

      That is a matter for biblical scholars, but again is misses the point. Just because something is in the Bible doesn't make it true. There are lots of things in the Bible. Some we know were added and subtracted to the popular versions of the bible while there are other, well documented, translation errors. There are also things in almost every version of the bible, that are factually incorrect, ergo, claiming something as truth because it is in the bible is irrational. Claiming evolution is untrue because some interpretation of the bible may not agree with it is likewise irrational. You need better evidence if you're trying to follow the scientific method.

    22. Re:Academic Oppression by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 1

      I've never heard anyone suggest that Cain's wife was any person other than a sister. The PI=3 thing I've heard before, but only from real idiots.

      I'm an atheist, but you aren't helping. Please stop.

    23. Re:Academic Oppression by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      and that all humanity except Noah and his wife were obliterated in the Great Flood (thus making every one of us their descendants and incredibly incestuous to boot). Technically, Noah, his wife, his grown children and their spouses, so there's a little more genetic diversity there, but it's not like they were trading partners for maximum diversity. Makes me wonder if the shorter lifespans mentioned immediately after the flood might be because of inbreeding... BTW, if you want some real "end of the world" style inbreeding, read the story of Lot and his daughters (they survived Sodom and Gomorrah's destruction). The daughters thought they were the only people left alive in the whole world, so they got daddy drunk...

      Heck, you get the argument that all humanity on Earth began from Adam and Eve, despite the fact that Cain is marked by God so that any man who finds him will kill him on sight (Genesis 4:15), leaves to settle in the Land of Nod, and in the very next verse (Genesis 4:17) he "knew his wife". His wife? Where the heck did a wife come from? Were Adam and Eve especially bizz-ay? Did God go around randomly creating other humans, and if so, why aren't they written about in Genesis? You'd think the dawn of the human race was important enough that God would make sure to include a heck of a lot more detail. Well, there are _two_ creation stories in Genesis, one for the whole world, and one specifically for the Garden of Eden. If you look at the first story, humanity is created on the sixth day. In the second story, the reader is brought back in time to the third day, where God creates a little island of life on the planet, and populates it. Adam, Eve are from this garden. Everyone else was born or created in other places. I have to explain this to literalists too; they always say that everyone is from Adam and Eve. Sheesh.
    24. Re:Academic Oppression by LnxRocks · · Score: 0

      Sorry - try again: Matthew 4:8 - It is obvious from context that this is spiritual. This would be impossible physically even with a flat earth.

      Daniel 4:10-11 - this is a vision and thus not literal as continuing to read to verse 19 would indicate.

      Job 38:13 and 37:3 - "Ends of the earth" is an expression used to indicate the whole world and as such is still in use today.

      Joshua 10:12-13 - describes what happened from the standpoint of the observer For an observer on earth the sun does appear to move

      Ecclesiastes 1:5 - "Sunrise" and "Sunset" are terms which are still used today to describe the solar cycle.

      1 Chronicles 16:30, Psalms 93:1, Psalms 19:4-6 - These are songs not scientific observations or even historical reports.
      Keep in mind also that you are looking at a translation which can sometimes choose bad wording. An example is Isiash 40:22 which would appear to imply a flat earth but examination of the Hebrew shows that the word used can imply 3 dimensions.

    25. Re:Academic Oppression by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 1

      No one has ever seriously advocated the earth is flat? There's some papal writing you might want to check for that one.

      Citation? Seriously, no one has used the Bible to argue a flat Earth. People in the middle ages were perfectly aware the Earth was round. [Disclaimer: there are of course the crazy "flat earth" people even now, so I don't mean literally no one, but it was never a teaching of the church / the pope / anyone particularly "important"]. They had even figured out the correct-in-spirit correlation that the climate is hotter around the equator because that part of the spher[e | oid] is closer to the sun. They had all kinds of ideas about what life was like on other parts of the globe, and while there was a lot of controversy and theological significance ascribed to the details of these ideas, the fundamental premise that the earth was round was pretty universal. MWIIMS (My Wife Is In Medieval Studies :-P)

      Now, the things you say about the heliocentric model are completely correct, and that is a much better example: because the "literal" meaning of some passages would imply the sun revolved around the earth, heliocentrism was controversial for some time. These days Christians are okay with it. Which should be a lesson that interpretations of holy writings still have to go through the reality-based filter of what is in front of our eyes, and not taken a priori.

      The flat earth stuff is a total myth, though. I disagree with GP in that I think the PI=3 is an effective parody: it gives an instance where it is, and always has been, completely obvious to everyone that it is not meant literally in a precise numerical sense (I mean, even the unit of measurement for the passage is a "cubit," which is defined as "the length from your elbow to the tip of your fingers," which is hardly a unit in the sense of modern engineering... modern literalism is highly anachronistic in this context). The existence of such a passage points out that "now we're just haggling over price" -- there are obviously non-literal "scientific" claims, and the question is where do we draw the boundaries.

      On the other hand, GP is right that no one (to a close approximation, i.e. for large values of zero :-P) has ever used the bible to prove a flat earth. It's best to be aware of that if only to avoid an inadvertent straw man.

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    26. Re:Academic Oppression by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly... The Bible's measurement of those "Seas" was exactly correct: to one significant digit.

      I don't expect God to give measurements with 10 digit precision in the bible. However, there is a something to this. I think it's reasonable that numbers wouldn't have fractions, but if the bible were really written by God, then it's reasonable that it should be accurate to the integer. A 10 cubit diameter circle should be well over *31* cubits (31.4). That's not just "rounding to one significant digit" (who even understood rounding in those days?), but it's a clear mistake. It was well within the technology of the day to measure to measure the different between 30 and 31 (and a half).

      Or to put it another way, if the bible had a verse that said, "John and Jane had 5 sons and 6 daughters, and thus had 10 children", would you wave your hand and argue that God rounded it off to one significant digit?

      As I said, I could understand "31", but "30" makes no sense. Did God inspire and guide the hand of the writers of the bible or didn't he? And if he did, why would he allow such an obvious mistake?

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    27. Re:Academic Oppression by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      In fact, that makes far more sense to me; why would He create this complex universe with its incredible mesh of physical laws, only to break them with miracles and supernatural occurrences? I'd think He'd work within the confines of what He had created.

      Exactly. I think of God like a programmer. If you go through all of this effort to create a great object-oriented framework, that scales and adapts beautifully on its own, why would you suddenly start copying and pasting code to accomplish minute tasks?
      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    28. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 10 cubit diameter circle should be well over *31* cubits (31.4). That's not just "rounding to one significant digit" (who even understood rounding in those days?), but it's a clear mistake. It was well within the technology of the day to measure to measure the different between 30 and 31 (and a half). First of all, the Bible is not meant to teach mathematics.

      Second, you really ought to read up on significant figures. You could have a diameter of about 9.7 cubits and a circumference of about 30 cubits, and by modern standards it would be perfectly legitimate to report the diameter as 10 cubits, even in a scientific journal. (Of course, it would not be preferred, since cubits are not SI.)
    29. Re:Academic Oppression by jafac · · Score: 1

      Re-read Genesis.

      It describes God creating Adam and Eve, and God creating "Man" (presumably the rest of humanity).

      Now, the interesting interpretation here, is the racist conclusion that there are "chosen" people, descended from Adam, who are blessed by God, and can be "saved", and then there's the rest of us.

      The "two creations" are there - but it's conveniently overlooked in its ramifications by biblical scholars, because of what it implies.

      (there's also the alternative interpretation of the Great Flood, that only part of the whole globe was covered, because the "World" only included that region of the globe (the middle-east) that is spoken of, or named, specifically, in Genesis. (ie. the "New World" isn't mentioned.) So we are not all necessarily descended from Noah, or even Adam.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    30. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pi is actually defined as the ratio circumference/diameter, thats one way of doing it and there are equivalent or equally correct ways of doing it. that pi is irrational, at least in mathematics, means that you wont find two integer numbers (the integers are those used for "counting", zero and the negative ones, {...,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3...}, an infinite list of numbers) such that when divided the give pi.

      your teachers should explain you why they consider wrong what you wrote, and even if they dont just dont leave it there! try wikipedia

    31. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my scientific gut urges me to correct you from the fallacy you've fallen into. Evolution is not a fact, i mean, i do believe that it's a great way to view it and i know of no theory whatsoever that fits the world around me. But i think that its this kind of statements that make religious people revolt since for them, science has no extra support and apparently evidence is not that important. in the end, for them it's the same thing you saying that evolution is a fact and a muslim say ala is the lord.
      The point on these discussion as i see it is that most of the time we keep saying evolution is correct, but for the sake of the scientific method, let's try and raise questions that cannot be answered with creationism. For example, if god is so wise and all-mighty, then why do we humans, his best piece of work, have so many parts interconnected in tremendously stupid ways while we could achieve the same level (or better) of consciousness with nanotubes hanging around our bodies, why does the body seems so not-elegant?? the efficiency can be explained by both theories given enough time..
      I'm sure this is just one of many, please post your own, or even better, make a new post with this petition, 5 minutes should be enough to find a question that cannot be answered by creationism, since in fact, it answers nothing at all!

    32. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the passage is recording to one significant digit? :)

    33. Re:Academic Oppression by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, articles of faith for Christians were the existance of God and that Jesus was the messiah, not that pi is 3, the world is flat and we used to live with grass eating tyrannosaurs.

      Last I checked, it was that the Bible is the Word of God, not written by man, but by God (through the hands of a man guided by God). To not believe in the foundation, but the things that come through it is just silly. "I believe what the Book says about Jesus being the Messiah, but as for what it said about pork, blended thread, Friday night meals and such, that's too inconvenient to believe." You either believe the book to be true, or you don't. To pick and choose what you want to believe makes a mockery of the Book.

    34. Re:Academic Oppression by thermopylae300 · · Score: 1

      In Biblical times it was common to measure with your forearm (in cubits). Perhaps you could allow for some rounding.

      --
      Before the invention of eruptions, lava had to be carried down the mountain by hand and thrown on sleeping villagers.
    35. Re:Academic Oppression by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 1

      I would like to add that there's also this passage describing infinity via the distance between east and west.

    36. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Strictly speaking, pi does have a pattern. It's just in hexadecimal rather than decimal. There is an equation that can give you the value of an digit in the hexadecimal expansion of pi without needing to compute the previous digits.

      Of course, you need all of the previous digits if you want to convert it to decimal, but it's still a pattern.

    37. Re:Academic Oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      while your response is humorous, i am pretty sure you just dont get it so much. the thing is, is that you probably dont care to intelligently inquire about this subject or its context. if i read that 2 + 2 equals 5, and said that math was dumb, then I dont consider myself much smarter than the people that I am lambasting. anyhoo...a word to the wise...the bible was not meant as a scientific document...this should be patently obvious...as so astutely and yet dryly put, the bible is a document that is: "written in its own time and context." This is hardly historically deviant, and if you were exposed a little more, maybe this would be part of your understanding. Hence, a perfect circle for an alter is not of scientific importance but a spiritual importance. Therefore, the significance of the document in a spiritual context. Please, sir, if you can understand one thing, the bible will not guide you in science, nor will science lead you in truth, it is the reasonable coexistence that provide a valid and cohesive path. And if none exist by an objective mind or investigation, than one is false.

      late.

    38. Re:Academic Oppression by Alsee · · Score: 1

      all humanity except Noah and his wife were obliterated in the Great Flood (thus making every one of us their descendants and incredibly incestuous to boot)

      Bah! That's nothing!

      According to evolution that goat-fucker guy over there is incestuous!

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    39. Re:Academic Oppression by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      You are a retard. The Bible is not the word of god, and never claims to be. There are parts which are proclamations by god, but for fuck's sake, the Gospels are named after their human authors you dumbass. Oh and if you knew anything, there is a specific bit in hte new testament that repeals all cleanliness laws, after all unclean thingsare declaed clean

  16. Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Dawkins and many others notwithstanding, evolution doesn't disprove god(s) or mandate atheism. What it does do is undermine (very thoroughly) an argument for god(s) that used to be a 'slam dunk': the 'argument from complexity in the biological world'.

    Unfortunately, a lot of people don't understand the distinction, and people like Dawkins don't help. Many religious types treat 'discounting an argument for god(s)' the same as 'advancing an argument against god(s)', and go ballistic. But it's important to note the difference. There's still room to believe in god(s) even if you accept the ridiculously overwhelming evidence that evolution happened and is happening. (I don't believe in god(s), FWIW, but many people do.)

    Stein and his ilk really remind me of the worst features of Ned Flanders sometimes. "Well, I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!"

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    1. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dawkins and many others notwithstanding, evolution doesn't disprove god(s) or mandate atheism. What it does do is undermine (very thoroughly) an argument for god(s) that used to be a 'slam dunk': the 'argument from complexity in the biological world'. Unfortunately, a lot of people don't understand the distinction, and people like Dawkins don't help. Many religious types treat 'discounting an argument for god(s)' the same as 'advancing an argument against god(s)', and go ballistic. But it's important to note the difference. There's still room to believe in god(s) even if you accept the ridiculously overwhelming evidence that evolution happened and is happening. (I don't believe in god(s), FWIW, but many people do.)
      You're arguing on a forum where people regularly claim the bible "says pi is 3 and therefore the bible is wrong" because it describes a vase in a room in round numbers. If people here can't even tell the difference between describing a room and giving a maths lesson to eight significant figures, they're unlikely to get your distinction.
    2. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by avanderveen · · Score: 0

      It's not as if Christians don't believe in evolution, they just don't believe that we evolved from a single-celled organism in the primordial soup.

    3. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by n9uxu8 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, said. I wrote something about this regarding evolution and the political campaign describing just this problem. While yes there is a distinction, the fact that most people won't see it, is a problem:

      Evolution:

      You know the deal...reproduction leads to mutations. Some mutations benefit survival, and these traits are passed on to further generations.This leads sea monkey to salamanders and apes to man. Check the bones at your local natural history museum for the appropriate citations.

      In any case, in days gone by, the evolution question was fairly simple:

      I do/do not (circle one) believe in evolution.

      For the most part people were okay with this. If you didn't believe in evolution, you tended to get giggled at, but nobody stole your lunch money, so all was well, and time passed.

      Eventually, though, that wasn't good enough for some folks. Believing in evolution was no longer good enough. The conversation moved to something along these lines:

      "So...do you believe in evolution?"

      "Yes, of course I do. Ooh...wanna go to the museum? The fossils are wicked cool!"

      "So, you admit that God was not involved in the creation of man, then."

      "Say what now?!?!"

      That's when life got ugly. All Christians want to say is that clearly the evolutionary process is going on all around us, but God is the architect behind it all. Not good enough, apparently. Evolution is strictly random. As such God cannot be involved. Unfortunately, saying God did not create man is tantamount to saying "There is no God." That's quite a pickle, don't you think? What's a politician to say?

      There is an inherent contradiction in believing evolution and believing in God, but I believe that is the point. I think they used to call these essential mysteries. I believe in evolution. I believe in God...big fan of his work. I don't believe that invisible angels were at work bumping the necessary single cell organisms together to eventually create man. I do believe if I mix the proper ingredients and stick them in the oven, I'll eventually get a cake.

    4. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Afecks · · Score: 1

      Evolution IS an argument against gods, a specific form of gods. Namely the idea that there are gods that care about us and had us in mind when creating the universe. Evolution teaches us that human life, from the universe's perspective, is no more meaningful than a beetle's. That form of god is a capricious and uncaring god by any standard. The god of evolution is also the god of AIDS, cancer, birth defects and flesh eating bacteria. Not because of anything man did or because of some "fall" but because that's simply how the system works. The god of evolution could consider us nothing but freakish vehicles for his beloved diseases. Evolution is the biggest threat to religion for a damn good reason. The idea of nonoverlapping magisteria loses it's appeal when the religious circle keeps getting smaller and smaller. In other words, those believers in the god of the gaps really don't like it when we shrink their gaps.

    5. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by cats-paw · · Score: 1

      What it does do is undermine (very thoroughly) an argument for god(s) that used to be a 'slam dunk': the 'argument from complexity in the biological world'. Unfortunately, a lot of people don't understand the distinction, and people like Dawkins don't help.


      I believe that Dawkins has written several books about evolutionary biology. How is it that he is not helping ? What is not helping is that creationists either do not read the books (and not just his), do not understand them, or simply refuse to even try and understand them.

      --
      Absolute statements are never true
    6. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Woundweavr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "So...do you believe in evolution?"

      "Yes, of course I do. Ooh...wanna go to the museum? The fossils are wicked cool!"

      "So, you admit that God was not involved in the creation of man, then."

      "Say what now?!?!"

      That's when life got ugly. All Christians want to say is that clearly the evolutionary process is going on all around us, but God is the architect behind it all. Not good enough, apparently. Evolution is strictly random. As such God cannot be involved. Unfortunately, saying God did not create man is tantamount to saying "There is no God." That's quite a pickle, don't you think? What's a politician to say?

      There is an inherent contradiction in believing evolution and believing in God, but I believe that is the point.

      No actually thats not what happened. Science has never spoken to the existence or non-existence of God, regardless of what some believers or non-believers want to believe. God by definition exists outside the system or in every aspect of the system. We therefore have no means of detecting him empirically (because one requires contrast to see something. If we had no way of detecting anything at all (in anyway) outside the atmosphere, we couldn't detect our planet moving, or if some quantum of energy exists in every piece of space and matter(it'd be the baseline).

      Similarly, evolution - or any other natural phenomenon can not disprove the intervention of God.

      If we assume that God exists, then it follows that he defined the universe and its rules. The reason we're in 3(4)-D is because God willed it so. The reason that the world is rational is because thats how God set it up. The reason mutations happen is because God set it up this way.

      When one programs some agent that learns or changes its behavior depending on how its used and/or its success/failure, you are still the cause of the evolution because you set the rules (and likely provided the input). Maybe you could have programmed a static (say) chess player that was just as good, but just because you chose to allow it to improve itself to that level doesn't mean you didn't create it.

      This is applicable to any natural system. If I run a program and control the data and the logic that manipulates it, I can know the outcome of any singular portion. If we accept the world is predictable (a presupposition of science) and rational and we accept that God set the starting point and those rules, then everything occurred because he wanted it to (barring perhaps free will). Even quantum reactions may be ruled by an underlying predictability we don't yet understand... or maybe God is just rolling d20s.
    7. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

      I believe that Dawkins has written several books about evolutionary biology. How is it that he is not helping?

      He is, indeed, doing a good job of spreading understanding of the science of evolution. But he does (frequently) conflate the fact of evolution with disproof of God(s). It's in that narrow sense that he's "not helping". I also think he's off on the historical utility of religion. For a better treatment of that, I'd suggest David Sloan Wilson's "Evolution For Everyone". Wilson makes a good case that religious belief has, in the past, been "practically realistic", even if religious beliefs are not, in fact, true. (Of course, that doesn't mean that religious beliefs are necessary to get those benefits.)

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    8. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by n9uxu8 · · Score: 1

      Ah the problem with posting a sidebar. The evolution comments I made were a sidebar to a discussion of political candidates and the hot topic of evolution. The point was not that science has said that you must not believe in God, but that people (journalists/lobbyists/whoever you feel like pointing a finger at) use the one to attack the other. It's a no-win argument as it is easily abused for the public consumption

    9. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Miltazar · · Score: 1

      Yes, many people don't understand this distinction. I come from a fairly heavy Christian background, and everyone around me always told me that schools filled kids with propaganda. The most heard argument for this was that they always "brainwashed" kids into believing this "evolution hogwash".

      I can't speak for all Christians, but the ones that I grew up with did and do see evolution as something that is anti-god. They see it as an enemy, when really it never says there is no god. Evolution just proves that the world wasn't created in 7 days. I'm just glad I did go to a public school where they taught me enough for me to realize that everything I'd been taught to that point from religion was all crap. I'm an athiest now and I'm completely open to any scientific theory.

      As others have mentioned here, that would be something with evidence, falsifiable, etc. If god is proven eventually via this process, then thats fine. The important thing is that we keep teaching kids REAL science so that they can decide for themselves, as I did, whether or not to still choose religion.

      --
      "Hold! What you are doing to us is wrong! Why do you do this thing?"
    10. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Many religious types treat 'discounting an argument for god(s)' the same as 'advancing an argument against god(s)', and go ballistic."

      As a 20-year bible thumper (former), the attack on creation is an attack on the Bible's inerrancy, which in turn destroys the whole "redemption" house of cards (in the literalist's mind). That sacred cow can't go down, as its what they've lived their life for. Notice they really don't attack any OTHER part of science--just the ones (evolution & big bang) that shows a literal interpretation is not wise.

      For me, there is so many troubling items in a literal bible interpretation that I couldn't blindly follow it. While not convinced there isn't a god (neither is Dawkins), the biblical god is extremely suspect due to the contents of the bible: rampant sexism, beating (and HAVING) slaves, and then just the overall bizarre events-- ordering massacres of men/women/children, bald prophets praying to kill kids due to an insult, etc., etc.

      Without proof of some other god, well, we'll just have to assume its ONLY US here and be kind to each other, without the tribalism, etc. If we could just get our heads out of the spirit-world (until proof somehow appears), we'd be so much better off, as a planet.

    11. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Dawkins and many others notwithstanding, evolution doesn't disprove god(s) or mandate atheism. Actually it's creationists who think evolution disproves their god. Otherwise they wouldn't be so hysterical about it.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    12. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

      You want "overall bizarre", look up Deuteronomy 25:11-12.

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    13. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

      Actually, I thin the removal of the last bit of supporting evidence for God does pretty much lead to a (kind of) atheism. For example, if the theory of General Relativity were slowly eroded, until there was no supporting evidence at all, it would be abandoned. Dawkins would argue God is in the same category.

    14. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by DerWulf · · Score: 1

      There is no room in the rational mind for believing in god. That's the whole point: BELIEVING and not KNOWING. No matter how smart some religious people might be, this part of their reason is not based on argument and evidence. Dawkins put it nicely: it's a delusion. It's not like science and religion are two sides of the same coin. Science is wanting to understand, Religion is believing with complete lack of basis and proof: anti-knowing. And I pitty humanity that so many of our numbers are vunerable to such what amounts to an DoS attack on the mind.

      To the point: ID is the attempt to increase the relevance of religion by hijacking the scientific form (or what a laymen might think it is) but it also shows that truly religious people realize that they can not flip-flop on an issue that their holy (and therefor correct) book(s) has(ve) a completely clear opinion about. If GOD created man, the animals, the heavens and the earth and if GOD said so himself it MUST be true or their believe is false. It's really basic modus ponens really. I value integrity so I actually prefer those believers who care for what their book says over those folks who think they can pick and choose ("woah, look, god is like EVERYTHING and isn't it beautiful so this must be GOD").

      --

      ___
      No power in the 'verse can stop me
    15. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well you are mis-characterizing Dawkins. Nothing new there, ppl do it all the time. He very clearly states that he can not prove there is not a god. He even goes so far as to say he does not rule out the possibility. He only believes it to be very unlikely. You seem to have a bit of the very confusion you are accusing others of.

    16. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by nine-times · · Score: 1

      What it does do is undermine (very thoroughly) an argument for god(s) that used to be a 'slam dunk': the 'argument from complexity in the biological world'.

      Meh... I think people just aren't clever enough. After all, the introduction of the theory of evolution doesn't make the world less complex, it makes it more complex. In neither case do we have an explanation of how the universe came to be, but we all admit that it did come to be. But which would seem to come from a creator with more cleverness, insight, and forward thinking?-- A world which exists as it does and never changes; or a world that, once set in motion, builds life such as us, from nothing but stardust, using only the most basic and fundamental laws of physics.

      No, if you really think about it, evolution shouldn't properly be discouraging to people who believe in god(s). Not in the least.

    17. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by Yellow+Onion · · Score: 1

      Exactly what I was thinking, but the lack of people understanding this concept is the exact reason why ID should be taught in school. teach them that Evolution and ID can work together

    18. Re:Evolution doesn't disprove God(s)... BUT... by hiruhl · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I don't think that's exactly what they think. They think it contradicts their story of creation -- hence why creationists are the ones who dispute it, and not others with the same god. It contradicts the story from Genesis, which is what gets the creationists' panties all in a bundle.

      It also contradicts the more intellectually relevant teleological argument (argument from design), which the parent referenced. Evolution proposes that more complex things come about from simpler things, which is precisely the "counterintuitive" notion which the argument from design appeals against: complexity cannot come from simplicity, so there MUST be some original, supremely complex being, to have resulted any sort of thing existing whatsoever. A classic example from the literature is: a man who has never seen a wristwatch before stumbles upon one, and notes that it must have been made by someone, what with all its complexity (about which he would be right), and so it is with us observing the universe.

      I think the name "Intelligent Design", as thrown around by creationists, is to align themselves with the more respected argument from design (which does not make any claims about what the nature of this designer is), yielding the pretense of wielding a more respectable theory, whilst really just playing the empty "...because the Bible says so, which is true because God says so, which is true..." card. The technique is not very clever, but what do you expect from a bunch of "Intelligent Design theorists"?

  17. Re:Monkey's uncle? by bondsbw · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean?

    --
    All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
  18. About time... by munik · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It's about time we challenge the presuppositions behind evolution on a larger scale.

    1. Re:About time... by wanerious · · Score: 1
      It is a good attitude to maintain skepticism about assertions and ideas --- you are in a prime position to actually learn about evolution and other areas of science.

      But please, I'm begging you, steer wide of websites like Answers in Genesis and the ilk. You will find little honest science there, only phantom plastic arguments that sound like real science. You should challenge presuppositions in the strongest way --- which is to become a scientist yourself. Can you imagine how famous you'd be by overturning the life's work of thousands of very smart people over the last hundred years or so? But don't fall for the easy, grade-school arguments of the charlatans. There are so many subtle and important errors in the page you referred to that you'll never claw your way back out into the world of clear thinking.

    2. Re:About time... by caution+live+frogs · · Score: 1

      What exactly is that article supposed to demonstrate? That a person can tell the difference between a randomly eroded pebble and an arrowhead? What presupposition is that even supposed to address? How is that relevant to evolutionary biology?

      There isn't anything on that site worth linking to, anyway. Not one thing. If you find a coherent, well-reasoned, fact-based argument on that site, it's an accident.

      Here's a hint for you (same one I tell my students): If you want to kill evolution, you can't just prove it wrong. You have to show that it is a fatally flawed argument, AND also present a new theory that does a BETTER job of explaining everything that evolution explains. Furthermore, the new theory has to be BETTER than evolutionary theory at PREDICTING what will happen. It is not enough to explain what we already know. Scientific theory has to have a predictive value. Creation garbage has zero predictive value, because nobody knows what the creator will do. Today we have the world as we know it, tomorrow maybe he decides to bring back dinosaurs just for the hell of it.

      You should also keep in mind two things: First, if you want to kill evolution as a theory, you need to start with a thorough understanding of what it is (and what science is). You can't present a cogent argument if you don't understand the facts. Second, there have been a lot of very intelligent people, highly educated people, who have thoroughly and rigorously tested evolutionary theory over the last 150 years. A great number of these people were not fans of the theory, and more than a few had reasons to want to disprove it. Despite this, it's still the best explanation of how life came to be, and where life is going, and how it happens on a generation-to-generation basis.

      But yeah, that argument about the pebble vs. arrowhead, that makes all of the above moot. Guess I'll tear up my Ph.D. now and start witnessing on the streetcorners.

    3. Re:About time... by munik · · Score: 0

      I do not have to destroy the theory of evolution in order for my theory to be credible.

      I have yet to be shown that evolution can be explained by direct observation and demonstrated.

      Until I am shown [that], my theory is as good as yours. My theory cannot be directly observed or demonstrated either.

    4. Re:About time... by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      I do not have to destroy the theory of evolution in order for my theory to be credible.

      I have yet to be shown that evolution can be explained by direct observation and demonstrated.

      Until I am shown [that], my theory is as good as yours. My theory cannot be directly observed or demonstrated either.

      Have you taken the time and effort to look up the direct observations? You are only displaying your ignorance.

  19. Win ben stein's money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Apparently it's easier than I thought to win Ben Stein's money, just pass the collection plate.

  20. lose my job? by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is just indicative of the paranoid world some wackos live in. Only those that gain their power from deceiving the masses are afraid of open discussion. Otherwise, we are free to discuss whatever we like.

    BTW, the reason that evolution can be talked about in school and ID should not is that evolution is science, and can change as new information is acquired. Evolution is not based on any traditional truth. It is based on observation, and it's connection to the holy, if any, is only incidental. OTOH, ID is based on a specific group creation myth, and promoting ID is like promoting religion, something the US government should not do. If we want a survey of creation myths, that is such a large topic that it needs a course all of it's own, and many would support such course, except, I suspect, those that want to teach ID, as such seem often afraid of competing knowledge, perhaps because the truth will set you free,

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:lose my job? by PortHaven · · Score: 1, Troll

      "evolution can be talked about in school and ID should not is that evolution is science, and can change as new information is acquired."

      I do not see how such precludes ID. Perhaps it precludes a Genesis creation but not ID. Especially as scientists discover greatest aspects of design patterns, and similarities to code re-use in biology.

      "Evolution is not based on any traditional truth. It is based on observation, and it's connection to the holy,"
      I see quite a few traditional myths in regards to evolution. And I find it's adherents to be quite religious and zealous. They too like to cover the mistakes, misinterpretations and mistranslations of their own as well.

      The amount of fraudulent evidence used in many schools to teach evolution is immense. Be it drawings and depictions based on psuedo men derived from a single jawbone or a tooth of an extinct pig. And while those in the know may be aware that these mistakes and frauds are incorrect. These representations are STILL being used to teach kids the religion of evolution (as opposed to the theory of evolution).

      But to me, the discussion should not be closed and censored. Such action is far worse than what the Catholic church did to Galileo. At least the Catholic church's stance allowed Galileo to express his views so long as he merely stated them as a theory for discussion rather than declared them fact. Evolutionists are far worse, because they won't even allow discussion on that level.

    2. Re:lose my job? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My creation myth is that the holy created the universe many billions of year ago. The holy then pretty much let it go, interjecting little things here and there, like humans on the planet earth long ago. The holy is not a trickster, and leasves clues of the creation to the creation. The holy likes enjoys watching the creation make mistakes, learn from those mistakes, and become more sophisticated. The holy thinks it is funny when the some parts of the creation hangs onto the old stories, in much the same way that parent finds it funny when a child continues to believe that the world goes missing when the child closes his or her eyes. The holy knows that at some point, all of creation will become sophisticated enough to accept the new truth, it just takes time.

      ID is precluded from science class because it violates my right to believe what I wish to believe, and instead teaches that one particular creation myth is more valid than mine. It violates my right to worship as I wish. Some might say that my myth is the same as ID, but it is not. The differences are subtle, but they are mine, and I have a right to them. By teaching a philosophy based on a truth, instead of a philosophy based on changing models, the ID people are forcing their truth on all unsuspecting school children.

      Again, no one is saying to go out persecute religious people, even if they are wacko. No one saying recreate the spanish inquisition. No one is saying that we need a crusade to the bible belt. No one is saying that we bomb evangelical churches in that same way that some bomb doctors offices. All anyone is saying is do not try to force a version of the truth on a free society.

    3. Re:lose my job? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      This is just indicative of the paranoid world some wackos live in. Only those that gain their power from deceiving the masses are afraid of open discussion. Presumably you've heard about the extremes the people behind this movie went to to prevent anyone who might give it a negative review from seeing it before the release.

      The irony (and hypocrisy) is astonishing.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  21. Two for two by smooth+wombat · · Score: 3, Informative
    Just as with the Dilbert Flash fiasco, I had already mentioned the nonsense of 'Expelled' in my journal and provided four links showing the outright lies and falsehoods presented in this propaganda piece.


    To cut short any discussion from those who think that a religious precept should be included in a scientific curriculum, I submit this quote from one of the linked articles so everyone is clear as to why ID is not science:

    "Intelligent Design" fails to meet the basic definition of a scientific idea: its proponents do not present testable hypotheses and do not provide evidence for their views that can be verified or duplicated by subsequent researchers.

    That's all there is to it folks. ID supporters need to submit evidence to back up their claim and it will be considered. So far, the only thing ID supporters have done is a) try to show supposed holes in current Evolutionary theory (all of which have been answered) and b) claim that some unknown, untestable, omnipotent force is behind everything. At no time have they ever presented evidence to support their idea and so, rightly, ID falls under the heading as an idea which attempts to support someone's religious ideas.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    1. Re:Two for two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To go along with this, show me how and where "evolution" has been proven. It cannot be either. The important thing to remember here it that evolution is just a theory. And why does it stay a theory? Because it cannot be proven and scientists know it. It is too difficult to prove since you would have to have millions of years of documented, observed, empirical data. That is something that cannot be done in one lifetime alone, it will take a thousand lifetimes.

    2. Re:Two for two by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Serious question: should the inability to prove or disprove a theory automatically preclude it?

      Remember, one of the tenets of faith (not intelligent design... a very different concept) is that it cannot be proven except to each individual in a personal way. Thus, although I may have proof of it myself, I have no ability to share that proof. Does that make it invalid?

      It's up to you whether to believe one thing or another, but I fear for a society that forces the prominent persons of intellect to be limited to any particular school of thought, including evolution, intelligent design, or other similar theories.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    3. Re:Two for two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative



      "Intelligent Design" fails to meet the basic definition of a scientific idea: its proponents do not present testable hypotheses and do not provide evidence for their views that can be verified or duplicated by subsequent researchers.

      I think you may have missed what the point of the movie was. The point Stein was trying to make is that if researchers try to investigate ID, they are silenced by being "expelled" or what have you. It's rather hard to present tested hypotheses about ID when you are fired for even considering them.

      I don't think he was trying to prove that ID is true. I think he was just trying to show their side of the story.
    4. Re:Two for two by PortHaven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Intelligent Design" fails to meet the basic definition of a scientific idea: its proponents do not present testable hypotheses and do not provide evidence for their views that can be verified or duplicated by subsequent researchers."

      Darwin noted the variations of animals. And stated that if his theory was correct we should find transitional forms.

      If Intelligent Design were true, we'd see similarities and patterns in the design of a variety of species. Even similar design patterns in the genetic code and make-up across a variety of species on various levels.

      There you have it. And it's testable and discoverable. It may require further analysis beyond our current level of understanding. However, the same can be said true of Darwin's theory. So now you have it. The Scientific Theory of Intelligent Design

      ***

      I've often heard staunch atheists/evolutionists use the above argument. And i think it is one of the most absurd. Furthermore, if you refuse any dialog, you do not allow people to postulate their theory or the requirements.

      It's like a dictator censoring western websites and then at the same time arguing that there is no interest in those websites as evidenced by the lack of visits from his nation.

      ***

      "Evolutionary theory (all of which have been answered)"

      Really, well, I think it's interesting that numerous species cited as transitional forms later fail the test often turning out to be contemporaries.

    5. Re:Two for two by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1
      Serious question: should the inability to prove or disprove a theory automatically preclude it?


      That's a trick question but I'll do my best to answer it anyway. IANAS for the record.

      Depending on what is being proposed, it may take decades or even centuries to prove or disprove a scientific theory. How long has it taken to prove/disprove some of what Newton and Einstein have proposed regarding gravity? Until recently, frame dragging was not able to be tested due to the limits of our technology. What about the idea that everything is composed of smaller and smaller particles? How long had it taken for Leucippus' idea (as revealed by Democritus) of matter being composed of atoms to be revealed to be true?

      The catch with ID is it will ALWAYS be untestable since how does one test for an omnipotent being? Merely saying that things look to be designed does not mean they are. One now has to take the next step and say, "Who designed it and how do we test for this being?" ID/Creationist supporters have never, EVER, said what test they would propose to test for such a being. They simply throw their hands up and say, "God/Unknown Force/Unknown Being did it." That's not science.

      And that is the key point. By definition, an omnipotent being can never be known. It is omnipotent and so, according to myth and legend, lives outside what we consider "normal" time.

      What ID/Creationists want to do is rewrite science as we know it and say the supernatural, not just the natural, should be included in the scientific realm. As was stated in the Dover trial a few years back, according to the IDers, astrology is a science. If we're going that far, why not move "GhostHunters"* from the SciFi channel to Discovery.

      Until ID supporters can provide a means to prove or disprove their idea, ID will always be relegated to a religious or philosophical precept.

      *I have written a missive that when people claim they are seeing ghosts, what they are really seeing is a quirk in the time continuum. Read the missive at this link.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    6. Re:Two for two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "Intelligent Design" fails to meet the basic definition of a scientific idea: its proponents do not present testable hypotheses and do not provide evidence for their views that can be verified or duplicated by subsequent researchers.

      So...uh, scientists have tested evolution? I wasn't aware that we had figured that our yet.
    7. Re:Two for two by buddhapop · · Score: 1

      Remember, one of the tenets of faith (not intelligent design... a very different concept) is that it cannot be proven except to each individual in a personal way. Thus, although I may have proof of it myself, I have no ability to share that proof. Does that make it invalid? This doesn't make it invalid. This makes it un-scientific. Therefore, it doesn't belong in science class.
      --
      Where does the white go when snow melts?
    8. Re:Two for two by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand what proof means.

      The grandparent states that ID isn't science because it doesn't meet the definition of a scientific theory. That doesn't mean it can't be taught elsewhere, but why should it be shown in science classrooms any more than the Flying Spaghetti Monster Theory?

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    9. Re:Two for two by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Serious question: should the inability to prove or disprove a theory automatically preclude it?

      It precludes it from being a scientific theory, yes. If you want to use the word "theory" in some other sense, you ought to be very clear about that.

      Thus, although I may have proof of it myself, I have no ability to share that proof. Does that make it invalid?

      Subjective insights are all well and good, but are not useful guides to the objective world. If you have a personal experience of Jesus's love, no one can tell you that what goes on inside your own heart and head is not invalid - but that applies equally to your neighbor's experience of Krishna's love, and the guy across the street's experience of perceiving that all five skandhas are empty, and the girl at the checkout counter's deep and abiding experience of Bob Dobbs as her short duration personal savior.

      If any of you were to take those personal experiences as being informative about biology, cosmology, history, chemistry, physics, engineering, economics, or anything outside your own subjective experience, that's not valid.

      I fear for a society that forces the prominent persons of intellect to be limited to any particular school of thought

      To be a person of intellect means to accept intellectual rigor and discipline, to carefully consider the foundations of ideas. Certain schools of thought are not compatible with intellectual rigor; to accept them marks one as not a person of intellect. Intelligent design is such a concept. It has no intellectual merit.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    10. Re:Two for two by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      To go along with this, show me how and where "evolution" has been proven. It cannot be either. It can, however, be disproved. (Genes are transferred in a specific way, find any animals with genes that does not math this and evolution have some explaining to do)

      It also provides predictions. Given a change in environment, mutations may introduce new features. For bacteria and fruit flies, these experiments does not require millions of years.
      --
      I lost my sig.
    11. Re:Two for two by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      no one can tell you that what goes on inside your own heart and head is not invalid

      Er, obviously that should be "is not valid". (Or "is invalid".)

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    12. Re:Two for two by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      Remember, one of the tenets of faith (not intelligent design... a very different concept) is that it cannot be proven except to each individual in a personal way. Thus, although I may have proof of it myself, I have no ability to share that proof. Does that make it invalid? Absolutely! ...if you're trying to introduce your faith as "science", that is. Your personal faith and theories in life you may choose however you like.
      --
      I lost my sig.
    13. Re:Two for two by Woundweavr · · Score: 1

      If Intelligent Design were true, we'd see similarities and patterns in the design of a variety of species. Even similar design patterns in the genetic code and make-up across a variety of species on various levels.

      Says who? If I do interior design, I can use plaid paint in one room and polka dotted wall paper in another.

      Additionally, similarities and patterns is ill-defined and non-instructive Horses and cows both have four legs. This does not in any way demonstrated the existence of a "designer". Indeed, it could easily be evidence of evolution since four legs provides stability that does not exist with 2 or 3.

      Really, well, I think it's interesting that numerous species cited as transitional forms later fail the test often turning out to be contemporaries.

      So what?
      I- Darwin is not Lord of Evolution. Aspects of the theory that he popularized (he didn't even invent it, he just did major work in the field and his work was well known) may be wrong. That doesn't invalidate evolution.

      II - "Intermediate forms" do exist.

      III - Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. Even if every change required an 'intermediate form' not finding it doesn't demonstrate its nonexistance.

      IV - Even if evolution was conclusively debunked that does not prove Intelligent Design.
    14. Re:Two for two by mortonda · · Score: 1

      "Intelligent Design" fails to meet the basic definition of a scientific idea: its proponents do not present testable hypotheses and do not provide evidence for their views that can be verified or duplicated by subsequent researchers. I may not have the proper language to express it, (and I'm not going to spend the time to write a thesis!) but here's an example to prove your claim false:

      "ID" predicts that a designer created complex organisms with complex components. These components would often bear resemblance to each other, being a "good design". By using a finite set of components, organisms would be able to be organized by similarities into "classes". There would not be a gradual transition from one organism to another, because intermediate steps would not be viable.

      This could be developed further in to many case studies. The very fact that biology can classify organisms and that there is no gradual progression of species could be seen as evidence...

      Anyway, just saying, ID can make predictions, and they can be tested. The result of this is another matter.
    15. Re:Two for two by Miltazar · · Score: 1

      Please, look up the definition to a word before complaining.

      From wikipedia:
      "In scientific usage, a theory does not mean an unsubstantiated guess or hunch ... a theory is a systematic and formalized expression of all previous observations, and is predictive, logical, and testable."
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory#Science

      Why does everyone always forget that certain words have certain meanings depending on the context in which they are used? Evolution is a scientific theory, thus you need to know the scientific definition of a theory.

      --
      "Hold! What you are doing to us is wrong! Why do you do this thing?"
    16. Re:Two for two by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      To go along with this, show me how and where "evolution" has been proven. It cannot be either. The important thing to remember here it that evolution is just a theory.

      You've completely missed the point. Evolution doesn't have to be proven, it has to be testable - and it is. ID doesn't have to be proven, it has to be testable - and it isn't. That is the difference, a scientific theory must produce testable predictions, it's part of the definition. Just because it doesn't doesn't automatically mean that it's wrong - but it does mean that it's not a scientific theory and has no place being taught in science class. By all means teach it in a religious education class though.

    17. Re:Two for two by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Do you understand that gravity is also just a theory?

    18. Re:Two for two by Lurker2288 · · Score: 1

      Your example isn't particularly material here because it doesn't tell us much about the veracity of ID as a whole. Conventional neo-Darwinism provides a perfectly adequate explanation for your example. First, we do see transitional forms in the fossil record, though obviously because the record is imperfect we don't see all of them. And molecular genetics allows us to see transitions at the genome level--we can see how mutations accumulate over time in conserved genes, and how the number increase as two species diverge. Neo-Darwinism also explains why you'd see such similarities throughout nature: because once a useful mechanism evolves, it gets passed down and spreads. Or, you could have a case of convergent evolution, where similar environments produce similar adaptations without a need for immediate common heritage.

      And frankly, even your propose prediction is kind of suspect. If your designer is all knowing and all powerful, why should he be limited to reusing the same techniques over and over? Wouldn't it be more interesting for him to try radically different stuff? And why couldn't he create transitional forms if he wanted to, just for a little variety? In short, your testable prediction is based entirely on how you interpret the designer's motives, making it subjective and untestable.

    19. Re:Two for two by LooTze · · Score: 1

      If Intelligent Design were true, we'd see similarities and patterns in the design of a variety of species. Even similar design patterns in the genetic code and make-up across a variety of species on various levels. I am not sure where you get this prediction from. Evolution from natural selection predicts that extant species evolved from simpler common ancestors - as a result, you expect to see similarities and patterns in the design of a variety of species even in their genetic code and make-up. This is routinely taken as evidence of evolution from common ancestor. You also run into vestigeal functions that have equivalent functional organs or proteins in related species. because as divergent branches evolved some functions became redundant.

      On the other hand, ID does not make any such prediction. If you see a similarity in design you can propose that this Intelligent Creator re-used an optimal design that s/he had found works best. If you completely different designs, you could say that the Creator was bloody genius and instead of getting bored reusing old working versions, s/he started from scratch every time.
    20. Re:Two for two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually they have tried to present evidence, and failed miserably. It's even worse than a matter of not being science, it's simply wrong. They tried to push the idea of an irreducibly complex blood cascade, yet we've known for decades that dolphins have precisely the type of blood cascade that IDists say is impossible. They said if you take away even one part of the bacterial flagellum, it's useless. The reality is you can take away 40 parts and it still has a function. And that's not even counting the falsehoods they try to spread about the evidence for evolutionary theory.

    21. Re:Two for two by BrianGKUAC · · Score: 1

      They're waiting for the Higgs Boson. Then they'll claim their evidence.

      --
      Menus: Linux=function, Windows=vendor, OS X=as little as possible. Makes a statement, don't you think?
    22. Re:Two for two by martyros · · Score: 1

      So how do you prove that something was designed? What kind of evidence would be convincing to you?

      This is part of the problem with the debate -- people say, "Science means falsifiable; you can't falsify this; therefore, this isn't science (and therefore not true)." Under those conditions, discussing things with evolutionists is a bit like playing Yu-Gi-Oh with my 7-year-old nephew: the rules are defined at the outset so you lose.

      --

      TCP: Why the Internet is full of SYN.

    23. Re:Two for two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I don't disagree with this, I personally believe that evolution shouldn't be taught as science either. Maybe this is just me, but I personally believe both evolution and intelligent design should fall under philosophy. One of the parts of the scientific method is observation. While scientists might be able to "observe effects of evolution", nobody has ever actually observed evolution taking place. Yes, we can prove "micro evolution" in labs, but that's only proving that cells can mutate (as opposed to evolve). It also seems evolution and the 2nd law of thermodynamics clash.

      One question that I've always wondered is this: If survival of the fittest is the truth, why all the fuss over global warming? If all the ice melts, can't penguins just adjust to the climate change? If they end up dying as a species because they can't adapt (like dinosaurs), isn't it just tough luck for them?

      Probably the biggest problem that I have accepting evolution is the philosophy that comes with it. I think Steve Turner summed it best, so I'll end with a quote of his.

      "If chance be the Father of all flesh,
      disaster is his rainbow in the sky,
      and when you hear
      State of Emergency!
      Sniper Kills Ten!
      Troops on Rampage!
      Whites go Looting!
      Bomb Blasts School!
      It is but the sound of man worshiping his maker."

    24. Re:Two for two by Copid · · Score: 1

      I think you may have missed what the point of the movie was. The point Stein was trying to make is that if researchers try to investigate ID, they are silenced by being "expelled" or what have you. It's rather hard to present tested hypotheses about ID when you are fired for even considering them.
      But the movie doesn't really cover any such examples. Further, it would seem that people like Behe, who are working from behind the protective curtain of tenure, would have gotten some meaningful work done. They haven't. Why not?
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    25. Re:Two for two by Copid · · Score: 1

      "ID" predicts that a designer created complex organisms with complex components. These components would often bear resemblance to each other, being a "good design".
      Why? Why would the designer not make each organism unique with its own special set of components? ID in general says nothing to that effect.

      If we want to start characterizing the designer (what are the designer's goals, mechanisms, timelines, etc.), then you'll have yourself something to go forward with. A properly specified designer with some meaningful restrictions on its methods would indeed be a workable scientific hypothesis.

      The ID crowd tends to be pretty quiet about the details, though, because for most of them, their hypothesis would slowly turn into the Christian creation myth. If that gets out, you can't just jam it into primary school textbooks. You're stuck actually having to do the research necessary to get it published. Right now, they're stuck keeping it vague enough not to be religion, but that also ends up making it vague enough not to be testable in any meaningful way.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    26. Re:Two for two by Copid · · Score: 1

      So how do you prove that something was designed? What kind of evidence would be convincing to you?
      Well, Dembski makes quite a lot of noise about "explanatory filters" and "specified complexity" and other such handwavy mathematical nonsense. If he could actually come up with The Dembski Test for Complexity and Design and apply it to some strings of information, my ears would start to perk up. Succeeding in a few double-blind tests for design on known cases would be mighty impressive. Right now, he has lots of proofs with very few definitions. Not a good place to be.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    27. Re:Two for two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just as with the Dilbert Flash fiasco [slashdot.org], I had already mentioned the nonsense of 'Expelled' in my journal [slashdot.org]

      You like to toot your own horn, eh?

      This might get you a minuscule amount of attention now and then, but it sure won't get you any respect.

  22. why? by ionix5891 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As a European person a question pops into my mind a lot lately

    "why is the US going backwards in the last decade? who is gaining from this dumbing down of the population??"

    1. Re:why? by Manchot · · Score: 1

      It's not that the population is being dumbed down. Really. It's that a vocal minority combined with a complicit conservative media is making it appear that way.

    2. Re:why? by turbine216 · · Score: 1

      who is gaining from this dumbing down of the population?

      In most cases, it's because a stupid consumer is the best kind of consumer.

      In some cases, it's because a stupid ideologue makes for a faithful ideologue. One who won't question you when you ask him for 10% of his paycheck on Sunday (just an example, it's not limited to people who worship on Sundays).

      And then there's always the idea that a stupid voter is the easiest type to influence. The type that would vote on issues that impact him emotionally, like whether or not he's descended from apes. If you're trying to garner votes from a group of people with a very strong negative opinion of a particular scientific theory, you take a position against that theory. When necessary, you even go so far as to manufacture a looming crisis to make it seem that much more urgent.

      At the end of it all, it's about money, and fools. Something about how they're easily parted...

    3. Re:why? by jrmcc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is the fear of the future the USA fallen victim to. The "baby boomers" are now reaching the "get-off-my-lawn" years and want to sink back into their barca-loungers and have warm and fuzzy ideas of the after-life. They grew up questioning authority and now that they are the authority they don't want to be questioned.

    4. Re:why? by JavaLord · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "why is the US going backwards in the last decade? who is gaining from this dumbing down of the population??"

      All of this darwin talk, and nobody brings up Dysgenics? It's not just the US population, some scientists think it's a worldwide effect.

    5. Re:why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So embracing sharia law and having declining birth rates is progress?

    6. Re:why? by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      Just a quick note on dysgenics; like eugenics it adds a 'directionality' to evolution which isn't there with natural selection. Natural selection only cares about reproductive success, where dysgenics and eugenics are concerned with the promotion or deletion of other traits which are considered 'good' or 'bad'.

      From the wiki article (note: three balance warnings on the page, sounds like fun :) the example of the dysgenic effect of the strongest healthiest young men being killed in the first world war only makes sense if you say strong and healthy is good; from a natural selection perspective, the first world war just means that it's more beneficial to be relatively strong and healthy, but with a pronounced limp so you don't get sent to battle.

      Anyway, for selective breeding purposes it DOES make sense to declare some traits such as tastiness (plants) or intelligence (humans) to be positive, it's just that natural selection might not see it the same way. I only mention this because it sounds like Expelled confuses evolution by natural selection (the most reproductive pass on their genes) with eu/dysgenic selection (the individuals I like best pass on their genes) which is an extreme disservice to Darwin.

      P.S. Is this a record for Godwin? The movie whose trailer is on youtube, linked from the summary compares its opponents to Nazis? Does that mean this thread was officially over in the -3rd comment?

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
  23. It isn't science. by Don_dumb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    encourage people to speak out if they believe How many times do we have to say it, SCIENCE is not about BELIEF. You can believe whatever you want but in a science class (or academic institution) and officially (the government position) the thinking should be one of reason, evidence and demonstration of understanding. Belief has no place.

    Remember if intelligent design is correct then it can be explained, demonstrated and then analysed further. Until then it is as much a waste of time as it is trying to work out how much flour Flying Spagetti Monster is made up of.
    --
    If this were really happening, what would you think?
    1. Re:It isn't science. by munik · · Score: 1

      Interpretation of facts is based on presuppositions, which are based on our beliefs. Scientists sometimes presuppose that only those things which can be directly observed, explained, demonstrated, analysed further, and etc. can be shown to be true. However, that's a faulty presupposition. What about gravity? Energy?

    2. Re:It isn't science. by Epeeist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you are trying to say (very badly) that all observations are theory-laden then I doubt that anybody will argue with you. Similarly if you want to argue that the Duhem-Quine thesis would allow multiple theories that explain the observed facts of evolution then you won't get any disagreement.

      So its down to you. Produce another theory that explains the facts. Just make sure it has the same explanatory power as Darwin's theory and the neo-Darwinian synthesis. It also has to be predictive and the predictions have to be testable and falsifiable. Parsimony is another requirement - no de-occamisation to sneak a god in by the side door.

      Creationists are extremely good at whining about the ToE. All they have managed to produce, as Behe had to admit at the Kitzmiller-Dover tria, is something with the same scientific standing as astrology - http://www.cavehill.uwi.edu/bnccde/ph29a/thagard.html

    3. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When are you going to list thats that meet the supposedly faulty presupposition of science? Gravity and energy are both completely observable. Are you just a troll?

    4. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What about gravity?

      Jump off a building. You'll feel it.
      Energy?

      You'll feel the energy of the landing.

    5. Re:It isn't science. by munik · · Score: 0

      You're right: gravity can be directly observed.

      > "But if we are allowed to take our own beliefs in science..."

      I hold that you are believing in evolution. It has yet to be demonstrated to me that evolution is directly observable and demonstrable.

    6. Re:It isn't science. by munik · · Score: 0

      Yes. Again, with respect to you, I hold that you are believing in evolution. Evolution can be neither observed nor demonstrated.

    7. Re:It isn't science. by gawdonblue · · Score: 2, Funny

      Flying Spagetti Monster
      Tis spelt Spaghetti thou blasphemer. Ware His Noodly Appendage lest it smite thee!

      Oh, and further scientific proof that pirates stop global warming: http://www.google.com/trends?q=global+warming%2C+pirates&ctab=0&geo=all&date=mtd&sort=1
    8. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Noodles!

    9. Re:It isn't science. by mfnickster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which part of evolution do you think hasn't been observed or demonstrated?

      Is it mutation? Natural selection? Sexual selection? Speciation in the lab and in the wild?

      Typically we see this claim made about "macroevolution," as if it's a sum-greater-than-its-parts kind of thing. It isn't.

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
    10. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did you do that? How did that happen? That is so funny. I am totally LMAO!

    11. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By what empirical basis do you hold your senses to be generally reliable? Or on what rational basis do you hold your intellect to be generally rational? In fact, reason and observation themselves, two cornerstones of SCIENCE, are held on mere BELIEF.

    12. Re:It isn't science. by Tetsujin · · Score: 2, Funny

      Until then it is as much a waste of time as it is trying to work out how much flour Flying Spaghetti Monster is made up of. Hi,

            Is there a denomination that believes in a Flying Spaghetti Monster made of rice pasta? My wife has Celiac and so we want our thinly veiled lampoon-deity to be gluten-free.
      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    13. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until then it is as much a waste of time as it is trying to work out how much flour Flying Spagetti Monster is made up of.


      This is actually quite plausible. From drawings we can determine ( admitedly not with great accuracy ) its volume. Given that the FSM's shape doesn't really allow for much lift due to aerodynamic features, and as there is little evidence of any other possible explanation, the most plausible mechanism by which the monster keeps itself afloat is a matter of buoyancy. Now, we know the density of air, and so an estimate of the FSM's maximum possible flour content is a simple application of Archimedes principle. Establishing a lower bound is more tricky without more details about the monster's composition, but at least we can narrow it down to a maximum finite value.
    14. Re:It isn't science. by astrohopper · · Score: 1

      Could it be that the spaghetti monster's meatballs, actually evolved on the flying mass of dough ? It seems to me that given enough time life with the ability to reproduce will pop up, and evolve into savory tasty meatballs.

    15. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      800 quarthexes of flour. Everyone knows that.

    16. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot; obviously force fed all of your knowledge from a standard text book and have never found anything new in the scientific community or extended one of it's principles. The whole point of being a scientist is to have a belief(s); whereby, you [demonstrate and analyze further] the foundations of that belief(s). You may fail, but you may also develop a better understanding of a principle of which you were not originally looking for. My point if scientists didn't "believe" they wouldn't have negated other theories from the past or have developed new ones, pick any field. We would all have 1 textbook, unchanging and always correct because there is nothing else to learn. A belief is merely a hypothesis, a basic scientific principle, one of which you failed miserably to learn; hence, you are an idiot.

    17. Re:It isn't science. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Those are two ideas that are also held by serious Xian theologians.

      So the fact that scientists also depend on them really isn't all that earth shattering.

      Christian != American Evangelical Christian. Although they do tend to speak as if it were so (evangelicals).

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    18. Re:It isn't science. by foobarbaz · · Score: 1
      Evolution can be neither observed nor demonstrated.

      I know a strain of penicillin-resistant bacteria that disagrees with you.

    19. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many times do we have to say it, SCIENCE is not about BELIEF. How funny. Do you BELIEVE that? Do scientists BELIEVE in the law of non-contradiction? What makes us BELIEVE that reproducible experimental results can support/disprove a hypothesis? Science is a framework built from axioms that cannot be defined by science - they are outside the scientific realm. Science is largely buttressed by reason, which in turn is supported by other philosophic notions. You cannot have science without belief. Today, science has cut off its trunk; We no longer need those underpinnings. We have our precious science, we need nothing else. It has turned into our religion - it is our belief.
    20. Re:It isn't science. by Don_dumb · · Score: 1

      Oh no, I sense a schism in the pastafarian movement. The ric-ites and the glutinis may split.

      --
      If this were really happening, what would you think?
    21. Re:It isn't science. by Tringard · · Score: 1

      Remember if intelligent design is correct then it can be explained, demonstrated and then analysed further.

      Actually I don't think this is the case. We don't want ID taught in the classroom because it is not science, it can not be. As far as I can imagine, God is not testable by science, so no hypothesis will ever be added to science which supports God's existence. Thus science will not lead us to support the existence of God, even if He does exist.

      This is why the ID-proponent spends so much time poking at those areas where weakness is seen in evolution. If a scientific hypothesis can not be submitted supporting his belief, then the next best thing is to attack that which threatens the belief. Ironically these attacks only strengthen evolution as answers are sought out to explain those weaknesses.

      (Disclaimer: I do believe in God and that He is our creator. I leave a place for evolution, but am not overly concerned by it.)

    22. Re:It isn't science. by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

      Oh no, I sense a schism in the pastafarian movement. The ric-ites and the glutinis may split. Well I for one can't believe a benevolent Flying Spaghetti Monster who wants us to worship him but doesn't want to make it clear that he exists would create people who would be caused great digestive distress by His noodly appendages...
      --
      Bow-ties are cool.
    23. Re:It isn't science. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Evolution can be neither observed nor demonstrated.

      Define "evolution." I'm guessing you are defining it in such a way that you are correct, but that your definition doesn't match what others mean by it. I could define "gravity" in such a way it can't be "observable". Can you see a gravity wave? Is there an explanation for how and why? Where is the unified equation? By that, anyone that believes gravity exists must be non-scientific. After all, both gravity and evolution are just theories.

    24. Re:It isn't science. by mog007 · · Score: 2, Funny

      The Great Noodly one is not composed of flour, He created the world, and gave us knowledge of his Noodlyness so we may eventually create flour, and turn it into an approximation of His form.

    25. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and evolution is true...please it is a modern fact, devoted by reason...it is certainly not true, and cannot, and will not be proven. Yet, it seems you believe that evolution is truth...and science has lead you to this...how sad you do not understand this simple concept. science is not truth always, yet is based on modern fact. it redeems itself by being able to correct itself by aquired knowledge. are you a fool?

      second, you and your crew with the Spaghetti Monster are damn idiots. it is with always intellectual superiority that you compare leprechauns with factual historical figures like Jesus, Mohammad with KNOWN myths such as Santa Claus. And your the smart ones? Lol.

    26. Re:It isn't science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once again, you are confusing "evolution" with "adaptation." They are NOT the same thing. I know few Christians/Creationists that woud ever try to argue with adaptation. There is nothing un-Biblical about God creating life withg the ability to adapt to it's surroundings. What many Christians DO take issue with is the concept of evolution and the spontaneous ariaing of life by chance. Adaptation in a complex organism (say, canaries!) can be observed, documented, and verified in our lifetime. Evolution can NOT be observed in the same way. You cannot, for instance, watch a squirrel "evolve" into a panda. The concept that many Christians reject is one of lifeforms changing into complete, separate, wholly different lifeforms. A bacteria adapting so that it can resist a previously effective means of control is no different from dark-coloured moths being the ones that survived during the industrialization of the UK. That the fittest survive is also never been a hotly-contested topic amongst church folk, as far as I know. Again, there is nothing un-Biblical about a strong animal surviving, whilst a weak one dies. Taking the fact that an organism can adapt to it's surroundings and then hypothesizing that it could, given enough time, change into an entirely different creature is an example of following something to it's illogical conclusion. Please understand WHICH concept you are arguing if you choose to continue this debate, but do NOT try to write off adaptation and evolution as interchangable, as they are decidedly not.

    27. Re:It isn't science. by wfolta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How many times do we have to say it, SCIENCE is not about BELIEF. You can believe whatever you want but in a science class (or academic institution) and officially (the government position) the thinking should be one of reason, evidence and demonstration of understanding. Belief has no place.

      Actually, belief plays a much larger role in science than you want to admit... What is a hypothesis, except a belief? Yes, a hypothesis must be tested, but it starts as a belief.

      And I'm beginning to notice more and more that people will use, for example, statistical methods to find something of significance, then basically propose the explanation that suits them and because what they found was (statistically) significant, their explanation is somehow more credible. But there are multiple explanations and they don't even bother to investigate others, because somehow validity leaks from the observation to the explanation.

      And at what point do you accept an explanation as valid? Factor A -- significant at the 95% confidence level -- can be explained by X, Y, then Z. Yep, sounds good to me. Very clever explanation.

      It might also be mentioned that Stein is not the only guy on a crusade, as it were. Look at the "evolution" of Dawkins from explainer of evolution to crusader against religion.

  24. Another American obsession by jonnyj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This whole debate seems pretty strange to European eyes. I consider myself to be a fundamentalist Bible believing evangelical Christian, but, in Britain, people like me take the view that Genesis describes the evolutionary process pretty well. Although many Evangelicals support Intelligent Design or Young Earth Creationism, there's little opposition within Christian circles to full acceptance of the scientific explanation of the origins of life.

    Between this and support for a right-wing social and foreign policy agenda, I sometimes wonder if American evangelicals read the same Bible that I do.

    1. Re:Another American obsession by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      That seems a little odd to me, as an American. One of the reasons the colonists came here was to escape religious persecution. It can't have changed all that much over the years, can it? Europe's religious elite didn't take too kindly the idea that the Earth might be round or that people might be descended from apes. Even now, the new Pope is visiting us and basically calling everyone a bunch of heathens, and telling us we need to return to Catholicism. Not terribly progressive, if you ask me.

    2. Re:Another American obsession by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1
      I sometimes wonder if American evangelicals read the same Bible that I do.


      No, they don't. What they appear to be trying to do is take us back to the days of the Puritans. Being from Great Britain, you remember the Puritans, don't you? The ones who used force to take over the government for a time and tried to impose their religious views on the entire country?

      Yeah, that's the same thing America's Evangelicals are trying to do (minus the military portion but occasionally using terrorist-like acts to force their views on others).

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    3. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please can we distinguish the origins of life from the origins of species?

    4. Re:Another American obsession by kmichels · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You have to give our American evangelical fruitcake cousins credit though, for at least standing firm in what they believe in, even if they are completely and utterly batfuck crazy. They, at least, are biblical "literalists" (I use that word very very loosely), ie they believe in the entire contents of their bibles, from start to finish.

      European, and especially UK "fundamentalist evangelicals" on the other hand are neither fundamentalist nor evangelical in the strict sense of the words, and don't have the strength of conviction to believe that their bibles are the inspired word of god. I've always found that stance more than a little perplexing: either your faith and beliefs are based on the bible or they're not. You can't choose to only believe certain chunks of it and not others, because that at once invalidates its authority.

    5. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. You are wrong. Catholics and many others believe that the Bible is inspired by God and that the Bible is 100% truth. There can be multiple meanings of the word truth. Take a look at any given political event today and watch 3 different networks coverage of it. Most of the time the reporters are all telling the truth... but it's a flip side of the coin from what's on the other channel. Same with the Bible... The Bible is literally a collection of books... a library. It not just one book... it's a whole collection of books that have, over time been bound together so that it's easier to transport and read. That combining of the books happened around the time the printing press was created... There's poetry books in there. There's literay books in there. There's romance novels in there. There's history books in there. All of them have truths to them. Just because there's a few facts in the Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John that are different from book to book doesn't mean that any of them are invalid. They are depictions of the same stories from different points of view. As such some things are stressed more in one book than in another, and so on and so forth. Just because an elementary school's 3rd grade level math book may not mention calculus formulas and irrational numbers, or imaginary numbers does not mean those advanced math ideas don't exist. It's just something that wasn't mentioned in the lower level book since the students haven't advanced enough yet to learn the higher level stuff.

    6. Re:Another American obsession by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      It's a common misconception that colonists came here to "escape religious oppression." The reality is MUCH more complicated. First of all, there were several waves of colonists in several different geographical areas, each coming for their own reasons. Colonists in Jamestown, for example, generally didn't give two shits about religion. They were mostly here for land and money. Puritan colonists in New England ostensibly came for religious reasons (though many of them were no doubt more hopeful for the land and money). But they didn't come to "escape religious persecution" so much as to "escape religious persecution against THEM" (i.e. not to reject the idea of theocracy, but merely to establish their OWN theocracy).

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    7. Re:Another American obsession by maxume · · Score: 1

      There are probably more fundamentalist Bible believing evangelical Genesis describes evolution Christians in the U.S. than there are in Britain.

      There also happens to be a rather large group of fundamentalist I believe every-damn-thing my pa told me Christians in the U.S.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    8. Re:Another American obsession by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      I've got a newsflash for you. EVERYONE picks and chooses passages from the Bible to believe and not believe in. I don't see many fundamentalists sacrificing goats, marrying their sisters, or trying to rebuild Soloman's temple.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    9. Re:Another American obsession by madjia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That seems a little odd to me, as an American. One of the reasons the colonists came here was to escape religious persecution. It can't have changed all that much over the years, can it? Europe's religious elite didn't take too kindly the idea that the Earth might be round or that people might be descended from apes. Even now, the new Pope is visiting us and basically calling everyone a bunch of heathens, and telling us we need to return to Catholicism. Not terribly progressive, if you ask me. Not all of Europe had religious persecution, some countries in Europe maybe, but don't forget all the countries ARE and WERE very different from each other. Just writing this because it touched a nerve I think ;) My country, the Netherlands, has a very tolerant history where freedom of religion has always been very important.

      The Pope also has nothing to do with Europe, he is not a European leader of any country, he is the head of a international church whose headquarters happen to be in this continent.

      And as another 'European' I have to say the discussion is something you won't really see here, maybe not even because everyone accepts evolution, but mostly because religion is something private. People don't really try to convince people of their religious views. Maybe a cultural difference?
    10. Re:Another American obsession by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      It comes down to two points: 1) commitment to the literal interpretation of the Bible, and 2) the fear that evolution discredits Genesis 1-2 based on the literal view.

      Mind you, this isn't the view of every American Christian, only the most vocal and the ones who want a lever to use on the communities of Christians-- somewhat akin to, "if you don't believe a 6-day creation, you ain't a good Christian!" (add southern US accent and toss in a "bubba" if you like)

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    11. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many of the old-timers in my church don't. I do. I nearly had a full religious meltdown when I came to terms with this. There is one fundamental truth. Our inability to understand the truth does not make it any less true.

    12. Re:Another American obsession by Tipa · · Score: 1

      That's actually true of Americans as well. The Catholic Church sees no conflict between belief and science, and I know for certain the Episcopal Church knows the difference between metaphor and research as well. Those ate the only two churches I have been involved with, but I don't consider anti-intellectualism to be a property of all American religion.

    13. Re:Another American obsession by jonnyj · · Score: 1

      European, and especially UK "fundamentalist evangelicals" on the other hand are neither fundamentalist nor evangelical in the strict sense of the words, and don't have the strength of conviction to believe that their bibles are the inspired word of god.

      Are you parodying a position or do you really believe that? If by fundamentalist you mean a person who believes that the Bible is the inspired, inerrant word of God, then I'm one of those. And if by evangelical you mean a born-again Protestant fundamentalist with a personal faith in God, I'm one of those, too.

      But I also believe that the origin of the species of life (I accept the correction made above) is pretty much the way science describes it. I can't see any conflict between the two positions. And nor can most of my fundamentalist friends.

    14. Re:Another American obsession by Xiaran · · Score: 1

      SOmeone has made the point a few posts down from me but I would also like to make the point that Americans seem to misunderstand a lot of the reasons for migration of religious groups from Europe to the New World in the 16/17 hundreds. When people like, for example, the Puritans say they were "persecuted" they mean that they could not convince the powers that be to implement their way of thinking upon the masses.

      And also are you surprised that the Pope is telling people the become Catholic. He does that all the time. Feel free to ignore the old fool.

    15. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      marrying their sisters
      You've never been to Kansas, have you?
    16. Re:Another American obsession by gosand · · Score: 1
      ...Genesis describes the evolutionary process pretty well.


      I grew up Catholic, went to Catholic school for 8 years.. nuns, daily prayer, weekly mass, etc etc. They didn't teach us anything about evolution. But I remember the first time I heard of it, I thought "oh, that is what the Bible was talking about". But nobody ever TAUGHT that, because to refer to anything existing outside the Church's teachings must have been forbidden. We were only taught what was in the Bible, no other explanation was given. That's just the way it was, no questions. I mean, real-world science that backs up the fanciful book that we are just supposed to believe - why wouldn't they embrace it? Well, probably because that might lead to actual free thinking, and they couldn't have that now, could they?

      Intelligent Design didn't exist when I was growing up, it was just called "Don't ask any questions or you're going to Hell" I went to my friend's kids Confirmation party this weekend. They are 11 and 9. He went to the same school I did, but neither of us believe in any of that anymore. (his wife wanted his kids to do it) I told him "You know, it's funny they confirm kids so early these days. I guess they want to get them while they still believe in Santa Claus." We had a good laugh while eating a piece of cross-shaped cake.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    17. Re:Another American obsession by codegen · · Score: 1

      This discussion takes me way back to my early days in University before I saw the light (or rather the mediocre marks) and switched to Computer Science. As I remember from one of my political studies course (which remained surprisingly useful duiring my time in the private sector given the office politics), the phenomena of new world fundamentalism (and not just in religion) is directly tied to isolationalism. Political thought was and is a continuously evolving process. Many of the persecuted colonists were not the newer thought escaping, but the older thoughts that were escaping the new. The new world offered space where they could be by themselves with their own beliefs, free from outside influences which would challenge them. In the old world, the continuing interaction with other countries and other beliefs cause the more fundamentalist views to be moderated. Once the US left the empire, the effect became more pronounced, with the older beliefs more established and a melting pot philosophy limiting the new ideas. The remaining colonies (Canada, Australia, NZ,etc.) form a middle ground between the two. There were a lot more details but that is the core of the argument that I remember.

      As for the Pope, the latest study shows that some large number (I forget the actual number and am too lazy to google for it) of Italians don't do confessional, and attendance is down all over Europe. The strongest strength for the RC is actually in the developing world.

      --
      Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
    18. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but you folks also believe race car driving means folks making left and *right* turns of varying radius with really heavy breaking and acceleration with a wide difference in speed. We think racing is rednecks making regular relatively gentle high-speed left turns.

      Apparently a large portion of us are too slow to handle complexity. But please know, there are some F1 fans here.

    19. Re:Another American obsession by mcvos · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That seems a little odd to me, as an American. One of the reasons the colonists came here was to escape religious persecution. It can't have changed all that much over the years, can it? It's been centuries, not mere years, and a lot has changed. Today, the US is starting to look like the land of religious persecution, whereas most of Europe (except Poland and perhaps Italy, it sometimes seems) tends to take a more enlightened approach.

      It's not uncommon for European christians, even very conservative christians, to favour progressive social and environmental politics. Although they do tend to discourage abortion, euthanasia and homosexuality (unlike progressive christians who think that's your own business), and a few even refuse to have their kids vaccinated.

      Even now, the new Pope is visiting us and basically calling everyone a bunch of heathens, and telling us we need to return to Catholicism. Not terribly progressive, if you ask me. But even he (or the Catholic Chruch in general, at least) has accepted the theory of evolution and quite a lot of other well-established scientific theories as our most accurate knowledge of nature so far.
    20. Re:Another American obsession by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Between this and support for a right-wing social and foreign policy agenda, I sometimes wonder if American evangelicals read the same Bible that I do. Americans tend not to read books, not even the Bible. They much prefer to get their religious instruction from a man standing up in a pulpit yelling at them on a Sunday morning. Most Christians would be shocked by what's in the Bible if they ever took the time to read it.

      http://skepticsannotatedbible.com/

      http://dark-sided.blogspot.com/2006/09/atheist-reads-bible-one-big-wtf.html

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    21. Re:Another American obsession by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      Centuries, yes. It's all of the time that makes up US history, but in terms of religious history or European history, it's not very long at all. I don't think religion tends to reinvent itself very quickly.

      I've listened to some conservatives speak about what the Pope is up to, and many are angry at what they perceive as the "dumbing down" of religion. It's a lot like what has happened to our education system and our government. All these things the church expects of patrons are too difficult, Latin mass, confession, and so on, so let's skip over them and just call everyone a good catholic. This whole bit about accepting evolution really irks a lot of people. I wonder if the Pope really believes what he's saying or if he's saying that to welcome in the flock. I only refer to the Pope because it's in the news, the Vatican's antics are about the only religious news I ever hear.

      I understand the replies above about persecution as well. There were many different groups that settled here and they all had a variety of reasons for leaving Europe. I was always taught that freedom of/from religion was a big factor. I grew up in New England though, so I'm sure our text books were slanted to the New England colonist's point of view. Sure, we had the Salem witch trials and isolationism of various religious groups, so the colonists didn't exactly sort things out all that great on their own.

    22. Re:Another American obsession by kmichels · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find more of them than you suspect. That lot down in Texas who made the news recently were marrying and shagging their sisters and daughters! I'll bet I can find you a few who not only sacrificed their goats but probably also shagged them first. And as for rebuilding Solomon's temple, if it weren't for the political difficulties, I'd wager more than a fiver (£) that there are several people down in the American South with more money than sense that would contribute to a temple rebuilding fund given half a chance.

      As for picking and choosing, I'm one of many who chose to not believe in any of it! An interesting literary work, but definitely not the in-errant word of an infanticidal deity.

    23. Re:Another American obsession by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      Well, I'd say that American "fundamentalism" is a different beast and has a different history than the European brand (although I'm not absolutely certain of it).

      At it's core, Christian fundamentalism in the US started out as a reactionary movement to some European scholarly analysis of the text of the Bible (that alone should tell you something about the difference between European fundamentalism and the US brand).

      Over the years, the movement has become more reactionary and increasingly radicalized towards anything that might question their fundamentalist principles. Hence, this is a much bigger issue in the US than it is elsewhere.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    24. Re:Another American obsession by mcvos · · Score: 1

      Centuries, yes. It's all of the time that makes up US history, but in terms of religious history or European history, it's not very long at all. I don't think religion tends to reinvent itself very quickly. Christianity reinvented itself quite a lot over the last five centuries.

      I've listened to some conservatives speak about what the Pope is up to, and many are angry at what they perceive as the "dumbing down" of religion. It's a lot like what has happened to our education system and our government. All these things the church expects of patrons are too difficult, Latin mass, confession, and so on, so let's skip over them and just call everyone a good catholic. Being protestant, I don't care much about internal affairs of Catholicism (although I'd appreciate it if they'd excommunicate child abusing priests), but I was under the impression that Latin mass (or Latin sermons at least) had been done away with during the counter reformation. But I admit I know little about Catholic liturgy.

      This whole bit about accepting evolution really irks a lot of people. I wonder if the Pope really believes what he's saying or if he's saying that to welcome in the flock. I don't see why he wouldn't believe it. He's an educated man, and the Vatican's position on science has come a long way since the Galileo fiasco.
    25. Re:Another American obsession by kmichels · · Score: 1

      There are also probably a billion people on the planet who would agree that the Roman Catholic interpretation of scripture is, to put it politely, a little imaginative: immaculate conception, virgin birth conception, male only priesthood, celibacy, papal infallibility. Roman Catholic theology is based *as* much on tradition as it is on the bible, and they are the first to admit it, and actually are quite proud of it, and in the same way as Islam has done with the hadith, they too have referred back to interpretative works of early church fathers and indeed more modern papal brain-farts for inspiration.

      And I'm afraid I just don't buy your excuse for the bible. The differences and inconsistencies go way beyond just different points of view - they are opposing points of view in many cases, sometimes within the same book, such as Job, nevermind between books.

      Remember, you're supposed to believe in an omnipotent, omniscient deity: if it is as good as you fundamentalists make out it is, then surely it would be able to ensure that the bible accurately and consistently represented its views?

    26. Re:Another American obsession by protein+folder · · Score: 1

      The Pope also has nothing to do with Europe, he is not a European leader of any country, he is the head of a international church whose headquarters happen to be in this continent. <nitpick>The pope is actually the head of the Stato della Città del Vaticano, which is technically a sovereign state, tiny though it may be. Before the unification of italy, the pope actually ruled over decent-sized chunks of land.</nitpick>
      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    27. Re:Another American obsession by kmichels · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I should have been a bit more explicit in what I meant. My experience of the religious fraternity in the American south is that by far the majority do not accept evolution because their bibles don't allow it, mostly because a literal interpretation of the creation myth in the bible does not allow for the mind-numbing amount of time it actually took for us to get to where we are today (young earth theology seems particularly prevalent)

      In the UK, there are folk who believe this, but it tends, in my experience, to be limited to the lunatic fringe elements of fundamentalist evangelicalism.

      Which effectively makes them less fundamentalist than they think they are. If you're a fundamentalist then you are going to have a hard time *not* being a young earth believer: remember that if you're a fundamentalist, then creation happened as per the Genesis account, and you can't go having all kinds of funky interpretations of what "day" means.

      As for inerrant, if the bible is inerrant, then your deity of choice is one badly confused individual (or should,that be "trindividual"?) and was clearly smoking something strong when he was dictating his masterpiece. Maybe that's where Rastafarians have it right: you have to be stoned out of your mind for it to (a) make sense and (b) not see the glaring inadequacies of it in terms of consistency and accuracy.

      Besides, if it was the inerrant word of your deity, and it was *that* important, why is it that we do not have the original documents to work from?

    28. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "people like me take the view that Genesis describes the evolutionary process pretty well."

      An interesting comment, considering that it doesn't describe evolutionary processes at all. Unless one is referring to the talking snake.

    29. Re:Another American obsession by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Hm. So you think that nothing has changed since those colonists departed from England? I wonder what source of news (and history!) you consume regularly...

    30. Re:Another American obsession by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Between this and support for a right-wing social and foreign policy agenda, I sometimes wonder if American evangelicals read the same Bible that I do.

      Most American supporters of ID don't read the bible, or for that matter agree with or know the official position of their church. The problem is "superstar" preachers who make money from controversy and the appearance of persecution, and the wealth they have generated which they've used to buy their way into the highest levels of the US government and pay for huge media campaigns to try to miseducate people.

    31. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My country, the Netherlands, has a very tolerant history where freedom of religion has always been very important. Which is why the Pilgrims (the Puritans who would go on to found Thanksgiving and basically nothing else, Massachusetts was founded later and the US's founding fathers were decidedly not Puritan) went there first. After being jailed in England for being what today we'd probably call "terrorists" they moved to Amsterdam, where they were allowed to practice their beliefs in peace.

      Until the stifling religious freedom (having to put up with people who had other ideas) got to be too much and they left for New England, a region just north of the existing Virginia Colony. Then, with God by their side, they missed and hit Cape Cod instead.

      Ironically one of the things the Puritans succeeded in doing was being so brutally restrictive that they probably helped religious freedom make it into the US Constitution. Otherwise religion would have been decided by state, which each state having their own official religion.
    32. Re:Another American obsession by superyooser · · Score: 1

      This whole debate seems pretty strange to European eyes. I consider myself to be a fundamentalist Bible believing evangelical Christian, but, in Britain, people like me take the view that Genesis describes the evolutionary process pretty well.... Is that what your tour guide told you?

      Sorry for the sarcasm. But at this rate of weakening doctrine, your church, too, will soon be a museum. Or a mosque.

      I weep for Britain. I hope your flag will wave proudly for a long time to come.
    33. Re:Another American obsession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same book, different brain.


      Personally, I'm with you. But in this country, there's very little room in the public arena left for compromise, understanding, "devil's advocate" thinking, or anything else but an us-and-them attitude.


      I don't know if this is because of 9/11, republicans vs. democrats, or our Puritan pilgrims roots; as a citizen of this country, polarization seems to be the theme of the day.

    34. Re:Another American obsession by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I sometimes wonder if American evangelicals read the same Bible that I do.

      Well, you might be assuming too much to think they're reading the Bible at all. Some portion of them are only memorizing certain lines from the Bible and talking about them outside of any meaningful context.

    35. Re:Another American obsession by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Besides, if it was the inerrant word of your deity, and it was *that* important, why is it that we do not have the original documents to work from?

      The dog ate my homework...
      uhhhhhhhh I mean Satan.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    36. Re:Another American obsession by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Yes, European Christians have appallingly weaken doctrine.

      They should not be allowed to call themselves fundamentalist evangelical Christians until they have been properly re-indoctrinated.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    37. Re:Another American obsession by GWBasic · · Score: 1

      "people like me take the view that Genesis describes the evolutionary process pretty well." An interesting comment, considering that it doesn't describe evolutionary processes at all. Unless one is referring to the talking snake.

      That's because you believe that the story of Adam & Eve isn't meant to be interpreted literally. The only "fact" about the story of Adam & Eve is that it's one of the oldest known written stories.

      Personally, I interpret the story of Adam & Eve as a form of historical fiction about when a group of primates became human because they stopped living from instinct and started to rely on knowledge. Thus, it's perfectly compatible with evolution as long as one realizes that no storyteller from 6-7 thousand years ago would have any idea about DNA & mutations.

  25. Win Ben Stein's Attention by folstaff · · Score: 2, Informative
    If you actually watch the movie or listen to Stein talk about the movie, of course the majority of this group won't, Stein is pointing out that there is no tolerance for dissenting opinions in universities.

    Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species. He rejects that it is the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does.

    1. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species. He rejects that it is the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does.

      So, he doesn't reject evolution except for the part that really undermines his personal choice of mythologies. And he doesn't like university science curriculums because they ... don't confuse mythologies with science? There are entire coures of university study dedicated to mythology, and indeed there are entire universities that are all about training people to be good religious Borg units. The views he holds on this subject are talked about and celebrated at such places every single day. What he wants to do is remove the scientific method and critical thinking from the science classroom.

      If he has a point in this area, it has far more to do with liberal arts and poli-sci type educations, where far more subjective and debatable things are quashed in the classroom every day. Is he bothered by the way science is twisted in some classrooms? Then he should start with the professors who think that the World Trade Center was blown up by an army of stealthy NSA demolotion experts because - lacking some basic science education - they can't get their heads around the difference between "melted" steel and "weakened" steel. There's plenty of things to examine in the classroom without debating whether or not you can become infected by a bacteria today that didn't exist yesterday (since, you can).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by martinmcc · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have done both, and yes one of the points he is making is that there is no tolerance for ID in may scientific establishments. He does however bring in a lot of erroneous examples to make this point.

      Secondly, the reason science teachers teaching ID is not tolerated, is because it is not science. Quite simple - someone teaching ID in a science class is not doing their job.

      Stein does reject Darwinism for the evolution species. Evolution has nothing to do with where life comes from - it answers why life is like it is now. The beginnings of life is another question, which has many interesting conjectures and experiments, but nothing to do with evolution.

      He also blames Darwin for the holocaust (always a nice move) and is patently and obviously dishonest in word and action (he used sound tracks without permission, copied animations without permission, got interviews based on false premises etc.)

      The fact is, ID is complete and utter nonsense. Try reading anything advancing ID. The idea itslef is so fool of logical falicies it would not fool a open minded six year old. Google some of their 'proofs' - either they are extremely lazy, or they provide proofs they know are false. No serious honest person, whether Christian or otherwise takes ID seriously, it is just extremists attempt to muddy the waters because they fear people have too much knowledge and more and more are coming to realise the ludicrousness of religion.

    3. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yessir, that's right, universities never attempt to challenge current theories or advance new viewpoints. The computers we're using right now, and the Internet they're connected to, were all developed because those universities just love maintaining the status quo.

      What Stein and millions of other ID apologists don't want to accept is that universities have no tolerance for unscientific, magical opinions like their little unprovable invisible man myth. That's exactly the way it should be, and if they have a problem with that, they can go back to clubbing gophers with large rocks and eating them raw because the greatest caveman scientists have proven that it's scientifically impossible to control fire and thus there's no point in trying.

    4. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species. He rejects that it is the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does.

      Just a few points:

      1) If Stein doesn't reject Darwinian speciation, then what's the controversy?

      2) Evolution in the presence of DNA is inevitable. Evolution pre-DNA, or of DNA, (i.e. as origin of life) is currently a theory. I'm glad that Ben Stein at least gets that, but the majority of creationists don't. Of course evolution (based on simpler hereditory mechanisms than DNA/RNA) most likely did create life, but there's no proof of it yet.

      3) Given that there is NO single (or even majority opinion) theory as to the origin of the laws of the universe, Ben Stein denying that they were derived by "Darinism" is rather odd! Are they really related in his mind?!!!

    5. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by ThogScully · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Evolution is based in science. It has evidence and is discovered/researched by way of scientific means. People who believe the scientific method can accurately be used to discover and research things can go so far as to say that they believe in them because science supports it.

      ID is based on religion and tradition. It does not come from evidence or from any application of science as we define science. It's presented as an alternate explanation evidenced by religious texts and motivations. People who believe in God or religion and believe what their respective religion tells them to believe about creationism or ID can go so far as to say they believe in ID or creationism because their religion supports it.

      The real conflict with evolution versus ID is that ID proponents want ID taught in science class. That would be akin to Darwinism and evolution being taught in a psychology or theology class. It's just out of place. Most reasonable people I know on both sides of this can accept that there's a difference between philosophy and science and that they don't need to be mixed and that one is free to take their own beliefs from one, the other, or some combination of both.

      The issue I take with this movie is not that it presents ID and/or creationism, but that it makes those who believe in it out to be the victim of oppression because "you can't talk about that in science class" and because the scientific community will shun you for teaching it. Truthfully, the scientific community only wants to make sure it's not presented as science because it devalues work they take seriously. And Ben Stein is using/abusing his reputation for being a very intelligent person convince religious folks that they are being oppressed, so they'll lash out against anyone who says that ID and creationism shouldn't be taught in science class. Everyone's free to believe what they want, but school is not the place for misrepresenting the beliefs of some or even many people as the result of scientific research.

      And finally based on all I've said above about my perspective, my reply to you is that Ben Stein is out to make money and nothing else. If he really believes as you say, then he could have skipped this movie. Of course, evolution is not a "answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does" or anything like that. I watched the preview; it was very clearly edited with a single goal in mind: to victimize those who have religious beliefs counter to accepted scientific theory. He is not pointing out that universities don't allow dissenting views. I can't imagine there exists a university without theology or psychology classes to discuss creationism and ID very thoroughly. The failure here is not for professors to teach ID or creationism, but for science professors to validate any education based on ID or creationism with scientific evidence.
      -N

      --
      I've nothing to say here...
    6. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by maxume · · Score: 1

      Radical scientists are calling the movie dishonest:

      http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=sciam-reviews-expelled

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a good point. It reminds me of how academia smeared the Duke Lacrosse Team.

      All the big wigs at Duke including the dean and 88 of the faculty declared the team members guilty of rape. You see, the agenda of political correctness is more important than fairness.

      As it turned out, the whole claim of rape was a hoax by made by an unstable stripper with a long troubled history. But the know-it-alls of academia condemned the lads even before the evidence has been examined.

      The important point Ben Stein is making is that universities do not allow any questioning of its orthodoxy. Universities have become dead zones for open debate and discussion.

    8. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species. He rejects that it is the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does.

      And Newton's theory of gravity doesn't explain why hydrogen combusts. Evolution isn't an explanation of the origins of life nor does it have anything to do with cosmology. It is only an explanation of how diversity arises between forms of life.



      Therefore Stein is complaining about the wrong thing.

    9. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by KMnO4 · · Score: 1

      Ben Stein is a pesky, pandering old hack.* His position is hardly noble, it is just sometimes he's taking because he knows it will sell. He probably secretly has as much contempt for the target audience member of that film as any "librul" does, if not more. But he sees them as ripe for the taking. Cha-ching goes the Ben Stein cash register, as he upbraids those dastardly secularists for being so "intolerant"!
      If a small group of physicists suddenly started to have an alternate theory of gravity, that it was caused by millions of invisible elves that pull down on things...you'd expect them to be fired for their "dissenting" opinions too!
      * apologies to Tom Shales

    10. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by MyOpenMind · · Score: 1

      Go watch the movie. Even the last 10 - 15 minutes and listen to the exchange between Stein and Dawkins. Dawkins finally agrees that some intelligent life form on another planet could have seeded the needed material to start the evolutionary process off. What does that say when one of the leading Darwinist admits that there is the "possibility" that there was some intelligence that started the entire process? At least he was open for the debate. I think that we should also. Sit down without passion and look at the theories. No one has produced a single working example of evolution in a lab. We have observed changes in nature over time and claim that that is evolution when in many cases it is simply adaptation. But even that could be rationally debate as could the genetic engineering that makes animals less suspectible to disease. That is a direct view of intelligent design. We are designing new animals and plants all the time. If that is the case why can we not accept that maybe, just maybe someone or something else did the same thing. It is a simple concept and I think that is what makes it hard for the science community and the general population to accept.

      I can take a tangerine, a lemon and an apple and with a good botantist and genetist create a new fruit. I took something and redesigned it to fit a new need. Just something to ponder and maybe open up for a passion free debate.

      Right as I get ready to post this I see the google quote of the day:

      "I think computer viruses should count as life. I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We've created life in our own image."
          - Stephen Hawking

    11. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

      You might notice that most astronomy departments also will be pretty intolerant of a geocentric theory of planetary motion. Geology departments don't tolerate flat-earthers. Medicine schools are pretty intolerant of those who claim that the germ theory is heresy.

      So tell me, what was the point of biology departments not tolerating theological discussion again?

    12. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Guysmiley777 · · Score: 1

      That's because ID is not a scientific theory. The theory of evolution is. It's like asking why they never discuss nihilism in a calculus class. Why would you?

      The entire movie is a ham-fisted attack on science. They present no evidence for ID in the movie at all. It's about as objective as a Michael Moore movie.

      --
      Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
    13. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by monomania · · Score: 1

      "Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species." Well, if you've seen the film (as you obviously haven't) and also read his other commentaries on the subject made in conjunction with the promotion of the film, you'd know that he does reject evolution of species.

      He does this in two ways, in fact, both explicitly in his commentaries, and by support of Intelligent Design, which itself rejects natural evolution. The mission statement of the ID weblog, Dembeski & O'Leary's weblog, Common Descent, has the opening statement: "Materialistic ideology has subverted the study of biological and cosmological origins so that the actual content of these sciences has become corrupted. The problem, therefore, is not merely that science is being used illegitimately to promote a materialistic worldview, but that this worldview is actively undermining scientific inquiry, leading to incorrect and unsupported conclusions about biological and cosmological origins. At the same time, intelligent design (ID) offers a promising scientific alternative to materialistic theories of biological and cosmological evolution -- an alternative that is finding increasing theoretical and empirical support."

      In other words, a project to redefine science itself as an endeavor that, rather than proceeding purely by examination of physical phenomenon and analysis of physical causes to arrive at physical (real-world) explanations, posits the possibility of a "spiritual" (non-materialist) science that proceeds from the presupposition there exists an supernatural intelligence behind the workings of the physical world, which must be accommodated in any explanation of physical phenomenon, and deferred to in any theory.

      Such conjectures are fit for Philosophy and metaphysics, but as for being Science, this way lies madness....

      And as for rejection of "Darwinism" because it offers no explanation of "the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does", neither the current science of evolution (the science of biology), the Neo-Darwinian theory on which it is based, nor the original theory offered by Darwin himself ever concerned themselves with the issues of the origin of life per se (the science of abiogenesis) nor the or the origins and workings of the physical Universe (the science of physics). That would be like rejecting Quantum Mechanics because it didn't explain genetic drift within a population.

    14. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      f you actually watch the movie or listen to Stein talk about the movie, of course the majority of this group won't, Stein is pointing out that there is no tolerance for dissenting opinions in universities.

      That's because the 'opinion' that evolution didn't happen, but ID did isn't science. ID isn't testable. It isn't based on all the accumulated emprical data as evolution is.

      If you want to discuss ID in a religion class I think you will find there is extreme tolerance for it.

      Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species. He rejects that it is the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does.

      Once again, that's fine for philosophy or religion, but has nothing to do with actual science.

    15. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      There's lots of tolerance for dissenting opinions. If you read up on the actual stories of the "expelled", you'll see that it's all smoke and mirrors. After failing to get ID-creationism into school science standards, the Discovery Institute is playing the persecution card. Unfortunately for them the biggest threat to ID is open discussion, because then its history as a sci-fi term stapled onto Creation Science comes to the fore.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    16. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Wister285 · · Score: 1

      I think this post makes the point. I'm pretty sure that throughout history, the scientific majority has constantly derided challengers as being idiotic, comical, and just plain wrong. Even though I love the site, just read Slashdot for a while and it becomes obvious. It's this intellectual arrogance that stifles intellectual creativity, which further impedes the strive towards truth.

    17. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      That would be akin to Darwinism and evolution being taught in a psychology or theology class. I went to a Jesuit school, in which "Darwinism" was taught in religion classes. Jesuits sure have come a long way since persecuting Galileo.
      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    18. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Wister285 · · Score: 1

      Let me just be clear about my post here before it gets ruthlessly attacked. I wasn't taking a side in the ID debate or anything else as my point actually was meant to refer to scientists who discredited theories that eventually became accepted. I'm just saying that we should be calling out the arrogant scientists who refuse to listen to opposing viewpoints and their belittle others' with differing theories with condescending language.

    19. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by TobiasTheCommie · · Score: 1

      wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong..

      Yes, Dawkins DID say that, but it doesn't mean what Stein wanted you to believe it means... I suggest you read up on this instead of following the dogma of stein.

      I suggest you read up on how Stein has EXPELLED a scientist (PZ Myers) from a viewing of his movie.
      > I went to attend a screening of the creationist propaganda movie, Expelled, a few minutes ago. Well, I tried ... but I was Expelled! It was kind of weird -- I was standing in line,
      > hadn't even gotten to the point where I had to sign in and show ID, and a policeman pulled me out of line and told me I could not go in. I asked why, of course, and he said that a
      > producer of the film had specifically instructed him that I was not to be allowed to attend.

      http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2008/03/expelled.php

      But back to how, as you say "What does that say when one of the leading Darwinist admits that there is the "possibility" that there was some intelligence that started the entire process? At least he was open for the debate. I think that we should also."
      Well, what he says about the movie.

      >Please, don't pay to go see it. Let it die a quiet theatrical death. If you really want to see it, wait for a free opportunity that won't line Mathis' pockets.
      http://richarddawkins.net/article,2400,Expelled-Overview,Josh-Timonen-RichardDawkinsnet

      Of course he was open for debate, but, nothing came of it, ID/Creationism is a waste of time, he knows it, and says so.

      Oh, btw, do you know how much Stein mislead all the scientists in the movie?

      > I shall not discuss the main message of the film -- that American creationist scientists are being victimized for their views -- except to say that it was very much NOT its main
      > message when the film was called Crossroads, and when I, together with PZ Myers, Eugenie Scott and others, were conned into taking part.

      > And Kristine asked Mathis to explain what had become of a film called Crossroads which had mysteriously morphed itself into Expelled. The import of her question was the widely known
      > fact, which I have already mentioned, that PZ and I had been tricked into participating in Crossroads without ever being told that the true purpose of the film was the one conveyed
      > by the later title Expelled -- the alleged expulsion of creationists from universities.

      http://richarddawkins.net/article,2394,Lying-for-Jesus,Richard-Dawkins

      This clip is a video of Dawkins and Myers talking about Myers being EXPELLED, and about the segment that mislead you
      http://youtube.com/watch?v=c39jYgsvUOY

      But yes, lets put the trust in the development of our children into a scamming, lying pile of junk like Stein who deceits to get his point across.

      And by the way, comparing Evolution to Nazism was probably not the best thing the man could have done. Especially not considering that Hitler considered himself very christian - Note, this is NOT a Godwin... Stein made a Godwin, i didn't..

      --
      Tobias Ussing http://www.nearby.dk
    20. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by tbannist · · Score: 1

      That's what he's saying. However, it's quite likely that he's wrong. He seems to be falling for one of the classic traps of conspiracy theorists: failing to apply Occam's Razor.

      There's a story about a guy being denied tenure because he wrote a creationist book, except he was denied tenure for the same reasons that any other professor would be denied tenure: Not bringing in grants, not graduating students, not publishing papers. The book he wrote actually would have worked in favour if he hadn't slacked off on everything else to write it.

      Similarly the rest of his persecutions consist of people with a sense of entitlement blaming all of their failures on creationist persecution.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    21. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by protein+folder · · Score: 1

      OK, I'm game, what's the origin of "intelligent life form on some other planet" that seeded earth?

      Also, no working example of evolution in the lab? What are viruses, bacteria, hell, even cancer cells?

      Also, nobody's questioning the fact that humans or other forms of intelligence are capable of affecting the course of evolution. Look at the many varieties of dogs, for instance. The main objection to the "intelligence" in intelligent design is that we've got no way to observe that intelligence, and a lot of the ID proponents would seem to require some kind of supernatural intelligence to fulfill that need.

      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    22. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Miltazar · · Score: 1

      Yes he does seem to godwin himself quite a bit. I've noticed this is a common argument(from Christians atleast). From the relatives I grew up with, and sadly still have to talk to, because Hitler talked about racial superiority/inferiority then Evolution is to blame for WWII. From my understanding he based much if that talk off of a way of thinking that applies natural selection/evolution to race instead of a species. Its basically a different way to say "we're better then you". Anyone who really knows evolution knows that it really didn't have anything to do with it as thats not what evolution is about. They don't see it like that though.

      p.s. hmm, did I just godwin myself? damn.

      --
      "Hold! What you are doing to us is wrong! Why do you do this thing?"
    23. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Gee, I don't know of a single semi-competent biologist who believes that evolution is the answer for why life exists. As they keep saying, it's not abiogenesis; it only explains why so much life exists, and why it's so varied, and why sex exists, and similar issues. Evolution explains how life as we know it with its amazing profusion developed from its humble beginnings in the primordial ooze ~3.5 billion years ago.

      Likewise, "why the universe works the way that it does" is a bit of a big question, but generally that makes me think of cosmology, not biology.

      There is amazing tolerance for dissenting opinions in universities. What there isn't tolerance for in universities is stupid opinions. Rocking the boat is respected and formally encouraged. A trip to Stockholm is one of the more famous prizes, but there are many others.

      The catch is that crazy ideas are only accepted when backed with some evidence. You have to show that, imprimus, your idea makes different predictions than the status quo it's challenging, and secundus, that reality matches those predictions better. If you can do that, peer review be damned, you're on to something.

      No predictions? Unscientific nonsense.

      Predictions wrong? Incorrect science. Still a respected part of the process, but the rewards go to the people who get it right.

      Explaining known observations is a common starting point, but there are an infinite number of possible explanations for a finite set of facts; anything limited only to ex post facto justifications is useless. Science begins when you offer ante facto predictions.

    24. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      If you actually watch the movie or listen to Stein talk about the movie, of course the majority of this group won't, Stein is pointing out that there is no tolerance for dissenting opinions in universities. He's not "pointing it out", because it simply isn't true. Universities are perhaps the most diverse marketplace of ideas on the planet.

      In any other context the makers/supporters of Expelled would be arguing that tenure should not exist, because it protects people who want to express radical views.

      Stein does not reject Darwinism for the evolution of individual species. He rejects that it is the answer for why life exists and why the universe works that way that it does. Does he actually find anyone who thinks biological evolution answers either of those?
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    25. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by t0rkm3 · · Score: 1

      He was a self-proclaimed Christian but like much in his life it was mostly used as a tool to further his ends. He was often critical of the peaceful stance of Christian religions preferring the more militaristic Islamic traditions.

      He took up the teachings of Arthur de Gobineau who espoused eugenics as the legacy of Darwin.

      Eugenics was a very popular topic at the time throughout the world. Margaret Sanger (founder of Planned Parenthood) was a very influential proponent of similar precepts here in the US.

      He was racist. That view biased everything that he touched. Saying that Hitler was a good or even middling example of a Christian is like saying that taking a birth control pill is like wishing for the demise of the African American population like Sanger did.

    26. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by folstaff · · Score: 1

      Universities are perhaps the most diverse marketplace of ideas on the planet. As a current Masters student in History, I deny this idea based on my own experience. It is not something pushed down by the professors, although every professor I have had so far is left of mainstream politically. It is the students who lack any real diversity of thought. Our classroom has racial and diversity, but even if you combined moderate and conservative opinions they would still be in the minority.
    27. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by MyOpenMind · · Score: 1

      See I think that is where even my point is being missed. I made no reference to anything supernatural. Unless people are making a leap that anything outside of nature is now considered supernatural. Any influence from outside the environment would be tainting the experiment. There is lots of passion on both sides of this argument. Most debates are settled when both parties remove passion and clouded examples and rely stickly on fact. Links to examples of evolution would be appreciate. I await with an open mind.

    28. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      People who believe the scientific method can accurately be used to discover and research things can go so far as to say that they believe in them because science supports it. The scientific method is not something that you believe in or not. It simply is. It is a human invention, and exists as a result.

      You use or do not use, but there is nothing about the scientific method that involves the metaphysical.
      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    29. Re:Win Ben Stein's Attention by protein+folder · · Score: 1

      1, "anything outside of nature" is by definition supernatural. By nature, I mean the world, the universe, and the laws governing their function/activity.

      2. I don't know what you mean by "tainting the experiment"

      3. The classical example of evolution is the ring species.

      4. I probably did miss your point. I'm not actually sure what it is.

      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
  26. John Oliver said it best... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We'll allow a sticker on every science textbook that says "This is only a theory" so long as we can put a sticker on every bible that says "This might all be bullshit".

  27. All Your Global Leadership will Be Ours by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The sooner the US embraces creationism, thereby abandoning the scientific method, the better. We British didn't do a bad job of running the world when it was our go and we've learned from our mistakes - we're ready to have another bash as soon as the US steps aside.

    1. Re:All Your Global Leadership will Be Ours by szo · · Score: 1

      Talk to China about this.

      --
      Red Leader Standing By!
    2. Re:All Your Global Leadership will Be Ours by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      If you think the next turn will be Britain's you have a lot of news catching-up to do!

  28. Hmm by ScouseMouse · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, if you dont think conventional Scientific wisdom has its own share of theories that are not backed by facts, i direct you the "String theory", from which so many PHD's have been made over the last few decades.

    Not totally dissimmilar to creationism, it happens to fit a bunch of facts which may or may not be true, and is unlikely to be proven either way.

    Of course, As there trying to dissaociate Creationism from Religion, another way of reading the "facts" they rely on is that we were all created by Aliens from the planet "Zog" who were on a bit of a bender after "DRuuth" celebrated his 4096th cycle (They count in 16's naturally). Boy was that one to remember!
    Naturally, if you try to suggest this to one of them, they get rather Irate. Trust me on this. :-)

    1. Re:Hmm by Matt+Edd · · Score: 1

      String theory actually makes testable predictions. It's just that most of them cannot be tested at this time. I've been waiting but ID doesn't provide even one testable prediction.

    2. Re:Hmm by Wavebreak · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, nobody claims that string theory (the 'theory' here being somewhat of a misnomer) is the only possible explanation. It's simply a rather elegant hypothesis that seems able to explain in a consistent framework things that have thus far been difficult to integrate with the rest of our knowledge. Which is why there's been so much effort to come up with (currently) testable predictions based on it. However, until it can be experimentally confirmed or disproven it is just that, an elegant hypothesis, and nothing more.

      --
      Nobody expects the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal.
    3. Re:Hmm by mcvos · · Score: 1

      String theory actually makes testable predictions. It's just that most of them cannot be tested at this time. I've been waiting but ID doesn't provide even one testable prediction. I recently read that String Theory does not make testable predictions, and as such has been stripped of its status as "viable scientific theory".

      That's what happens when a promising theory doesn't live up to expectations.
  29. Religious Fanaticism from within... by HetMes · · Score: 1

    ...Western society. Maybe exaggerated rigth now, but you're getting there. A Secretary of State mentioned this discussion in the Netherlands a few years ago. She became a laughing stock, and rightfully so. I look at it this way: if you make a movie of yourself rolling dice, eventually you'll roll 20 6's straight. Cut all except that part, youtube it, and amaze the world with your amazing dice skillz ("He must know how to throw dice!"). Anthropic principle, multiple universes, they all sound a hell of a lot more plausible than anything remotely connected to Creationism.

  30. 'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by curmudgeon99 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't it ironic that a whole generation of religious folks are doing nothing more than routing their kids into a backwater. Suspicion of science just means their children will distrust science and math and be shuttled, therefore, into a legion of burger flippers. Teaching your kids that Intelligent Design is the right answer is as close to child abuse as I can imagine.

    1. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by munik · · Score: 0

      As a child, I was taught to love science and to be scientifically inquisitive. As an adult, I continue to be scientific in my observation of the world. As a child, I was also taught creationism. And, as an adult, I continue to believe creationism as it has held up under my and others' scrutiny.

    2. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by ytmstry · · Score: 2

      Burger flippers huh??? I currently work in computer security, hold my undergraduate degree and am currently working on my graduate degree. But I was abused as a child I guess. Go figure I guess I have no hope since all I am going to do is be a burger flipper. Please think before you speak.

    3. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by not-quite-rite · · Score: 0, Troll

      How can you be scientific in your belief of a entity-in-the-sky making "stuff"?

      Inquiring minds wish to know....

    4. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, how else are we supposed to keep up the numbers of the lower class? I have a sneaking suspicion that the real reason these sorts of people are so afraid of immigration is that the immigrants are taking up all the unskilled jobs that they've been carefully grooming their children for.

      Why yes, I am incredibly bitter, thanks for noticing.

    5. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by munik · · Score: 0, Insightful

      How can you be scientific in the belief that you and the world are the product of random processes?

      That goes against all we know about information and organization theory. This world, the atmosphere, the animal kingdom, your body are all incredibly organized and useful.

    6. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd hate for my child to be flipping burgers like Ben Stein. Too bad he never amounted to anything.

      Could you please stop cheapening REAL child abuse with this crap?

    7. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by avanderveen · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Are you kidding me? The kid's an idiot anyways if he's unable to respect math and science just because he believes another theory.
      I'm a Christian that believes in creationism. Does that mean I don't respect math and science? Hell no. I've been taught all throughout my Christian education to respect math an science as the truth and even to realize the validity of the provable and demonstrated portions of the theory of evolution. However, I'm not going to believe in evolution as a theory of our existence because there are just too many holes and contradictions with other science to believe it. The reason I don't believe in evolution as a theory of existence is not because of some distrust in science or because I've been told the avoid it.
      Christians aren't supposed to be stubborn and unwilling to look into things, we're supposed to test our faith constantly.

      [1 Thessalonians 5:21]
      "Test everything. Hold on to the good."

      [James 1:3]
      "because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance."

    8. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by Tranzistors · · Score: 2, Informative

      Trust science? Are you mad?!? If Einstein trusted Newton on time and space, where would we be? Distrust is important.
      Ok, ok, by science you mean scientific method or hypotheses or what?
      And trust in mathematics is questionable as well - even if in theorems there are no errors, one must always make sure that axioms are appropriate.
      P.S. It is sometimes hard to remember that mathematics has nothing to do with reality, it should come with "COMES "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."

    9. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by not-quite-rite · · Score: 1

      You dodged the question.

      You said you believe in creationism. But you also state that you are scientifically inquisitive. Where do the two meet, and which wins out?

      Please elaborate on your evidence...

    10. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Child abuse? For exercising the natural human right to teach my child as I see fit? That's about as arrogant a viewpoint as I've ever seen.

      Tell me, o master central planner, authority on proper indoctrination of other people's children, how to you propose to solve the "problem" of parents exercising their natural human rights, bypassing the policies of the almighty state?

      Let me guess: By employing the coercive power of government as a means to change their behavior. I have one simple question for you, and I ask that you think long and hard about it: who exactly is the aggressor here, and who is the victim?

      It's people like you that make me smile when I hear that taxpayer money will be used to advance things like "intelligent design" (which, by the way, I don't believe in myself). You wanted government in charge of education, you wanted society to be subject to central planning -- you damn well got it.

      For the record, I support neither intelligent design NOR government education. I'm simply thrilled to hear to that you are disgusted with how government education turned out.

    11. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by protein+folder · · Score: 1

      You can study the random processes and try to figure out how said processes lead to order from chaos. If you've got a supernatural entity organizing everything, that pretty much stops science (aka the study of the natural world) right there.

      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    12. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by tomcode · · Score: 1

      Are you suggesting the offspring of these religious nuts will be "naturally selected" out of the good schools and good jobs? Or -- contrary to your "theory" -- will their children grow up to be President as if by the will of some intelligent designer? I'd say "The jury is still out."

      --
      f u cn rd ths u cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgmng
    13. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by toastedcheese · · Score: 1

      While I agree that they're doing their kids a disservice, somehow I don't think the valedictorian of my high school, who is currently pursuing a chemistry degree, sees herself as a burger flipper or an enemy of math and science. After all, the whole point of ID is that it's trying to be scientific. Failing, of course, but still trying.

    14. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

      Isn't it ironic that a whole generation of religious folks are doing nothing more than routing their kids into a backwater.

      Isn't that statement as ill-informed and biased as those you criticize? When I was taking chemistry at a public university the professor who taught the class, and was also the dean of the department, was a Roman Catholic priest. So was the scientist who introduced the big bang theory, ironically some scientists rejected this theory because it was offered by a priest and "sounded" like creationism. The vatican operates a major observatory doing hard science in the field of astronomy.

      The war between science and religion is waged by those with an agenda, many true scientists and many true religious believers don't have a one or the other perspective. Many religious people simply believe science is explaining the mechanics of God's universe.

    15. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by m50d · · Score: 1
      That goes against all we know about information and organization theory. This world, the atmosphere, the animal kingdom, your body are all incredibly organized and useful.

      Yeah, and you know what? THAT'S THE WHOLE GODDAMNED FUCKING POINT OF THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION. It explains it, clearly , elegantly, without need to invoke anything from outside. PAY SOME BLOODY ATTENTION.

      --
      I am trolling
    16. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by not-quite-rite · · Score: 1

      What the hell? Troll?

      Damn you Christian Moderators, and your reactionary button clicking!

      I'll see your Theistic ways, and raise you 1 annoyed Ignostic Transhumanist....

    17. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by not-quite-rite · · Score: 1

      Please define the terms "supernatural" and "natural"

      People use the term without clearly defining what is meant by it. How do you have things outside of the natural world?

      Using more undefined nonsense words does not make undefined nonsense arguments more sensical - it simply makes them more inexplicably NONSENSICAL

    18. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by curmudgeon99 · · Score: 1

      Medicines, for example, are proven safe and efficacious using tests performed with the Scientific Method. Such tests can be replicated and when enough have, we trust the results. That is the scientific method and the basis of our society. Teaching children that anything but the viewpoint that has the greatest amount of scientific proof--and that would Evolution by Natural Selection--is teaching them to ignore the findings of the Scientific Method. Teaching your kids to distrust Evolution would be teaching them to distrust the findings of the Scientific Method. I, for one, would not want to patronize one of your brilliant children who became a doctor and who does not believe in the Scientific Method. And believing in the Tooth Fairy and the Easter Bunney has just as much experimental proof in support of it as does "Intelligent Design". So, if you teach your children to believe in anything but Evolution, you are teaching them bad information and, yes, it constitutes child abuse. It's child abuse only slightly less than the Christian Scientist or 7th-Day Adventist parent who denies their child medical attention of anything but the most modern sort. It's child abuse to teach your children to believe something that is not supported by the experimental evidence. The principle of Evolution by Natural Selection has more confirmatory evidence than any other scientific principle. It is rock solid.

    19. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      right, burger flippers -- because it's not like even your current president would be one of those idiots

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    20. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by protein+folder · · Score: 1
      From webster's dictionary:

      supernatural: of or relating to an order of existence beyond the visible observable universe; especially : of or relating to God or a god, demigod, spirit, or devil

      natural: being in accordance with or determined by nature b: having or constituting a classification based on features existing in nature. occurring in conformity with the ordinary course of nature : not marvelous or supernatural

      How do you have things outside of the natural world? An excellent question. I have no idea. What I'm basically trying to say is that science is concerned with studying the natural world and looks to discover the causes behind various effects. Invoking some unobservable (because if you could observe it, faith would be pretty mundane) entity not bound by the constraints of the natural world to explain these effects isn't science.
      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    21. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by curmudgeon99 · · Score: 1

      While I say "Hooray" for your valedictorian, it hardly adds up to more than anecdotal evidence. So, do you recommend a belief in intelligent designs to your children? If you have none, would you? Would you teach them to also persist in believing in the Tooth Fairy, Ester Bunney etc? I think not. Just so you can prove a point, is not enough justification for stunting the learning of your own flesh and blood. I just question the sanity of people who would teach their children the earth is only 6,000 years old. Why would you so willfully lie to your children?

    22. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by toastedcheese · · Score: 1

      I'm aware it's anecdotal evidence; I was just trying to counter your generalization. I still agree with your basic premise that people should not teach their children things that are not true. However, the simple fact is that the parents don't see themselves as lying to their kids. Nor can you categorically state that those kids turn out wrong because they were misinformed as children.

      Basically, I have a problem with this attitude because it's unduly hostile. The way to convince people to give their children good educations is not to tell them that they're bad parents and their kids will be flipping burgers. For one thing, in many cases it's not true and they know it.

      I am trying to figure out what the Ester bunny would be... maybe it would be fruit-scented. :)

    23. Re:'Intelligent Design' Advocates Make Kids Idiots by curmudgeon99 · · Score: 1

      Though I agree with your underlying point, that science and math are growing subjects where the beliefs of yesterday can be superceded by today's findings--in any case it's better than the state of Biblical Science, which stopped developing thousands of years ago. You take your pick...

  31. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dude, I find it far more frequent that people don't understand what *evolution* means.

  32. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean?

    Because the evidence for evolution is overwhelming?

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  33. Let's be honest. by kinabrew · · Score: 1

    There is no debate. There is no evidence whatsoever for creationism.

  34. corepirate nazis 'shaking their fists' at creators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's all in the manual. better to be prepared than just plain scared. see you there? let yOUR conscience be yOUR guide. you can be more helpful than you might have imagined. there are still some choices. if they do not suit you, consider the likely results of continuing to follow the corepirate nazi hypenosys story LIEn, whereas anything of relevance is replaced almost instantly with pr ?firm? scriptdead mindphuking propaganda or 'celebrity' trivia 'foam'. meanwhile; don't forget to get a little more oxygen on yOUR brain, & look up in the sky from time to time, starting early in the day. there's lots going on up there.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071229/ap_on_sc/ye_climate_records;_ylt=A0WTcVgednZHP2gB9wms0NUE
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080108/ts_alt_afp/ushealthfrancemortality;_ylt=A9G_RngbRIVHsYAAfCas0NUE
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/31/opinion/31mon1.html?em&ex=1199336400&en=c4b5414371631707&ei=5087%0A

    is it time to get real yet? A LOT of energy is being squandered in attempts to keep US in the dark. in the end (give or take a few 1000 years), the creators will prevail (world without end, etc...), as it has always been. the process of gaining yOUR release from the current hostage situation may not be what you might think it is. butt of course, most of US don't know, or care what a precarious/fatal situation we're in. for example; the insidious attempts by the felonious corepirate nazi execrable to block the suns' light, interfering with a requirement (sunlight) for us to stay healthy/alive. it's likely not good for yOUR health/memories 'else they'd be bragging about it? we're intending for the whoreabully deceptive (they'll do ANYTHING for a bit more monIE/power) felons to give up/fail even further, in attempting to control the 'weather', as well as a # of other things/events.

    http://video.google.com/videosearch?hl=en&q=video+cloud+spraying

    dictator style micro management has never worked (for very long). it's an illness. tie that with life0cidal aggression & softwar gangster style bullying, & what do we have? a greed/fear/ego based recipe for disaster. meanwhile, you can help to stop the bleeding (loss of life & limb);

    http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/12/28/vermont.banning.bush.ap/index.html

    the bleeding must be stopped before any healing can begin. jailing a couple of corepirate nazi hired goons would send a clear message to the rest of the world from US. any truthful look at the 'scorecard' would reveal that we are a society in decline/deep doo-doo, despite all of the scriptdead pr ?firm? generated drum beating & flag waving propaganda that we are constantly bombarded with. is it time to get real yet? please consider carefully ALL of yOUR other 'options'. the creators will prevail. as it has always been.

    corepirate nazi execrable costs outweigh benefits
    (Score:-)mynuts won, the king is a fink)
    by ourselves on everyday 24/7

    as there are no benefits, just more&more death/debt & disruption. fortunately there's an 'army' of light bringers, coming yOUR way. the little ones/innocents must/will be protected. after the big flash, ALL of yOUR imaginary 'borders' may blur a bit? for each of the creators' innocents harmed in any way, there is a debt that must/will be repaid by you/us, as the perpetrators/minions of unprecedented evile, will not be available. 'vote' with (what's left in) yOUR wallet, & by your behaviors. help bring an end to unprecedented evile's manifestation through yOUR owned felonious corepirate nazi glowbull warmongering execrable. some of US should consider ourselves somewhat fortunate to be among those scheduled to survive after the big flash/implementation of the creators' wwwildly popular planet/population rescue initiative/mandate. it's right in the manual, 'world without end', etc.... as we all ?know?, change is inevitable, & denying/ignoring gravity, logic, morality, etc..., is only possible, on a temporary basis. concern about the course of events that will occur should the

  35. God and Evolution working together: Deism by usul294 · · Score: 1

    One thing I've always wondered is why nobody has tried some good old fashioned (Founding Fathers style) Deism. Its pretty simple, God sets the initial conditions at t=0 and he sets the system. By doing this He (or She) knows how things will happen in the future of this timeline. Everything after t=0 is governed by physics leading up to and through evolutionary processes. Its not Intelligent Design, since life on Earth is created by natural processes, but the fundamental laws of the universe are of God/God himself.

    1. Re:God and Evolution working together: Deism by HetMes · · Score: 1

      To say the least, it would require a premise far more complex than something like the anthropic principle and multiple universes. However, if you are willing to believe that, would you also be willing to believe that you were created just a fraction second ago with false memories, and that anyone but you is just there to give you the experience of being alive. And you will die within a fraction of a second from now. But, you might think, as I am reading this, surely seconds have past. Or have they? You might also believe in the Tooth Fairy. Because, you see, once you move away from Occam's Razor and common sense, anything is possible.

    2. Re:God and Evolution working together: Deism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would it?

      "Out of Nothing, nothing comes". is the fundamental issue. How did this get started and why? It is not Science at this point because we cannot get evidence either way. We do not know the rules of universe at that point or even one second before.

      The issue is scientists are trying to philosophers and theologians. And Philosophers and Theologians are trying to be scientists. Look at Dawkins and his comments Flew becoming a Deists. Dawkins clearly doesn't get Deism or religion in general. He confuses Science, Philosophy and Theology.

      Darwinism and Evolution does NOT prove or disprove a "creator" or an Intelligent Design. Its called First Cause. Both groups need to learn just because the have a mastery of one means you can speak on the other.

      Stein is saying that if a Darwinist is insisting is all accident, then dissent and discussion should be permitted. Which is true, because it is not Science!

    3. Re:God and Evolution working together: Deism by MoxFulder · · Score: 1

      There's nothing wrong with believing in Deism, but Deism itself does not constitute a scientific theory, since it is by definition untestable.

      As you state it, Deism posits that "initial conditions" for the universe were set at a specific point in time, without any specific hypothesis about the nature of those initial conditions. This means it cannot be disproved, since absolutely any set of conditions at t=0 would be consistent with Deism.

      So, Deism is philosophically interesting... and indeed I am sympathetic to it myself, largely based on my religious beliefs. But it isn't a scientific theory.

    4. Re:God and Evolution working together: Deism by PieSquared · · Score: 1

      Deism was popular for a long time... but with advances in knowledge there's no reason why there needs to be a god to start it all - for three reasons. The first is that self-organizing behavior shows complex-seeming things arise without a "plan" or "guide" from simple rules. Second, and probably more important to your particular vision of deism is occam's razor - why do you *need* to create a being just for this? Finally and most importantly, you only raise the question of where your deist god came from. What created the god that created the universe, and why couldn't it just create the universe itself?

      --
      Does a line appended to your comment give your post meaning in and of itself, or only in relation to those without?
  36. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    People don't have to assume anything about Evolution, since there is more than enough empirical evidence at this point to support it.

    Why do people automatically assume that whatever absurd idea they pull out of their ... bible ... should be afforded the title of "theory" when they meet none of the qualifications required to be one?

  37. An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Finding oil is a very important and high-stakes issue for oil companies. Literally trillions of dollars are riding on it. Exxon's exploration budget alone is around $20 billion per year. When the chips are down and they need to find the most likely spots to drill - what kind of geology do they use? Flood geology, or mainstream? Which one actually delivers the goods?

    Let's assume the Earth is only a few thousand years old. Where did the oil come from? Was it created in the ground with the rest of the Earth? If so, is there a way to predict where it might be found? Or perhaps it really did form from plankton (with a few plants and dinosaurs), but about 10,000 times faster than any chemist believes it could? Any way you look at it, a young Earth and a Flood would imply some very interesting scientific questions to ask, some interesting (and potentially extremely valuable) research programs to start. How come nobody's actually pursuing such research programs?

    Why don't creationists put together an investment fund, where people pay in and the stake is used as venture capital for things like oil and mineral rights? If "Flood geology" is really a better theory, then it should make better predictions about where raw materials are than standard geology does. The profits from such a venture could pay for a lot of evangelism. Why isn't anyone doing this?

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    1. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by munik · · Score: 0

      You're referring to the theory that oil was created through the Flood, by the rapid deposit of much vegetative and animal material into oxygen restrictive environments.

      I don't know about Flood geology methods for oil exploration --- that doesn't make sense to me. It seems that the normal geologic methods we've studied for finding oil: surface analysis, satellite imagery, gravity meters, magnetometers, sniffers, seismology, etc. would be best.

      I don't know that the creationist theory has immediate application to finding oil, as we really don't know where it was deposited, but from what I've read, it is the most logical method of explaining how oil was formed.

    2. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by KYPackrat · · Score: 1

      It's currently possible to pressurize/treat waste chicken parts or green waste and produce a reasonable facsimile of crude oil in hours or days.

      If the abiotic oil people are correct, or if the process of crude oil & coal creation doesn't require millions of years, then Flood geology is equivalent to non-Flood geology. Rather than saying "There was ocean here for a while, and ocean there for a while, and...", it says "there was ocean EVERYWHERE for a while".

      You have created a straw man here. There is no need for "Flood geology" to be better. All a young-Earth geologist need do is explain it as well. Then you get down to arguing about axioms...

    3. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It seems that the normal geologic methods we've studied for finding oil: surface analysis, satellite imagery, gravity meters, magnetometers, sniffers, seismology, etc. would be best.


      You ought to be able to do better by using the predictions you get from understanding flood geology or simply be reading in your bible as to where most of this matter was converted in oil. Failing that simply praying would surely be by far the most accurate method of finding oil wouldn't it ? I mean it doesn't get much more accurate than the direct Word Of The Lord does it, he is surely the ultimate last word on the subject and it surely would be strange indeed if he decided not to answer your prayers when you were setting up this religiously powered company to bring glory to His name and supply the world with a vital resource He has provided to power Churches to do Glory to His Name. In fact being as he is All Powerful it's hard to see why he wouldn't just deliver the diesal direct to your SUVs fuel tank if it would give you more time to smite sinners and Give Glory To His Greatness.
    4. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Guysmiley777 · · Score: 1

      All the loopy 6,000 year old Earth type hear when they read that is "Gaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawd put it there."

      --
      Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
    5. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

      If the abiotic oil people are correct, or if the process of crude oil & coal creation doesn't require millions of years, then Flood geology is equivalent to non-Flood geology.

      Uh... no. Flood geology has a lot of mutually-incompatible subvariants. Many of them, for example, propose that the continental plates shifted in the year or so of the Flood. That's, er, substantially different from standard geology and makes different predictions about where the organic matter will be that eventually becomes oil. More, the conditions that produce oil in an accelerated way are fairly specific. For those conditions to hold, specific geological conditions and features have to be present, which in turn makes predictions about where and how oil will form, and suggests what to look for when doing exploratory drilling. Somehow no one seems to apply these predictions, though.

      Either that, or else you're saying that the young-Earth theory doesn't actually make any specific predictions at all.

      So, is young-Earth geology failed science, or not science at all?

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    6. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by tbannist · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why don't creationists put together an investment fund, where people pay in and the stake is used as venture capital for things like oil and mineral rights? If "Flood geology" is really a better theory, then it should make better predictions about where raw materials are than standard geology does. The profits from such a venture could pay for a lot of evangelism. Why isn't anyone doing this? Actually, they do. None of them have been successful in any way, and that's probably why you haven't heard of it. I only know about this because it was part of one of the CBC's Tapestry shows.

      Most of them go bankrupt and financially ruin their investors, a few of them are simply fraudulent from start to end, and there's one or two that employ actual geologists, but still aren't very successful.
      http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2008/01/let-there-be-light-crude.html
      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    7. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by doctorcisco · · Score: 1

      1) Because if you seek an advanced degree in geology, and you learn the material, get solid grades, but don't believe it took X million years for these formations to be made, you will not receive your degree. My high school science teacher was just such a man.

      2) No one challenges the observable fact that oil is found in certain kinds of geological formations far more often and reliably than in others.

      3) I have an earned Master of Divinity, and I believe in a young earth. The conflict between evolutionary thought and creationist thought really comes down to a question of epistemology -- how do you know what you know? At the root of all scientific inquiry is the idea that everything in the natural world can be understood on the basis of currently available/observable/discoverable data.

      The Biblical creation account specifically says that this assumption won't work going back to the beginning of time, because there three unobservable and unrepeatable events shaped our universe:

      1) The initial creation itself was mature. If you invented the flux capacitor and went back to day 7 of Genesis, how old would you think the universe was? You'd see a complete ecosystem, geological features like rivers and riverbeds, light from stars in the night sky, and so on.

      2) The fall into sin not only changed people, it wrecked a previously perfect universe. Laws of biology changed -- death entered the world, many of the animals became predators, a perfect and perfectly harmonious world became a "survival of the fittest" jungle instead. It could very well be that laws of physics changed as well. Try to imagine a universe warping and shrivelling like a dying leaf.

      3) A worldwide flood -- for which, by the way, most of the water came up from underground. Geological change on an epic scale.

      If one assumes the scientific worldview, evolution is the best available explanation for what we see. If one assumes the Biblical worldview, there's no problem whatsoever learning and observing the nature of things as they currently are. There's a really big problem working backwards and applying our understanding of the nature of things to the question of origins.

      Epistemology -- how do you know what you know? It's not a "scientific" question, but is that a comment on the quality of the question, or on the limitations of science?

      doc

    8. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by ArchMageZeratuL · · Score: 3, Funny

      The oil was obviously placed there by Jesus. However, knowing that heretics would take over the world someday, he decided to put all the oil exactly where you'd expect to find it if the Earth was actually 4.55 billion years old, so oil companies in Texas could become rich and elect the Bush family to power.

      Oh, and he obviously also placed a lot of oil in the Middle-East to stimulate a crusade against the Muslim infidels that he predicted would appear centuries later.

      Isn't Jesus fantastic? Well, either that or the Earth really is 4.55 billion years old, but would you really believe the lies that those evolutionists tell you? Ben Stein said they are nazis, so they must be, right?

    9. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by ArchMageZeratuL · · Score: 1

      The Lord works in mysterious ways, I guess? ;)

      [BTW, in case anyone is wondering, my post above is sarcastic]

    10. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Isn't Jesus fantastic? I don't know; I've never smoked him.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    11. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are.

      Zion Oil is eschewing previous geological assays and conventional opinion in favor of biblical prophesy (don't ask me what prophesies, because I neither know nor care).

      So far, I believe their reports back on their initial explorations are mildly encouraging in a nebulous way but very short on detail.

      I am not holding my breath on this bizarre new paradigm in geophysics, but it's not totally out the question that there Israel could have hidden oil reserves. It's just not very likely.

    12. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's obvious that they're wrong they just don't want to publicly admit it because they would lose a lot of power over a lot of people who currently do their bidding for *free* (or in fact, pay them for the privilege)

    13. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1
      None of that really addresses the question. The first point is a non-sequitor. I wasn't asking about how few creationists have geology degrees, I was asking why so few creationists strike oil. (Or, indeed, find any deposits of any raw material.)

      The second point is interesting. Oil is indeed found in "certain kinds of geological formations". That's a fact. And as Jules Henri Poincare pointed out, "Science is built up of facts, as a house is with stones. But a collection of facts is no more a science than a heap of stones is a house." Conventional geology isn't just a catalog of where the oil is. It also explains why the oil is there and not elsewhere, and it uses those frameworks to predict where else oil can be found. Young-Earth creationism, as you say in the third point, doesn't - can't - put those facts into a framework. In other words, it's not science.

      Now, an "epistemological" question - why does the framework of modern geology work so well, if it's not actually (an incomplete but basically accurate) picture the truth?

      The "omphalos" issue pretty much destroys science, and actually causes other issue. If light was created "on the way" from stars, then you have a God that is presenting evidence of things like supernovae that never actually happened. Even many religious people have issues with that.

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    14. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus knew people are going to need oil in the future. He put it there to test your belief in bible. He also created Darwin to come up with a theory to test if you would be fooled easily by evolution theory. The bottom line is, if you believe in evolution you wont goto Heaven. These are all simple tests Jesus has put in place to test your worthiness.

    15. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's almost as if fundamentalist leaders don't really believe in God or the accuracy of the Bible -- this would also explain why so many of them get caught with male prostitutes etc. -- but find religion useful for raising money and controlling women and children.

    16. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      I.1) One doesn't' have to believe such a thing happened if one provides support that matches the class of support for an older world--support from different clocks that use different mechanisms. This makes sense in other fields, too--that when one makes a claim that conflicts with current methods (e.g. that paying workers x dollars is less beneficial than paying workers y dollars), the claim modifies of replaces the current dominant theory if it can be supported (e.g. that paying workers x dollars actually increases profits).

      I.3) Considering the issue of scientific thought, note that, additionally, scientific thought accepts claims that could be supported by future, but currently impractical methods of observation.

      Religion versus science usually boils down to deciding how much revelation to accept and how much support is needed to become flexible and reconcile differences between revelation and support (when support means application of reasoning to perception) for topics where the domain of both conflict.

      One can argue about epistemology, but just as one should concede that we don't know how consciousness works, one should admit that it is possible that we may be able to understand how consciousness works--or that the consciousness is not yet forever excluded from the domain of science.

      One can also argue that revelation describes some things that are outside the domain of science--that there are unobservable, unsupportable things. This is one way to question the predictive value of science. As argued here, for example, one can claim nature worked differently at different times, and that is how history as recorded in revelation can differ from the history as predicted through science. But even that creates a testable claims because of implications for the future: if nature worked differently at different times in the past, then it might work differently in the future and the difference could possibly be observed.

      The belief in science is a belief in cognitive excellence--that revelation is not enough. The conflict over domains between revelation and science is in a supported argument that processes move from simple to complex. This argument gives scientists a tendency to look first for simple causes such as "some process would have to be incredibly complex to change the way the nature works so the process can eventually be observed and explained as a combination of more simple processes, or there is no support for such a complex process--invisible hand--so nature must have always worked the way it has worked for the last several hundred years with possibly small, gradually accumulating changes."

      The domain of science is potentially everything--consciousness included--but is not currently everything. Just as one can question the predictive nature of science, one can question the predictive nature of revelation: perhaps future revelation will supersede past revelation. People certainly replace older interpretations of revelation with more modern interpretations. The ironies are that one learns about revelation through observation--the same mechanism one uses to help reason scientifically--and that both science and revelation have interpretations which are mutable enough to allow for, in both fields, many camps of dfferent values, sizes, and mutability. Perhaps science illuminates revelation and helps to show us the hidden symbolism, or perhaps revelation illuminates science and helps to show us which direction to explore first.

      I haven't really added much to this discussion other than two refinements to your argument, and a tangental explanation of why this argument boils down to personal decisions about how much revelation to accept and how much support to accept (before deciding science can be predictive). The only core argument against your decision to support a certain level of revelation is currently philosophical: that good is furthered faster by efficient cognitive excellence and that parts of revelation which introduce additional complexities (such as the multiple modes of operation argument) reduce the efficiency with which we approach the good.

    17. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because God doesn't wish it.

    18. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by doctorcisco · · Score: 1

      Re: geology degrees, the point is that if the sciences won't grant degrees to creationists, it's rather odd to turn around and talk about creationists' lack of scientific achievement in the field -- including things like finding big oil fields.

      The Poincare quote simply asserts what you set out to prove. It's a bare assertion that, applied to the distant past, begs the very question I wrote my post to ask. I assert that there are no "facts" about the origin or age of the universe, because you must choose your epistemological presuppositions first. How do you know that currently observed scientific laws have always been true? Documents thousands of years old, in language appropriate to the time, assert that when the universe began, very basic assumptions we make about nature and ourselves simply were not true, and also describes the events that changed that world into this one. It's not a question some obtuse religious guy dreamed up last week to frustrate scientists.

      Why does geology predict rather well where to find oil? Because it begins with observed facts. "We find lots of oil in formations like this, and we don't find it in those." My only argument with the geology is the "how fast," and the age of the rocks.

      I've taken a stab at your epistemological question. Would you care to address mine? Or is this little corner of this topic going to be so similar to the rest ... science with admirable intellectual rigor -- except when discussing its own first principles?

      The "omphalos" -- you didn't address my question. How old would you think the earth was if you had a flux capacitor and went to day 7 of Genesis? I'll be happy to discuss your assertion if you'd first address mine. Or are first principles scary?

      doc

    19. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because in this case the predictions are exactly the same. I checked.

    20. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Copid · · Score: 1

      The idea that suspension of physical laws by divine intervention can invalidate any sort of science isn't really groundbreaking. I'd buy into it more if the theories that restrict themselves to natural causes didn't work so amazingly well. For example, the notable lack of evidence for a worldwide flood could be explained by a miraculous erasure of the evidence (including, apparently, a significant portion of the water, even if it did come from underground), or it could be that there was no worldwide flood.

      The most obvious example that I can think of is the first graph on this page. It's a beautifully straight line. Why? It could be a miracle, sure, but why would such a miracle have taken place? If we allow ourselves to believe that, why not simply accept last-Thursdayism and call it a day? On what rational basis can we distinguish between hypotheses that defy reason?

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    21. Re:An honest question for the young-Earth types. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

      the point is that if the sciences won't grant degrees to creationists, it's rather odd to turn around and talk about creationists' lack of scientific achievement in the field

      But I'm not asking about a lack of scientific achievement. I'm asking about a lack of economic and business achievement. You don't need an advanced degree to do well in business. Bill Gates is a college dropout, for example. However, it seems like only con men actually try to apply creationism to a useful purpose.

      Why does geology predict rather well where to find oil? Because it begins with observed facts.

      But - and this is critical - it doesn't end there. Oil exploration is not just a matter of, "Gee, we found oil and the rocks looked kinda like this, let's look up in our records where other rock that looks like that can be found." You need to fit those facts into a framework. If oil forms primarily from reefs that have been buried under the right kind of sediment, and maintained under the right sort of temperatures and pressures, and then collected in other kinds of rock formations, then to find oil, you need to be able to identify where such conditions have obtained in the past.

      You need to know where the oceans were, and how deep they were, and from that where their coasts were, and which of those coasts have been buried. You need to be able to figure out what areas have had the right kind of elevated temperatures for the right length of time, and where reservoirs could form, and which of those would have been geologically stable for long periods of time. All of this connects to other fields - chemistry and physics for dating, modeling, and assaying, paleontology and biology for dating and modeling again, then toss in seismology and so forth. It's not exactly a coincidence that creationists who enter the oil business either leave the field or stop being creationists.

      I assert that there are no "facts" about the origin or age of the universe, because you must choose your epistemological presuppositions first.

      We do have an epistemological difference, but it's not the one you're proposing. It's much more fundamental. You believe in the 'supernatural' - something forever unknowable by humans, even in principle. However, that's a troublesome concept.

      How can we, in practice, distinguish between something 'currently unknown but comprehensible' and something 'forever unknowable'? (We could also add other categories like 'knowable in principle but impractical to discover' and 'knowable and practical but, just by bad luck, will never have the explanation stumbled upon'.) From a practical perspective, the only way to tell which category something falls into is to try to understand it; if you succeed, then it was knowable. The problem is, if you fail, you can't conclude that it's unknowable. It might be... but it also might be the case that you just didn't happen to figure out something knowable, and you or someone else might have better luck on a subsequent attempt.

      If you decide that something is fundamentally incomprehensible, you will stop trying to understand it. Richard Feynman once joked that "You don't understand Quantum Mechanics, you just get used to it," but he never stopped trying to advance understanding of QM, despite how counterintuitive it is. And it's worth noting that QM is not quite as incomprehensible as it's popularly portrayed - if it were, the computer you're reading this on could never have been designed and built.

      Accepting that there are things that we don't know is not the same as accepting that there are things that we cannot, even in principle, know. As discussed above, the notion of 'the unknowable' adds nothing from a pr

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  38. Sometimes by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They ignore you because you obviously don't know what you're talking about.

    Then they mock you because you expect to be taken seriously without putting in the work to become informed.

    Then they fight you, because you won't go away until you've had your fight, and ingrained in your thinking, so deeply you don't know it's there, is the notion that might makes right.

    Then you win, because there are so many ignorant, lazy, belligerent people that sooner later sensible people, who want to get something accomplished with their lives, will sooner or later give up on picking sense out of your nonsense.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:Sometimes by B-Dubyah · · Score: 1
      ... Stein shows Darwinists insistently misrepresenting the scientific case against their theory. Where facts and reason might fail to persuade, personal attacks are employed, sometimes even by organizations supposedly committed to civil discourse.

      When I was taught Darwin's theory in college more than four decades ago, it was represented as unassailable. But I also was taught in those days to respect academic freedom, which is a good standard to apply in any field. In the 1990s, before intelligent design was added to the ideas studied at Discovery Institute, I learned about an assault on the academic freedom of Dean Kenyon, a biologist and author at San Francisco State University who had come to view Darwin's theory as flawed.1 At first, the effort to restrain him from teaching seemed like just another skirmish over political correctness.

      Then, following the Kenyon case, I began to examine the account of life's development that I once had been taught so dogmatically. One after another of the demonstrations of the theory that supposedly were "certain" and "conclusive" when I was a student â" such as Ernst Haeckel's embryo drawings that showed various animals looking almost identical in the earliest stages of life â" have been abandoned or replaced.2 What has not changed is the dogmatism.

      I soon came to realize that differences over the development of life, unlike other disputes, spark so much controversy because the collateral stakes are higher than they seem. Where you stand on the origins question often influences your worldview on issues of human life, ranging from cloning to euthanasia. Are we ultimately the product of purpose and design? If so, we would seem to be heirs to a more-or-less settled moral reality. Or, is man the unguided "result of a purposeless and natural process that did not have him in mind," as Harvard paleontologist George Gaylord Simpson wrote?3 In that case, perhaps we can conceive our own values.

      Public discussion on evolution is complicated further by confusion over words that lack any constant and agreed meaning. Terms like "evolve" and "theory" have different definitions in science than they do in everyday speech. Even among scientists, they are subject to varying understandings.4

      People frequently use the word "evolve" as a genteel way of saying "change," as in, "The Toyota Camry has not evolved much this year." But that makes no sense as a scientific expression. Cars don't "evolve" in the way most Darwinists mean â" an undirected process of small, incremental mutations acted on by natural selection to produce new species. Cars are designed. Intelligence is involved. Auto designs â" like ideas or fashions or cities â" don't "evolve."5 My own ideas on evolution didn't evolve; I changed my mind.

      Unfortunately, people sometimes are told that Darwinian evolution simply demonstrates "changes over time." If that were so, how could any sensible person object to it? Even ardent critics of Darwinism accept "microevolution" â" change over time within species. Animal and plant breeding, after all, are kinds of human-guided microevolution. Nature, too, plainly conducts microevolution.

      But classical Darwinists such as Francisco Ayala and Richard Dawkins assert much more. Dawkins, for example, acknowledges that living organisms "give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose."6 But, he argues that this appearance of design is completely misleading because undirected Darwinian processes â" random mutations and natural selection â" can produce the features of living systems that look designed. In Ayala's words, natural selection produces "design without a designer."7

      Advocates of the theory of intelligent design see things differently. They think there are discernible features of living systems and the universe that are best explained by an intelligent cause, not an undirected process like natural selection. They don't dispute that life changes over time; they dispute that u

  39. Moot by Xacid · · Score: 1

    I view this in the same manner that Passion of the Christ made more Christians, the way Micheal Moore has made more liberals or the way Bill O' Reily made more conservatives. -They didn't. It catered to an audience already set in their ways on the topic. I don't see a crazy threat to my scientific mind here. If I did...I'd start building sharks with laser beams and build a moat around my house.

  40. So much to say... by Fished · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's so much I would like to say here, and I rather doubt that I'll get it all said, but I'll make a stab at it. In the first place, I haven't seen the movie, so can't really comment on Stein's take. However, I have looked at the "sociology" of the Evolution/Intelligent Design/Creationism debate a fair amount, and what I see disturbs me from all sides. One major concern I have is the elevation of Darwinian natural selection as a means of species creation to an unrealistic importance. I just don't see why it's so important in and of itself. One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Darwinism (or neo-Darwinism). It seems to me that one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the biological sciences (other than the various sorts of paleontology) without necessarily agreeing with Darwinism. Yet, we are constantly told that a failure to teach Darwinism at the high school level will destroy science education as we know it and result in a US population that is hopelessly ignorant of all science, etc. etc. I just don't buy it. Bluntly, I can scarcely think of a job where a belief in Darwinism is necessary. On the other hand, we have school systems that literally teach absolutely no information science, computer science, etc. etc., and people graduating from college who literally don't know the different between a byte and a gigabyte. It's hard for me to see why this ONE THING is so vitally important, when it has virtually no practical application and there are scientific topics with enormous practical application that go untaught. Could the real problem be social or (speak softly now) political? It seems to me that that is exactly the case. The extraordinary efforts put forth by various scientific bodies to defend Darwinism from all criticism strike me as a knee-jerk reaction to a knee-jerk fear that the Scope's trial will happen all over again. This isn't about science--it's about continuing the Enlightenment project of supplanting all sources of Meaning (capitalization intended) with Scientific Meaning. That doesn't mean that I think that Darwinism is wrong. I actually think that it's as right as you're going to get within the boundaries that it sets itself. But I certainly don't think that the loss of Darwinism would destroy American education or anything along those lines. So ... people... GET A GRIP. My $0.02.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    1. Re:So much to say... by AlXtreme · · Score: 1

      One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Darwinism (or neo-Darwinism). It seems to me that one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the biological sciences (other than the various sorts of paleontology) without necessarily agreeing with Darwinism. Yet, we are constantly told that a failure to teach Darwinism at the high school level will destroy science education as we know it and result in a US population that is hopelessly ignorant of all science, etc. etc. I just don't buy it


      Okay, I'll bite: What should we teach children about biology?

      Genetics and evolution are simply a part of biology. If you are going to teach how animals and plants work, you can't leave out where animals and plants came from. It would be like discussing geometry without explaining what the Cartesian system is.

      What a scientist does or doesn't believe has very little to do with facts from the real world. Humans are full of inconsistencies (otherwise you wouldn't have wars between religions that believe it is wrong to commit murder). Scientists are humans, just like the rest of us. They too might know one thing, but believe the opposite.

      Now I don't believe not teaching evolution will destroy education, but why shouldn't it be taught? If education has to be bent in accordance with every religion, you'll also have to get rid of the dinosaurs and most of history. You'll also have to rewrite education in accordance with the Quran (which Muslims believe is the direct word of God, and thus must be true), for instance.

      If something is a well-supported scientific theory, there is no reason it shouldn't be taught. Of course it might be replaced by another theory in a hundred years, but that's just how science works.
      --
      This sig is intentionally left blank
    2. Re:So much to say... by caution+live+frogs · · Score: 1

      First, just a point to reiterate: "Darwinism" doesn't exist except in the minds of ID types. Neither does "Evolutionism" - it's not an ideology, not a belief system, it's a theory. Correctly, the theory of evolution through natural selection. Evolution = observed fact; natural selection = theory for major mechanism through which evolution occurs.

      Second, as evolutionary theory is the underpinning of modern biology, I have to disagree with you. I can't think of a single position in biology where you could reasonably expect to get anywhere without understanding evolution. I sure as hell would not want to go to a doctor that didn't understand basic biology - and evolution is basic biology.

      You can understand physics without needing to know string theory. Sure, there are things I'll never understand without learning string theory, but I can understand vectors and forces and acceleration and electrical flow without knowing string theory. In biology however, not knowing or understanding Darwinian evolution means you can't do a damn thing. Without common descent, you can't expect a drug that works in a mouse to also work in humans. You can't expect that genes excised from organism A can be successfully placed in organism B. You can't understand that captive tigers of indeterminate parentage are not the hope of the several dwindling subspecies in the wild. You can't understand that conservation means conserving behavior as well as genetics. People who do not understand these things are making decisions about how to run our country, how to preserve our natural resources, and what medical resources will be available to citizens. That scares me. It should scare you.

      Trying to understand biology without Darwinian evolution is like trying to understand math while limiting yourself to whole, positive numbers (and dropping the zero). You can do it, you might be able to learn a little, but you're crippling yourself for no logical reason.

      The argument that it isn't a big deal is flawed. An assault on science is an assault on science, and it should be treated as such. If you accept that evolution isn't that important, what happens when the ID proponents start going after geology for not supporting young earth theory? Do you just accept that there's no job you can think of that depends on valid radiocarbon dating? Where does it end? Why bother having advances in science if we're just going to give up when some small but vocal group starts yelling?

    3. Re:So much to say... by frith01 · · Score: 1

      I would suppose you would never want farmers to know about genetic diversity being good for their herds of cattle ? Or how maybe if there is a history of family genetic problems, that maybe you should have your CHILD checked sooner for issues, rather than waiting 10 years for the symptoms to show up before getting treatment ? How about knowing how to treat viruses, research cures for diseases that are occurring in foreign areas, so that we can provide cures if they ever get to the US ? Flu shots are based on understanding the genetics of the current strain of flu.

    4. Re:So much to say... by Fished · · Score: 1

      The argument that it isn't a big deal is flawed. An assault on science is an assault on science, and it should be treated as such.
      Here you do a grand job of making my precise point. This isn't about what's true. It's about a grand, failed vision of science as the only source of meaning and significance. 1950 called, they want their logical positivism back.

      I also find it instructive the way you conflate Darwinism with genetics. This is a fallacy of composition: the Intelligent Design movement criticizes one, and only one proposition, that Darwinian natural selection is a sufficient explanation for the biological world as we see it. This really has *nothing* to do with genetics--it's more a question of how hard you're willing to squint to fit everything into a secularist worldview.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    5. Re:So much to say... by KMnO4 · · Score: 1

      "a knee-jerk fear that the Scope's trial will happen all over again"
      - you act as though someone made this all up in their free time as a fiction. You do realize this has continued to simmer since the time of Scopes, with for example a supreme court decision in 1968 (Epperson v. Arkansas). A battle has fulminated in Kansas since 1999, and finally, as of 2007, SEEMS to be settled.

      continuing the Enlightenment project of supplanting all sources of Meaning (capitalization intended) with Scientific Meaning
      Hello? Earth to poster? Are you suggesting high schools have banned all teaching of classical philosophy and religion because "Scientific Meaning" is the only source of meaning? At least in my day, my AP world history course covered the major religions, including Christianity, and what their belief system was/is.

    6. Re:So much to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are uninformed. As explained in the Wikipedia article

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_evolutionary_synthesis,

      evolution is basic building block of all modern biology. It ties all the pieces together.

    7. Re:So much to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If by "neo-Darwinism" you mean panselectinism, that's been out of style in biology since the '50s. At any rate, you seem to be confusing what goes on in science classes and what goes on in academia. Natural selection is brought up in science classes because, like speciation by genetic drift and geographic isolation, it's one of the easiest ways to approach the subject. It's not of "unrealistic importance" in the actual research field.

    8. Re:So much to say... by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      your absolutely right1

      while were at it, lets get rid of the periodic table of elements in chemistry class.

      One major concern I have is the elevation of the 90-something elements as a means of all materials to an unrealistic importance. I just don't see why it's so important in and of itself. One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Oxygen or Carbon (or hydrogen). It seems to me that one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the bio-chemical sciences (other than the various sorts of helium balloon fillers) without necessarily agreeing with chemistry. Yet, we are constantly told that a failure to teach the periodic table at the high school level will destroy science education as we know it and result in a US population that is hopelessly ignorant of all science, etc. etc. I just don't buy it.

      --
      -I only code in BASIC.-
    9. Re:So much to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Darwinian ideas permeate modern society's thinking. Businesses rise and fall through competitive selection. Businesses evolve. Market niches for survival. Yeah, let's stop pushing a very attractive theory on our kids and let humankind founder with these silly, useless big brains of ours. God created IBM. That's all our children should need to know.

    10. Re:So much to say... by ozborn · · Score: 1

      One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Darwinism (or neo-Darwinism).
      Depends on what you're doing, if you doing any genetics it is next to impossible. Physicians doing medically related genetic research use evolutionary models like Hardy-Weinburg to find drug targets. Even cancer treatment requires a pretty good understanding of evolution just to get a handle on what is going on. While creationists focus on "species creation" evolutionary theory works well (and faster) on a cellular level and is very useful in explaining drug resistance in malignant cells, bacteria and viruses.
      BTW is also works well for the human organism too, there is remarkable agreement between genetic and paleontological data.
      Bluntly put, evolutionary theory informs the whole of modern biological science.

    11. Re:So much to say... by iter8 · · Score: 1

      I really hesitate to wade into to the crapfest that Mr. Stein is trying to create, but here goes....

      One major concern I have is the elevation of Darwinian natural selection as a means of species creation to an unrealistic importance. I just don't see why it's so important in and of itself.

      The reason that the theory of evolution is important is because it basis for our current understanding of molecular biology. IAACMB (I am a computational molecular biologist) and when I ply my trade, evolutionary theory is a fundamental tool. Intelligent Design (ID) and Creationism just don't work. It's not a religious conflict like Perl vs. Python, it's simply that evolutionary theory does a good job of explaining what we see in data (in my field, sequence data).

      Creationism and ID are not "bad science", they are dead science. In Newton's time most scientists were creationists, but the gradual accumulation of fossil and geological evidence showed that the recent and/or instantaneous creation of life could not explain the evidence. Prior to Darwin and Wallace, a form of special creation of species (ID) was held by many scientists, but Darwin showed that the evidence couldn't support that view and scientists gradually accepted evolution by natural selection. See Living with Darwin: Evolution, Design, and the Future of Faith by Philip Kitcher for the whole story. ID is no more important to modern molecular biology than the phlogistan theory of heat is to thermodynamics. It is just an interesting historical footnote. People who argue for ID are arguing for a notion that was found inadequate over a century ago.

      But I certainly don't think that the loss of Darwinism would destroy American education or anything along those lines. So ... people... GET A GRIP

      It's only a great loss if you think that understanding how science and biology actually work is an important part of education.

    12. Re:So much to say... by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      Your sarcastic and misplaced comments not withstanding, the parent is right - the belief in evolution is not the litmus test of intelligence. There have been many very accomplished people who do not fully grasp evolution and who aren't impaired by that one bit.

    13. Re:So much to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yet, we are constantly told that a failure to teach Darwinism at the high school level will destroy science education as we know it and result in a US population that is hopelessly ignorant of all science, etc. etc. I just don't buy it.

      If instead of 'Darwinism' high schools taught 'intelligent design', then that teaches kids that God is what causes nature as we know it. Once you buy in to that, why try to become a medical doctor? You already "know" that any disease you might encounter in your patients was designed by God himself, so why even bother trying to cure them? Why become a physicist and try to find the great unifying theory of everything? You already "know" that quantum mechanics cannot be understood by mere humans because God made fundamental particles unpredictable.
      When "intelligent design" is taught as if it were science, it's a slippery slope to basically replacing every single field of scientific research with "god did it".

    14. Re:So much to say... by hywel_ap_ieuan · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Parent post wasn't worth $.02. For that kind of obfuscation and dragging the red herring, I'd say "Fished" owes us.

      First alert is the constant refrain of "Darwinism" this and "Darwinism" that. People who are talking about science, like the scientists and educators that are under attack from the Expelled crowd, talk about the fact and theory of evolution. The fact of evolution was clear before Darwin started writing. Darwin was the first to figure out natural selection, but that was never the total of evolutionary theory - the man himself wrote pretty extensively about sexual selection, too.

      Likewise, talk about "Darwinism" not being of practical application is specious. Knowledge of evolution is fundamental; one can no more be considered an educated person who doesn't know the basics of evolution than one who doesn't know that the Sun is a star.

      Make no mistake, Expelled isn't about "academic freedom" and Intelligent Design isn't about doing science. In that sense, the parent post is correct; the issue is social and political. Intelligent Design advocates have no science to back up their positions, so they're fighting to undermine actual teaching at the level of primary and secondary schools. Losing this fight wouldn't destroy American education in and of itself, but it would be a serious step backward. Why in the world would we not object when someone wants to delete a broad swath of knowledge from our educational system?

    15. Re:So much to say... by BioBeing · · Score: 1

      The theory of descent with modification is an important concept in the biological sciences. Without it, very little in biology actually makes sense. Sure - you could teach science without it, but why should you be forced to? You could probably teach physics without mentioning the theory of electricity, but why would you do that? Electricity is a thoroughly grounded (pardon the pun) concept, with lots of evidence in it's favor. Same with evolution. Further, to teach something else instead - something which is demonstrably not a science and has no evidence for it - is stupid. Teaching ID would be worse than not teaching evolution. ID says it is OK to not search for answers. To give up and say "it is too hard, I'm just going to say godditit instead of finding a real answer." ID is ANTIscientific. So I have a grip alright - I have a very firm grip on the stick that says that we teach the very best theories that scientists can come up with. That we not remove good science from the curriculum just because some group or other doesn't like it.

    16. Re:So much to say... by JetJaguar · · Score: 1

      I also find it instructive the way you conflate Darwinism with genetics. This is a fallacy of composition: the Intelligent Design movement criticizes one, and only one proposition, that Darwinian natural selection is a sufficient explanation for the biological world as we see it.

      You're wrong about the ID movement only being critical of a single proposition though. Have you ever heard of the wedge document? Or any of Phillip Johnson's writings on this subject? The wedge document makes it pretty clear that the ID movement isn't just against evolution, it's against any scientific theory that does not contain God in some form (whatever that means). And their actions bear this out. Some Bush appointed NASA PR flunky recently went after a scientist for talking about how his work confirmed some aspect of the Big Bang, and the flunky stuck his neck out about the Big Band only being a "theory" (the usual creationist weasel words)

      Let me also point out that these folks are making demonstrably false claims about physics as well (the YEC's don't like radio-active dating for example and often claim that the physics is wrong).

      In other words, the ID movement has a much bigger, and much more insidious, agenda than you are claiming.

      --

      Shop Smart, Shop S-mart!

    17. Re:So much to say... by grep_rocks · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually Evolution is the one idea that ties all of Biology together, it neatly describes and predicts the physical, chemical and genetic similiarites and differences between all of life. Testing of drugs on animals does not make a whole lot of sense if there was not a biochemical similarity between animals and humans - would you feel better if a drug trial was conducted on mice or jellyfish? how about Chimpanzees? If ID were true jellyfish might be biochemically more similiar to us than mice - or all animals might be completely different - rendering animal trials useless. I think a doctor would be much more competent if he understood evolution if for the only reason that he would be able to interpert animal studies - nevermind that animal models are a vital piece of all medical research... Oh and understanding of mutation and spread of infectious diseases would be completely lost to the doctor as well... A biologist who does not understand evoloution would be pretty useless as well, genetic similiarites and differences between plants and animals would be lost on him - how can you genetically engineer a new species of corn or rice without some understanding of the genetic relationship of the plant to other species? Without evolution biology is just an endless array of facts with no structure by which to organize them - every plant and animal would be a unique and complex system completely unrelated to any other - w/o evolution biology would be set back 100 years - get a clue dude...

    18. Re:So much to say... by tutori · · Score: 1

      Businesses rise and fall through competitive selection. Businesses evolve. Market niches for survival. Don't you mean they are intelligently guided by Adam Smith's invisible hand?
    19. Re:So much to say... by tomcode · · Score: 1

      One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Darwinism (or neo-Darwinism). It seems to me that one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the biological sciences (other than the various sorts of paleontology) without necessarily agreeing with Darwinism. Yes, I'll take last year's flu vaccine because there's no way a virus can "evolve" when it's been intelligently designed already. And there's no reason to test medications on animals since they were designed independently of people. A much better approach would be to reverse-engineer the human design and create medicines based on design cues, or perhaps look for blueprints left by the Intelligent Agent. Such blueprints would have to be thousands of years old, possibly carved in rock.

      If I rejected all aspects of biology and medicine derived from the theory of common ancestry, I'd be praying too.
      --
      f u cn rd ths u cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgmng
    20. Re:So much to say... by yar · · Score: 1

      Hm. Well, first, I'm not familiar with some discrete body of knowledge called "Darwinism," so I'm not quite sure what you mean. What is neo-Darwinism? Could you clarify? I've seen the term, but haven't found a single definition of it. To the best of my knowledge, there's nothing called "Darwinism" taught in schools. Where is this focus on "Darwinism" coming from?

      Second, the understanding of natural selection and its relation to species evolution has changed a great deal since Darwin's time, if that's what you're referring to. Scientists don't agree on all aspects of evolution- ever read the punctuated equilibrium arguments given by Gould and Dawkins? ^_^

      I don't really think one can be a practitioner of any of the biological sciences without believing in evolution.

    21. Re:So much to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the "loss of Darwinism" would destroy American education. But the controversy surrounds whether intelligent design should be taught as science. By claiming that ID is science, we lose the rigorous aspect of scientific inquiry. When something is sufficiently complicated or difficult to understand, we can simply say, well an intelligent designer is responsible, so we can leave it at that. No further study required.

      I agree that not teaching Darwinism in high school wouldn't really be that big a deal. But to teach ID in the science classroom would destroy American science education. It simply is not science - it cannot be tested or analyzed or observed.

      I think this is why many scientists are so vocal about the whole ID issue. It's not so much about Darwinism vs. ID, but ID vs science. ID attacks the very foundation of science by making claims as science that science has no way of verifying.

    22. Re:So much to say... by nyctopterus · · Score: 1

      "Darwinism" is a word mostly used by creationists (are you one trying to sound like you're not?)--it isn't a particularly accurate term. Consider using "evolutionary biology" instead, because it takes into account non-darwinian processes.

      There aren't a lot of jobs where you need to know much Relativity or Quantum Physics either, but the erosion of basic science (in this case the unifying theory of biology) will have consequences down the line.

      Before you blame scientists for vigorously defending evolutionary biology, consider that no other scientific theory has come under such prolonged and intense a political attack, yet been so uncontroversial among scientists. If it were Relativity or the Germ Theory of disease, I'm sure you'd see the same sort of reaction.

    23. Re:So much to say... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      However, I have looked at the "sociology" of the Evolution/Intelligent Design/Creationism debate a fair amount, and what I see disturbs me from all sides. One major concern I have is the elevation of Darwinian natural selection as a means of species creation to an unrealistic importance. I just don't see why it's so important in and of itself. One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Darwinism (or neo-Darwinism). It seems to me that one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the biological sciences (other than the various sorts of paleontology) without necessarily agreeing with Darwinism.

      Yes, and you could work in a chemistry lab without believing in atomic theory.

      However, I wouldn't care to be served by a physician who rejects huge masses of evidence because it conflicted with some religious mythology he happens to believe, whether the topic was biology or chemistry. *Possibly* he can compartmentalize his thoughts well enough that he can still reason about evidence when it comes to medical diagnoses, but why take the chance when you can find a doctor who doesn't have to?

      Yet, we are constantly told that a failure to teach Darwinism at the high school level will destroy science education as we know it and result in a US population that is hopelessly ignorant of all science, etc. etc. I just don't buy it.

      We could also elect not to teach students about the atomic theory of matter, or indeed, we could neglect teaching science altogether. But you're venturing into the topic of what "education" means, and whether an educated public is a good thing, which are questions entirely different from the (manufactured) controversy about evolution.

      But if that's what's up for discussion... how would you feel about some other society that had a policy of teaching school kids a good foundation in every field of science, except for one that conflicted with some powerful group's arbitrary religious beliefs? People here would be laughing their asses off if some Middle Eastern country did that.

      On the other hand, we have school systems that literally teach absolutely no information science, computer science, etc. etc., and people graduating from college who literally don't know the different between a byte and a gigabyte. It's hard for me to see why this ONE THING is so vitally important, when it has virtually no practical application and there are scientific topics with enormous practical application that go untaught.

      I'm not sure I buy your assumption that kids are being taught more about biology than about computers, but if it is true it might merely be because CS/IT is a relatively new field that doesn't have the "stature" of the traditional sciences. If you take a degree in Literature you'll probably have to have some coursework in the physical sciences, and if you take a degree in CS you'll certainly have to take several semesters of irrelevant calculus, but few degrees make you take any CS at all.

      I don't think the problem you perceive has much to do with "Darwinism".

      Could the real problem be social or (speak softly now) political? It seems to me that that is exactly the case. The extraordinary efforts put forth by various scientific bodies to defend Darwinism from all criticism strike me as a knee-jerk reaction to a knee-jerk fear that the Scope's trial will happen all over again.

      Well, science *is* on the defensive in the USA.

      This isn't about science--it's about continuing the Enlightenment project of supplanting all sources of Meaning (capitalization intended) with Scientific Meaning.

      Huh?

      I've never met *anyone* other than a religious apologist who thought that science was supposed to provide us with Meaning. Science is merely an endeavor to find out how the universe works. Meaning is something you have to construct for yourself.

      That doesn't mean that I think that Darwinism is wrong. I actua

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    24. Re:So much to say... by phuul · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem isn't the "belief" in evolution (the term Darwinism is a canard really as is the use of belief but I'll go with it for now.) It's the attempt to get something that has absolutely nothing to do with science taught in a science class. The only reason evolution even enters into this is that the ID proponents have chosen that Theory to cast their rhetoric at. It's the idea that ID is an actual Theory that is the source of most of the ire directed at them. ID fails every possible requirement for being a true scientific Theory yet it's proponents use the recognition of this failure as evidence of censorship and persecution. The idea that if someone shouts loud enough they can force any idea to be considered a valid scientific Theory is the true fear. It's not the idea that some people don't find the evolutionary Theory valid that will harm science education, it's the subornation of the scientific method. The extraordinary efforts are necessary because when one so called theory forces it's way in (whether it's ID, astrology or The Flying Spaghetti Monster) it makes it that much easier for the next to get in.

    25. Re:So much to say... by caution+live+frogs · · Score: 1

      If ID posits that Darwinian natural selection isn't a sufficient explanation, then evolutionary biology agrees with ID. Current theory states that evolution is best explained by natural selection, but there are also extensions to strict Darwinian selection - some of which (like sexual selection) Darwin himself proposed, but others that he could not have foreseen. Things like cross-species gene transfer in plants, for example, resulting in triploid or quadruploid hybrids. As these types of plants constitute the majority of our grain crops, well, clearly that's unimportant.

      Even without taking the extensions into account, you can't explain natural selection without genetics. If Darwin had discovered Mendel's manuscript, he wouldn't have had as hard a time as he did explaining why natural selection works. He had to make a vague statement that offspring resemble the parents, with no knowledge of genes or DNA. Genetics (which you want to discount here) have provided some of the strongest evidence for natural selection and common descent. If ID wants to kill Darwinian natural selection, genetics needs to be taken down in the process. They can't have it both ways.

      The ID movement has one and only one goal in mind: To push the idea that there must be a Creator, because there is no other explanation for the world as we know it. It isn't explicitly stated any more (primarily to make the "theory" more attractive in secular education institutions), but historically the Creator is the Judeo-Christian God. ID only attacks Darwin because Darwin is a nice easy target, thanks to a century of anti-science rhetoric on the part of the wilfully ignorant.

      Incidentally, Darwin never said that evolution means there is no god. All he said was that god wasn't directing evolution. There are a great deal of evolutionary theories prior to Darwin's that presented no difficulty for the church. Alfred Russell Wallace was the man that stated bluntly that evolutionary theory is incompatible with religion. He just didn't publish a big thick book like Darwin did - even though he did publish first.

    26. Re:So much to say... by Shirakawasuna · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you have seen, "the elevation of Darwinian natural selection as a means of species creation to an unrealistic importance", but it certainly isn't something I've experienced or heard from anyone who isn't explicitly a creationist/ID advocate. You would seem to be the minority if you were even taught the basics of biology and evolution in high school, let alone to the point where you actually retained any of it or knew the scientific method.

      First, you throw around the word 'Darwinism' an awful lot, but the general usage refers to Darwin's original ideas and occasionally as a reference to natural selection with variation. I somewhat doubt that's how you are using it.

      Second, the problem with say a physician rejecting evolution or the fact that natural selection plays a significant role in life's continued existence and evolution/evolution in the past generally indicates a laziness on that person's part if not an outright sense of antiscience. Absolutely, you can deny all science with any bearing on history and still memorize treatments that work, ailments and their causes, etc, and be great physician. You can also be someone like Michael Egnor.

      You seem to want CS taught in public school, which I would have no problem with, but if we plan on teaching any biology at all in the classroom, evolution is absolutely foundational. We're already failing at it in the United States and it's been said that it may in fact be better to exclude biology classes from a public school education, usually due to the fact that teachers must simplify complex concepts due to time constraints and the creationist onslaught of inane political opposition.

      What are you talking about concerning "extraordinary efforts put forth by various scientific bodies to defend Darwinism from all criticism", exactly? Antiscience creationism has been around for a long time and generally has been a concerted effort to wiggle its way into public science education (it can't handle actual scientific scrutiny). If you consider a project like the National Center for Science Education to be a "knee-jerk" reaction you must surely consider the entire Free Software movement to be a reactionary dictatorship of dogmatic, epic proportions. You didn't provide any evidence or specifics in your claim, of course, so I can only assume you're thinking of the AAAS or NCSE.

      I wonder what the 'this' of "this is not science" is referring to. You mean the creationism-evolution controversy? Of course it's about science, it's about political attacks on specific scientific concepts that conflict with the personal beliefs of various people. Do you mean teaching evolution in public schools? I have to wonder which part you think isn't about science. The courses are entirely about learning scientific conepts. Biology classes of various kinds have been in public schools for over a century, so it certainly isn't an overreaction to recent developments or even the Scopes trial. In fact, many public schools taught more life science classes (zoology, botany, etc) in the early 1900s while right now you're lucky to get a single coherent biology course in a U.S. public school. If anything, biology education has taken a beating in the U.S.

      I wonder who you've heard that thinks the "loss of Darwinism would destroy American education". American education is already pretty bad, especially considering how good it *could* be, and evolution is hardly taught at all. I think science education would be vastly improved, however, if we were at a level where students at least understood the theory of evolution in general, as it is a classic example of a successful scientific theory.

    27. Re:So much to say... by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      One could certainly be a competent physician, for example, and not believe in Darwinism (or neo-Darwinism). It seems to me that one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the biological sciences (other than the various sorts of paleontology) without necessarily agreeing with Darwinism. That is flatly incorrect.

      Even a doctor has to understand evolved antibiotic resistance, pathogen evolution, genetic diseases, genetically engineered treatments, and animal testing of human treatments, none of which make much sense without evolutionary theory.

      And that's the same theory that's woven into the core of pretty much every bit of modern biology. There aren't even any vaguely competing theories on offer any more. The last attempt I can recall is Lysenkoism, which was an obvious bust. So-called "intelligent design" is not even wrong.

      But I certainly don't think that the loss of Darwinism would destroy American education or anything along those lines. So ... people... GET A GRIP. The reason that people care so much is that because evolution is one of the most heavily established theories, you can't get it out of science education without getting rid of science itself. That's particularly true if your goal is to introduce creationism, which is terrible science (and pretty weak theology).

      Our primary and secondary science education is already pretty weak, and scientific knowledge is becoming ever more crucial in the modern world. That's true not just for jobs, but for us to fulfill our duty as citizens. So yeah, in my view, this is a big deal.
    28. Re:So much to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...the elevation of Darwinian natural selection as a means of species creation to an unrealistic importance. I just don't see why it's so important in and of itself. One could certainly be a competent physician...one could even be a quite competent practitioner of any of the biological sciences...without necessarily agreeing with Darwinism. Yet, we are constantly told that a failure to teach Darwinism at the high school level will destroy science education as we know it and result in a US population that is hopelessly ignorant of all science, etc. etc. Evolutionary theory is a unifying concept that makes the broader study of biology more coherent. It's a set of basic principles that are ultimately relevant to a wide array of disciplines, including medicine and IT.
      While belief in evolutionary theory may not be required for competence, understanding of it is. It has consistently proven to be an immensely useful tool, and giving that tool to students is a Good Thing(tm).
  41. Re:Monkey's uncle? by cycik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean? People do not automatically assume evolution is true. It is a well tested theory that provides a good explanation for the word and has made good and testable predictions. It does not explain everything and does not claim to and is working to find the answers. Intelligent Design (or as Christopher Hitchens has referred to it Ignorance Deified.) is not even a theory and provides not useful understanding in how life works. If the ID people want to be taken seriously. They can produce good research and put forward a good testable hypothesis that can better explain the world or the liars for Jesus can just STFU. Why do people assume a completely untested assertion is a legitimate competitor in the marketplace of ideas?
  42. Re:Monkey's uncle? by caution+live+frogs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Uh... because there is exactly zero evidence supporting other theories? Because other theories are largely unscientific, untestable, and not falsifiable? Because creationists still don't understand that evidence against one theory do NOT automatically equate to support for an alternate theory*? Because evidence from every branch of science, from astronomy to chemistry to geology to physics to zoology all support the currently accepted theory? You know, those sorts of things kind of tend to make people really, really tired of dealing with folks like Ben Stein, who remain obstinately and willfully ignorant.

    (*e.g., if this fruit is not an orange, that does not mean it is automatically an apple... heck, could be a kumquat, for all you know).

  43. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Umm... Stein is not discussing the Science. But, the Atheistic philosophy of Darwinism that says its all an accident and random. ID creationism. Stein points out this very attitude and those that use their power to silence opposition.

    ex nihilo nihil fit

  44. Here's my take by jocknerd · · Score: 1

    You can be sure that those behind this film will say that this is not a pro-religion film, but one where they try to make Intelligent Design a real scientific theory. But before you believe that, take a look at how many church's will send their members, teen youth groups, etc. to watch this film. Then tell me this isn't about pushing religion down our throats even more.

    1. Re:Here's my take by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      Then tell me this isn't about pushing religion down our throats even more.

      Yeah, I hate it when I have to spend $10 to pay for a ticket so I can get religion "pushed" down my throat.

      Don't want to listen to it? Don't buy the ticket. Don't want to watch "Passion of the Christ"? Don't buy the DVD. Don't want to watch "Edward Penishands"? Get out of the back room of the video store.

      The "change the channel" arguement works for violence, porn, AND religious shows. Let people choose to watch what they want.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
  45. What I am opposed to ... by mbaGeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... is the closing of minds

    ideas are dangerous to closed minds.

    80 years ago the "establishment" was opposed to teaching the theory of evolution - now the "establishment" doesn't want to discuss the possibility that evolution is "bad" science.

    I also like the fact that the "enlightened pro-evolution" people are usually the ones resorting to argumentum ad hominem...

    --
    It ain't what they call you. It's what you answer to. http://mylyceum.us/
  46. Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't one of the points of the movie that while scientists espouse neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. that they are not actually following it? As one of the submitters (and evidently one of the few people who watched the extended trailer), you're pretty accurate there.

    During the whole montage he's writing something over and over on the blackboard and it comes out to be something like "I will NOT question Darwinian Evolution." He interviews scientists and editors who have lost their jobs for printing/writing papers that claim our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature.

    Disclaimer, I read a lot of Darwin/Dawkins/Gould so I'm pretty biased here ... but I fear that the ostracized members of the scientific community will make the evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds. Which is why I likened his trailer to the Spanish Inquisition.

    I think that even though it's 'a waste of time,' it's bad to write these people off or fire them. I'm sure there's sound criticism against these papers and authors but Ben Stein isn't showing that in his movie if there is.

    If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it. It may be a waste of time to you but it's complete snobbery to write them off. Ben Stein is correct that you may lose friends if you watch that movie and become polarized by it--don't let that happen!

    Like a Michael Moore movie, objectivity is raped, killed, gutted and donned over a rich man's face who then can safely tell you what to think.
    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by electrictroy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I will illustrate your point, with an example I saw on CNN:

      (1) A BBC reporter wrote a fair, non-biased article on global warming. In one paragraph he stated, "Not all scientists agree that global warming is caused by man-made actions," which is an accurate statement. Not "all" scientists think man caused the problem. Some don't even think it's a problem, saying it's just part of a natural cycle that's been happening for the last 10,000 years.

      (2) The reporter published the article on the website, and immediately an email rolled-in from an environmentalist demanding that phrase be expunged.

      (3) The reporter and activist went back-and-forth several times, with the activist saying, "There is no doubt," and "We may be uncertain of the cause, but we must not let the common people know that we are uncertain."

      (4) The reporter refused to rewrite his article until the activist told him, "If you do not comply, I will rally my group and you will receive thousands of emails demanding the change."

      (5) The reporter, obviously concerned about this prospect (and possibly losing his job), immediately deleted the offending paragraph.

      And thus:

      An activist, acting somewhat akin to a religious zealot, took a balanced BBC article & turned it into a one-sided piece using the tactics of threats and coercion to silence any contrarian views about global warming. It does not surprise me to learn that similar tactics are being used to silence researchers and/or scientists.

      --
      The government is not your daddy. Its purpose is not to raid middle-class neighbors' wallets and give it to you.
    2. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Which is why I likened his trailer to the Spanish Inquisition. I wasn't expecting that!

      I dunno really, I believe there is no God and Dawkins is his prophet. But it does seem to be very dangerous if people are losing their jobs for writing papers about "creation science" or "intelligent design" or whatever they call it. I think it's all bollocks quite frankly. But who knows, lots of theories have languished in kookdom for hundreds of years and then a mutated version of them has turned out to be quite relevant. E.g. non Euclidean geometry was for ages considered a mathematical curiosity, but it turned to be useful in phyics.

      I think, for reasons that will hopefully enrage the people doing it, "intelligent design" studies should be publically funded on the off chance that some future mutated version of it becomes useful in some part of science. Though I doubt it will look anything like the stuff I see now.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by mc900ftjesus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it. It may be a waste of time to you but it's complete snobbery to write them off. Ben Stein is correct that you may lose friends if you watch that movie and become polarized by it--don't let that happen!"

      I humor their kids who still believe in Santa, I guess I can pretend that humans magically appeared one day too.

      People realize that their own ego is what's preventing them from accepting evolution, right? It's the crap that you've been forced into believing since birth plus the fact that you think you're somehow different than any other animal that makes you think that you're really magical, sorry "created."

    4. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by radl33t · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The journalist should be fired. End of story.

    5. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by VanillaBabies · · Score: 1

      It is more complex that being persecuted for believing ID, but wikipedia has an okay version of it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sternberg_peer_review_controversy

    6. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by servies · · Score: 1

      You mean, you believe what CNN 'we believe everything the USA government tells us to be the truth' reported??

    7. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ghostdoc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So when does the scientific community get to stop talking about ID/Creationism and move on?

      To draw a parallel: The Ether was discredited around 100 years ago as being unnecessary. No serious physicist talks about it any more. Science has moved on, and is now talking about (for example) string theory. In a hundred year's time it will have moved on again and string theory will either be accepted as a working model, or rejected.

      Biologists have done the science on evolution, they have questioned it, poked it, prodded it and tested it for over a hundred years, and it stands up to that. It's a good working model, and now everyone would like to move on and stop talking about it.

      The desire to not talk about evolution/creationism is not a desire for orthodoxy, but a desire to move the science on.

      --
      Business/App ideas are like arseholes: everyone's got one, they're mostly shit, but very rarely they contain a diamond
    8. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's an important aspect to scientific debate that needs to be mentioned: doubts aren't evidence.

      -Why do you have a doubt?
      -Well, I just don't see ...

      An argument based on doubt is an argument based on personal limitation. I don't see ... I don't think ...

      That's not science. It's not even good rhetoric. It's simply a roadblock.

    9. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      Activist != Scientist.

      That is all.

    10. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by mdwh2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But who knows, lots of theories have languished in kookdom for hundreds of years and then a mutated version of them has turned out to be quite relevant. E.g. non Euclidean geometry was for ages considered a mathematical curiosity, but it turned to be useful in phyics.

      This is not comparable in the slightest. Non-Euclidean geometry never claimed to be science. It is mathematics (and by that, I mean actual mathematics, and it was never considered "kookdom") that later turned out to have an application in science.

      Intelligent design makes claims about the physical universe - but it is not a scientific theory.

      So I shall ask for another example - what "kookdom" comparable to Intelligent Design later turned out to be a valid scientific theory?

    11. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by darkwhite · · Score: 1

      So, what's your point? Just because a stupid person used stupid tactics to advocate a responsible stance with respect to the environment, that implies something wrong about that stance?

      The difference between that idiot and people who use "similar tactics... to silence researchers and/or scientists" is that the former can be objectively blamed for at most hurting the feelings of a few people, while the latter can be blamed for destroying our planet.

      --

      [an error occurred while processing this directive]
    12. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is the worst place in the world to read about politically charged scientific dispues. Usually one side will end up winning and make sure the article only reflects their views.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    13. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by tbannist · · Score: 1

      {{Citation Needed}}

      Frankly, I don't believe you. Your story sounds made up to justify your position and I don't really care whether you made it up, or someone else made it up and you're repeating it. Please provide some evidence to support your claims or stop posting them.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    14. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ktappe · · Score: 1

      Prove it. Give us links, dates, and names, or I call shenanigans.

      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    15. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ChromaticDragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree with just one part of your suggestion: Respect.

      You should respect your friends who believe in Creationism and not belittle them. You should respect anyone in a proper debate and maintain a sound sense of decorum.

      However, there is no reason to provide arguments for or against Creationism. None at all. Indeed, you would probably do much better if you simply stick with Common Descent, or even Abiogenesis if you wish. Provide sound reasons for this. Be prepared to patiently counter all the very tired and very old Creationist claims against these. But there is no reason whatsoever to tread in their realm. It's their job to provide sound reasons for Creationism, not everyone else's to counter it.

      I am saddened both by the poor science of many Creationists and poor theology of many Evolutionists. If you repeat what you feel to be "sound arguments against [Creationism]", you may simply be parroting popular memes of Evolutionists which are easily countered by anyone more familiar with the Bible (or whatever). You may seem as ill informed to them as they do to you. This wouldn't help your goal of persuading them.

    16. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 0

      Yes, but ID != creationism.

      It's an unprovable theory (as unprovable as the existence of God).

      I think the poster with the CNN story: electrictroy made a good point (and yes, I believe the story to be true because I'd heard it elsewhere on other "reputable" networks, as well).

      Imagine if you merely had one or two lines in a whole text about evolution that said "some people believe evolution was guided by the hand of God."

      It's actually very innocuous, it's completely true (some people obviously DO believe it), and there are certainly scientists who believe in evolution who believe God may have had a hand guiding it.

      Now, does it belong in a science book? It's not really science (although some people might consider theology a science), but I think it's very debatable whether a simple, TRUE, passage in a paper or text could include something like that. If the student is religious and puts something like that in their paper, as long as the science is correct, it would seem abhorrent to me to fail them or mark them down for including an obviously true statement.

      But what Stein points out is that debate gets stifled instead of debated. I think he picked a poor subject as an example, but that sort of behavior in academia certainly isn't limited to ID, as a perusal of FIRE's website should show.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    17. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by odourpreventer · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's pretty clear he writes on the blackboard as a punishment, like a teacher would punish a pupil.

      Having seen the trailer, it's quite heavy on propaganda, and light on everything else. What did these people write, why were they persecuted? (using "persecuted" liberally). Many of the quotes seemed taken out of context. One man mentions "neo-Darwinism" which I've never heard about before.

      Remember, evolution has been proven. It exists. But just because it can't explain *everything* these people reject it. When Mr Stein says "intelligent design", he means "created by God". He's stated that quite clearly before, and does so in the trailer.

      It's bad of course when people fall victim to witch hunts, just for stating a differing opinion, but that's a different issue altogether. Then there's a problem with the society we live in.

      And please stop with the Moore-bashing, it's getting tiresome.

    18. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by siddster · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except there weren't any real examples of scientific zealotry on display in the movie. For ex. Richard Sternberg wasn't fired because he published the paper(although he received some serious flak for it). He was just an unpaid research associate at the end of his term and they decided not to renew his contract.

      What Ben Stein and co. are engaging in here is basically selective data dredging where all they show is the bits and bobs that are in their favour. Objectivity? Bah! We don't need no steenkin' objectivity.

      Secondly, I also don't get why the "believers" want their point of view to be handled with kid gloves. If you are going to present it as evidence to a bunch of scientists, it's subject to the same rules of peer review as any other paper. (which means if it's bullshit they will call it what it is)

      In any case, there's tons more information about the movie on Scientific American

      http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=ben-steins-expelled-review-john-rennie

    19. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      I will illustrate your point, with an example I saw on CNN:...An activist, acting somewhat akin to a religious zealot, took a balanced BBC article & turned it into a one-sided piece using the tactics of threats and coercion...

      Please CITE the CNN story.

      CNN puts every story online, so you should have no trouble. If it exists. Odd how you have no names or dates. But I'm just paranoid, I guess.

    20. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature. "

      That claim is wholely unscientific simple on the basis that i claims to know exactly what is possible in nature, which to this day cannot be statet as certain. There are many unresolved and nocomplete effects still under investigation. Besides this point, whenever a biologist claims that something involving quantum mechanics is "impossible" or "unrealistic" that person deserves to be fired for shear lack intelligence.

      Just as any scientist shoudl be fired if they started writing articles on the mathematical impossibility of an intelligent designer, og the impossibility of god. Not because these subjects depict "the opposite opponion of the scientific community" but simply because they are unscientific. Which is the one thing a scientist cannot be allowed to be.

    21. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by notabaggins · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer, I read a lot of Darwin/Dawkins/Gould so I'm pretty biased here ... but I fear that the ostracized members of the scientific community will make the evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds. Which is why I likened his trailer to the Spanish Inquisition.

      I think that even though it's 'a waste of time,' it's bad to write these people off or fire them. I'm sure there's sound criticism against these papers and authors but Ben Stein isn't showing that in his movie if there is. That's all well and good if it weren't for this:

      http://www.expelledexposed.com/index.php/the-truth

      Read through the stories of the allegedly "expelled". There's a word for what they're doing:

      Lying.
    22. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      Heliocentrism (comparable to ID not in a religious sense, but in the sense that it was outside the mainstream in the time of Copernicus, Galileo, et al, and therefore languished in "kookdom") vs. geocentrism.

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    23. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by jafiwam · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "There are things for which the debate has been conducted and there is a settled position. Things like the world is not flat and that the Earth is not the center of the Universe. People who debate those points don't have open minds, they're just stupid."

      -birdmanesq

      Pretty much sums it up. There's no "debate", only stupid people making movies or otherwise flapping their yaps.

      Ben Stain is motivated by the same thing Michael Moore is, profit. Discourse on science doesn't happen on a movie screen, though it might happen at a lecture in a movie theatre.

      Nothing to see here, move along.

    24. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Angostura · · Score: 4, Informative

      That is the one of the most disingenuous summary of what happened that I have seen. Here's an account by the reporter who absolutely denies that amended the story based on any threat, but says he amended it because he was persuaded that it could be improved.

    25. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by bhima · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think it is also important to recognize that professional deniers exploit and conflate the public's ignorance of the details of science and minor scientific disagreements in order to invent a substantive disagreement where there is little to none. Then reporters report "not all scientists agree" and the public walks away with the idea that there is some sort of real 50/50 split between serious scientists doing serious research as to the nature of whatever is being discussed. The fact of the matter is that no scientist seriously expects to achieve 100% consensus, nor is there is a 50/50 split between serious scientists doing serious research on either issue. There are virtually no evolutionary biologists saying in order to explain this or that an intelligent designer is required. And there are few climate scientists saying that it is extremely unlikely that climate change is not happening or that is completely decoupled from human activity.

      So what's the best thing to do when faced with reporters uncritically reporting distorted facts from groups with hidden agendas or who present distorted data in an effort to present a "balanced" story? Translating real science into something easily consumed by average citizen is extraordinarily difficult to do and most scientists can't. So even if you were able to secure an interview with the same reporter it unlikely you could produce material to the same level that the professional propagandists produce... and the reporter damn sure isn't going to do it for you.

      As a scientist I appreciate the difficulty and I get frustrated when I see reporters parrot bad science... it makes me glad sensor chemistry isn't exactly a hot bed of international debate.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    26. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Heliocentrism (comparable to ID not in a religious sense, but in the sense that it was outside the mainstream in the time of Copernicus, Galileo, et al, and therefore languished in "kookdom") vs. geocentrism.

      Of course there have been things outside of the mainstream which later became mainstream (e.g., quantum mechanics was rejected by some scientists at first). The question is was this thing unscientific - i.e., disputed by vast amounts of evidence?

    27. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by larryboymi · · Score: 1

      I'm a pro-Creationist Christian, and I had wanted to see this movie, because I do feel like there is a lot of undue criticism from the scientific community against the thought of Creation, but I have had serious doubts after reading articles in Popular Science and other magazines. I may still go to see it to verify if anything he attempts to show is not based on propaganda, but with movie making you never know.

      Personally I believe in evolution on a micro-scale, like adapting to the environment, however I do not believe the diversity in species we have today could have come about by random chance and changes in the world over billions of years.

    28. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok why is it so hard to convince people of things which are so obviously the best things for them to believe in order to serve their own interests.

      I really feel as though there exists an as yet unknown force which acts against intelligent life to destroy them before they develop the technology to spread to other planets. This force seems to be similar in nature to thermodynamics.

      For climate scientist to be concerned about public opinion when all the best science is indicating that we may have a catastrophe on our hands is perfectly understandable. That they may even act desperately is not surprising.

      To anyone with half a brain the idea that the theory of evolution may not be taught to science students is also scary as hell. Irrational people are scary because they just don't make one wit of sense. They are self destructive and unpredictable. And giving these people any kind of a platform on which to spread their pathogenic memes is dangerous.

    29. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by damburger · · Score: 1

      If some prick was lobbying schools to teach aether theories in classrooms as a viable alternative to special relativity, physicists would be spitting blood. The only reason this isn't happening is because aether theory has little utility to religious fundamentalists.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    30. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by lysse · · Score: 1

      I will illustrate your point, with an example I saw on CNN
      ...who, of course, have no vested interest, nor have ever been criticised themselves on neutrality grounds...

      Can you provide an actual reference for this, so that the rest of us can actually check this out for ourselves?
    31. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Jarjarthejedi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Two good examples, firstly my Biology class. If you even thought that Evolution was not a full on fact you'd fail it. We had a question on a test worth 10 points (probably 1% total grade, not too much, but still) which was "Evolution is a Fact T/F".

      And then there's the whole 'Evolution disclaimer' issue that's been kicking around. The scientific response to a disclaimer about how evolution isn't 100% proven true and there are alternate theories has been somewhat absurd. I've never understood it, if someone put such a disclaimer in about Einstein's relativity I'd applaud them, or Newton's gravity, but for some reason Darwin's work is off limits for disclaimers (disclaimer -> I have seen a disclaimer about Newtonian gravity before, basically saying that, while it's useful, it's also believed to be false and that there are newer, better methods of understanding gravity).

      Are scientists supposed to be neutral unbiased parties? Yes. Are they? No. Are they as bad as Ben claims? Probably not. For the most part modern scientists are good about being neutral, except when you bring up the ol' Evolution. I suspect that a lot of the backlash is based on how unscientific some of the anti-evolutionist have been, but that doesn't excuse it.

      --
      There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
    32. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of evolution really involves random chance? Learn the actual theory before you trash it.

    33. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You scotched your whole argument in that last sentence. An activist is by definition a politician, which is not the same as a scientist. You can't extrapolate from activist to researcher - that's not scientific.

    34. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      Heliocentrism (comparable to ID not in a religious sense, but in the sense that it was outside the mainstream in the time of Copernicus, Galileo, et al, and therefore languished in "kookdom") vs. geocentrism. And with that sentence you basically explained why your example is not a good one. That was an example of science being suppressed in favor of religion, not an example of one scientific theory being consigned to "kookdom" by scientists and later being proven valid. There probably are examples of that, but I haven't seen one here yet.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    35. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gr8scot · · Score: 1
      Well, maybe, but lets get all the facts.

      I dunno really, I believe there is no God and Dawkins is his prophet. But it does seem to be very dangerous if people are losing their jobs for writing papers about "creation science" or "intelligent design" or whatever they call it. That might be very dangerous, or it might be nothing harsher than holding people to the standards of their professions. I'll see the papers in their entirety before I mouth off in defense of any religious nutjob insisting that his psychic experiences are "just as good as" objective facts, thank you very much.
      --
      All 19 hijackers were known terrorists 09-10-2001. Lack of FBI intelligence does not justify warrantless wiretaps..
    36. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "... scientists and editors who have lost their jobs for printing/writing papers that claim our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature."

      They lost their jobs for failing to follow editor review processes when publishing those works; They lost their jobs for lying and saying the works were appropriately peer-reviewed. They lost their jobs by failing to produce actual science that demonstrates that the 'code' could not have happened in nature - a claim which is extra-ordinary. They lost their shot at tenure for failing to produce a substantial amount of publication excepting a few works (which they admitted were non-science works!)
      They lost their jobs for hijacking science and various professional credentials and publications to lend the veneer of scientific legitimacy to their religious beliefs - which have no actual scientific backing.
      People who believe in Creationism are /by definition/ willing to say "The Earth is 6000/10000 years old because something written 2000/3000 years ago and compiled and edited 1800 years ago by ignorant desert-nomad goat herders proves it, and nothing that Science brings us can be believed" - while using computers, automobiles, telephones, antibiotics, vaccines, and food - all of which was made possible by the very science they willfully decry.
      When I was young, a kid on a sidewalk pushed me into traffic - I barely missed getting hit - and then came back and asked me if he could have some of the soda I was drinking.
      I am supposed to /respect/ that?

    37. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by pe1rxq · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are making a mistake in thinking that intelligent design is science.
      The very idea behind is makes it non-scientific and as such it shouldn't be treated as science.
      The very fact that it is not falsifiable strips intelligent design from any scientific purpose.

      Non-euclidean geometry might have been a niche... but it never was anti-scientific.

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    38. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But what Stein points out is that debate gets stifled instead of debated. I think he picked a poor subject as an example, but that sort of behavior in academia certainly isn't limited to ID, as a perusal of FIRE's website [thefire.org] should show. We're talking about scientific debate, and there is no scientific debate about ID. It's not a scientific theory, therefore there can be no scientific debate. It doesn't belong in the classroom, it belongs in the church. It's a theological debate between people who take the Genesis story literally and those who take it as a metaphor.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    39. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 2, Funny

      And please stop with the Moore-bashing, it's getting tiresome. So are his movies, but he doesn't seem to be stopping. That said, I agree with the rest of your post :)
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    40. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by vertinox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it.

      You could point out that the Papacy and the Catholic church themselves have no problem with the theory of evolution, but if you take a literal interpretation of the Bible there is no true room for logic and science. You could also point out the fallacy in believing in creationism without following the other aspects of the bible such as putting people to death who work on Sundays and those who touch pigs.

      Trying to persuade them with logic and science actually might be a bad idea, but if you point out that God could have used evolution to create man in the philosophical sense it would possible encourage them. Of course you could point out that the people as we know it was put together by a bunch of angry men at the Concil of Nicea hundreds of years after Jesus's death by a Pagan who wasn't really a Christian until he was on his death bed.

      Of course that might make them angry if you put it like that...

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    41. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by JCSoRocks · · Score: 2, Informative

      oh come on. Persuaded it could be improved? Like he's going to admit that he was bullied into changing it. Give me a break. He may be telling the truth, but there's no proof. Until there is it just sounds like doublespeak.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    42. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      There's a word for what they're doing:


      Moore-izing? I've yet to see the movie, but if it's what I epect it to be then it's no better or no worse than what Moore has one. And other than Roger and Me, not of Moore's films were worth my time -- I doubt Stein's will be either.
    43. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by BioBeing · · Score: 2, Informative

      The "point" of the movie is that scientists are being expelled, correct. However, you might want to look at www.expelledexposed.com to see that the scientists interviewed in the movie were NOT censured for their belief in ID. Sternburg did not get tenure, but that was because his publication record had plummeted and he had gotten virtually no external funding in recent years. Don't take Ben Stein's word for it (or mine). expelledexposed details all these cases. Please read them, and see what a huge lie Ben Stein is promoting.

    44. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Artichoke · · Score: 1

      [Intelligent Design is] a theological debate between people who take the Genesis story literally and those who take it as a metaphor.

      Er, no. Michael Behe, the leading proponent of Intelligent Design, is an evolutionist who is on record as believing that the earth is four billion years old. Not exactly a literal interpretation is it?

      Yes, of course the Creationists latched on to ID. But that does not affect the Intelligent Design per se. ID requires addressing on its own terms, not those thrust upon it by the Creationists nor those thrust upon it by Evolutionists with their painfully paranoid agenda.

      BS from rabid Evolutionists is just as distasteful as BS from rabid Creationists.

      --
      __
      Arse
    45. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I can no more respect those who believe in Creationism than I can those who believe in vampires, werewolves, fairies and goblins. It's all the same.

    46. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      I didn't argue about teaching ID in the classroom; I think your response is exactly the kind of thing Stein is railing against.

      That many people believe in creationism and ID is a FACT; that merely mentioning that FACT gets so many people's undies in a bind is the exact reason people like Stein should continue pushing the issue and FIRE should continue prosecuting cases against people who stifle free speech.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    47. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      The journalist shouldn't be fired if people want to read him. The first amendment is a good thing.

    48. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      If you believe in evolution on a micro-scale, I think you are holding yourself back from truly considering just how long history is.

      Consider the tiniest change (thicker hair) each generation.

      There are 50 human generations in 1,000 years-- 500 generations for many animals.

      In a million years, there are 50,000 generations-- each one an opportunity for microchange on multiple levels. Plants you depended on to eat going extinct due to new diseases.
      New aggressive plants and animals overwriting the less aggressive plants and animals.
      New diseases hitting you all the time.
      Random sexual preferences that propagate and strengthen with each generation.

      in a billion years, there are 50,000,000 generations (~500,000,000 generations for shorter lived animals).

      Consider that in only 500 years the average size of western humans has gone from roughly 5' to roughly 6'.
      Micro-evolution IS macro-evolution. Just over unimaginably long time frames.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    49. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      Er, no. Michael Behe, the leading proponent of Intelligent Design, is an evolutionist who is on record as believing that the earth is four billion years old. Not exactly a literal interpretation is it? Then the theological debate may be more complicated than I thought it was, but then I haven't had any desire to get into that debate. It doesn't change the fact that ID is not a scientific theory, and should not be treated as such.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    50. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by joib · · Score: 1


      One man mentions "neo-Darwinism" which I've never heard about before.


      See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Darwinism

      Especially Richard Dawkins lecture about neo-darwinism (linked above) is informative: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4633079169415752395

    51. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by profplump · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That was an example of science being suppressed in favor of religion

      I know that's what they teach you in 4th grade, but as is often the case, it's oversimplified to the point of being absurd.

      We commonly depict the Earth as moving around Sol, but that's merely a frame of reference -- Sol could be just as accurately described as orbiting Earth. With both the moon and the sun orbiting Earth, it's not a huge leap to assume that other astronomical bodies do the same. It's not actually true, but it's a logical, intuitive assumption and it takes some relatively sophisticated observations to disprove. Until Galileo, no one had made those observations, and therefore the prevailing model, even outside the political influence of the church, and in full accordance with valid scientific observations, was one of an Earth-centric universe.

      Copernicus did model Sol at the center of the universe, but he choose to do so purely for aesthetic reasons -- he had not actually made any observations to disprove a Earth-centered universe, he just liked the way the Sol-centered universe worked out when he modeled it. And while there's some validity to "the simplest solution is often the best" it's a long way from actual science.

      The church definitely worked to suppress ideas outside of their line of thinking. And it did act against Galileo, though his astronomical observations are only a footnote in those proceedings -- they wanted to silence him for questioning church dogma (and thus endangering the church's political power) in general, largely outside the arena of science. I'm not saying they liked the church liked his model or wanted to spread it around, but it's hardly the reason they placed him under arrest.

      And yes, I keep using "universe" here in the sense that we would commonly use "solar system" nowadays. But I think it's important to point out the difference in perspective that these people had.

    52. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them

      See, that's going to be a bit of a problem...

      and provide for them sound arguments against it.

      That I can do.

      I can respect people who do very stupid things, but that does not mean I respect the stupid things people think or do. I respect your right to believe whatever you want to believe, but I don't respect your invisible sky-god. And if you honestly believe the world was created in six days some six thousand years ago, there had better be something else about you that is damned impressive if you want my respect.

      I am willing to discuss these things sanely, civilly, even non-confrontationally, but I do still find creationism to be laughable.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    53. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by tukkayoot · · Score: 1

      "Not all scientists agree" is an essentially meaningless statement anyway. Any group as broad and diverse as "scientists" is going to have disagreements on any matter. The question is, what level of dissent is there among experts in fields pertinent to climate change theory? Is the debate overly one-sided, and if so, why might that be? If a journalist is going to broach a topic, they should be prepared to explore it in some depth.

      I'm not saying that short-sighted and heavily biased activists never impede legitimate research, or silence valid sources of information. They most certainly do. But you have to analyze each case on its own merits, and be careful not to assume that because one activist group has managed to bully one reporter into changing a single line of his story, it does not follow that the scientific establishment is being similarly bulled with regard to climate change, or that the scientific establishment is coercing particular scientists to abandon their interest in a particular idea (as the Expelled film claims).

      If you take some time to read the Expelled Exposed site, the Expelled site itself, and the reviews of various individuals who've seen the movie (from people who were interviewed for the film, to news sources such as Fox News and the New York Times), it becomes quickly evident that this is propaganda documentary if there ever was one. I mean, this is a movie tat cuts in clips of Hitler ranting as a means of making the scientists they interviewed appear more sinister. I think it's pretty easy to take the word of the NSCE over that of these guys.

    54. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      I fear that the ostracized members of the scientific community will make the evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds. a) Ben's claims of ostracism are greatly exaggerated. (See the "Expelled Exposed" link.)

      b) If you want a seat at the table in science, you have to BYO evidence.

      Evolution denial hasn't been expelled; it simply hasn't met the admission requirements. If they had a case they'd be presenting evidence rather than making dishonest propaganda films. End of story.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    55. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by spun · · Score: 1

      And please stop with the Moore-bashing, it's getting tiresome. So are his movies, but he doesn't seem to be stopping. That said, I agree with the rest of your post :) Really? I thought Sicko was his best film yet.
      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    56. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      Not to nitpick, but I would have to argue that ID is not disputed by a mountain of evidence, since it is theology/philosophy willfully miscategorized as science, and so is not scientifically provable/disprovable.

      To answer your question, though, I'd say that geocentrism was supported by a lot of observations and complex equations, (the observations were pretty good, considering the low tech of the time). The complex equations, required to make the observations fit with the underlying hypothesis, actually did provide a reasonably accurate way to predict the movements of the heavens (ie, the theory could be tested, and seemed to give valid results), and so one could argue that there was a lot of evidence supporting Ptolemaic geocentrism. However, that's a little misleading, because the evidence (observations) are the same for either view - the difference is in interpreting the evidence and providing a model that works. I don't think that could be construed to mean that that there was evidence against heliocentrism.

      I think that ID is a great way for people of faith to embrace a scientific theory which disagrees with the literal interpretation of the Bible, and as such belongs OUTSIDE the science classroom. It has no more place in the curriculum than a theory on the ascension of Muhammed or whoever else.

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    57. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by spun · · Score: 1

      There's a word for what they're doing:


      Moore-izing? I've yet to see the movie, but if it's what I epect it to be then it's no better or no worse than what Moore has one. And other than Roger and Me, not of Moore's films were worth my time -- I doubt Stein's will be either. Really? Care to tell me what part of Sicko was a lie? It was his best film to date, you may want to revise your opinion.
      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    58. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by wumingzi · · Score: 1

      But who knows, lots of theories have languished in kookdom for hundreds of years and then a mutated version of them has turned out to be quite relevant.

      It's too early to have a proper discussion, so I'll just quote Carl Sagan... ...But the fact that some geniuses were laughed at does not imply that all who are laughed at are geniuses. They laughed at Columbus, they laughed at Fulton, they laughed at the Wright Brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown.

    59. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by DaveWick79 · · Score: 1

      "And there are few climate scientists saying that it is extremely unlikely that climate change is not happening or that is completely decoupled from human activity."

      No one disagrees that climate change is happening. The disagreement is about why, and many scientists and meteorologists disagree on the level that humans have affected the natural climate cycles. Some are very high profile and have very intelligent writings on the subject. Want names? Roy Spencer recently wrote a book entitled Climate Confusion, in which he states that we cannot attribute warming solely to human devices and we in fact have little to no effect on the climate cycle for which we created the global warming buzzword.

      No, the problem comes primarily from people who are not scientists at all, like Al Gore, who goes around trumpeting what he calls facts which are in reality just marketing slogans for his own personal gain. He states that humans are the problem, when in reality the greenhouse gasses we release are a micro-minute fraction of total greenhouse gasses on the planet and have no actual measurable affect on the climate. This type of media manipulation is why global warming is such a hot topic, not because of a genuine uproar in the scientific community, who are quite split over interpretation of data and just how much humans are affecting climate cycles.

    60. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by larryboymi · · Score: 1

      Right, I have no problem acknowledging that what you say could happen over the macro-timespan that you indicate (millions of years), but it's my belief that it merely didn't take place over that long a period of time. I acknowledge that carbon dating is taken as truth by a lot of people, but I have not been convinced of it being infallible.

      I also do not think of human beings as animals.

    61. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      I will illustrate your point, with an example I saw on CNN:

      (1) A BBC reporter wrote a fair, non-biased article on global warming. In one paragraph he stated, "Not all scientists agree that global warming is caused by man-made actions," which is an accurate statement. Not "all" scientists think man caused the problem. Some don't even think it's a problem, saying it's just part of a natural cycle that's been happening for the last 10,000 years. Are you a creationist? I ask, because your distortions of this event resemble the way that the creationists distort the scientific evidence.

      You begin by misquoting what the original article said. Instead of "Not all scientists agree that global warming is caused by man-made actions," the actual words were "A minority of scientists...wonder whether this means global warming has peaked." This is very imprecise language, since a minority could be barely less than 50%. So the complaint was that the article should make clear that the truth is that consensus of the overwhelming majority of climate scientists (as reflected in the conclusions of the UN, the WMO, the US National Academy of Sciences, and every single major scientific organization that has reviewed the issue) agree that global warming will continue.

      (2) The reporter published the article on the website, and immediately an email rolled-in from an environmentalist demanding that phrase be expunged. Deceptively, this account claims that complaints came only from an "environmentalist." It fails to mention that the WMO also raised concerns that the wording could convey the mistaken impression that there were scientists at the WMO who believed that global warming had peaked.

      Note, in fact that the revised version of the report still says that

      A minority of scientists question whether this means global warming has peaked ...it just adds additional material to clarify that this view is not supported by the WMO--whose perspective was the main subject of the article.

      (4) The reporter refused to rewrite his article until the activist told him, "If you do not comply, I will rally my group and you will receive thousands of emails demanding the change."

      (5) The reporter, obviously concerned about this prospect (and possibly losing his job), immediately deleted the offending paragraph. For comparison, here is what the activist actually wrote

      I am about to send your comments to others for their contribution, unless you request I do not. They are likely to want to post your comments on forums/fora, so please indicate if you do not want this to happen. Oh, what a horrible threat! I am going to share your comments with others--unless you ask me not to. Surely such a threat must strike abject terror into the heart of every journalist!

      The deception evident in this false account--which has been widely repeated by global warming denialists all over the media--seems to be perhaps the defining characteristic of denialists of all kinds, whether it is evolution denialists, 9/11 denialists, or HIV denialists. The producers of "Expelled," for example, lied to scientists about the name and nature of the movie to get them to consent to interviews, and the movie shows Stein supposedly giving a public lecture to a room full of "students" who are in reality paid extras.
    62. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by spun · · Score: 1

      Evolution is a fact. Speciation has been seen in the lab. We've seen microbes evolve to digest nylon. We've witnessed evolution. Whether the whole of evolutionary theory is true or not is still debatable, but on a micro level, it is fact.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    63. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Sancho · · Score: 1

      If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it. It may be a waste of time to you but it's complete snobbery to write them off. It's not snobbery because it's not science. That's the problem. I don't mind that people believe in various creation stories or hold various religious beliefs. For the record, I am a Christian, but I don't mind that people believe in the Flying Spaghetti Monster (even though I have a hard time believing that they actually believe in it--I'll let that be between them and their god.)

      What I do mind is when people elevate such beliefs to the level of science. Intelligent Design is not a scientific theory for the simple reason that it cannot be disproven. Nothing more need be said about the subject, and anyone who disagrees is either ignorant of what science is, or is arrogant enough to think that they know better. So while I don't mind people believing that humans are too complex to have come about through evolution, I do mind when such ideas are taught in the science classroom.
    64. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by zehaeva · · Score: 1

      i think its a far stretch from mathematical curiosity to "kookdom"; even with no real applications of non euclidean geometry no one could contest the validity of it, and it had passed rigorous inspection as to its validity. on the other hand you have a theory that can not be tested or disproved, ever. holding onto a theory where there can be no validation nor falsification is not science.

    65. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      I do not believe the diversity in species we have today could have come about by random chance and changes in the world over billions of years.

      First, that's not exactly what Evolution says. There is nothing "random" about natural selection. The mutations may be random, but the result is very predictable -- and this concept is repeated in other kinds of science. Take quantum theory -- according to that, the universe operates on random probabilities. We don't know exactly where an electron is now, or where it will be later -- it moves randomly, within a field of probability. According to quantum theory, as I understand it, it's entirely possible that all of the atoms in your body could teleport to the other side of the world, right now. It's just ridiculously improbable.

      So, Evolution is like that -- given the environment of the world, and what is known about a species at a certain time, certain characteristics probably will develop. Sure, it's possible we could have evolved with three noses, but it's incredibly unlikely.

      But more importantly, why do you find that concept so difficult to believe? Why couldn't it have been random?

      One more question for you: What is it about Evolution that is incompatible with your faith? Why must God have created the world in six days, instead of intervening with Evolution over millions of years -- or simply setting off the Big Bang just right, knowing that we would be created as we are?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    66. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Yes, but ID != creationism. Sure it is. It came out in the Dover case that the prase "intelligent design" was a cut-n-paste replacement for "creationism" in a creationist textbook, right after the courts ruled that teaching creationism in public schools violates the Establishment Clause.

      It's amazing that anyone interested in this subject doesn't already know this.

      But what Stein points out is that debate gets stifled instead of debated. Debate has actually been endless. It's just that after more than a decade the "cdesign proponentsists" are still just parroting their original long-refuted claims.

      Are you aware that one of the major science journals (Nature, IIRC) let the cdesign proponentsists publish their claims just to ensure that they get a chance to be heard?

      You are tacitly buying in to this propaganda film's basic message, which is utter bullshit. People aren't being "expelled" for doing ID; they're simply leaving science behind in order to pursue religious apologetics.

      Why don't they show us the science instead of whining about being excluded? Oh, they can't -- they don't have any science to support their claims.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    67. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the problem with this type of reporting is that it gives equal weight to the opposing argument when it is undeserved. Nothing is 100% unanimously agreed upon. In the case of climate change its basically 90% to 10% in scientists that say its real and happening and probably an equal percentage in facts supporting that interpretation.

      in evolution vs. creationism the facts are 100% to 0% respectively. and saying "we dont know yet aka god did it" is not a "fact" that proves your case.

      I'm totally FOR scientists having a "bias" against things that arent true. especially laughable things that have nothing to prove their case but "the bible said it".

    68. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Sancho · · Score: 1

      And really, more to the point (which I managed to miss in my reply), there's no need to objectively look at Intelligent Design once it's determined that it isn't a scientific theory. Once we see that it cannot be disproven, it can be tossed in the trash or handed back to its creators for refinement into something which is science. However there is no need to teach it as though it were "an alternate theory" any more than Intelligent Falling or any religion's creation story should be taught.

    69. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am saddened both by the poor science of many Creationists and poor theology of many Evolutionists. If you repeat what you feel to be "sound arguments against [Creationism]", you may simply be parroting popular memes of Evolutionists which are easily countered by anyone more familiar with the Bible (or whatever). After years of skimming talk.origins, I have come to the conclusion that the majority of vocal creationists don't know jack about what the Bible actually says.

      And what is "good theology". Is there any theology in the entire world that is based on evidence rather than someone's interpretation of a mythical tradition?
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    70. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by larryboymi · · Score: 1

      I'd have to pose it back to you. Why not six days? Why not what appears to be a Big Bang taking six days?

      Sure god could have taken millions of years, I just don't think it happened that way, and luckily that only matters to me, everyone else is free to think what they want.

      For not agreeing that some of evolution is random chance, it sure does sound like you start your comment off that way.

    71. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Trails · · Score: 1

      I think, for reasons that will hopefully enrage the people doing it, "intelligent design" studies should be publicly funded on the off chance that some future mutated version of it becomes useful in some part of science. Though I doubt it will look anything like the stuff I see now.
      Studies?!? Publicly funded studies?!?! What, Iraq isn't enough of a money pit for the american taxpayers? What would "studies" of ID involve? Prayer? Peyote? Assembling a catalogue of biological traits with little to no fossil record on how they came to be and ascribing them to God? The very problem with ID is that there is nothing to "study", nothing to test. Perhaps one should instruct God to design a winged monkey? The thing that drives me absolutely apeshit about ID is that one of the greatest gifts humanity has is our capacity for rational thought, and when people purposely switch it off to adhere to some dogmatic crap, it takes that gift for granted. If there is an afterlife, don't you think St. Peter/Osiris/Charon/whoever would ask "and what did you do with this awesome ability you were blessed with?"
    72. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An activist, acting somewhat akin to a religious zealot, took a balanced BBC article & turned it into a one-sided piece using the tactics of threats and coercion to silence any contrarian views about global warming. It does not surprise me to learn that similar tactics are being used to silence researchers and/or scientists.


      Let me rephrase that a bit:

      "An anonymous activist, using threats over e-mail, scared a journalist, into rewriting a non-scientific article."

      This is NOT the same thing as:

      "There is a global conspiracy among scientific institutions to actively terminate the employment of professional researchers who present 'uncomfortable' conclusions in well researched papers."

      You made the two sound similar, but Stein's accusations are of quite a different magnitude than some fringe activist making threats over e-mail, causing the recipient to change an article on his/her own accord. He is claiming that there is a broad conspiracy among professional scientific institutions to expel any scientists who proposes a differing view. This is a MUCH more serious allegation.
    73. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by IKILLEDTROTSKY · · Score: 1

      I think so too, to cave in and change his story when it was the truth is wrong. Imagine if they did that during Watergate.

    74. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      Another completely true passage would be to say, "Others believe that evolution is guided by aliens who seeded our planet with life and continue to live inside our bodies."

      What do these things have to do with science?

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    75. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by LooTze · · Score: 1

      And so should the environmentalist (if possible).

    76. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Evolution is a Fact T/F"

      That's too vague a question, really.

      To understand biology, you absolutely must understand the fact of evolution, at least on a micro scale. You don't have to believe it's the origin of species, but there are certain parts of it that you must at least accept, or you won't understand biology.

      if someone put such a disclaimer in about Einstein's relativity I'd applaud them, or Newton's gravity

      But, you see, no one does. And I imagine most people wouldn't put such a disclaimer on these things -- only Evolution gets the "just a theory" stickers.

      Your example of Newtonian gravity isn't entirely valid -- Newtonian gravity was disproved by Einstein's Relativity. Do you see similar stickers on Relativity?

      That, and Newtonian gravity is still used. It has not been wholly discarded -- Relativity is a refinement of Newtonian physics. If you look at the equations, Newtonian gravity is still there, just with a few additional terms multiplied in that usually end up being close enough to 1 that we can ignore them.

      Are scientists supposed to be neutral unbiased parties?

      No.

      Science itself is supposed to be neutral and unbiased. But a scientist absolutely is allowed to have an opinion, so long as they don't pretend that opinion is science.

      For the most part modern scientists are good about being neutral, except when you bring up the ol' Evolution.

      Because evolution is generally widely accepted in the scientific community, and if you actually read up on it, it makes sense, and it has been tested. It's pretty much as solid as gravity.

      So when someone questions it, there are generally three possibilities:

      1. They don't quite understand it yet.
      2. They don't want to understand it; they'd rather believe the world is six thousand years old (which means they're also going against geology).
      3. They have genuinely found something wrong with evolutionary theory. Which would suggest that we should revise the theory, not throw it away entirely.

      Which seems more likely?

      Yes, it could be #3 -- but that is more like Einstein refining Newton's theory. No one's suggesting that gravity be thrown out, and we go back to Aristotle's (I think) theories of things falling because they are "earthly", and stars not falling because they are "heavenly".

      The reason you get this response is that almost every argument against Darwin is exactly like the arguments against Galileo. We all know how that turned out.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    77. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      Two good examples, firstly my Biology class. If you even thought that Evolution was not a full on fact you'd fail it. We had a question on a test worth 10 points (probably 1% total grade, not too much, but still) which was "Evolution is a Fact T/F".

      It sounds like you'd actually get a 99%.
      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    78. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      He interviews scientists and editors who have lost their jobs for printing/writing papers that claim our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature.
      And they should have lost their jobs if they work for a scientific or educational institution.

      I fear that the ostracized members of the scientific community will make the evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds.
      Claiming that bits of DNA could not have happened in nature (and therefore must have happened by some supernatural being) does not mean the person making the claim has an "open mind." It means that (1) the person's mind is deluded by religion and (2) the person doesn't understand the DNA. (This is the infamous "God of the gaps" argument, i.e., we don't know X, therefore X must have been done by god.)

      As for zealotry, scientist peers shouldn't spend any time entertaining "god made DNA" ideas any more than Flying Spaghetti Monster ideas.

      I'm sure there's sound criticism against these papers ...
      Scientists have no obligation to disprove religious ideas. The burden is on the religious to prove theirs.

      If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it.
      It's a waste of time. As for respect, see Richard Dawkins' Call to Arms.
      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    79. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by bcreason · · Score: 1

      I don't think this is a case of scientific zealotry. The old socialist/communist supporters from the fifties and sixties found themselves persona non grata due to cold war hysteria. So they pretty much took over the nascent environmental groups in the 70's. The reason for this is they could continue their anti big business propaganda without fears of being labelled traitors. Whether global warming is man caused or not is really immaterial to them. It's only another tool to push their socialist agendas. When you express doubt on Man caused Global Warming it's not Scientists that try and shut you up it's all these activists with a political axe to grind. Now this sounds very conspiracy theory, I know. I point to the case of Patrick Moore cofounder of GreenPeace. Moore, a true environmentalist, has distanced himself from the organization he started. Why, because GreenPeace has become a political tool with no real environmental agenda. Moore promotes Nuclear power as an environmentally friendly alternative to burning fossil fuels. GreenPeace opposes this based simply on Nuclear being associated with big utility companies. They base their opposition on fear mongering that does not fit the facts. If we had continued to build Nuke plants for the last 30 years. We wouldn't be having the problems we are now with pollution and reliance on foreign oil. GreenPeace's stance doesn't makes sense on an Environmental standpoint. They fear monger Global Warming and at the same time oppose the most reasonable solution. Why, because global warming is caused by big business, to which they are opposed. So attacking GW is attacking big business. Nuclear Power is also big business so they attack that as well. Science, facts, free speech, none of this matters to them as long they are free to twist facts to their political agenda.

    80. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Black-Man · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Creationism is obviously bunk. And anyone who takes the Bible literally... is an idiot.

      But do I respect their rights to say what the believe? Absolutely!

      And the close-mindedness of both ends of the spectrum is truly sickening.

    81. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      But that's the thing... it really can't be debated without debating the existence of God; it's not something for the science class! I agree with you 100%!

      But it IS also fact that some people believe God had a hand in guiding evolution. To mention that fact is not debating, it's merely saying "some religious people believe this, it helps them reconcile their religious beliefs with science" and can even be followed with "but it has no scientific merit as it can't be proved nor disproved."

      The fact that people get all bent out of shape merely by hearing the words "intelligent design" is exactly the problem.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    82. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1
      the reason why you saw that disclaimer on Newtonian physics is because it's been supplanted by a more accurate theory, relativity. There is no reason to put that disclaimer on evolutionary theory, because it hasn't been supplanted by a different theory, it has simply been improved and refined over time.

      also, the term evolution can refer to either the "theory of evolution" (the details of mechanisms of the process)or the "fact of evolution", the fact being the scientific consensus that all life currently on the earth descended from a common ancestor. that's the fact being referred to in your true/false question. The evidence behind this is both vast and varied, and is freely verifiable by anyone who has the expertise to examine it, thus making common descent a scientific fact.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    83. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by bhima · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's interesting that you use a man who supports intelligent design as an example of a high profile climate scientist who disagrees with the scientific consensus that climate change is indeed anthropogenic. I have found a strong correlation myself and that is something I find extremely interesting.

      Your assertion that 'no one disagrees that climate change is happening' is incorrect, there are a variety of scientists who either deny global change flatly or maintain that it has ceased.

      Your assertion that many scientists and meteorologists disagree is deceptive. Scientists who deny the existence of climate change or who deny an anthropogenic nature to climate change are a tiny fraction of the scientific community... and a smaller fraction still of climatologists.

      Your assertion that Al Gore is in this simply for his personal gain is both factually incorrect and a straw man argument... which is, on it's face, pretty lame.

      Your assertion that that gasses that we release have "no actual measurable affect on the planet" is not an undisputed fact and is contrary to the scientific consensus.

      Finally I question your summarization that it's media manipulation which generates the uproar and posit that it is manipulation of the media that generates it. As I have previously stated saying that scientific community is split on this topic when it is a tiny fraction of scientists who disagree is disingenuous. For any issue at all it possible to find at least one or two men who will support your claims. If you have deep pockets and flexible mores it is possible to find still more.

      To simply cast about until you find someone who has credentials who supports your preconceptions isn't particularly honest and is practically the defining characteristic of those who deny evolution and / or climate change... and come to think of it, the holocaust.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    84. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      I'm not buying anything... I don't believe in creationism, and I'm agnostic about the existence of God... but I do believe that even if God does exist as a "creator," he pretty much started things off billions of years ago and hasn't looked back since.

      I don't want classrooms to teach ID, and I'm really disappointed in Stein using such "Moore-ian" tactics, but it is fact that many people believe in creationism and ID, and it's mere mention shouldn't elicit the responses that we've seen here.

      I think my argument comes from something I read maybe a year or two ago, where one text merely stated, after discussing evolution, that some people believed God guided evolution. It didn't state that God guided evolution, it merely stated that some people take that philosophy. I simply don't have a problem with that, but it caused a huge debate at the time.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    85. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      He interviews scientists and editors who have lost their jobs for printing/writing papers that claim our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature.

      Careful with that. Being fired for publishing an article does not necessarily relate to the conclusion of the article. Consider the recent Gerstmann issue in videogame journalism: A reviewer was fired after giving a very negative review to a game that was featured heavily in ads on the site. Sounds clear-cut at first? Now watch the review, it's crap. Really unconvincing, not up to professional standard and people who know the game said he never played it past the first level. Previous work of his has been similarily sloppy. Sounds to me like he was fired for failing at his job, not for annoying the advertisers.

      People writing or approving a paper making claims like "this code cannot be natural" might have shown grave errors in their methodology or judgement. Perhaps these were just flimsy excuses like those commonly cited by creationists? Perhaps they were so bad that noone worth his salt would consider them correct so anyone who does would not be worth his salt and should be fired?

      I'm saying you can spin a lot of bullshit out of facts by hiding other important information. I doubt you can make a movie that would conclusively show that the firings were caused by disagreement over the conclusion without making it require so much background knowledge that mere mortals cannot watch it.

      Claims that there are conspiracies hiding the truth seems to happen pretty often lately when debating subjects that are contested in the US...

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    86. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by genner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even the most idiotic creationist won't argue evolution on a micro level but on a macro level it's still a theory.

    87. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Really? Care to tell me what part of Sicko was a lie? It was his best film to date, you may want to revise your opinion.


      Really? Care to tell me what part of my post claimed anything in Sicko -- or that anything Moore has done was a "lie"?

      Lie? No. Blatant one-sided arguments -- totally ignoring any argument/evidence to the contrary, yes. Some might call this a "lie", but I haven't. Certainly it's often misleading. As I claimed, this type of stuff is not worth my time. This type of stuff nothing but a Windex commercial -- showing how great his "product" is. I've little doubt Stein will be different, but I'll watch and see.

      If this is a quality of Moore/Sicko you like, you may want to revise your opinion of your critical thinking skills.
    88. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      We commonly depict the Earth as moving around Sol, but that's merely a frame of reference -- Sol could be just as accurately described as orbiting Earth. Except that it really can't be accurately described that way. I'll grant that there was more to the persecution of Galileo than just his scientific theories. I think the point stands though that it wasn't that his theories were considered to be kookdom, but that his writings were critical, possibly even mocking, of the church. That's what made the church bring the hammer down on him.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    89. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Bombula · · Score: 0, Troll
      I fear that the ostracized members of the scientific community will make the evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds.

      I think your fears are unfounded. With a tiny handful of exceptions such as Ben Stein and Francis Collins, the vast majority of people who are not grotesquely ignorant fully accept evolution as fact based on the absolutely overwhelming mountain of evidence that exists for it across all scientific fields from astronomy to zoology. There is no more danger of 'evolutionists' coming to be seen as dogmatic zealots than there is for 'arithmetists' coming to be seen as dogmatic zealots for not respecting the view that relationships between numbers are not logical but rather "God's Magic."

      If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it.

      No, it is not necessary to respect someone who is woefully ignorant. You can humor or tolerate a person of this sort, and treat them with compassion as you try to educate them, but respect is absolutely the wrong word. We do not respect ignorance. If someone believes women are inherently intellectually inferior to men - despite vast scientific evidence to the contrary - because their cultural background and magic books tell them so, we do not respect this belief. We condemn it as ignorance and attempt to rectify the problem through education. If someone is racist because their religion tells them a minority is inherently inferior and subhuman, as Mormonism did up until the eve of the Civil Rights Act, we do not respect this belief. We condemn it as ignorance and attempt to rectify the problem through education.

      Education and dispellation of ignorance does not preclude kindness, but ignorance is not an attribute deserving of respect under any circumstances.

      Creationism/ID is not on equal footing with evolution. It is transparently false, and we must treat it as so. It is necessary to correctly identify both truth and falsehood, otherwise we live delusional lives deatched from reality - the consequences of which are almost uniformly negative.

      --
      A-Bomb
    90. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by nuzak · · Score: 1

      Notice how all the people saying "not all scientists believe in (global warming|evolutionary theory)" quote actual numbers. Because it tends to make them look silly to say "0.03% of scientists surveyed do not believe in (global warming|evolutionary theory)".

      This is a tired old tactic: manufacture doubt from consensus and what I call "Proof through Scorn". The Evolutionists are particularly sad about it, since they can't even come up with a falsifiable alternative hypothesis, only leer smugly and repeat "Are you SURE? Are you SURE you're SURE? Are you SURE you're SURE you're ..." blah blah ad nauseum.

      The scientific community, like any, has its biases that have impeded progress on occasion. But it has an even stronger bias toward rigor and the truth. Who the fuck is Ben Stein, and why does he think he's in the slightest bit qualified?

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    91. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by nuzak · · Score: 1

      Bah, that's the ANTI-Evolutionists. My brain has evolved to require coffee before it can be fully employed in posting.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    92. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      The fact that people get all bent out of shape merely by hearing the words "intelligent design" is exactly the problem. I think that many people would like to see ID kept completely out because their afraid that if they open the door to it, it will make it easier for some school board to decide to insert a little more and a little more. I can understand that concern. I don't think that inserting any statement about ID is really necessary. It is something that really is a religious belief and should be explained in a forum that is concerned with religion. If we insert that bit about ID, then should we insert information about the beliefs of other religions concerning creation as well?
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    93. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      That many people believe in creationism and ID is a FACT; that merely mentioning that FACT gets so many people's undies in a bind is the exact reason people like Stein should continue pushing the issue and FIRE should continue prosecuting cases against people who stifle free speech. That FACT has absolutely nothing to do with science, and therefore doesn't belong in scientific discussion. You can discuss it all day long in a philosophical or religious forum and it's perfectly fine. Why do ID proponents keep pushing for it to be treated as science?
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    94. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by PenguinX · · Score: 1

      Why?

    95. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by John+Jamieson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow,

      It does not take much to rile up the people who hold "evolution" as a religion.

      Sorry, on /. the only worse thing than not saying Apple is perfect is pointing out the acts of Evolutionist zelots.

      If this post stays flamebait -1, I need to start looking into Big Bang Evolution alternitives, any group this reactionary does not feel too secure about what they believe in.

      Lets save flamebait modding for true flamebait... like "Appl sux, none of the stuff works" and "only idiots believe evolution". Pointing out an example of where a person was oppressed by a creationist or evolutionist or MS fan or Apple fan IS NOT FLAMEBAIT.

    96. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by jinxidoru · · Score: 1

      If you even thought that Evolution was not a full on fact you'd fail it. No, you didn't have to think evolution is a fact, you simply had to know that the teacher thought that. Remember that most tests were exercises in "Guess the Teacher's Mind." This is especially true if you took any social sciences class (maybe this is why I studied Mathematics).

      Also, evolution is fact in the same fashion that relativity is fact. Everything we have seen supports it. Does that mean it won't be disproven? Certainly not. It's a scientific fact, true until someone finds a problem with it and makes it better.

      I have seen a disclaimer about Newtonian gravity before, basically saying that, while it's useful, it's also believed to be false and that there are newer, better methods of understanding gravity Newtonian physics isn't "believed to be false," it is known to be false. That's one of the results of relativity. I doubt you saw disclaimers of this nature before Einstein.

      You could put a falsifiable disclaimer next to everything in science. That is the nature of science, it is falsifiable. What we believe today will be replaced. Does that mean we should write disclaimers around everything in our textbooks? Most certainly not.

      The problem with the evolution disclaimer is that people want it for political/religious reasons. They aren't interested in aiding scientific inquiry; they are interested in establishing religious beliefs.
    97. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by WNight · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Are you clinically unstable?

      "Evolutionists with their painfully paranoid agenda"

      Yes, because if we can get 50% of the world to believe, the devil wins! Yay!

      What the hell is going through your pointy little head when you suggest that "evolutionists", (why not "proofists" or "rightists"?) have an agenda. Like, the main organization sends us a card with monthly talking points when it hands out our anti-god assignments?

      You even misunderstood the post you replied to.

      It mentioned those who take Genesis literally (creationists) and those who think it's a metaphor (ID - god created the world but not in a literal week). You probably take it as a metaphor.

      If there was even one IDer (or creationist - but they know they aren't scientific - their honesty is refreshing) with the answers to these basic question, they might get a modicum of respect.

      1) Why your religion? All religions claim be *the* one?
      2) You do understand non-falsifiable theories are useless?

      But unfortunately, to an IDer, "evidence" is a good insult you can shout at a real thinking person. Go get your sign, dumbass, your team needs your research skills on the street corner.

      The shame of all of this is that you don't even understand the big words. Here's a rundown. You have no proof. The bible isn't. You don't even have a theory, as to have a theory you have to have an idea of what could make your idea wrong.

      Watching religious people "think" is like watching the tobacco industry lobby. It's not about facts in any way, but about what masses of them want facts to be. Popular answers spread through the group like wildfire, but nobody is willing to support anything with citations or arguments. Also, your main defense is to point out potential failures in the opposition and hope it distracts from your lack of proof. You're far more concerned with the appearance of being right than any actual correctness.

      Spend all the time you want showing that many people believe ID. It's not like to makes it look better - it merely gives us a better idea of Scientology's potential user-base. Science and truth aren't popularity based. I don't need the support of a herd of cows to speak the truth - you're all idiots and you have no proof. Not even the hope of proof.

    98. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by DaveWick79 · · Score: 0

      Lets put it this way - Gore isn't exactly hurting for cash by doing what he is doing. It may not be the only reason he is doing this, but the point is he doesn't have the scientific background to be a viable voice for the global warming crowd anymore than I do.

      I wasn't aware that Spencer was a supporter of ID.

      I also think you overestimate the actual number of scientists who are actually studying the effects of humanity on climate changes, vs. those who are simply pointing out that the climate is changing and assuming that humans are the cause because that is the popular current viewpoint, or "consensus".

      What is scientific consensus? Making your point loud enough and long enough that you get the majority of the scientific community on your side? Where has the actual science gone? It has nothing to do with consensus, it has to do with truthful (or untruthful) interpretation of facts. The main weapon against opponents of scientific theories such as human caused global warming, is not to dispute facts, but to dispute credentials, and that is borderline unethical.

    99. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by iluvcapra · · Score: 1

      The review of Expelled in Scientific American did a lot to debunk many of the claims of "firing" he makes in the film. Many times he'll claim someone was fired when in fact their grant merely ran out, only to be renewed the next week. In one case he claims a teacher who "criticized Darwinism" was fired, but he never actually gets around to repeating what she said, so you can't really decide if the example fits into his argument of "criticizing evolution." In fact the movie never really finds anyone that was fired or demoted for making any scientific claim regarding Evolution.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
    100. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by methuselah · · Score: 1

      huh?
      this was moderated to 5?
      settled? you mean like, "windows is the best operating system in the world" settled? lets not discuss it any further settled? if you think linux is an alternative you don't have an open mind and are stupid settled?

      hmmm

      I wonder who the narrow minded ignorant fools are in this discussion.

    101. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by radl33t · · Score: 1

      Compromising his integrity in the face of a baseless threat? He should join his colleges and just reprint PR from various government, NGO, and corporate agencies if in the end he will cave to their threat of "overwhelming email."

    102. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by dubl-u · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And what is "good theology". Is there any theology in the entire world that is based on evidence rather than someone's interpretation of a mythical tradition? Even to an atheist, there is definitely good theology in the same sense that there is good philosophy, good scholarship, and good advice.

      I'm both an atheist and a skeptic, and after I got over being a prick about it, I could see that there were a lot of smart, sincere religious people out there doing their very best to lead good lives. And they often feel that the creationists, the religious warmongers, and the nutty god-pushers are guilty of twisting theology for their own sinful ends.

      Whatever you think of the core beliefs of a given religion, the world's religious traditions preserve a great deal of pragmatic advice on how to conduct one's life. They provide a structure for examination of what it means to be human, and what kind of world we should strive to make. And they fill a spiritual need that, even if you and I don't have it, the bulk of humanity does.
    103. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May be they are just sick of the people who come to them trying to tell them how they are wrong?

      If you don't want to be belittled, stop belittling my belief.

      (Yeah! I believe things can be explained logically.)

    104. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by WNight · · Score: 1

      Because someone told them that scientists think science is good. So they feel that if they browbeat people until their views are called science that scientists will think their views are good.

      Really, they can call them anything they want. A polished turd is still a turd.

      I'm not hung up on labels though. There's bad science being performed all the time. If they want to call it that they can join the ranks of tobacco lobbyists and other "scientists". They'll fit right in. Decide on the truth, become a 'scientist', find evidence, discard that which doesn't fit the truth.

      There's a far more damaging label to attach to ID though. Wrong.

      Personally, I think it'd be hilarious to do a John-Galt sort of thing. Everyone who knows this isn't science - move to Canada. We'll let the rest to build airplanes, computers, and medicines with their science, and see how they do.

    105. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      I also do not think of human beings as animals.

      I think the quoted line is similar to invoking Hitler in a conversation, but I just have to be that one guy who responds...

      So, you believe in microevolution, but can't see how it might be applicable on a geologic timescale (i.e. billions of years). Oh, right. You don't believe that the earth has been around for billions of years. OK, well, I guess if you don't believe that there has been enough time for microevolution (which you believe in) to build up to macroevolutionary effects, then there's no reasoning with you.

      Do you find it at all curious that humans share ~98.5% of our DNA with chimps? Why do you think that is? What do you make of the fact that chimps (and other great apes) are able to learn and use rudimentary (human and/or chimp) language? How is it that they are able to pass down troop-specific (i.e. different troops use different tools), inter-generational knowledge about tool creation and use? Parlor tricks? It SURELY can not be because those "animals" are in any way similar to those of us created in "God's image."

      Why would a god bother to create these animals that are so closely related to us, but deny them a chance at salvation (completely begging the question of why a god who has enough power to create a whole universe would bother to care what a bunch of backwater apes think about he/she/it - and furthermore, why said god would choose to torture most of said creatures for an eternity because they hadn't even HEARD of he/she/it)?

      None of that is proof, but to me, it's a lot more interesting than the god of the gaps (we can't explain it right now, so god did it!)... I will agree with you that no one can PROVE how life was created. The difference between us is that I believe that we can construct testable theories and attempt to replicate early conditions, and you have some magical thinking process by which you close your eyes and claim that nothing is true unless it's written in your holy book.

      If a god or gods showed up tomorrow, then as a rational person I would expect proof of their deity status. That means testable hypotheses, and rigorous independent research. If the research held up, well, I guess I'd start praying to mecca or whatever. THAT is the difference between science and magical thinking.

      Creationists get all bent out of shape because they're excluded from the club... It's not just because we think your beliefs are ridiculous, it's because you can't play by the rules of science. Wanting something to be true is not the same as demonstrating solid evidence (i.e. stands up to SCATHING peer review) of truth.

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    106. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by odourpreventer · · Score: 1

      It sounded like an ID buzzword, so I just dismissed it as such. Live and learn. Thanks for the lecture link.

    107. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      I acknowledge that carbon dating is taken as truth by a lot of people, but I have not been convinced of it being infallible. I don't think carbon dating is used for that; IIRC, it only is good for like 50k years. And nobody would suggest that any particular dating method is infallible. It's just that a variety of different approaches come to similar answers, so we go with our best understanding so far.

      I also do not think of human beings as animals. In which case, your issue may be more with philosophy than with science or theology. If you look at the history of biological classification from Linnaeus on, you could see it as a history of people giving up certain plausible but cherished distinctions. Personally, I see those distinctions as cultural, and not required by Christian theology.

      There are plenty of very sincere Christians working in the sciences. The ones whose works I've read view their job as the study of creation in all its glory. That man is also an evolved animal is not a problem for them any more than the fact that the universe does not revolve around the sun. That God's works are more complicated than we first thought, and perhaps more than we are comfortable with, is not a problem, it's a challenge. It's a professional challenge, to explore and understand, and a personal challenge to be properly humble and accepting.

      That's my understanding anyhow.
    108. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Panaflex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can you respect anybody then? If your definition of "deserves respect" is "agrees with me" then you're missing out on a vast, wonderful, and engaging part of your life.

      --
      I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
    109. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by larryboymi · · Score: 1

      Jeez man I was just trying to tell you what I believe, not what I think you should believe.

      In the end it won't matter what either of us believes, it will just be what it is. It's not like when we die we get to laugh or anything.

    110. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      I'd have to pose it back to you. Why not six days? Why not what appears to be a Big Bang taking six days?

      Sure god could have taken millions of years, I just don't think it happened that way, and luckily that only matters to me, everyone else is free to think what they want. It unfortunately matters to everybody. If it did happen a different way, then we have the science and the biology wrong.

      That science matters pragmatically, as we use it to save and extend lives, reduce human suffering, and improve human life. It matters intellectually, as quite a lot of people want to know these things in a factual way, and aren't content to just call it a matter of personal opinion.

      And it matters theologically too. Many religious scientists see understanding God's creation as a religious calling. To them, saying that you shouldn't study the history of life is like telling a preacher he shouldn't study the history of the bible.

      Of course, you're welcome to your opinion on what the age of the earth is, just as you're welcome to your opinion on the meaning of any particular bible verse. But when a lot of people have spent a lot of time studying something and have come up with some answers, you can see why they would be reluctant to take your personal and opinion very seriously, right?
    111. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I was wondering what the other side thinks about this movie. I wholeheartedly agree with many of Michael Moore's points, but think his technique is out of proportion and in a lot of ways detracts from the main statement. This movie seems exactly the same, but I doubt that the people who agree with it will think that it is ridiculous in its formation of argument and the obvious bias that exists in such a documentary.

      I feel that many people who generally agree with moore would feel as I do, but would the same be for people who agree with this film? I can't say that they would.

    112. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Artichoke · · Score: 1

      Pure ID (i.e without the superfluous Creationist baggage) is agnostic about the nature of the designer, other than it requires intelligence.

      Michael Behe is a research biochemist. He's also an Evolutionist with some, to him, cogent questions.

      So anyway, why did I use the word paranoid? It seems to me that with notable exceptions*, the Evolutionists I've come across when they're dealing with Creation/Evolution have been badly bitten by the antics of the rabid Creationists. The Evolutionist response to Intelligent Design seems to be disproportionate and often off topic - which looks to be somewhat paranoid about a rabid Creationist resurgence.

      I'm not claiming anything for Intelligent Design. It should be dealt with as anything else in a civilized and rational public arena. I am bemoaning the BS from rabid Creationists and rabid Evolutionists alike.

      BTW, not all religions do claim to be The One. For that matter, not all religious types are arrogant fools - but perhaps it's the noisy, arrogant fools who get more notice?

      * I'd disagree with Steven Jay Gould's premiss in his "Rock of Ages" but it didn't come over as paranoid. Unlike, say, the ranty Dawkins.

      --
      __
      Arse
    113. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Because everytime a stupid person uses stupid tactics to defend an idea, the opposite side gets more ammunition to use (for their stupid people to use with their stupid tactics). If the goal is to try and convince other people of "the truth", then any slight hint of dishonesty will backfire badly. The whole reason there is a movie like this is because of these sorts of dishonest activism.

      Granted some of these activists just want to help, but maybe someone needs to say "we don't need your help, thank you".

    114. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      In the end it won't matter what either of us believes, it will just be what it is.

      Yes, you're right about that. The problem, though, is that far too many people use their belief of an afterlife to justify doing awful things in this life. That's really what it all boils down to... Without that carrot of Heaven and the stick of Hell, why would anyone adhere to a particular religion?

      Some religions believe heaven is being reincarnated in progressively "better" forms, and hell is reincarnation as a worm or whatever. The details don't matter -- the problem is that religion is mostly a crutch that is used to enable racism, xenophobia, and general bad behavior.

      Religion (and by extension, belief in the supernatural) is an outdated social construct. It needs to fade away and make room for social systems based on rational thought and respect for the fact that we all only get one life. Call me an idealist who denies human nature if you will... It's still better than encouraging people to believe in a sky-god who actually cares about minutiae like what kind of fabric is in the clothes we wear, whether or not we cook our meat in milk, or whether or not Joe can marry Steve.

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    115. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by lord_dragonsfyre · · Score: 1

      One man mentions "neo-Darwinism" which I've never heard about before. Just for clarity - "neo-Darwinism" (or, more completely, "the neo-Darwinian synthesis") is actually a common term in evolutionary biology. It refers to the field's incorporation of "classical" natural selection with modern theories of genetics, evo-devo (evolutionary developmental biology), cladistics, and similar ideas that make up our current understanding of the means and methods of evolution. In essence, evolution is an observable fact; the neo-Darwinian synthesis is our best theory to account for how it works.

      (I'm not a biologist by vocation, but I have a layman's interest in the field and try to keep up on the literature. A lot of it is really fascinating stuff, especially evo-devo.)
      --
      "I have spread my dreams under your feet, Tread softly, because you tread on my dreams." - W. B. Yeats.
    116. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      The Evolutionist response to Intelligent Design seems to be disproportionate and often off topic - which looks to be somewhat paranoid about a rabid Creationist resurgence. The response seems to be proportionate to the push by ID subscribers to have it inserted into science curriculum, which is one place it absolutely does not belong. Put it in philosophy classes or religious studies classes and things would be fine. But IDers don't seem to be satisfied unless they can force people to accept ID as science. I think that certainly explains the "paranoia".
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    117. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by GabriellaKat · · Score: 1

      Can god code something so unusable even he can't use it? No, but I can and so can you: http://www.microsoft.com/careers You are clearly biased.
      --
      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your politician, and hitting them?"
    118. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Jon_S · · Score: 1

      Carbon dating doesn't work for measuring millions of years. It only works for measuring 10's of thousands of years. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dating

      For measuing millions of years, you need to look at other isotopes.

    119. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Some people aren't in the news game to put their integrity on a pedestal for everyone to marvel over. They are in it to make money and support their families. Backing down but giving an exact reason why doesn't damage his integrity as much as you would like to think. It just gives him the opportunity to not gamble with his job so he can take care of his family. Something I admire with a lot more conviction then fighting some environmental wacko for self gratification.

    120. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by WNight · · Score: 1

      Carbon dating seems infallible. However, the assumption that we know the starting condition of the object seems wrong.

      Radioactive decay is quite accepted, and quantified. It's very consistent.

      However, if you RC-Date a burned bone, it'll give you a goofy number.

      So you also date by strata, and as many other clues as you can, then cross-check.

      The people who rush around publishing insane results from carbon dating aren't scientists - they're people who expect infallible machines to guess what they're trying to learn and give an unequivocal and guaranteed answer. The machine very definitively says "The ratio of isotopes in this sample is x/y", and you have to use that factoid carefully, not just assume that the outcome it implies is true or that the technology is faulty.

    121. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Artichoke · · Score: 1

      Quite. Unless and until ID ever looks like flying, it's not suitable for anything other than general discussion, and future research by its proponents. But slagging it off as Creationism-in-sheep's-clothing (as Richard "The Rant" Dawkins does) isn't enough either :)

      --
      __
      Arse
    122. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the only reasonable way to describe them is that they both orbit around their common center of mass.

    123. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      There's actually a paper about how systems of this nature tend to be poorly-understood by humans. Coupling random variation with a weak driving force is a powerful way to get to an equilibrium, but this isn't really clear to people.

    124. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      More specifically, when Newtonian gravity was developed and tested, it was correct -- given the precision of measurements and boundaries of testing they had access to.

      Later study showed that Newtonian gravity is a rather accurate approximation to general relativity, in particular situations (those situations encompassing "nearly all readily-observable mechanics"). General relativity has been shown to be correct, given the precision of measurements and boundaries of testing we have access to.

      Someone might certainly "prove general relativity wrong", but they're going to do it by finding a situation outside of our former ability to test general relativity where it fails, and we'll find that GR is a good approximation to this new rule, when you consider the situation we're testing it in.

    125. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      They can say what they want, but it should not be taught under the auspices of science, particularly in public institutions, and we reserve the right to not listen and deride them for having no understanding of how reality works.

    126. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Fair enough-- it sounds like you are close to seeing it, but you couldn't bear emotionally to believe certain things are true. And I say, if that makes you happy and nice to the folks around you, then more power to you.

      Since I really believe that none of anything we do matters very soon after our deaths, I just want me and you, and other folks to be happy (as long as being happy doesn't mean killing me or some crap like that).

      Peace!

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    127. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by philspear · · Score: 1

      He interviews scientists and editors who have lost their jobs for printing/writing papers that claim our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature.

      Disclaimer, I read a lot of Darwin/Dawkins/Gould so I'm pretty biased here ... but I fear that the ostracized members of the scientific community will make the evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds. Which is why I likened his trailer to the Spanish Inquisition.

      I think that even though it's 'a waste of time,' it's bad to write these people off or fire them. I'm sure there's sound criticism against these papers and authors but Ben Stein isn't showing that in his movie if there is.

      The "expelled exposed" site someone else mentioned earlier (http://www.expelledexposed.com/index.php/the-truth) has detailed information about each of the "expelled" individuals.

      There's of course a lot of bias. However, these sound like sub-par scientists who weren't really fired for their scientific views. It sounds like they just weren't good at their job and/or had poor people skills. One of the researchers denied tenure had all but stopped doing research, two others who claimed they were fired were temporary workers whose contracts weren't terminated early. One was a journalist who is still a journalist. As for the doctor, the website says it best:

      "The Claim: Michael Egnor says in Expelled that he expected criticism, but was shocked by the viciousness and baseness of the response.
      The Facts: Michael Egnor had apparently never been on the Internet before."

      I also was fairly biased from the start, but it seems to me that these are people whose professional lives weren't heading where they wanted them to go and are blaming an imaginary conspiracy rather than their own ineptitude.
    128. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Morlark · · Score: 1

      The journalist should be fired if he is incapable of maintaining a proper standard of journalistic integrity. If "people want to read him", maybe he should go start a blog. And the first amendment has literally zero relevance to this situation.

      --
      Santa's suicide mission go!
    129. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by WNight · · Score: 1

      Exactly. If someone asked the honest question "Why don't you believe in god" I'd try to answer. But if they jump straight to ID and browbeat me with religious idiocy such as "Athiesm is just a religion", "ID is as much a science as the big bang", "... paranoid evolutionists", they're obviously just pushing their agenda, like Rush Limbaugh. And they're about as welcome.

      I know a guy who believes in the "Electrical Universe", the idea that plasmas are much more powerful than we think, etc. He believes the solar system changed configurations multiple times in recent pre-history. (Anything the ancients said they saw in the sky or we can guess they did from vague analysis of cave-blotches and burial rituals, they did see - and it WAS plasma, damn it!) His only evidence is that "the electrical force is FAR stronger than gravitational".

      He's not content to just have a different idea and mull it over with friends, it has to be the center piece of every discussion. The electrical force is very strong you know, so it's relevant to everything. Anything not proven wrong is assumed to be true, and he doesn't trust anyone's proofs. He insists on shoving it into most conversations and acts repressed if you try to say you don't think it's related.

      It's a lot like ID. Both fantastically wrong. Both totally based on supposition instead of observation. Both believed because they're more comfortable. Both pushed into places they don't belong by fanatics who literally do not understand the meaning of proof.

      It's not a popularity contest, nor a vote. That millions agree merely proves that millions have no clue.

    130. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ID v. Creationism v. Evolutionary Theory = Philosophical debate != Science.

      ID is not testable, and therefore cannot be proven, however, there's a lot of "Well, we believe this happened..." or "Well, one theory is this..." or "One might conclude that....but no one really knows" when talking about the origins of life, our planet, and our solar system.

      So, both sides have THEORIES on how life originated, and neither is able to PROVE them. Until then, we should keep looking for the RIGHT answer which, at this point in time, could be either (because we don't have the whole picture yet).

    131. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1
      Actually, your making the mistake of thinking that an ID can't be part of science. Science if the pursuit of answers and understanding of the natural world around us. It could be entirely possible that life was create somewhere else and then places on the earth in ways similar to Francis Crick's extraterrestrial explanation of abiogenesis. This could remove the random parts and put more of the intelligent design parts to work.

      The very fact that it is not falsifiable strips intelligent design from any scientific purpose.
      It is falsifiable. All you have to do is find the random process that could create life as we know it. Don't take lack of knowledge as an impossibility to falsify something. If we did this, we would never look for ways of validating or invalidating common beliefs in science. ID doesn't say that with all things being possible, something was made in a certain way. It says that X isn't possible on it's own natural state so it was moved along (designed if you will) by an intelligent being. If X is possible naturally, then ID is falsified.

      On the same note, how many times has a theory or hypothesis been rejected because it is improbable with current knowledge just to find that it had been accepted after our knowledge increased. The Idea of rejecting ID based on limits of knowledge simply because we can't currently falsify it is as absurd as not wanting to understand how something works. It is a driving force or catalyst to investigate abiogenesis instead of simply taking it for granted because it seems to support something else we are attempting to claim. This is the problem with blanket rejections of meaningful problems to current thinking. It is entirely possible that it cold fit well into teh bubble theory as well as the extraterrestrial life theory and evolution as we know it could be limited to a much small realm then we are currently giving it credit for.
    132. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by notabaggins · · Score: 1

      There's a word for what they're doing:


      Moore-izing? I've yet to see the movie, but if it's what I epect it to be then it's no better or no worse than what Moore has one. And other than Roger and Me, not of Moore's films were worth my time -- I doubt Stein's will be either. What on Earth does Moore have to do with this? The facts are that "Expelled" is based on bald faced lies. It's not a matter of bias or opinion or lack of balance, it's good old fashioned lying.

      Take the case of Caroline Crocker, Stein in "Expelled" says:

      "After she simply mentioned Intelligent Design in her cell biology class at George Mason University, Caroline Crocker's sterling academic career came to an abrupt end."

      Except she wasn't fired. Nor did she merely "mention" ID. She was teaching creationism, including creationist canards that are blatantly false, and was not curriculum for the course. Yet she finished her non-tenure contract without being terminated.

      Yes, the school did not renew her contract but that happens to thousands of non-tenure track professors all the time.

      She says (in the film):

      "[My supervisor] said 'nonetheless you have to be disciplined', and I lost my job."

      Except she didn't.

      The "discipline" amounted to be instructed to teach the curriculum of the course for which she'd been hired to teach. How shocking. She was told to fulfill the contract which she signed. How oppressive.

      Stein says (in the movie):

      "Not only did she lose her job at George Mason, this highly qualified researcher suddenly found herself blacklisted, unable to find a job anywhere."

      Except that after GMU, she taught at Northern Virginia Community College then Uniformed Services University then went to work for the Intelligent Design and Evolution Awareness (IDEA) Center.

      http://www.expelledexposed.com/index.php/the-truth/crocker

      These are lies. Flat out, bald faced lies.

      See also:

      http://tinyfrog.wordpress.com/2008/02/15/ode-to-caroline-crocker/

    133. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There are things for which the debate has been conducted and there is a settled position. Things like the world is not flat and that the Earth is not the center of the Universe. People who debate those points don't have open minds, they're just stupid."

      -birdmanesq

      Pretty much sums it up. There's no "debate", only stupid people making movies or otherwise flapping their yaps.

      Ben Stain is motivated by the same thing Michael Moore is, profit. Discourse on science doesn't happen on a movie screen, though it might happen at a lecture in a movie theatre.

      Nothing to see here, move along. IMO there is a big difference between Ben Stein and Michael Moore. Ben was already wealthy (~$40M) before making this movie. Among other accomplishments, he regularly beat all the smart guys that came onto his Emmy-winning TV show "Win Ben Stein's Money" To dismiss him as a Nixon speech-writer is like claiming Ron Howard did nothing after playing Opie on TV.

      Michael Moore had nothing before his filmmaking career started with that documentary on the auto industry (dang alzheimers! what was that film called?) In fact, wasn't he a high-school dropout? So I think the profit argument holds for him. But why do you think Ben Stein would set himself up to be flamed like this if only for money? I don't buy it.

    134. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't one of the points of the movie that while scientists espouse neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. that they are not actually following it?

      ...you're pretty accurate there. There is nothing neutral about the standpoint of people who believe in an intelligent creator (which is just a politically correct way of saying Theists). Rather, the ID point of view is a very particular standpoint that can distort many types of otherwise valid observations. In this particular case, the observation that there are patterns in DNA, is used to support the idea of ID. This is a subjective, not a neutral, standpoint: It presumes the existence of God, which is unprovable and therefore has no place in the world of science.

      During the whole montage he's writing something over and over on the blackboard and it comes out to be something like "I will NOT question Darwinian Evolution." He is writing "Do not question authority." Huge difference; one might even wonder whether he is writing it as the backbone of the ID philosophy, or as a pseudo-punishment for his ID views to bolster his point?

      He interviews scientists and editors who have lost their jobs for printing/writing papers that claim our DNA has a 'code' with information that could not have happened in nature. "...could not have happened in nature." A presumption, and not a neutral or scientific one. Thank you, whoever you were, who fired these people. Please keep facts and public education secular.

      ...evolutionists look just as much like religious zealots trying to purge their ranks of people with open minds I'd say "really good imaginations" rather than "open minds". Scientists first acknowledge that science is largely based on the works of others. I think "evolutionists" are simply trying to keep their body of work free from the imaginative presumptions of the ID crowd.

      If you have friends who believe in Creationism, respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it.... The reason that it's considered impolite to discuss religion or politics in a friendly social situation is that it is an impassioned subject in which neither side of the argument has the slightest clue about what they're even saying, and which will likely just piss people off. Why argue?
    135. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      The geocentric model was considered scientific at the time, and there appeared to be evidence to support it.

      Galileo's biggest troubles came not just from offending scripture, but from personally offending influential friends the church hierarchy who initially supported him, including the Pope.

      Heliocentrism is different than ID in that it is not religious in nature; however, given the context of his question, I find it is comparable because:

      a) it is an example of a fringe idea
      b) was initially rejected by the scientific community because of a pre-existing scientific theory with working equations that could reliably predict future observations
      c) but later proved to be valid

      None of this is to imply that I promote ID. ID is not science, it is one religion's attempt to align their beliefs and science. I'm just trying to say that kooky ideas have a spooky way of turning out to be true ... or at least closer to true than originally thought.

      If you don't like that example, how about the idea of an expanding universe? Lots of people didn't like that one at first.

      Black holes were considered science fiction when they were first postulated.

      Today there is a debate over dark matter, with some in the scientific community saying it is the only way to balance the universe as we know it, and others rejecting it as conjecture.

      As a matter of fact, I think most important ideas HAVE been relegated to kookdom before being accepted. Einstein's ideas were very controversial. Although they won support eventually, they represented too great a shift for many of the old guard to adequately comprehend, let alone accept.

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    136. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Nothing, but if you were a science teacher, would fail someone for saying that?

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    137. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by darkwhite · · Score: 1

      The whole reason there is a movie like this is because of these sorts of dishonest activism. No, the whole reason there is a movie like this is that there are people out there who bring fundamentalist religion into the public discourse and hijack education for their purposes, as well as a massive stratum of anti-intellectual population who are content with the hypocrisies of their organized religion.

      You can't stop stupid activists. You can, however, fight the notion that just because someone arguing an idea is an idiot doesn't mean the idea is right.
      --

      [an error occurred while processing this directive]
    138. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by k3r3nsky'sr3v3ng3 · · Score: 1

      (3) The reporter and activist went back-and-forth several times, with the activist saying, "There is no doubt," and "We may be uncertain of the cause, but we must not let the common people know that we are uncertain." Agreed. Sounds like the Straussian philosophy of "noble lies" and "deadly truths". While I enjoy reasonable scientific dialogue, (good enough to make a real biology class) I truly despise some of these activists who treat their beliefs as some infallible truth. To me, these activist are no different then some of the people they claim to oppose. Reminds me of the time I went to California. They had the special $4 a gallon gasoline (probably like $5 by now) and all of this other expensive pollution reducing gear, but 90+% didn't realize that much of the air pollution in California comes over trade winds from the Chinese coal belt. And don't even get me started on the Darwin freaks. Ask them who Alfred Russell Wallace (one of the first environmentalists, BTW was and observe their look of puzzlement
      --
      "We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security." Dwight Eisenhower
    139. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by nine-times · · Score: 1

      "There are things for which the debate has been conducted and there is a settled position. Things like the world is not flat and that the Earth is not the center of the Universe. People who debate those points don't have open minds, they're just stupid."

      -birdmanesq

      Sometimes "settled positions" are still worth questioning. For example, there was a time when we believed that space and time were absolute, and that the earth was the fixed center of the universe. At some point, people realized the Earth was traveling around the sun, and it became settled that the sun was the fixed center of the universe. Now we believe that time and space are not so absolute, but space and time are all relative, based on the frame of reference in which they're measured. Oh, and because of that, the Earth is as much the "center of the universe" as any place can be.

      Will our current viewpoint change? Possibly.

      That's not to say that I disbelieve theories about global warming. Still, I don't think we should be eager to close a topic, end the discussion, and call the matter "settled". We still have a lot to learn.

    140. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by cyphercell · · Score: 1
      So, is his job is to report the news? Or, is he an agent for an environmental organization?

      My god, I hope neither of my kids become such chicken shit weasels that they back down after a few meaningless threats. Yes, there's a point where you back off and go back to making your living, but to fold under virtually no pressure? Spineless. Beyond this, there's also a point of integrity where you walk away from the job and tell your kids that they may need to help out a little (getting a job, spending less etc), because your old job was EVIL.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    141. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by chet.holstrom · · Score: 1

      ok, so if ID isn't a scientific theory(I'm by no means implying a diety, just some sort of ordered intellegence that started something), then how did life start?

    142. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by onion_joe · · Score: 1
      huh huh, you said Ben Stain.

      --
      sig sig sig siggy sig
    143. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by radl33t · · Score: 1

      He should find new employment. Journalism is not a career for the limp hearted. This isn't about a working man bringing home food for his dependent family. I do not recognize this crutch you lean on. It does not excuse him from a code of ethics. Besides, if the GP is accurate the BBC would not have threatened his job over such an incident. Quite the opposite, actually. He doesn't need excuses from you, the GP said it clearly - he didn't want do deal with mass amounts of activist email. If he wants to make a dollar to feed his family tell him to get go get job at a factory or a department store, where he does not have the same professional obligations to the public.

    144. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      ok, so if ID isn't a scientific theory(I'm by no means implying a diety, just some sort of ordered intellegence that started something), then how did life start? Scientists are trying to figure that out. The fact that we don't know the answer yet doesn't make ID a scientific theory though. There's nothing scientific about it. It's simply speculation.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    145. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you. I also value what you say as much as I do when my dog barks.

    146. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by chet.holstrom · · Score: 1

      then so is saying something came from nothing. right?

    147. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know there was a giant evolutionary experiment after World War II? The Soviets rejected the ideas of evolutionary biology. They didn't believe Jesus magicked it all, of course. But there was a "good communist" with different ideas. So they put his ideas into practice, to feed their nation. The United States on the other hand crammed evolutionary biology down the throats of farmers. Now it wasn't in the form of indoctrination, it was abstracted for them to a degree, not that it actually conflicts with Christianity in anyway (that's a relatively recent development). The US agriculture improved, growing at a tremendous rate. Ever fewer people were able to feed ever vastly larger groups of people. Russians waited in lines for hours for even the most modest food, while America grew to literally feed the world. The contraction of the US food supply as a result of using land and food stuffs as a source of ethanol is already causing a shock to world food prices and famine. It's been a very modest change, that's how productive evolutionary biology is.

      What's the ID theory, formally. How can it be used to make predictions to produce better wheat, more fruitful corn, leaner beef? ID isn't a theory. It's an idea to bolster flagging faith. Because without the literal interpretation of the Bible, the physical object to point to, there's really nothing there to sustain faith for many people. Though they claim to love God, and see Him as a source of truth, without blatant lies, they can't believe. They don't feel His presence. What a small thing to so desperately grasp at.

      You want me to take your faith as a substitute for science? Pray me up a better microchip. Evangilism, as opposed to Christianity as it might be, is a hope of the comparitively rich to continue the unnecessary suffering of those trapped in an abyss of poverty. I bet deep down, for them to win at life, they need to see others lose. What a religion. What an example of humanity. On the otherhand, it could just be that rational thought is hard, so why try?

    148. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      These are lies. Flat out, bald faced lies.


      In the same way Moore presents his arguments are often "bald face lies". I wouldn't call them directly "lies", but highly biased one-sided arguements. Which is what it sounds like Stein is presenting.

      Based on your report, I doubt Stein will be much better than Moore has been. And an utter waste of my time to view. Still, I can have no real opinion on Stein until I see it for myself.

    149. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....that it's media manipulation which generates the uproar ....

      Indeed, its all a media frenzy and has nothing whatsoever to do with science. The climate cycles and it has nothing to do with human activity other than media hype.

      Take a look at the relatively recent history of the "science" of climate change and the media hype surrounding it:

      In the Feb. 24, 1895 issue of the NY times the headline was: "GEOLOGISTS THINK THAT THE WORLD MAY BE FROZEN UP AGAIN". The same paper on May 15, 1932 headlined: "EARTH IS STEADILY GROWING WARMER". Again on May 21, 1975, in the Times, "MAJOR COOLING IS WIDELY CONSIDERED INEVITABLE" and also on the cover of TIME magazine of Dec 3, 1973, "THE BIG FREEZE". Finally recently, again on the front of TIME, April 3, 2006, "SPECIAL REPORT ON GLOBAL WARMING".

      Is climate change based on science, that is KNOWLEDGE or is it based of assumptions (beliefs), guesswork and political control agendas? It is an inconvenient truth: Climate has for eons and is still cycling up and down and we humans can't do a damn thing about it.

      --
      All theory is gray
    150. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Is climate change based on science, that is KNOWLEDGE or is it based of assumptions (beliefs), guesswork and political control agendas? It is an inconvenient truth: Climate has for eons and is still cycling up and down and we humans can't do a damn thing about it. Jesus tap-dancing Christ. (don't ask for an apology, you won't get one)

      From a purely pragmatic standpoint, whether or not global warming exists don't you think it's a wise idea to stop fucking polluting the fucking planet?

      Instead, you and every other conservative use your church-appointed hatred of science to justify anti-environmental conservative policy.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    151. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      then so is saying something came from nothing. right? It would be if that's what scientists were actually doing, but that's not what they're doing. They're forming testable hypothesis and then going out and figuring out ways to test them. When ID proponents start doing that, then there may be reason to take them seriously.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    152. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Fluffeh · · Score: 1

      Firstly,

      I agree with respecting the beliefs of others. I am a Catholic in Australia and have been firm in my beliefs since I was about 10 years old. I spent a good few years of my youth thinking that I would end up a priest.

      However, in my opinion, teaching children that God made the world in seven days and we are all descended from Adam and Eve is akin to teaching them that the world is flat, but there are some crazy scientists who say it is round.

      I really do not understand this (Sorry for the next bit to people I might offend) apparently purely American concept (Radicals aside) of taking everything in the bible as being word for word truth. Everyone agrees that people living for hundreds of years is not to be taken literally (Hello Old Testament) and there are many other non-literal things, but it seems that creationism is certainly MEANT to be taken literally.

      Why not extend that magic spark to evolution? I personally don't even extend it this far, but what's wrong with saying that evolution took place, but God was involved in the original "spark of life" that set off the first unicellular organisms?

      I really think that this continued debate in your country is feeding the stereotypes that already exist of the American people due to these and other similar arguments.

      The world is not flat. Man was not made from clay. Woman was not created from the spare rib of a man. The history of the world did not start with seven magic days a few thousand years ago. Was God involved in this somehow anyway - that is where FAITH COMES IN.

      --
      Moved to http://soylentnews.org/. You are invited to join us too!
    153. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by et764 · · Score: 1

      Except that it really can't be accurately described that way.

      I know this wasn't really the point of your post, but you can put the center of the universe (i.e. your center of reference) pretty much wherever you want. If you have a nice, neat set of equations that describes the position of everything and you put the sun at (0,0,0), all you have to do is is replace all x's with x - Earth[x], y's with y - Earth[y], and z's with z - Earth[z] and then you suddenly have an equally descriptive model of a geocentric universe.

      As far as I know, the reason we put the Sun in the center is because you can do a pretty good job of describing the planets' orbits with ellipses rather than weird spiral things. To be fair though, I think a geocentric theory assumes the planets move in circles centered at the Earth, instead of awkward sprirals, which is incorrect.

    154. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by chet.holstrom · · Score: 1

      not to be rude, but how much have you studied both sides of this argument?

    155. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...In the case of climate change its basically 90% to 10% in scientists...

      Since when is scientific knowledge or for that matter, truth itself, dependent on the numbers of adherents? Fundamental scientific progress has NEVER, even once, been the product of a committee or majority consensus. Historically, it has usually been the lone dissenter who eventually proved to be right and brought about a fundamental forward progress of science. For example, it took 50 whole long years for the majority of "scientists" of that time to drop their idea of infinite light speed after the Danish astronomer Roemer measured it to be finite.

      --
      All theory is gray
    156. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      Enough to understand the arguments that each side is making. How about you? Have you looked into the research that's been going on regarding abiogenesis? Are you suggesting that the ID side is actually proposing testable hypothesis?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    157. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....The thing that drives me absolutely apeshit about ID is that one of the greatest gifts humanity has is our capacity for rational thought....

      So now what is so irrational about the idea that the human brain is the product of a mind? If it takes human brains to come up with an aircraft carrier or any other complex human creation, might such brains not also exist because an intelligent mind made them?

      --
      All theory is gray
    158. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...The Ether was discredited around 100 years ago as being unnecessary...

      Not quite, they just renamed it "virtual particles" filling all space, responsible for the zero point energy.

      --
      All theory is gray
    159. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That guy sounds like a pain in the ass. However, unless you have evidence to disprove his claims, you shouldn't be too quick to dismiss them.

      Not everything is capable of being scientifically analyzed and made into a proper theory, but that doesn't mean it's worthless to consider. For instance, one idea I like reading about is that of "ancient astronauts", an idea that basically some of early cultures' "gods" weren't just imagined, but real, but instead of gods, they were alien visitors. You've probably seen a show called "Stargate" which explores this premise. It has some interesting support. For example, in the Christian Bible's book of Ezekiel, there's an account of a visitation by Jehovah, but to a modern reader it reads more like a spaceship landing, which is interesting since no one in those times ever thought of visitors from other planets.

      Is this something I "believe", the way other people believe strongly in religions or in well-supported scientific theories? Hell no. If you ask me what my official belief is regarding the Book of Ezekiel, my answer is "I don't know". But I do find this an interesting hypothesis, and I wouldn't reject it out-of-hand without good cause. It certainly makes more sense to me than the idea that Ezekiel really did see a real god, which I consider an even more fantastic proposition than that of alien visitors. But for some odd reason, most people seem to think the idea of alien visitors in the past to be "crazy", but don't say the same thing about people who actually believe these historical figures were gods.

    160. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      It says that X isn't possible on it's own natural state so it was moved along (designed if you will) by an intelligent being. If X is possible naturally, then ID is falsified.
      That doesn't sound like a meaningful theory so much as, "Evolution as it stands is wrong, so I accept the only alternative hypothesis that I can think of at the moment." The ID crowd seems to be the null hypothesis plus some implications that don't necessarily follow from failing to reject the null hypothesis.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    161. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by chet.holstrom · · Score: 1

      I'm not super well versed in both sides arguments but I know what both sides are saying, I'm not saying that ID has a testable hypothesis, because I don't know if they do or not, but I do know that no scientist is going to prove evolution for a fact, cause that would require them to replicate the universe, no? in order to make something out of nothing and get life out of non-living material, would they not have to create a universe? or at least a living cell from a non living mass of particles?

      Now ID on the other hand doesn't really need to be tested, cause if it's true, then history would match up with it?(maybe?) I know they claim to find halfway humans that are monkey like and all that, but how do they know it wasn't just a really old person that was hunched over all the time? or that it was a species that went extinct, vs the halfway point between humans and monkeys? I'm not saying either side is right or wrong, but I just think that neither side has thought their argument enough. There's just not enough information to teach evolution as fact. But it is being taught as fact, and ID, while you say isn't a scientific theory, has been around twice as long as evolutionary theory, so you can't be so easy to discredit it.

    162. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everything is capable of being scientifically analyzed and made into a proper theory, but that doesn't mean it's worthless to consider. Great point. I happen to be a three-headed space monster from the planet Beeezu in the Nzueeur Galactic Sector. I am 20 million years old, and used to travel to Earth to drop tremendous poops in the middle of your oceans.

      Unless you have evidence to disprove my claims, you shouldn't be too quick to dismiss them.
    163. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....That many people believe in creationism and ID is a FACT...

      As many evolutionists BELIEVE that Darwinism is a fact. Both are hypotheses about how things came to be. No present day lab experiments or observations can prove one or the other. Fossil evidence shows that some life forms appeared out of seemingly nowhere, rather suddenly. For example, even evolutionists talk of the "Cambrian Explosion", as evidenced by the fossil record. Nobody has ever made a fossil, so we don't really know what processes made fossils. We know for sure, that no fossils are being made today. Today, anything that has ever been alive simply decays, long before it could form a fossil.

      --
      All theory is gray
    164. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ClassMyAss · · Score: 1

      And then there's the whole 'Evolution disclaimer' issue that's been kicking around. The scientific response to a disclaimer about how evolution isn't 100% proven true and there are alternate theories has been somewhat absurd. I've never understood it, if someone put such a disclaimer in about Einstein's relativity I'd applaud them, or Newton's gravity, but for some reason Darwin's work is off limits for disclaimers (disclaimer -> I have seen a disclaimer about Newtonian gravity before, basically saying that, while it's useful, it's also believed to be false and that there are newer, better methods of understanding gravity).
      No scientific work should need such a disclaimer - it's implicit in the study of science that all "facts" are really open for debate if better or contradictory evidence comes in to play. You're right, Newton's theory of gravity has been thoroughly supplanted by Einstein's, so it makes sense to mention the fact that Newton's theory is just an approximation; currently there is no evidence that there is any theory that overtakes evolution in such a way, so it does not make sense to put a disclaimer. The implication that the nutjobs want to foster by putting such a disclaimer on evolution is that it is somehow less valid than the rest of science, which is a freaking lie.

      BTW, this movie is ridiculous - the theory of evolution caused the Holocaust? Wow...at one point I was under the impression Ben Stein was intelligent, but he's really proved me wrong on that by signing on with this drivel-fest.
    165. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      Pure ID (i.e without the superfluous Creationist baggage) is agnostic about the nature of the designer, other than it requires intelligence.
      Pure ID also happens to be completely devoid of claims, results, or even testable hypotheses. The weird thing about it is, the closer they come to defining an actual, testable hypothesis, the closer they usually end up coming to Biblical creationism.

      So anyway, why did I use the word paranoid? It seems to me that with notable exceptions*, the Evolutionists I've come across when they're dealing with Creation/Evolution have been badly bitten by the antics of the rabid Creationists. The Evolutionist response to Intelligent Design seems to be disproportionate and often off topic - which looks to be somewhat paranoid about a rabid Creationist resurgence.
      There are a few issues at work here. The first and most obvious is the fact that in the context of what goes into primary school textbooks, ID is, without any real argument to the contrary, little more than the same creationism that we've been keeping out of schools for years. The cdesign proponentsists would have us believe that they're a totally new animal with interesting new ideas, but the evidence simply doesn't bear it out. It's easy to call it paranoia, but when you see the same people showing up over and over again, you start to suspect a pattern.

      More importantly, though, we're not talking about a bunch of crackpots who are being dismissed simply because they're crackpots. I don't think that there would be much resistance to a paper that actually contributes something to our knowledge being accepted into peer review. The problem is that nobody on the ID side is touching peer review with a 10-foot pole. They'd rather skip that inconvenient stuff and jump straight into textbooks for kids.

      Given that they don't have a testable hypothesis but rather a simple philosophical objection to the way science is done now, it seems to me that it makes sense to reject ID from schools on its own merits. The fact that it's almost always just stealth creationism is mere icing on the cake. If they can successfully divorce themselves from creationist fringe players and formulate some testable hypotheses and generate some actual results, then we can talk. Until then, it's not paranoia that keeps them out of the game.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    166. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ... that many people believe ID....

      Many people also BELIEVE in evolution. Truth is not subject to a vote. Since neither evolution not ID can be shown to be either true or false in a science lab, they are BOTH beliefs. God as such is not necessary to either belief. It's just that those who believe in God have jumped onto the ID bandwagon. There are those in the ID camp who do not necessarily believe in God or the record of the Bible. Their position is mainly that evolution, as presently mainstream, is insufficient to account for much of what we see in nature or in the lab. The driving force of natural selection cannot account for all of what we observe.

      --
      All theory is gray
    167. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      I think my argument comes from something I read maybe a year or two ago, where one text merely stated, after discussing evolution, that some people believed God guided evolution. It didn't state that God guided evolution, it merely stated that some people take that philosophy. I simply don't have a problem with that, but it caused a huge debate at the time.
      In a case like that, people are outraged on principle rather than practicality. Should we caveat any scientific claim of fact with a list of religious objections to it? "Some people don't believe that the mountains formed this way. Some prefer to believe that the world was made from the corpse of Ymir, the frost giant." At some point, you have to just let science class be science class. Caveats like that are just there to stroke a few religious egos and don't contribute anything to the science discussion.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    168. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I don't think I would exactly call that folding. Perhaps switching the story from X to Y doesn't want X said, but not folding. If he completely folded, you wouldn't have known about the switch or the reasons why.

      And if your kids are dumb enough to grow up and risk their jobs and means to support their families over something like that, then you deserve them living in your garage and supporting their children. They will become unemployed and you will be to blame.

    169. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Why not six days? Why not what appears to be a Big Bang taking six days?

      Occam's Razor.

      Which is easier to believe -- a book, assembled by humans; or the evidence before our own eyes, which we've been looking at for generations?

      Or, take this back to Galileo's problem. Which is easier to believe -- that God has seen fit to spin and tinker with the Celestial Spheres just so to make it appear as though things orbit the sun, when they really orbit the Earth? Or is it easier to believe that things orbit the Sun, and the Bible need not be interpreted so literally?

      Sure god could have taken millions of years, I just don't think it happened that way

      Again: Why not?

      For not agreeing that some of evolution is random chance, it sure does sound like you start your comment off that way.

      Alright, do this experiment for me: Go and buy a lottery ticket. You won't win.

      Yes, it's random, but you won't win. You are less likely to win the jackpot than you are to be struck by lightning.

      Or try this one: Flip a coin ten times. If you know anything about probability math, you'd expect 5 heads and 5 tails. I'll bet it's not exactly that, though -- maybe more like six and four, maybe even seven and three. Probably not ten all one way or the other.

      Now flip a coin a hundred times. It's probably going to be much closer this time -- probably not more than ten off, fifty-something one way, fifty-something the other.

      Flip the same coin a thousand times. The more repetitions, the closer you get to the expected outcome, knowing that on any given flip, you have a random chance of getting heads or tails, and they are equally probable.

      We call this the Law of Large Numbers.

      It may bother you that there is randomness at the core of this, but a lot of certainty can be built from randomness. The fact that every atom in your body didn't simultaneously jump a foot left is a result of probability -- and it's interesting that people find probability so hard to believe when we're talking about evolution, but no one questions it when we're talking about quantum physics. Is it really that probability is hard to believe, or that you desperately want to believe your scripture?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    170. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Where is this rule written that says a journalist must do X even if it threatens his livelihood?

      I think you have been watching too much citizen cane and romanticizing too much about the roles journalist play. This isn't government corruption he was exposing or anything similar. It was a statement that was more opinion then fact and he used it to illustrate the pressure that groups are using to force a common viewpoint. So tell me, which part is more benificial to society as a whole; A story making a statement about global warming stopping for some reason, or a story about how he was pressured to change that story? I mean you know about it because he said something right? Now which is more benificial to him and his family; Geting black listed and drummed out of any events surounding the issue, perhaps losing his job, or changing the story and keeping his kids clothed and food on the family's table?

      Your right, he doesn't need excuses from anyone. But this isn't the problem it is being made out to be either.

    171. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Anything not proven wrong is assumed to be true...

      That is an apt description of Darwinism. Just because living things adapt to their surroundings doesn't mean alligators learned to fly and became birds. That is an assertion, for which there is not, as for much of evolution, an iota of "proof".

      --
      All theory is gray
    172. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      Whoever said anything about failing someone? I would grade each student on how well they do on the content of the course. If someone answered a question "God/aliens did it", then they would get that question wrong. If they answered every question that way, they would then get a zero.

      Who would ever do that?

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    173. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Danse · · Score: 1

      but I do know that no scientist is going to prove evolution for a fact, cause that would require them to replicate the universe, no? Actually, no, they wouldn't. We already know that evolution exists, because we've seen it. What you're thinking of is abiogenesis, or the development of life from non-living material.

      in order to make something out of nothing and get life out of non-living material, would they not have to create a universe? or at least a living cell from a non living mass of particles? Right, which is what the research is focusing on. Read up on abiogenesis and you'll see what I'm talking about.
      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    174. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      My understanding of the ID is simply that certain complexed structure of life couldn't have randomly happened so it was by design of some intelligent being. The point is that they claim X couldn't happen in it's own which is why the design was needed.

      Perhaps this is exactly why this shouldn't be pushed out into a corner because of some possible god connection. It appears that you or I don't understand the argument that being made by it. In shortened layman's terms, it attempts to fill gaps where science can't seem to prove anything and they think that some aspects of different types of life is too complicated to have happened on the scale it did by chance.

      Personally, I don't see the problem with it or parts of it as long as it is treated like a regular scientific theory which can change and grow as we learn more about it. Even with science you have to go back to a point where something was just there, somehow built up energy and released it creating a big bang that has set the dimension we call reality into motion. I personally don't care if we make the jump of faith needed to understand that something always was there and things happened in the beginning when we can't check, in the middle where life happened which we still haven't been able to verify or check, or at any time in the process of existance until today. It isn't like we are creating life in labs of anything. The miller experiments are the closest we have which creates monomer RNA cells. We have yet to polymerize them by any synthetic process that could have existed naturally at any given point in time.

      So I suggest that we spend a little less time rejecting something out of hand because of the cheerleaders in the side lines and explore the possibilities and perhaps the scientific validity of claims. Especially the claims that something couldn't happen naturally without a push from an intelligent being.

    175. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't even be bothered to TRY to do the job properly, don't bother getting into the business. Do something else for a living.

    176. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      Imagine if you merely had one or two lines in a whole text about evolution that said "some people believe evolution was guided by the hand of God."

      It's actually very innocuous, it's completely true (some people obviously DO believe it), and there are certainly scientists who believe in evolution who believe God may have had a hand guiding it.


      That statement is misleading and pernicious in the context of a scintific textbook or paper. It is factually true, but it implies that there is a scientific basis for holding that belief. While there are Christian scientists who reconcile their faith with science, you will not hear them say that they have scientific evidence for their faith.
      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    177. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      That is the problem. There is no one proper way of doing the job. I don't know where you guys get that things should only be done one way or that your one way is the "one right way".

      It was his article and he chose to write it the way he did and then follow up on the pressures he got from it. That is the proper way to do the job because it is the way he chose to do it.

    178. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      I think you're getting a lot of hostility because you're in the territory of a 'teach the controversy' talking point. Getting statements about ID or the 'merely a theory' status of evolution into science textbooks is high on the agenda for religious groups. See here for a quick intro, but you've probably heard about it before anyway.

      The problem is that they're trying to force non-scientific statements into a scientific context and give them a false aura of scientific validity. Discussion of the scientific method, its successes and failures, alternatives to scientific theories and so forth are all valid and interesting (I studied some of them at university), but they are not science, they are about science and do not belong in science books.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    179. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Haha.

      There's also no evidence whatsoever to support your claim, other than your say-so. I'm assuming his plasma-loving acquaintance has at least some shred of evidence to back up his assertions. As for my alien astronauts, I have several millenia of religious writings talking about fantastic events and characters, so there's at least evidence of something interesting being behind it all, although it's mostly probably drug-induced delusions caused by spoiled or contaminated food.

    180. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      In other news, the officials of $DICTATORSHIP amended their election results to improve them.

      Seriously, thought, you should not amend an already-published article. You should instead write a follow-up/errata to it. That would avoid all claims of inappropriateness, since anyone could check the differences themselves.

      --

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

    181. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Boronx · · Score: 1

      Pure ID (i.e without the superfluous Creationist baggage) is agnostic about the nature of the designer, other than it requires intelligence.

      Either that, or every claim creationists have made about the phantasmal designer over the last few thousand years have been disproved.

    182. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I think, for reasons that will hopefully enrage the people doing it, "intelligent design" studies should be publically funded on the off chance that some future mutated version of it becomes useful in some part of science.

      I'm a bit uncertain how the claim "some or all aspects of life were designed on purpose by an intelligent being" could be studied. It doesn't make any predictions which could be tested or used as starting points for future avenues of research. The only thing it does predict is that there was pre-human intelligence, but since this intelligence is usually considered to supernatural in nature - a god - it isn't really in the realm of science either.

      So, what would the funding be used for, exactly speaking ?

      --

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

    183. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by kwietman · · Score: 1

      GAAAH! I tried to not yell, but this got me. Fossils are not a direct timeline, because the process of fossilization is (wait for it) RANDOM. Therefore, there will be species that seem to appear out of nowhere, because none of their direct ancestors were lucky enough to be fossilized. Also, where do you get the idea that no fossils are being made today? First, define "today." When we speak of fossils, we cover many millions of years. There are human fossils within the last 1500 years, if you need proof. Ever heard of a city called Pompeii? If there is any impediment to the fossilization of humans today, it is the tendency of humans to interfere in the process by preparing and burying their dead in conditions that encourage return to the environment. Without us digging them up, there's no evidence to suggest that pharoahs would not have become fossilized. In a way, they were already on the journey to being so, aided by the peculiar rituals of the ancient Egyptians. Quit taking a short view and calling it adequate evidence of the long one. On the first point: "...many evolutionists BELIEVE that Darwinism is a fact." Let me clear this up for you. I've never met an evolutionist. It's not a field or a profession. But those of us who accept evolution as a reasonable explanation for the development and diversity of life on this planet do so because it long ago passed the "hypothesis" stage and became a theory in the truest sense of the word. It withstands scrutiny, is supported by observable fact and accurately reflects known outcomes. It is not, however, a "theory" in the sense that ID proponents incorrectly use the term; any old idea that comes into your head, without any need for support, substantiation or experimental proof. There is always debate about a real theory. That's what makes it robust. But a true theory, like that of natural selection, survives such debate the richer, with even more detail and elegance.

      --
      The universe is made of atoms and empty space. All else is speculation. --Democritus of Abdera, 435 BC
    184. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by kwietman · · Score: 1

      "How did life start" is a reasonable question to ask, and may be explored in a scientific manner. This does not mean that ALL ideas about how life started are scientific by definition. Ideas that state, for instance, that life sprang fully formed out of the ass of a gargantuan orangutan may be posited, but the lack of any evidence supporting the existence of such an orangutan or its scat makes it just another stupid idea. If your hypothesis doesn't have any evidence to support it, it is not a theory. The fact that the other guy's theory doesn't have 100% of the answers does not mean that your idea has merit by default. You must still provide verifiable evidence to support your claim, or it's just a claim. If you try to pass that off as science, you deserve to be mocked.

      --
      The universe is made of atoms and empty space. All else is speculation. --Democritus of Abdera, 435 BC
    185. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by kwietman · · Score: 1

      "...the poor theology of many Evolutionists." This is a profoundly empty statement. The idea that I don't show "respect" to your stories and myths has nothing to do with their validity. If you have to demand "respect" for these stories in order for them to be valid, then they simply don't have the strength to stand on their own merits. How much "respect" should I have for animistic religions, or those which teach that earthquakes are caused by a great catfish, or that lightning is sent by a horny old god who impregnates women disguised as a shower of gold? These stories are fanciful but have no validity as science. They are entertaining but have no validity as science. The discussion here is whether proponents of ID have any cause to be indignant that their story about a supernatural "creator" isn't taken seriously as science. It isn't, because it isn't science. By the way, if I'm just parroting memes, please quote chapter and verse the passages that support the *scientific* basis for intelligent design.

      --
      The universe is made of atoms and empty space. All else is speculation. --Democritus of Abdera, 435 BC
    186. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by chet.holstrom · · Score: 1

      well thanks for attacking a neutral position. I never implied one to be right over the other.
      and both sides have some evidence to support themselves, history has yet to contradict ID, and it has yet to definitively contradict evolution. sure you could be a naive narrow-minded person and say that taking ID as a theory is akin to taking an orangutan and pulling a universe out of it's butt, but then, we aren't so stupid as to believe something like that. I never implied or said that ID or evolution is right, I only say that both deserve discussion. surely you can agree to that?

    187. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I said "some future mutated version". I don't think that life was designed by an intelligent being, but maybe some of the research the ID people do might end up being useful for some other, completely unrelated subject. E.g. the Swedish Church records were created by people who were almost certainly creationists but they have been used for twins studies for example.

      http://www.genline.com/databasen/

      In some ways the genealogical database the Church of the Latter Day Saints or Mormons could be useful in the future. I'm not sure if they publish them though.

      Chinese medicine was based on principles like chi that were, to be blunt, utter nonsense. And yet they found out about that wormwood could treat malaria. Now modern science can leverage that discovery to work out the active ingredient -

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

      It's possible to discover interesting stuff even if you're completely wrong about theory.

      In an odd sort of way humans discovered artemisinin using a technique a bit like evolution. Presumably herbalists tested loads of herbs on loads of sick people and made a note of which ones treated which illness. They didn't know enough chemistry to design a drug, but then again neither do we yet. But a brute force test of all herbs on all diseases combined with decent record keeping did solve the problem.

      I think that's my point. That people doing research is good, regardless of whether their world view is correct or not. They might stumble on something that is later useful.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    188. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by kwietman · · Score: 1

      "...history has yet to contradict ID, and it has yet to definitively contradict evolution." This implies that the two are on the same footing. The reason nobody has definitively contradicted evolution is that the evidence, by and large, supports it. The exact mechanisms, timing and minutiae are still subject to debate, but that basic premise is still very sound. To imply that ID has not been contradicted is silly. The idea is not subject to contradiction, because, as an unprovable "supernatural" idea, there is no contradiction that could successfully be demonstrated, any more than one could be mounted against my admittedly facetious example. In order to contradict a true theory, we must disprove the examined evidence. There is no examined evidence for ID (and no matter how you slice it, it's still creationism). My idea is unfalsifiable; it must, therefore, have merit. BTW, why is the idea of a universe emanating from the anus of a primate less stupid than one created by a supernatural all-powerful deity, if there is no evidence for either? I have no problem with discussing ID. We're doing it right now. The problem I have is with pretending that the discussion of ID is a scientific one. It isn't. It is, at best, a philosophical one. The danger is in taking a philosophy and attempting to fit it into the box marked "science" without anything to keep it there on its own merits.

      --
      The universe is made of atoms and empty space. All else is speculation. --Democritus of Abdera, 435 BC
    189. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by jaminJay · · Score: 1

      Paraphrased:

      A day unto God is as a thousand years is to man.

      I believe it's in John somewhere, and even then it is by no means meant to be accurate.

      --
      Leela: "Is all the work done by children?" Alien: "No, not the whipping."
    190. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People don't hold evolution as a religion, they don't worship it or pray to the evolution "god".. they aren't "evolutionists".

      They are just normal people, sick and tired of a small but vocal bunch of religious zealots trying to push their version of religion onto the rest of society using deceitful tactics, lies and misinformation, to discredit something that is observable in nature and has been shown to be correct many times over.

      These ID people never bring real arguments to the discussion that haven't been proven to be incorrect many times before or at least don't amount to anything more than them saying "god did it". They aren't being oppressed because of a rejection of their beliefs, but rather rejected for their push to replace science with god, even when both can co-exist peacefully.

      If they left it at just a religious idea and didn't try and force it on the general population by such nefarious, deceitful, unchristian means then no-one would give a crap what they think, but they don't.. so some people get upset at their constant lies and act rashly.

      I don't personally have a problem with the idea that god had a hand in getting us where we are today.. but if so then he has done it in a way that is consistent with what we have shown has actually happened on this planet... ie Evolution

    191. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Artichoke · · Score: 1

      Cool. That's well put. Thanks.

      --
      __
      Arse
    192. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also no evidence whatsoever to support your claim, other than your say-so. Exactly. A direct statement. You apparently prefer hearsay.
    193. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "My understanding of the ID is simply that certain complexed structure of life couldn't have randomly happened so it was by design of some intelligent being."

      That is indeed what they claim, but said claim contains a logical fallacy:

      If complexity is evidence of intelligent design, then the designer (which, by virtue of possessing intelligence is extremely complex) must itself have been intelligently designed, and that designer, also intelligent and therefore complex, must also have been intelligently designed, and so on. So using complexity as evidence of intelligent design leads to an infinite regression of designers.

      To avoid the infinite regression, we must therefore postulate an extremely complex system (i.e. an intelligent designer) which was not itself intelligently designed. Unfortunately, the presence of a complex entity which wasn't intelligently designed nullifies the assertion that complexity is evidence of intelligent design by introducing a situation where this clearly isn't true.

      The ID people can't have it both ways. Complexity either is evidence of intelligent design, in which case there must be an infinite series of intelligent designers each of which designed the next designer, or it isn't evidence of intelligent design because it says a complex entity can exist without being designed.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    194. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Just because living things adapt to their surroundings doesn't mean alligators learned to fly and became birds. That is an assertion, for which there is not, as for much of evolution, an iota of "proof"."

      Hence the fact that the theory of evolution doesn't claim alligators learned to fly. I find it strange how Creationists / IDers (same thing, different hat) have the temerity to criticise scientific theories that they obviously know absolutely nothing about.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    195. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I think that's my point. That people doing research is good, regardless of whether their world view is correct or not. They might stumble on something that is later useful.

      You haven't answered my question: what, exactly speaking, would ID studies study ? What would the ID researchers use the money to ? If an ID researcher gets 100 million dollars, what will he do with the money ? Buy lab time ? A field trip ? What ?

      --

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

    196. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      It's full of lies. It is not objective at all.

      Sorry, I can't respect someone who argues against things they don't understand.

      I also wouldn't respect someone who thought gravity was because magic gnomes held everything down.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    197. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Which is nothing like what is happening here.

      There is no evidence of this happening, and the people are just grinding an axe.

      Oh noes, I didn't get tenure, it must be because of my belief!

      Of course this ignores the people that do believe and get tenure, and don't get fired...many thousands of them.

      There is a large difference between activist and scientific community.

      That said, I would like to see a cite, because based on my experience(limited) a reporter would not get fired for that, in fact the paper would eat it up because they would get more people looking at their site, and the paper would get a wider circulation.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    198. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      That's all I'm saying... I don't believe in ID, but if I was teaching a class, I'd have no problems, while discussing evolution, saying "some people believe God guided evolution, some think aliens did; whatever you believe, there is no scientific basis for it."

      If some student asked me "well, couldn't God have guided evolution?" I'd say, "God could have; so could Satan. Or Aliens. You can believe what you want to believe if it makes you more comfortable with it as long as you stick to facts when doing work in this class."

      But some people are so blinded by hatred of religion or dissenting opinions (not that ID is even a dissenting opinion), the mere mention of it sends them off the deep end. I think the problem here is anti-religious zealotry...

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    199. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      .... theory of evolution doesn't claim alligators learned to fly.....

      No, it claims much more than that. Darwin's "Tree of Life" as still printed in textbooks depicts all life originating in a common ancestor. The very title of his book: "Origin of the Species" proclaims this. Evolutionists claim that all life began with "simple" one celled life forms and became more and more complex over time. There is no evidence whatsoever for this scenario. On the contrary, even evolutionists speak of stuff like "The Cambrian Explosion" as evidenced in the fossil record. An explosion is a sudden event, not something slowly happening over immense periods of time. The fundamental tenet of evolution is shown to be false in the laboratory and in every day life. Simple things NEVER, EVER become more complex without the activity of mind, involving thoughtful planning as well as energy. Nobody has ever demonstrated otherwise today. Undirected energy is almost always destructive. Evolution is a belief of the majority, just as "The Earth is flat" resting on elephants or turtles was a belief of the majority at one time.

      --
      All theory is gray
    200. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Should we caveat any scientific claim of fact with a list of religious objections to it?

      But that's the point, in this case - there's no objection to evolution, just that that was God's plan all along... being agnostic, I believe if there is a God then you'd think it would have been his plan... or experiment, to see what evolved. Like I said, I don't believe he guided it, but I don't think there's any objections to natural selection except that God (super-natural, I guess) helped it along, perhaps in ways we would never understand.

      I just don't see the big deal... I wouldn't teach it in my classroom (if I were a teacher), but if someone asked "Couldn't God have guided evolution?" I'd say "Sure... he could have, but since we have no scientific facts to prove it one way or another, it's merely conjecture and can't be used as evidence of anything."

      There... the topic was dealt with, nobody forced any religious doctrine on anyone, but people were allowed to express their thoughts on it. I don't see the big deal. If that's what people want to believe to reconcile their faith with science, so be it. No harm done.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    201. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I guess they would spend it trying to pick holes in evolutionary theory in a variety of ways. Assuming they really believe in what they say.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    202. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Ever heard of a city called Pompeii?....

      Yes, it was a sudden catastrophe that buried the life forms under deep, hot layers of ash. All fossils are made not by some slow process over eons of time, but but sudden burial and heat and/or immense pressure to prevent the decay that would otherwise happen. By today, I mean at least since Darwin lived and proposed his preposterous ideas. Nobody has made a fossil since then or even demonstrated how such a fossil could occur. We know that fossils occur in sedimentary layers. That implies the existence of water.

      (..I've never met an evolutionist...)

      Someone who believes in the theory of evolution is an evolutionists in the same way that someone who believes in communism is a communist. Is that so hard to grasp?

      (..But those of us who accept evolution..)

      Yes you have to accept, that is believe evolution occurred in the past. You cannot show that it occurs today. Any time someone tells you about something that happened in the past, you have to either BELIEVE that or not. Evolutionists believe what they believe, but cannot prove it any more than the ID folks can demonstrate their beliefs. The laws of physics presumably were the same millions of years ago.

      We cannot prove this however. All we can show is what the laws of physics are today and the assume (believe) that they never changed. All evidence from the past, whether physical or historical has to be BELIEVED, it cannot be demonstrated. Therefore ID and evolution are both beliefs. You pick your belief and I'll pick mine.

      --
      All theory is gray
    203. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by kwietman · · Score: 1

      "Any time someone tells you about something that happened in the past, you have to either BELIEVE that or not." You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means. When I use the word "believe," it's a concession to the evidence, which is strong enough to convince me. I try not to use it too much. I believe that the laws of physics were the same millions (and billions) of years ago because all the observable evidence of the universe points to the laws of physics being static, up until a few picoseconds after the initial event (beyond that, without data, I don't speculate. You may place any creators you wish within that box, but be prepared to be questioned about evidence). When someone says that they believe in ID, it (generally) means that they believe it in spite of the strong evidence suggesting that natural selection occurs, or believe it due to an erroneous or incomplete knowledge of the processes involved. Behe's irreducible complexity has already been discredited, for instance, yet the argument is commonly used to support the idea of ID as a scientific theory. The statement that all evidence from the past must be believed because it cannot be demonstrated is argumentative twaddle. Do you, then, believe that photographs, film, etc. are not really recordings of the past? How about physical measurements of blue shift, or argon-potassium dating? Do you believe that recorded evidence that says that experiments done to determine gravitation, velocity, etc. will end with different results than those previously recorded? I do not succumb to belief, I acknowledge evidence. When and if there is positive, reproducable, experimental evidence of ID, I will acknowledge it as well. Be well.

      --
      The universe is made of atoms and empty space. All else is speculation. --Democritus of Abdera, 435 BC
    204. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      If complexity is evidence of intelligent design, then the designer (which, by virtue of possessing intelligence is extremely complex) must itself have been intelligently designed, and that designer, also intelligent and therefore complex, must also have been intelligently designed, and so on. So using complexity as evidence of intelligent design leads to an infinite regression of designers.
      In the beginning, with ID or science, you reach a point that just was. Take the big bang theory, how do you ascribe the stuff that was there to create the energy and release it without resorting to a it was just there as some point. But the thing is, with ID, the inteligence doesn't have to be of this world or understood by this dimension. We are only considering life on earth and how it started and evolved. Most of which has heaping gaps in the science which at present is just assumed to be true to the extent that other parts of other theories work nicely. But as you attempted to allude to, it doesn't create a logic loop because we are only concerned with the here and us.

      To avoid the infinite regression, we must therefore postulate an extremely complex system (i.e. an intelligent designer) which was not itself intelligently designed. Unfortunately, the presence of a complex entity which wasn't intelligently designed nullifies the assertion that complexity is evidence of intelligent design by introducing a situation where this clearly isn't true.
      If and only if, you confine the inteligence to what you understand and percieve to be applicable today. But as I pointed out earlier, we are only concerned with earth and humans or life humans understand. The inteligence can be withing or outside that dimension and doesn't necessarily have to be confined to the same subset of rules we are. Think of our universe being a semi controlled experiment in a test tube like structure relative to objects so large and ominous that we can't fathom their conception without an imagination of some sorts. Well, think of the possibilities of this chance.

      The ID people can't have it both ways. Complexity either is evidence of intelligent design, in which case there must be an infinite series of intelligent designers each of which designed the next designer, or it isn't evidence of intelligent design because it says a complex entity can exist without being designed.
      They don't have it both ways. They simply aren't placing artificial restrictions on the concept in order to prove/disprove their point. It isn't that complicated, just think outside the box.
    205. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Simple things NEVER, EVER become more complex without the activity of mind, involving thoughtful planning as well as energy.

      Wow, you've convinced me! We have to tell everyone that H2 + 2O2 + Energy => 2H2O is a lie and should be written thus: H2 + 2O2 + Energy + Jebus => 2H2O!!!

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    206. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      You're completely right, there's no such thing as "Ethics in Journalism", because it's a self regulated entity. Therefore, politicians, lawyers, big businesses, and even crackpot little environmentalists should be able to email and threaten journalists, every single fucking time a story is published that people don't like. What's more, is the story should be changed, rewritten in a manner that is more politically aesthetic for future generations. You're right. Fuck the truth.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    207. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Ethics is a completely different beast then what we are seeing here. Your confusing ethics with your ideals which will eventually lead you to an unethical choice.

      If any ethics were violated here, it would have been the environmentalist wacko who did it. Not the journalist. All the journalist did was turn a statement of opinion into a statement of fact by publishing the do as I say mentality of the pro global warming kooks. There is nothing unethical about that.

    208. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....We have to tell everyone that H2 + 2O2...

      No, you can say that the DESIGN of hydrogen atoms and oxygen atoms and the force that governs them is such that two of the former will combine with one of the latter in such a way to make the only natural substance that expands when transitioning from a liquid state into a solid form.

      --
      All theory is gray
    209. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by larryboymi · · Score: 1

      I flipped a coin a half million times and every time it came up heads.

    210. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      No, you can say that the DESIGN of hydrogen atoms and oxygen atoms and the force that governs them is such I'm beginning to think you're being intentionally ignorant here. It is the nature of hydrogen and oxygen atoms (in fact, atoms and molecules in general) that they combine to form more complex molecules spontaneously. First you deny that "simple => complex" actually happens in nature, then you turn right back around and insist that "simple => complex" happens in nature when it has been designed to do so. So, by your own reasoning, you completely undo your first argument, because by your assertion, all nature is designed!

      At best you have a flimsy argument for theistic evolution.

      the only natural substance that expands when transitioning from a liquid state into a solid form Again, this is clearly understood as the chemical nature of water and a function of its strongly polar covalent bonds and its geometric form. It's fully explainable within accepted physical laws. It is not some cosmic hack God wrote into the universe to support life. If water for some reason defied all natural explanations, which it doesn't, you might have some footing on trying to use water to somehow dismantle evolution.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    211. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      But that's the point, in this case - there's no objection to evolution, just that that was God's plan all along... being agnostic, I believe if there is a God then you'd think it would have been his plan... or experiment, to see what evolved.
      Should physics teachers have to say, "F = ma, and some people believe that F = ma because God willed it to be so"? What's the point of introducing the topic if not to stroke somebody's irrelevant religious insecurities?

      I just don't see the big deal... I wouldn't teach it in my classroom (if I were a teacher), but if someone asked "Couldn't God have guided evolution?" I'd say "Sure... he could have, but since we have no scientific facts to prove it one way or another, it's merely conjecture and can't be used as evidence of anything."
      I don't think that anybody is advocating smacking down kids who ask the question. I'm simply saying that there's no reason for the instructor or the textbook to bring up such things unnecessarily, especially when those efforts seem devoted specifically to casting doubt on one particular field of study.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    212. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      bah, it's all bullshit. After reading the emails, I'm beginning to think that it has been blown far out of proportion. She was an idiot speaking on behalf of idiots and he made minimal changes in presentation to appease her.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    213. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      My understanding of the ID is simply that certain complexed structure of life couldn't have randomly happened so it was by design of some intelligent being.
      Which, in and of itself, is kind of a silly leap. There could be a natural mechanism other than the ones that we currently believe drive evolution that explains the same thing. ID amounts to "Evolution is wrong, so we win by default" in that case. How on earth did they get to claim the null hypothesis as their own and then try to sell it as some sort of new science?

      The point is that they claim X couldn't happen in it's own which is why the design was needed.
      Accepting, for the sake of argument, that they do get to occupy the set of "~evolution" and claim victory by default, they'll need to give some compelling arguments as to why evolution couldn't happen on its own. There hasn't been a lot of work done there that doesn't simply boil down to personal incredulity. Why are the current extrapolations invalid?

      So I suggest that we spend a little less time rejecting something out of hand because of the cheerleaders in the side lines and explore the possibilities and perhaps the scientific validity of claims. Especially the claims that something couldn't happen naturally without a push from an intelligent being.
      I don't think that there's much evidence for the claims being rejected out of hand in the scientific community. There has been a lot of discussion in detail on the topic. They have been rejected out of hand from public schools, but that's because what their claims 1) Don't really amount to science at this point, 2) Have produced no results worthy of peer review, and 3) Tend to be a transparently obvious repackaging of old creationist canards being sold by people who, until recently, were selling biblical creationism.

      If, for example, Dembski ever gets around to actually calculating the amount of "complex specified information" in something or Behe suggests a testable mechanism for how this supposed intelligent designer intervened to create the flagellum and produces some surprising results, they'll probably start making some headway with the scientific community. Since they haven't even bothered to go that far, I don't see how they can claim persecution based on the simple fact that they're not being rewarded for work they haven't done and results they haven't produced.

      If you could make a career in science by positing vague, untestable hypotheses and then claiming that failures in the work of others supports your own, I suspect that there would be a lot more people lining up for jobs in academia. As it stands, results matter. The persecution card will only get you so far if you don't produce any.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    214. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      ick, dont know how I got into this conversation but ick, I cant take it anymore so I will give you, mr silentbob an rational response of the debate here that went very very south. I am assuming your opponent here is a word of faith christian, rahter irrational thought on how things come into being by speaking and thought.

      The scientific argument here that is being poorly made to you is that entropy and evolution seem to be at odds with each other on a cosmic scale. Luckily here on earth we have a gigantic source of energy right next door sustaining micro-evolution. However, this would require very very rare stable circumstances to sustain. Also it is very very difficult to prove/disprove that punctuated equilibrium/macro evolution works as by their nature there is a giant gap.

      theistic evolution can be intelligently discussed in one of two ways. 1. Lasse Faire - God started the universe with a bang and has been a spectator since, having created it in such a way that it will sustain itself acording to his plan. This scenario is Generally unacceptable to conservative Christians but works very well with loose interp of scripture and violates no scientific principles while solving a serious issue. The other theistic evolution that can be intelligently discussed is God created the Universe, everything in it, then created the world as it is, allowing for microevolution to correct the flaw of sin in nature, this method is generally discussed among conservative Christians and Jews. Either argument is edifying, and can be debated rigourously.

      I hope this is a bit better argument for you to consider than the aforementioned thought governs creation train. Which is just a bunch of hocus pocus for wiccans and word of faith christians.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    215. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      entropy and evolution seem to be at odds with each other on a cosmic scale.... However, this would require very very rare stable circumstances to sustain. The thing is, to say that complexity arising from simplicity is at odds with the second law of thermodynamics is to completely misunderstand the issue. I see you try to resolve it with the micro- and macro- distinctions, but let me see if I can put it to you a different way.

      Imagine a completely flat plane, infinitely wide. Now imagine that there are a bunch of steel balls on that plane. Without any external forces, the balls stay put and never move.

      Now instead imagine an extremely chaotic plane, also infinitely wide. It has lots and lots of bumps and dents in it, but at both very small and very large scales, there are clear patterns: plateaus, craters, hills, ridges, and paths. Some of these paths are infinitely branching, some are not. If you place a bunch of steel balls on this plane, they will all tend toward the lowest point they can reach. If you then shake the plane around a bit, some of them may jump around and wind up in a different "lowest point" than they started.

      Imagine that each nucleotide on a DNA strand is a location on a "multidimensional" plane (if you need help thinking multi-dimensionally, check out Michio Kaku's "Hyperspace"). Imagine that lower points are "more adapted" and higher points are "less adapted" (by adapted I mean suited to continue reproducing with respect to their environment). The reality is much more complex as in the real world, the environment is constantly changing. Now think of the steel balls as actual manifestations of DNA. Every mutation is a "shake". Just as the steel ball will, most of the time, return to the lowest point possible, so too, will most mutations from a well-adapted organism die out quickly and the most adapted organism will continue on. This is that stability you are looking for.

      However, from time to time, the chaotic randomness may carve out a new path, and the jostling may force the steel ball out of its pit and into a new path (obviously the stable life form would continue to exist -- think of it as, there may be multiple balls in this particular pit) eventually leading to a deeper pit. Unless you are videotaping the entire experience, you could easily miss that event, and indeed, the status of life on earth during any one organism's life time is more or less a snapshot.

      What people who make the micro/macro distinction basically say, is that there are only pits, and no paths, and the pits are so far away from one another that random jostlings cannot possibly catapult one ball into another, or that the likelihood of that happening is so small as to be negligible. Most supporters of macroevolution simply say that this is an unnecessary constraint put on evolution that there is no evidence.

      In essence, macroevolution is just microevolution over a long enough period time.

      I don't have much trouble with theistic evolution, although many people who support theistic evolution would make the claim that while God allowed life to evolve, they also claim that he intervened at specific points to "nudge" life into new evolutionary lineages, and/or created humankind specially from how he allowed other forms to evolve. What the science of evolution indicates, however, is that the micro/macro distinction is only one of degree and not of semantics, and that time, not divine intervention, is necessary for the macro parts to happen.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    216. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Well put, I tried to smash too much information into a quick couple paragraphs and it got convoluted. Now whereas you understand these jumps are a necessity, it is practically impossible to explain how great odds like one in a billion are pretty good odds on a cosmic scale to people who have a hard time with the lottery ;)

      You are also running into issues with a group of people who do not understand that evolution is a measurement tool, but rather see it as a method of talking about positive progress. The words mutation are always viewed negatively, and cannot distinguish between adaptation and micro evolution. (I side from the debate within evolution that adaptation and micro evolution are different in that adaptation occurs within a lifetime and micro evolution is a trait passed on from a generation. I don't think good definition has been made here).

      Yes I come as a Christian to the table but that does 2 things, it makes me ashamed of my ignorant loud brethren, and does not excuse me from seeing scientific enlightenment or the pursuit of it.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    217. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Yes I come as a Christian to the table but that does 2 things, it makes me ashamed of my ignorant loud brethren, and does not excuse me from seeing scientific enlightenment or the pursuit of it. And I quite admire you for it, since my experience with Christianity is that your type is not well tolerated in many circles.

      I guess I try to promote scientific understanding. I just hope onlookers who are undecided will see the validity in my arguments and the ignorant tactics of my opponent, and that in so doing I will do my small part to help the evolution side of the debate among the undecided and laypeople, and possibly help nudge some of the former, ignorant types more towards where people like you are. It's just hard to have a fair fight with an opponent who insists upon repeating the same claims over and over again and refusing to study and understand your point of view.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    218. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      That very well could be. Of course where you draw the line of idiots she was speaking for cold be debated to some degree.

      But I think the important part is that the interaction was documented and reported on. It wasn't a protect myself and hope no one finds out. I think the journalist in question did an acceptable thing in which many people seem to think he defied some unwritten rule about something they hold in their head. In either case, the effect is the same.

    219. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Which, in and of itself, is kind of a silly leap. There could be a natural mechanism other than the ones that we currently believe drive evolution that explains the same thing. ID amounts to "Evolution is wrong, so we win by default" in that case. How on earth did they get to claim the null hypothesis as their own and then try to sell it as some sort of new science?

      I don't think it is an "evolution is wrong so we win by default" situation. You might very well see it that way. It is obvious that you appear threatened by the thought that they could be right which explains your position somewhat. But here is the situation as we have it now, if Evolution is the result of some other natural mechanism, we will never know it because the current debate consists of a "i said so, so this is the way it is". This is why I think the ID question is important, in proving it wrong, it forces development and progress on something that has been limited by zealots- including you. We will never know the real answer as long as we have gaps in the current process and insist that what we can imagine is the way it is if we only imagine it in a certain way.

      Accepting, for the sake of argument, that they do get to occupy the set of "~evolution" and claim victory by default, they'll need to give some compelling arguments as to why evolution couldn't happen on its own. There hasn't been a lot of work done there that doesn't simply boil down to personal incredulity. Why are the current extrapolations invalid?

      I don't understand why you are insisting victory by default. I mean at any given point in time we can watch the natural progression of evolution and totally debunk them. The current model is in the same light but it is considered taboo to challenge it. In essence, they are enjoying the same victory by default except that there is a mechanism in place to sequester dissent.

      But the framing of your questioning tells me that you don't even comprehend then claims being made by the ID camp. How do you pretend to be authoritative enough to speak against it if you won't invest the time and effort to argue against the arguments being made? I mean I could say cars are black and it doesn't do a thing to counter the argument that I painted my car white. It isn't as if my car stopped being a car when I painted it a different color. You see, It isn't that evolution wouldn't happen on it's own or without inteligence assisting it, it's that certain complexed parts of it are too complexed to happen naturally by chance. These same parts are illusive in the current theory as in we have no facts backing it up other then an end product that could support either statement. As for the winning by default, it is simple, find a way to verify that it could happen without an intelligent assist. That would falsify the entire premis but more appropriately, it would open a dead segment of science that is religiously guarded by the keepers of information.

      I don't think that there's much evidence for the claims being rejected out of hand in the scientific community. There has been a lot of discussion in detail on the topic. They have been rejected out of hand from public schools, but that's because what their claims 1) Don't really amount to science at this point, 2) Have produced no results worthy of peer review, and 3) Tend to be a transparently obvious repackaging of old creationist canards being sold by people who, until recently, were selling biblical creationism.

      I think you are confused. They have been rejected from schools because of a connection to the cheerleaders on the side lines. It had nothing to do with amounting to science. Of course there is the chicken and egg problem here too, how can it amount to science when anyone entertaining the idea in a scientific light loses their jobs and is black balled from the fields? I mean seriously, does a concerted effort to hide the possibility of something really mean that the n

    220. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Well for me it helps that my wife was a biology staff instructor, very enlightening :)

      My goal personally is to bring some enlightenment to the Christian group as a whole. I am planning (when my wife gets out of her 11th year of college, to develop a nice bioethics course, with the review of a group of PHDs in each area). Lutherans are nice to work with in this area since they are the most academic of the denominations.

      An interesting perspective though is this; Christians are woefully ignorant of science as a whole. Scientists are the same way to theology. Here and there, you find someone who can cross over, a scientist who is sound with their theology, or a Christian who is sound with their science. But on each side they are overshadowed by zealots. It is an uphill battle, good luck with your side ;)

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    221. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh.

      b) There was a lot of debate about this... but neither side was disproven by evidence. Also, the geocentrists equations were horrible models. They DID NOT work fully. Which was why there was still debate (Brahe vs. Kepler).

      The issue was solved when Kepler took Brahe's data, and produced modeling equations based on the sun being at the center of the solar system that accounted for effectively all of the data that had been collected. This was fundamentally solved by the data. Once Kepler's model was published along with the data, it quickly and effectively settled the whole mess. Scientists respond to data, not guesses.

      ID, on the other hand, is not science. It makes no falsifiable predictions. It has not produced a model that explains things better then evolutionary theory, and not for lack of trying of the ID'ists side.

      And, since ID has failed to address the issue scientifically, they've shifted to propaganda and ad hominom attacks. Guess what, scientists don't like that any more then anyone else.

      If there was a reasonable scientific alternative to Darwinian evolution to account for the diversity of life, scientists would be studying it now. Anyone who had good evidence for an alternate hypothesis would become world famous, win Nobel prizes, etc. The evidence hasn't been found, though.

    222. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...don't you think it's a wise idea to stop fucking polluting ...

      Since YOU brought Jesus into the discussion and Jesus is God, indeed we should take care of God's property. It's not OUR earth. We did not make it. He commanded the first humans to take good care of it, not rape and destroy it. However, it was to be done in harmony and interaction with our creator. Instead man has declared his independence from God and has done and still is doing his own thing.

      God is the ultimate environmentalist, since He created the environment in the first place. Just because some of those claim to speak for Him participate in the destruction of His creation doesn't make them right.

      I simply pointed out that those who claim knowledge keep saying one thing for a time and then the opposite. Why do you have to resort to profanity over established historical publication of this flip-flopping masquerading as science?

      --
      All theory is gray
    223. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1

      It is obvious that you appear threatened by the thought that they could be right which explains your position somewhat.

      Why would you say that?

      But here is the situation as we have it now, if Evolution is the result of some other natural mechanism, we will never know it because the current debate consists of a "i said so, so this is the way it is".

      You clearly don't spend much time following the actual work of evolutionary biologists. There's a lot of discussion and debate on all manner questions about the evolution of complex systems and the origin of life. They're not just hanging around and collecting paychecks while figuring out how to persecute Behe and Dembski. The picture you're drawing of the biological research community is simply not an accurate one.

      I don't understand why you are insisting victory by default.

      Because the intelligent design camp has made absolutely no positive claims that aren't simply framed as evolutionary theory being wrong. They're merely presenting the false dilemma that if evolutionary theory doesn't explain it, then it must be intelligently designed. If you can suggest a single positive, objectively testable claim that they make, I'm all ears.

      But the framing of your questioning tells me that you don't even comprehend then claims being made by the ID camp. How do you pretend to be authoritative enough to speak against it if you won't invest the time and effort to argue against the arguments being made?

      I have to tell you that the evolution / creationism (now...err..."intelligent design") debate has been something I've followed closely for years. I'll gladly stack my reading list against yours on this one any day. As far as I can tell, the arguments that are being made generally boil down to personal incredulity or, if we're lucky, mathematical hand-waving with questionable assumptions. I'm going to have to skip over your car analogy as it doesn't make the slightest bit of sense to me.

      You see, It isn't that evolution wouldn't happen on it's own or without inteligence assisting it, it's that certain complexed parts of it are too complexed to happen naturally by chance.

      I appreciate that. My point is that they're simply asserting it and doing very little in terms of real work to support the point.

      As for the winning by default, it is simple, find a way to verify that it could happen without an intelligent assist.

      That's a big "it" in this case. The flagellum? The immune system? Blood clotting? There is a nearly infinite supply of examples. And progress is being made. Behe's points on these have been answered with possible theoretical pathways. Does that falsify ID? Certainly not. There are always examples of work not yet done and problems not yet solved, and history has shown that if a pathway is suggested for one feature, the ID crowd simply picks up a new feature to harp on. ID simply lives in those crevices that evolutionary hasn't filled in yet. That's why it's not a proper theory of its own but rather a glorified null hypothesis.

      I think you are confused. They have been rejected from schools because of a connection to the cheerleaders on the side lines.

      I think that you're the confused one on this point. If you look back on the creationism in schools controversy over the past 30 years or so, you'll find the same players cropping up over and over again. There are certainly some legitimate players who honestly think that ID will move in as a theory, but the real power players who are pushing these things into schools are the cdesign proponentsists who have been around since day one, trying to find a legal way of getting creationism into schools. Replace "God" with "designer"

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    224. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "No, it claims much more than that."

      It does not make any claims approaching the silliness of your assertion that alligators learned to fly.

      "Darwin's "Tree of Life" as still printed in textbooks depicts all life originating in a common ancestor."

      It does indeed.

      "Evolutionists claim that all life began with "simple" one celled life forms and became more and more complex over time. There is no evidence whatsoever for this scenario."

      There is excellent evidence in the fossil record, which shows that organisms become simpler the further back one goes in time.

      "On the contrary, even evolutionists speak of stuff like "The Cambrian Explosion" as evidenced in the fossil record. An explosion is a sudden event, not something slowly happening over immense periods of time."

      I suggest you actually read up on what the Cambrian Explosion (more commonly called the Cambrian Radiation nowadays) was, how long it took, and why various pieces of evidence (and the lack of other pieces) has led to considerable scientific controversy over whether it actually occurred. Note the term "scientific controversy" here, because despite the fact that creationists try to pretend that there's a big conspiracy by "evolutionists", disagreement about what some pieces of evidence actually signify is extremely common.

      "The fundamental tenet of evolution is shown to be false in the laboratory and in every day life. "

      Cannot be duplicated in a laboratory due to factors of scale does not equate to being disproved. As to every day life, the fact that said lives are measured in tens of years rather than tens of millions of years means that everyday life tells us absolutely nothing about processes that occur over hundreds of generations.

      "Simple things NEVER, EVER become more complex without the activity of mind, involving thoughtful planning as well as energy."

      1) Crystals clearly and demonstratively become more complex over time without planning.

      2) The energy input bit is a straw man, because the Earth has, and still does receive gigantic amounts of energy.

      "Undirected energy is almost always destructive"

      An assertion which can only be described as utter balderdash. The light from stars we see at night is undirected energy, just like the light from our well known and considerably closer daytime star is undirected energy, yet without the latter our planet would be a ball of rock with a surface temperature approaching absolute zero.

      NB: it's pretty clear you're parroting rubbish you've read in some silly texts written by creationists who don't know enough basic science to see the flaws in their own arguments. However, the fact that you're posting on the Internet means that you have access to copious amounts of real information about these and other topics, so there's no excuse for posting such obvious blather.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    225. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "In the beginning, with ID or science, you reach a point that just was. Take the big bang theory, how do you ascribe the stuff that was there to create the energy and release it without resorting to a it was just there as some point."

      Whether a singularity did or did not exist is a matter of considerable debate among cosmologists, so claiming that science says there was one is a gross oversimplification.

      "But the thing is, with ID, the inteligence doesn't have to be of this world or understood by this dimension."

      It would still have to be extremely complex to be capable of intelligence.

      "We are only considering life on earth and how it started and evolved"

      "We" are not doing anything of the sort. ID supporters might try to restrict the debate to that so they can avoid having to deal with the logical consequences of their claim about complexity being evidence of intelligent design, but that doesn't mean we should let them get away with it.

      "Most of which has heaping gaps in the science which at present is just assumed to be true to the extent that other parts of other theories work nicely."

      The theories that attempt to fill the gaps in our knowledge aren't "assumed to be true", hence the fact that there are several competing ones that are subjects for heated debates in scientific circles.

      "But as you attempted to allude to, it doesn't create a logic loop because we are only concerned with the here and us."

      You and other ID proponents clearly doesn't include everyone else who sees this as a transparent attempt to avoid having to deal with the logical flaws in their own claims, so saying that "we" are concerned with the here and us is patently false.

      "If and only if, you confine the inteligence to what you understand and percieve to be applicable today."

      It's actually a case of if, and only if, one assumes that "intelligence" is a word with a specific set of definitions rather than something that ID supporters can arbitrarily change the meaning of to avoid dealing with the logical fallacies in their own arguments.

      "The inteligence can be withing or outside that dimension and doesn't necessarily have to be confined to the same subset of rules we are."

      "http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/supernatural"

      1: of or relating to an order of existence beyond the visible observable universe; especially : of or relating to God or a god, demigod, spirit, or devil

      2 a: departing from what is usual or normal especially so as to appear to transcend the laws of nature b: attributed to an invisible agent (as a ghost or spirit)

      If IDers want to claim that their ideas are science, then they should avoid trying to use magic as a way of avoiding the logical flaws in them.

      "Think of our universe being a semi controlled experiment in a test tube like structure relative to objects so large and ominous that we can't fathom their conception without an imagination of some sorts."

      The fact that you're trying to frame it in terms of test tubes and experiments doesn't change the fact that you're describing supernatural, and therefore magical entities.

      "They don't have it both ways. They simply aren't placing artificial restrictions on the concept in order to prove/disprove their point."

      Trying to frame the debate only in terms of life on Earth is a blatantly artificial restriction whose only purpose is to try and avoid revealing the fact that ID avoids its logical flaws by invoking the same supernatural magical explanations as Creationism.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    226. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...In essence, macroevolution is just microevolution over a long enough period time...

      There you go substituting the power of time and random chaotic events for the power and intelligence of the Creator. Evolutionists posit that large amounts of time can do what nobody has ever seen happening today, or even by best efforts of intelligent? humans caused to happen. Science is about DEMONSTRATING by experiment and observation TODAY how things work and the laws by which nature operates NOW.

      (..However, from time to time, the chaotic randomness may carve out a new path..)

      Science is NOT about what MAY have taken place in the distant past, but what can be observed and experimented with TODAY. The past is not directly accessible to us humans and neither is the future. We are creatures of the present and have to depend on the RECORDS of the past and how we interpret those records.

      Nobody TODAY has ever seen macro-evolution take place. Whether God wound up the Universe, like a big clock and is now letting it run down or whether He is actively involved in tweaking it now and then is also not directly accessible to us. Again we have to depend on the records and BELIEVE the various people's interpretations thereof or not.

      The study of the past depends on records and how they are interpreted and those interpretations are believed. ID, evolution and creationism are all in a boat named belief.

      --
      All theory is gray
    227. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ArtDent · · Score: 1

      I think that I should receive public funding for research. I will do scientificky stuff, and, you know, try to pick holes in existing theories in a variety of ways.

      Could please answer the question? You're suggesting that we spend public money on something, but you haven't given the slightest indication of what that might be. I'm a very liberal guy, but I would find such spending practices completely unacceptable.

    228. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Sceintists have demonstrated "micro" evolution in a lab, where novel information is developed independently. Mathematical extrapolation and archaeological data indicate VERY STRONGLY that macroevolution is simply an extension of this. The barrier between macro and micro is an artificial barrier and the burden of proof is on the one who asserts it exists.

      Four things I ask of you.

      1) Read my WHOLE COMMENT and my justification for the statements I make before blindly quoting me out of context.
      2) Post your comments on our "main thread" lest I miss some of them.
      3) Quit arguing all over the fracking place. Stick to one or two topics at a time.
      4) Quit using God as justification for God. That's circular logic no matter what your pastor tells you.

      If you can't adhere to these don't bother debating me anymore.

      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    229. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      Why do you have to resort to profanity over established historical publication of this flip-flopping masquerading as science? Because (1) profanity is not immoral. Not even your Bible condemns it explicitly. It's an arbitrary "social sin" and only has any usefulness because people don't (2) most Creationists use global warming to try and cast doubt on evolution, when it's just a stupid red herring. (3) Conservatives consistently vote for the most un-environmental candidate possible. Repeatedly.

      So no, you are not obeying your God's commandment to be good stewards of the Earth because in voting for the un-environmental candidate you are not promoting environmental change. These tactics are EXTREMELY FRUSTRATING, hence the swearing, to underly the more important subtext of the matter.

      In any case, science is not set in stone. In the 1800s we did not have *nearly* the same meteorological equipment we do now. We can observe things must faster and draw conclusions where before we were not able. As new evidence comes to light, scientific theory is sometimes challenged and sometimes altered. This is true of every branch of science. It's not "ignorant flipflopping" as you so poetically put it.

      Besides, if there is no debate among the peer reviewed scientific community that there is a danger of anthropogenic global warming, don't you think it wise to listen to them and take their advice, even if they're wrong?
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    230. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      because people don't dammit... change that to read "because people give it power".
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    231. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by ArtDent · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, I'm interested in writing a science textbook about you, tentatively entitled, "Of Three-headed Space Monsters and Anal Probes." I understand certain states are considering legislation that will protect science teachers' freedom to teach the science presented in my book, once I make it up.

      Would you be interested in sitting down for an interview at some point?

    232. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...where novel information is developed independently...

      Oh yes, really, where?

      (..Mathematical extrapolation..)

      For that you have to know the initial conditions and the exact function involved. For data or records from the past we have neither.

      (..The barrier between macro and micro is an artificial barrier..)

      NO, it's an unbridged and unbridgable gulf that no PRESENT experiment or observation has crossed. We do not have direct access to the past, but have to BELIEVE whatever records we have. We are creatures of the present only. Manipulating belief dependent records by fancy math doesn't make them any less based on belief and interpretation.

      --
      All theory is gray
    233. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      Of course intelligence of the readership that draws conclusions from the headline of an article, can be debated. In fact in a round about way I've called myself an idiot, which isn't likely fair. Actually, I would say she was rather intelligent and articulate also.

      He did do an acceptable job, as well as the environmentalist, but I wouldn't say that it's an unwritten rule that journalists shouldn't omit relevant facts from an already published story (which is not what happened).

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    234. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Why would you say that?

      From the way you shaped your argument and comments you made.

      You clearly don't spend much time following the actual work of evolutionary biologists. There's a lot of discussion and debate on all manner questions about the evolution of complex systems and the origin of life. They're not just hanging around and collecting paychecks while figuring out how to persecute Behe and Dembski. The picture you're drawing of the biological research community is simply not an accurate one.

      I don't follow it but I keep up with it. You see, the problem is that there is debate but not conclusive proof. You and I can talk about something all year long but we won't know for sure is what we put on paper works in the real world or not until we test it. Those tests aren't happening. Or they aren't happening with any large degree of success. That translates to a I said so in my book.

      Because the intelligent design camp has made absolutely no positive claims that aren't simply framed as evolutionary theory being wrong. They're merely presenting the false dilemma that if evolutionary theory doesn't explain it, then it must be intelligently designed. If you can suggest a single positive, objectively testable claim that they make, I'm all ears.

      Their claims that the point of evolution being wrong is no different then the claims that ID is wrong. There is absolutely no proof that these complexed traits happened by change in a natural environment. As soon as there is proof or at least something observable and verifiable, then ID is disproved or falsified. That is the scientific process, not "I'm right and your wrong because what I say fits into something else I said better".

      It's not a win or lose situation. It is a do something to prove a right or a wrong situation. If your pissed that actual science will have to be done in order to prove the current scientific model to be the most accurate, then get over it. That is what science is about.

      I have to tell you that the evolution / creationism (now...err..."intelligent design") debate has been something I've followed closely for years. I'll gladly stack my reading list against yours on this one any day. As far as I can tell, the arguments that are being made generally boil down to personal incredulity or, if we're lucky, mathematical hand-waving with questionable assumptions. I'm going to have to skip over your car analogy as it doesn't make the slightest bit of sense to me.

      And I can say the same. Evolution is a lot of fill in the blanks and the ID is attempting to do that. They are most likely wrong but it doesn't mean that the current model should just get a pass because of cheerleaders on the ID sidelines. NO suggestion to something that we don't have verifiable answers to should be automatically dismissed because of whoever is associated with it. That is bad science. The concept of an intelligent design doesn't have to be a spiritual or godly one. It could be almost anything. You seem to be focused on the entire creation connection as if it is more important to disclaim any possible connection to a creation then it is to discover the truth. That too is bad science.

      I appreciate that. My point is that they're simply asserting it and doing very little in terms of real work to support the point.

      lol.. Isn't that the point of this movie? When people (real live scientist) want to investigate it an do the work that you are asking for as proof, they are getting fired and blackballed from the field. I mean sure, I can say their proof doesn't exist and ignore the part where my side has worked very hard to make sure it never exists but does that make me any more right? In case your confused, the answer is no. And it make me look stupid for demanding something that I am purposely attempting to suppress.

      That's a big "it" in th

    235. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Whether a singularity did or did not exist is a matter of considerable debate among cosmologists, so claiming that science says there was one is a gross oversimplification.

      No, it isn't an over simplification. At some point, you have to get something from somewhere. It isn't like everything magically appeared by some creator who always was and always will be that said on the first day....

      It would still have to be extremely complex to be capable of intelligence.

      Sure it would have to be extremely complex. But that is irrelevant when we are talking about the evolution of what we know and this complex inteligence is relative to a worlds we don't know. Maybe I can illustrate this point a little better. Suppose your your doing an experiment and you have a control sample for reference. Now suppose you do something and see a desired effect on your experiment and find that the control exhibits the same properties later. Then you find out that the janitor had been doing his own experiments that cause the change in both. The theory and relevant information gained from your experiments would then be wrong because the janitor which is a force outside your control and documentation interfered in ways outside your prescribed limits. That's the effect an intelligent being or influence outside of how life on earth as we know it with the current evolutionary models can have. It makes them foreign to the hypothesis and expected results.

      "We" are not doing anything of the sort. ID supporters might try to restrict the debate to that so they can avoid having to deal with the logical consequences of their claim about complexity being evidence of intelligent design, but that doesn't mean we should let them get away with it.

      "We" most certainly are. And yes, they can frame the debate. If I said the light is green at 9 am every Tuesday, you can't say but it is red on Friday so you are wrong. If you wish to challenge my statements, you need to keep your responses within the confines of my statement. Similarly, ID is claiming that certain aspects of abiogenesis and evolution simply couldn't happen by random chance in the natural world and needed an intelligence push or design. They have defined their position and you can't say that something outside it or ancillary to it somehow makes them wrong while claiming something else as right with just as little evidence behind it.

      As far as getting away with it, prove them right or wrong. That is what science does. If they are wrong, then the science will show it. Science is the search for explanations to our natural world. What you are basically saying is that Science can take the week off because I don't like what they are claiming. You seem willing to just unilaterally dismiss any claims based on the source of the claim instead of any scientific evidence or work that may or may not be present. But the worst part is that you are willing to not attempt to do the work to show your position is correct or the most correct but still claim some superiority based on an associated messenger. That isn't science, it is a religion.

      The theories that attempt to fill the gaps in our knowledge aren't "assumed to be true", hence the fact that there are several competing ones that are subjects for heated debates in scientific circles.

      Their being assumed to be more true then the ones ID'ers have pushed.

      You and other ID proponents clearly doesn't include everyone else who sees this as a transparent attempt to avoid having to deal with the logical flaws in their own claims, so saying that "we" are concerned with the here and us is patently false.

      First, I'm not an ID proponent. I'm arguing this because I see science acting like a religion and not science. This is what religions do, the jews say Jesus wasn't lord. The Christians say the Jews are wrong because Jesus was god. The mu

    236. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "No, it isn't an over simplification."

      Read a little about brane cosmology for just one example of why it is, as I said, a gross oversimplification.

      "Sure it would have to be extremely complex. But that is irrelevant when we are talking about the evolution of what we know and this complex inteligence is relative to a worlds we don't know."

      I have already responded with a dictionary definition of supernatural to show why this assertion, while not impossible, is not science (clue: science is entirely concerned with, and restricted to nature, and leaves supernatural matters to theologians and philosophers).

      "Maybe I can illustrate this point a little better."

      I fail to see how (a) this makes anything whatsoever clear, or (b) has any relevance to ID whatsoever. If you wanted an ID analogy using the same actors, then you should have written something like this:

      A scientist sets up an experiment to falsify a theory. The janitor messes with his control, so the experimental and control data end up being the same. Having discovered the janitorial tampering, our scientist therefore repeats the same experiment in a locked laboratory monitored by closed-circuit TV, trip-laser alarms, etc., and gets identical results. He does this over and over with ever more elaborate security measures, but still finds no difference between the control and the experiments. There are two possible conclusions he can draw from this:

      1) Science: his theory is wrong.
      2) ID: having observed that an experiment was once tampered with by a janitor, he formulates a hypothesis which he calls "Intelligent Tampering" which states that all his experimental results (or rather, the lack of them) can be explained by janitors. When other scientists ask how this can be true if no janitors can enter the laboratory, none were ever detected within it, and there were no physical signs of tampering, he first says that the nature of the janitors is irrelevant, but when pushed claims this can be explained by a special type of undetectable janitor who can pass through solid objects and influence experiments without touching them. This is, he says, a scientific theory because nobody can disprove it.

      "Yes, they can frame the debate. If I said the light is green at 9 am every Tuesday, you can't say but it is red on Friday so you are wrong. If you wish to challenge my statements, you need to keep your responses within the confines of my statement."

      I'm not asking you whether the traffic light is red though, but whether it existed at all when you said it was red, and if so, what type of traffic light it is. There could be many sources of red light on that street corner, e.g. vehicle stop lights, refracted sunlight, flashing signs, kids with toys that emit bright red lights, etc., so the mere presence of a red light doesn't prove there is a traffic light, and even if there is one, whether it was actually red merely than having been perceived as red can depend on its type (light from the older incandescent traffic lights for example can be difficult to distinguish when direct sunlight is hitting them, while the newer LED ones are much easier to see).

      The entire foundation of your assertion about the redness of the traffic light is predicated on it existing and actually being red rather being you believing it was red, so protesting that these are either irrelevant or outside the topic at hand would be at best disingenuous.

      "Similarly, ID is claiming that certain aspects of abiogenesis and evolution simply couldn't happen by random chance in the natural world and needed an intelligence push or design."

      There is a big difference between claiming something and actually having some hard evidence to back it up.

      "They have defined their position and you can't say that something outside it or ancillary to it somehow makes them wrong while claiming something else as right with just as little evidence behind it."

      More straw men.

      1) Saying that their ideas raise have certain logical impl

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    237. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by Copid · · Score: 1
      Sorry about the delay. Work has been a bear.

      From the way you shaped your argument and comments you made.

      Well, I suppose if we're doing armchair psychoanalysis, I could suggest that you'd rather attribute nefarious motives or personality deficiencies to somebody who disagrees with you than acknowledge the possibility that they might do so for legitimate reasons. But that wouldn't be very nice.

      Their claims that the point of evolution being wrong is no different then the claims that ID is wrong.

      I'm not claiming that ID is "wrong" so much as that thus far, it amounts to nothing more than "evolutionary theory is wrong." That, in and of itself, is not an invalid position to take. It just isn't a whole new branch of science like the ID proponents are trying to sell it as. If they would go so far as to make a single positive, testable claim, then I'd be the first in line to call it science. As it stands, though, it's still just the null hypothesis. Criticism of a theory is not a theory in and of itself.

      If your pissed that actual science will have to be done in order to prove the current scientific model to be the most accurate, then get over it. That is what science is about.

      No, I'm simply pissed that we have a group of people pointing to deficiencies in our understanding and calling it a "theory" and then getting angry when people are unimpressed.

      The concept of an intelligent design doesn't have to be a spiritual or godly one. It could be almost anything.

      That's the problem. The "theory" posits no mechanisms, no creator, no properties of creation, no timeline, nothing. I'll disagree with some scientists and say that ID is, in principle, testable and potentially a scientific hypothesis. In order to make it happen, though, they're going to actually have to make and test some solid claims.

      You seem to be focused on the entire creation connection as if it is more important to disclaim any possible connection to a creation then it is to discover the truth. That too is bad science.

      You miss my point. There are distinctions to be made between two different claims. The first is that ID is good science being suppressed. The second is that ID should be taught in schools. The fact is that ID (for whatever reason) has produced no meaningful scientific results. That's a strong knock against it when it comes to getting it into a primary school curriculum. Combine that with the fact that the people who are pushing it are clearly pushing it for religious reasons rather than scientific ones, and you have an obvious failure of the Lemon test.

      I am not the only person to make the connection between the reluctance of most high-profile ID supporters to make clear statements of their "theories" of ID and the fact that ID only had a fighting chance of getting into schools if they could distance themselves from biblical creationism. Sure, there are probably some people who are honestly trying to formulate a scientific theory of ID. Those people should be addressed when they get there. Until then, the movers and shakers are, by all appearances, a PR operation and not a scientific one.

      lol.. Isn't that the point of this movie? When people (real live scientist) want to investigate it an do the work that you are asking for as proof, they are getting fired and blackballed from the field.

      Well, the point of the movie is that and, "We're not blaming the Holocaust on Darwin, but Darwin totally caused the Holocaust." Frankly, I'm skeptical of their claims because the concrete examples they've come up with have been bullshit. Sternberg, who Stein calls "The most egregious case," has experienced no more negative repercussions than being scolded by his colleagues for what was an obvious ethical breech in the peer review process. For all the claims of persecution a

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    238. Re:Indeed, Scientific Zealotry Hurts the Cause ... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Sorry about the delay. Work has been a bear.

      I know the felling.

      Well, I suppose if we're doing armchair psychoanalysis, I could suggest that you'd rather attribute nefarious motives or personality deficiencies to somebody who disagrees with you than acknowledge the possibility that they might do so for legitimate reasons. But that wouldn't be very nice.

      You can call it whatever you want but every day in life we have to make decisions based on the accuracy and probabilities of something being pitched to us. It is just something we do on a normal basis and that was just something I noticed.

      I'm not claiming that ID is "wrong" so much as that thus far, it amounts to nothing more than "evolutionary theory is wrong." That, in and of itself, is not an invalid position to take. It just isn't a whole new branch of science like the ID proponents are trying to sell it as. If they would go so far as to make a single positive, testable claim, then I'd be the first in line to call it science. As it stands, though, it's still just the null hypothesis. Criticism of a theory is not a theory in and of itself.

      If it was as simple of an argument being presented back, I could agree. But it seems that people are losing their jobs and being blackballed for attempting to entertain the idea and do the research. Then the claim of "there is no evidence supporting X so X can't be possible. You do understand that If a statement about X is made and people are not allowed to investigate X, a counter statement can't be made either right?

      No, I'm simply pissed that we have a group of people pointing to deficiencies in our understanding and calling it a "theory" and then getting angry when people are unimpressed.

      It isn't a point of unimpressed. It is a situation where it is being religiously denied and banned from being investigated by people more then capable of investigating it. You don't become unimpressed about something and blackball a guy attempting to do the work behind it. That is what this movie is supposedly about. How science is losing it's objectivity because of an association with cheerleaders of god. If anything unrelated to a religion was introduced, scientists would be allowed to investigate it and the possibilities of it then present the science to prove or disprove it. This isn't happening because either someone has taken science to be their new religion or because some people dislike religion to the point that it matters more then doing science.

      That's the problem. The "theory" posits no mechanisms, no creator, no properties of creation, no timeline, nothing. I'll disagree with some scientists and say that ID is, in principle, testable and potentially a scientific hypothesis. In order to make it happen, though, they're going to actually have to make and test some solid claims.

      My point is that it is easily falsifiable. Perhaps more so then it is testable. If it can be falsified, it puts an end to it with solid ground underneath it instead of the My religion is more accurate style problems we have now. Of course making specific claims and time lines would be nice, but you have to sort of test a hypothesis before before declaring certain facts. And when the scientists are being blackballed for entertaining the idea, it get overly complicated to work on it.

      You miss my point. There are distinctions to be made between two different claims. The first is that ID is good science being suppressed. The second is that ID should be taught in schools. The fact is that ID (for whatever reason) has produced no meaningful scientific results. That's a strong knock against it when it comes to getting it into a primary school curriculum. Combine that with the fact that the people who are pushing it are clearly pushing it for religious reasons rather than scientific ones, and you have an obvious f

  47. Why the fuss? by rotide · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Seriously, I don't get what the fuss is about. First off, I'm agnostic bordering on atheist (confused but don't particularly believe, but still confused). That said, I would never buy this ID/Creationist bull that is being portrayed as some sort of pseudo-science.


    But seriously, it's Ben Stein making a movie!?!? Why is this going to be "promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students"?

    Listen, there are VERY FEW MOVIES of which I would ever suggest to a kid to _learn_ from. As a boilerplate, if you see it on TV, it is probably fiction (except for most of what discovery et al have in their programming, you can generally learn from those).

    But come on! It's a religiously themed movie that seems to take after those awful Moore movies. Buy a ticket or don't, but why blow this up (in typical American fashion) and out of proportion?

    Get over it, it's a movie, move on, ride a bike or something and forget about it.

    1. Re:Why the fuss? by notrandomly · · Score: 1
      The fuss is about the fact that Expelled is merely one piece of a larger picture, which is that religious fundamentalists are actively trying to replace science with religion. And they are aiming this film at their core market: The religious masses who desperately want to justify their beliefs. And to gain traction in order to convince the rest of us.

      It's a dangerous movie because its hate-filled rhetoric and blatant misinformation is part of a bigger whole which seeks to undermine science.

      And yes, ID = Creationism = religion.

    2. Re:Why the fuss? by rotide · · Score: 1
      Not to sound rude, but it's a movie, not a class that is being taught in public schools. Michael Moore also has "hate-filled rhetoric" and "blatant misinformation". The saving grace for the world is that most people know that these movies are for entertainment. Maybe they have a small demographic, but they aren't being touted as documentaries on Discovery channel, etc.


      Furthermore, I doubt that Ben Stein is trying to convince us of anything. I'm sure he's just trying to make money, partially because he knows that the movie will generate negative press and possibly get him more "fame" and potentially more movie sales.

      Although, I understand this need to lump anyone with a strange and/or wrong opinion into this group of outcasts and/or misfits of whom only want to subvert our beliefs or views. But really, I think he's a has-been who is putting out a movie that will generate press (negative or positive) to get his name out there again.

      I don't doubt that he believes this stuff, but he's not hurting anyone. This is going to be one of those things where, if you don't want your kids to watch this crap, then don't let them see it. If you don't want to watch this crap, then don't. But I don't see a conspiracy nor do I see anything remotely malicious.

      Sometimes a movie, is just a movie.. even if it is terrible.

  48. umm by superwiz · · Score: 1

    The trailer itself is plainly inflammatory. It doesn't support any of its claims. It just makes the accusations graphic. You are not likely to be shunned or feared as he would like to believe. You are, however, likely to be laughed out of the room. The academic answer to mystery has to be exploration. Hypothesizing that it is something unexplainable (ie, the flying spaghetti monster creating the universe) is simply tantamount to giving up the exploration for physical causes of events.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  49. Re:Monkey's uncle? by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    "who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc."

    Or greed, ego, sorry...I meant EGO. The fact that so much in science is about competition rather then science.

    I guess we can in part thank the National Geographic and the public education system for a large number of unconvinced. They're continued iconic use of artist illustrations of evolution of man from ape to homo sapien. Even after a fair number of list were proven to be frauds or at best honest but foolish mistakes.

    Yes, people like to point out that science is about learning and change. However, our science is often more about EGO. And often an unwillingness to admit the mistakes of science. Science will deride religion for the same fallacies it makes daily.

  50. Re:Controversy? (!= theory) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately you are very wrong because you don't understand some science basics like what a theory is. If you want to suggest silly things at least understand what the other side (i.e. Science, I assume you're a kreationist troll) means when they use a word. Both are NOT theories. See the following video made which points out the error in your ways.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdWMcMW54fA

  51. "nobody tried"? by jopet · · Score: 1

    This is essentially what most catholics seem to believe in.

    However, that theory has no explanation for why something like a god is needed in the first place. If god is the explanation and "sets the initial conditions", what makes that theory any more plausible than the universe just was with this conditions? Just came into existence?
    If you propose some X to explain Y, what is the benefit if you cannot at all explain X?
    Why do people always seem to feel more comfortable with not being able to explain the existence of some (usually humanoid) "god" than being equally unable to explain the existence of the universe?
    And why do people insist so desperately on something there has never, ever been even the slightest indication or hint for?

    1. Re:"nobody tried"? by CompCons · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with that line of argument and I have used it for a long time. But I have an answer for you as to why people feel more comfortable with a diety than with cold hard science. They want an answer to the "why" questions. Science will never be able to answer the "why" questions. Science is very good at answering "what,where,when,how" but the biggest question of all. Why are we here? can never be answered by science. Personally, I don't think there is an answer to that question anyway. There is no reason. Thats why I have no need to fill the gap with my imaginary friend.

    2. Re:"nobody tried"? by Miltazar · · Score: 1

      I think it comes down to how everything started. In the end it comes down to a matter of infinity. If the big bang is what caused it, then what caused that? No good answer for that. If god created it, what created him? God has always existed. I myself choose to sway toward the scientific answer at the moment, although I can understand that the second answer may be more comforting to people then the other. Humans in general seem to have a hard time grasping the concept of infinity, or at least I do.

      --
      "Hold! What you are doing to us is wrong! Why do you do this thing?"
  52. Look to your own backyard, thank you by Shivetya · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because I can find lots of stories that make me I am glad the crazies here don't express their religion by bombing people... like , in, uh wonderfully enlightened Europe.

    Really, do you guys not get the news we do? Burning cars in France, oh I know, the PC word is immigrants. Killing of writers in Europe because they dared to write about someone's god?

    What you have here in America is exaggeration. Look at it this way, if its brought up over and over and made to look silly it probably is. The haters need something to jump up and down about to make themselves feel superior and these ID people are a great target. The ID people are not a great percentage, just a convenient target.

    It says even more for /. that this qualifies as a story. I guess a few editors need to get their brownie points with the insecure techie crowd... the one that needs to vilify anyone with belief and the willingness to express it. (plus its also good fodder for anti-Bush people who claim some hair brained connection to him however tenous)

    mod to me to hell if you like, but it is true that it takes a big does of exaggeration to make ID people out as a representative of America or religious America.

    Bring out the haters, this thread should have lots of them.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Look to your own backyard, thank you by Sabz5150 · · Score: 1

      mod to me to hell if you like, but it is true that it takes a big does of exaggeration to make ID people out as a representative of America or religious America. Really? http://www.pacificviews.org/weblog/archives/Pictures/evolution_study_new.jpg Hey, we're better than Turkey! Go us!
      --
      "Who modded this informative? Whoever it is must've been smokin' some of that martian pot!"
    2. Re:Look to your own backyard, thank you by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Really, do you guys not get the news we do? Burning cars in France, oh I know, the PC word is immigrants. Killing of writers in Europe because they dared to write about someone's god? Burning cars in protest to actions by the government, has nothing to do with stupidity.
      Yes there are a minority of Muslims who over react here, but here we dont vote them into positions of power (not the crazies at least).

      mod to me to hell if you like, but it is true that it takes a big does of exaggeration to make ID people out as a representative of America or religious America. You do raise a point but, the things that made loose respect for religious America, go far beyond ID, i think threating people because they have cars with "gay is ok" on them was what made me decide that crossing the pond isnt for me http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LE1QVhYdIpg about 2 minutes in she "gets the boys"
      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    3. Re:Look to your own backyard, thank you by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Because I can find lots of stories that make me I am glad the crazies here don't express their religion by bombing people... If you think crazies don't bomb people in the USA, you don't stay very well informed.

      Fortunately we don't have a lot of it, but any at all is too much.

      Also, who needs bombs when we can take our machine guns out for a shooting spree? Or snipe off random drivers on the freeway?

      A lot of *our* crazies don't seem to have any motivation at all.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:Look to your own backyard, thank you by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I remember some little event in NYC that took place a few years ago. Left a few people dead, some smoke, and some rubble behind. Or maybe some other event that left a federal building ruins. Maybe the LA riots qualify as enough of a problem for you?

      Face it, everyone's got issues with crazies. The US, however, is the only developed country I've seen where education, intelligence and knowledge are actively discouraged and frowned upon by a large segment of the population.

      I'm actually curious about the root of this as well. The only thing I can think of is that the US is so well off that a lot of people can actually afford to be dumb, stupid and backwards, and these people believe that their approach to life should be duplicated by others.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  53. No Intelligence Allowed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wanted to watch the trailer, but it turns out you need flash to do so. All of a sudden it hit me why "No Intelligence Allowed" was painted all of the website.

  54. Censorship? by Poorcku · · Score: 1

    "This video is not available in your country."- that is what youtube says. And I live in Germany; so how should i interpret this?

    --
    I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
  55. No conflict by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

    Evolution and ID do not contradict each other. ID is vague to the point that no matter what science comes up with as the "meaning of life" followers of ID can turn around and say "that sounds like Genesis". Of course when you compare the study and continued theory of evolution to a few paragraphs in the bible there are bound to be some assholes that say "These two things can't be the same". The ability to form one's own opinion is the beauty of the bible, no matter what some wacko interprets the meaning as being, it's just their opinion. The same goes for the atheist/agnostic crowd, they come up with their latest theory and throw it in the face of someone they believe is religious and scream "SEE THERE IS NO GOD" as if they had finally found that incontrovertible proof. The two groups have need to stop trying to have it 100% their own way. I would say a good half way point would be to teach evolution, and if the kids ask how or why evolution is the way it is, the required answer is "God made it that way". Which is a very good answer for all sorts of questions that have yet to be answered: How long is a transcendental number? Why can't we seem to move faster than light? When will Duke Nukem Forever be released?

  56. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  57. As if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is going to be any balanced talk here on /. about it...heh.

  58. RDS = Re-Direct Script! by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't click on links ending with notlong.com! http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt ... More importantly it's that beginning 'rds' that is a dead giveaway. That's Yahoo hosting a Re-Direct Script (RDS). If you see [yahoo.com] after a link, fair warning that you should check the very beginning, they could be hosting a redirect to something very very harmful. Honestly, I'm shocked that Yahoo would do that but I guess what ever brings in the ad/referral cash, huh?
    --
    My work here is dung.
  59. Do schools even teach evolution? by Tangent128 · · Score: 1

    Looking through my textbooks, I find plenty of description of natural selection. Sometimes there's even a couple paragraphs on mutation. But then they label the whole section "Evolution" and continue on to other subjects.

    So far, I have yet to see any convincing arguments that mutation can produce innovative changes. Sure, there are cases of antibiotic resistance, but most of them seem to be merely disabling the mechanisms exploited by the antibiotic, as opposed to actually developing a defense against the antibiotic itself.

    1. Re:Do schools even teach evolution? by Eivind+Eklund · · Score: 1
      "Innovative" is hard to define. If your argument is that single mutations - the simplest for of which is single point mutations - can't produce significant difference, then this and this are the two most relevant examples from the first page of a Google search for "single base difference".

      If your argument is that mutation can't make a large jump - well, welcome to reality. Mutation makes small changes, natural selection picks among them, and over time this build up to large differences.

      If your argument is that minor differences can't sum up to an "innovative" difference, e.g. eye evolution from a light sensitive patch, has been shown in rapidly in simulation using minor differences from generation to generation (.1% differences).

      If your argument is that such differences would not show up in the real world, then our experience with single strand (genetically identical) mice might of interest - after 3 generations, there's measurable, inheritable size differences, which by definition is a form of mutation (even though I've not seen the direct genes for this being mapped).

      For direct gene mapping, there is the repeated longitude (20,000 generation) evolution of cold-resistant e.coli, with subsequent genome sequencing and difference analysis.

      These are just a few examples off the top of my head. I don't know what kind of evidence in particular you'd like, because I don't know what you know and don't know. Feel free to ask more questions, and I'll try to find time for an answer. (And sorry for the lack of references for most of this - I've got limited time.)

      Eivind.

      --
      Doubting the existence of evolution is like doubting the existence of China: It just shows that you're uninformed.
    2. Re:Do schools even teach evolution? by jopet · · Score: 1

      So far, I have yet to see any convincing arguments that mutation can produce innovative changes. That is because you do not look.

      Hint: mutation or any form of biological evolution does not produce innovative changes. It just produces changes. The pressure of survival in the ecological niche influences which of these changes have a bigger likelhood to survive. Because of how such ecological niches work, it is usually something that looks more "innovative" to human eyes, but not always. It has happened often during evolution that something complicated or seemingly "innovative" was lost again, simply because it was not needed in the ecological niche any more.
      Evolution is not at all about some directed development towards some sort of "highest" lifeform. It is merely about adaption and development and a seeming development towards "higher" lifeform is a mere epiphenomenon.
    3. Re:Do schools even teach evolution? by Tangent128 · · Score: 1

      Can you provide any (even hypothetical) mutation-by-mutation walkthroughs of the development of any complex structure? For "evolution" (whatever that nebulous term means today) to be compelling to me, it needs to be able to provide predictions at all scales, not just the macroscopic.

    4. Re:Do schools even teach evolution? by jopet · · Score: 1

      All animals and crops used today are the result of mutations that changed an original wild form to something more desirable for man. Wolves do not bark, dogs do.

      It is hard to understand what you mean by "(even hypothetical) mutation-by-mutation walkthroughs". Clearly, if you look at the paleontological evidence of species through time it is easy to see the development of many structures, whatever your idea of "complex" is.

      I am not really sure what you are questioning here. And what do you mean by "prediction at all scales"?

    5. Re:Do schools even teach evolution? by Tangent128 · · Score: 1

      So far, I've only heard vague progressions like you've just given. Which bases of which genes changed, in what order? Until one can establish hard details like that, as opposed to hazy "trait x APPEARS!" statements, saying evolution is the cause gives one no more information than saying "God did it", "aliens did it", or even "spaghetti did it."

  60. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is false just because they don't understand what the theory actually means? I think people have a tendency to deny what they don't understand. Or they fear it.
  61. Re:Monkey's uncle? by KillaBeave · · Score: 1

    "Automatically assume" is a bit strong, and I think it applies more to the ID proponents than those that look at the evidence for evolution and go "yea that makes sense."

    I'll tell you what puts evolution in the "fact" category as far as I'm concerned, Yorkshire Terriers. To put it in Java terms ...

    if (Yorkshire Terrier != Wolf || Yorkshire Terrier != Fox){
    evolution.setCorrect(true);
    }

    These little rediculous (but very lovable) dogs in no way shape or form could have survived in the wild. Selective breeding created them ... and selective breeding is just people making the decision as to who gets to pass on their genes instead of "survival of the fittest." It works on the same principal as evolution. Hell they're even named for the city where the breed originated!

    (and yes I know evolution is not a "fact" per se as it's a thoery about a process ... the proper wording just eluded me.)

  62. Back stage passes available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pharyngula (PZ Myers)
    http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/

    Richard Dawkins
    http://richarddawkins.net/cat1_Reason

    Uncommon Descent (Creationist)
    http://www.uncommondescent.com/

    ERV (Fighting Mad Evolutionist)
    http://endogenousretrovirus.blogspot.com/

    Panda's Thumb (Evolution)
    http://www.pandasthumb.org/

    And, of course,
    Beware the Believers
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eaGgpGLxLQw

  63. Re:Monkey's uncle? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    ...(reference to all the "my uncle was not a monkey!" counter-arguments)? Whenever I hear that one, I pat them on the shoulder, look sympathetic, and tell them to "give it a few more generations."

    They don't seem to love that as much as I do. O:)
  64. The irony is thick in this one by DrXym · · Score: 4, Informative

    One well known evolutionary scientist P.Z. Myers was queueing up to see a preview screening of this movie, when he was singled out of line and asked to leave the cinema. So he was expelled from Expelled, presumably because he would write it up for the trash it was. A double irony was he was standing next to Richard Dawkins who was apparently not recognized and allowed in.

    1. Re:The irony is thick in this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The irony? You didn't even get your facts straight! He got booted from a private screening. He managed to find out how to register and guess what Richard did use his first name on the invite either.

    2. Re:The irony is thick in this one by DrXym · · Score: 2, Informative
    3. Re:The irony is thick in this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      It's worse then that - he was *in the movie.*

  65. No controversy?! by erroneus · · Score: 1

    "is simply an anti-science propaganda film aimed at creating controversy where none exists, while promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students." The controversy exists and have never stopped existing since the first time someone brought an idea counter to creationism to the public. There exists controversy. The question is how public and visible will it be at any point in time? Most people try to stay away from the debate just the way they try to avoid politics and other issues that get people stirred up and divided.

    As to promoting poor science?! What do they think science is? A table of contents pointing to a list of facts about the universe? If it were, it'd only be about 0.00001% complete...most likely less. Science is precisely about opening up the mind to working out the facts versus opinions and figuring out what the truth is...as we presently understand and accept it.

    Waking up people's minds to conflicting ideas rather than letting them sleep is a good thing...usually.
    1. Re:No controversy?! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      The controversy exists and have never stopped existing since the first time someone brought an idea counter to creationism to the public. There exists controversy. Yes, but there hasn't been any *scientific* controversy for over a century (other than about the details of evolutionary mechanism).

      The controversy under discussion is the social controversy created by creationists who don't want their children learning facts that contradict their religious mythology. Their leaders are doing their best to manufacture a scientific controversy to back up their position (or, in the case of ID, to make it *look* like there is one).

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  66. Second amendment by spectrokid · · Score: 1

    Funny how americans cling desperately to their right to bear arms. But the biggest weapon of them all, the general knowledge required to see through possible lies and spin comming from Washington, that one gets dumped by the roadside.

    --

    10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

  67. What other theories? by schon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean? Which other theories? Nobody has presented any other theory at all.

    In order for something to be a theory, it must be testable and falsifiable. "My invisible friend did it" is *not* a theory.
    1. Re:What other theories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Insulting someone's religion is a perfect way to motivate people to go see this movie and I suspect was probably motivation to even make the movie. People as abrasive as yourself will probably do as much to promote this movie as the catchy commercials.

    2. Re:What other theories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is evolution testable or falsifiable?

    3. Re:What other theories? by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding?

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    4. Re:What other theories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insulting someone's religion Who's religion was insulted there? The only insult I saw was towards "Intelligent Design".

      If you believe that ID is a religion, then you're making his point for him.
    5. Re:What other theories? by methuselah · · Score: 1

      test? test evolution how? evolution isn't really very good science. it is speculation based on observation. maybe that is why its defenders are so rabid.

    6. Re:What other theories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Evolution has no more "real" evidence than creationism (though there's tons more BS). Just because someone theorizes that things evolve, observes supporting evidence (wow, he looked for it and found it, what a surprise) does not make it so. There's not a shred of fossil evidence that one animal has become another. What we have is a dinosaur skeleton that has a similar structure as a bird skeleton so, because evolution is unquestionably true, the dino HAD to become a bird. No QED just QE.... And falsified evidence and the amount of hoaxed data is never advertised. Nope, just believe what you're told children.... Or else......

    7. Re:What other theories? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      test evolution how?

      DNA comparisons, morphological comparisons, fossil history, lab experiments on fast-breeding species, long term historical observations of species in nature.

      evolution isn't really very good science.

      Look at how wrong you are.

      it is speculation based on observation.

      In a way, that's all science in a nutshell.

    8. Re:What other theories? by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      test? test evolution how? evolution isn't really very good science. it is speculation based on observation. maybe that is why its defenders are so rabid. That's ridiculous. There are a zillion examples, but let me take an obvious one.

      Darwin existed long before we knew much about the inside of a cell, or anything about genetics. It was decades later that Mendel's work was rediscovered, and many decades more before we found out that DNA was the core of genetics.

      Once we learned about it, we could easily use evolution to predict that there would be certain relationships between the DNA of organisms that reflected their evolutionary history. For example, that humans would share a lot of DNA with each other, but some less with chimps. And we'd share less still with monkeys, then dogs, then snakes, then trees, then bacteria.

      Those relationships have been found to exist over and over and over again. There is an entire new medical science, genomics built on teasing out those relationships and relating them back to physical correspondences, and then applying this knowledge to saving and improving human lives. And the theory of evolution is a keystone in that field, as well as many others.

      So yes, evolution has been tested and retested. I started as "speculation based on observation", which is what science calls a hypothesis. But that's fine, because that's the first step in the scientific method. You should read about it!
    9. Re:What other theories? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me preface this by saying, I completely agreement with your post.

      Hugh Ross (an old earth creationist) wrote a very interesting book called "Creation as Science". Whether or not you agree with his ideology it was a good read.

    10. Re:What other theories? by JoachimV · · Score: 1

      Agreed that theories must be testable and falsifiable, including intelligent design or creationist ideas. And new scientific evidence should be predicted by those theories.

      There is ongoing work on testable ID models and testable creation models.

      Here is one such example:
      http://www.reasons.org/tnrtb/2008/04/21/testing-cosmic-creation-models-part-1/

      Hugh Ross is one such theorist, especially in the areas of cosmology.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Ross_%28creationist%29

      His theories have caused him to be criticized by both scientists and creationists.

  68. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1
    Go look at the second link I posted, and search for the phrase "unequal in most cases". You will see a graph of the divergence of over two thousand genes between mice and humans. The data fits a bell curve very, very well. This is exactly what we'd expect if mutations were random. Lots of studies have been done in this vein, and no one has been able to find statistically-significant deviations from random, ever. (And not for lack of looking. Google "directed mutagenesis" to hip yourself to an example.)

    It's true that the origin of life on Earth is still effectively a mystery. We don't know how the first cells originated. We have some interesting hypotheses, though, and they are being tested. Assuming that, just because we don't know something, we won't ever know - that hasn't worked out well, historically.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  69. Easy proof against Intelligent Design by benwiggy · · Score: 1

    If the Designer is so intelligent and man is his masterpiece, then explain shins. Any half competent designer would have put some fleshy covering there to stop it hurting so much when you hit them against a table leg. Testes outside the body? What were you thinking? Nerve cell regeneration would be on most people's wishlist. Complete amino acid synthesis is missing. One third of the day in low-power recovery mode? The Appendix: why? Intelligent? frankly, I give it a C minus at best.

  70. Why it matters by Telvin_3d · · Score: 1

    This is not simply a religious freedoms issue. This is something that will affect everyone. For anyone wondering why this matters consider the following:
    India's future genetic engineers and biologists are certainly not being taught ID in school.
    China's future geologists are not being told that that the earth is only thousands of years old.

    These examples and many like them discredit and undermine the entire educated underpinnings of our society. You can't ignore the machine that makes everything go and just assume that it will keep on working.

  71. As a Christian..... by Taimat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I always find these discussions interesting. The fun thing about it is, there is no way to be 100% sure. Yes, geological and biological evidence points (a lot) towards evolution. The Bible says 7 days. You have some Christians that believe that is a literal translation, and some that reference "a day is like unto a thousand years to God" and vice versa - so those 7 days could be millions of years. The problem comes down to - to many believers put God into a box, and try to limit his abilities by their own understandings of the universe. On the flip side, how can you scientifically test that God exists, and there for that He Created? If you could, that would negate Faith by it's own definition. Which basically is what this comes down to for each individual who actually cares about ID vs Evolution..... Either you have faith in God, and believe in 7 days, or I.D,.... or, you have faith that I.D. or Creation is not a possiblity, or can't exist because Science can't prove it. This debate will never be put to rest because of it's nature.

    --
    The above comments are not guaranteed to make sense to anyone other than the author...
    1. Re:As a Christian..... by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Uh, science can't prove that you won't turn into a delicious cake when I stab you in the face. There's a huge body of evidence against my assumption, but it's still (due to the induction problem) not proof. You'd still be mightily offended if I stabbed you in the face and started eating you, I'm sure.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    2. Re:As a Christian..... by benwiggy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Either you have faith in God, and believe in 7 days, or I.D,.... or, you have faith that I.D. or Creation is not a possiblity, or can't exist because Science can't prove it. The Pope has no problem with evolution. It just seems to be American Baptists that can't cope. One of the features of Christianity is that it is supposed to do away with the old Jewish pedantic scrutiny over the exact literal meanings and intepretation of the Law. (Matthew 22:37-40). But it seems this is lost on some who feel their faith is on some way threatened if the Bible is not classes as 100% literal, despite the culture of symbolism inherent in Judaism.
    3. Re:As a Christian..... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Either you have faith in God, and believe in 7 days, or I.D.... or, you have faith that I.D. or Creation is not a possiblity, or can't exist because Science can't prove it. a) You're forgetting a thousand other religious traditions that every bit as much supporting evidence as Gensis or ID (i.e., none whatsoever).

      b) You're excluding the middle position that many, perhaps most non-creationists actually hold, namely that science does not and can not say anything at all about the supernatural, and therefore belief in a religious tradition is simply a matter of whether you want to believe something that has no supporting evidence (and, if so, which of the traditions you want to believe).

      Perhaps you're unaware that most of the scientists in the USA (a) accept the fact of evolution, and (b) are Christian.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:As a Christian..... by Taimat · · Score: 1

      as your tag says..... j/k You have a good point.. I am not very good at putting thoughts down. Yes, most scientists are not atheist or agnostic.. I think the latest stat was >85% of US population says they are Christian. for your b) point.... that's what I'm trying to say, apparently poorly. My main point is that this argument will go on until a. Jesus returns (belivers are right) b. time machine invented (could go either way) c. some new scientific breakthrough (could go either way / most likely to evolution) d. etc..etc..etc... I am not telling anyone here what to believe, I don't like people that do. People need to choose what they believe, but more importantly, know why they believe that. BTW... I am a Christian that believes in evolution.

      --
      The above comments are not guaranteed to make sense to anyone other than the author...
  72. heh. by apodyopsis · · Score: 1

    I am a Darwinist and fan of R Dawkins - there my cards are on the table, don't flame me for a hidden agenda.

    I am also quite interested in Neurotheology - an attempt to explain the religious phenomenon though scientific means.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurotheology

    In general the scientific community and academia are understanding to many theories - providing that there is evidence or strong theoretical grounds to support it. And thats where intelligent design falls down in my opinion.

    Bottom line is: If there is evidence or theoretical reasoning for I.D. that can withstand concerted scientific examination and review then by all means get it on the table and I will prepare to eat humble pie.

  73. Stein on financial issues too by theskipper · · Score: 1

    Ben Stein also believes some wacky things about the markets and has been published in the NYT. Including issues regarding the credit crisis and that shorts sellers were responsible for market declines this year.

    Doug Kass decomposed him pretty well in a series of articles:

    http://www.thestreet.com/story/10400657/1/kass-ben-stein-blames-you.html
    http://www.thestreet.com/story/10403672/1/kass-eat-my-shorts-ben-stein.html

    Stein is the new Dvorak.

  74. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  75. Fantastic stories of the "Expelled" by Sockatume · · Score: 2, Funny

    You know a movie's in trouble when the main response from mainstream movie critics is roughly "deceptive propagandist shit-pile", but the real fun comes when you start reading up on the people who were supposedly expelled. Like the Smithsonian employee who had his keys taken away and was fired, thrown out of his office, and thrown off the editorial staff of a journal.

    Well, he was fired from his unpaid assistant job at the Smithsonian. Well, his contract for his unpaid assistant job expired. Well, it expired and they gave him a new one. But he was sacked from the journal! Oh, his contract expired there too. Well, there's his office of course, they took that away. Well they moved him into a crappy office. Well, they moved him into his own office. They took his keys away, though! They took everyone's keys away in his whole building! And, uh, they replaced them with keycards.

    This is clearly the most honest movie of all time.

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    1. Re:Fantastic stories of the "Expelled" by NeuroManson · · Score: 1

      And he was issued a new contract once again, but this one was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard'."

      Bonus geek points to you if you get the joke.

      --
      Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  76. Why not political correctness instead? by elrous0 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Forget this ancient debate. No one has ever made a movie seriously critiquing political correctness on college campuses. Now THERE is a student freedom subject worth tackling.

    And, no, "PCU" was not a serious critque.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Why not political correctness instead? by cptnapalm · · Score: 0

      As you can see from how you were modded, no critique is to acceptable. The open minded have declared it sacrosanct.

  77. Hypocrisy... by HetMes · · Score: 1

    ... is the reason. Not knowing about bytes and gigabytes is one thing - you can always catch up on that - but being taught that it's fine to ignore the basic scientific methods upon which we have built our entire society, is quite something else. Of course it will not confilct with everyday things most of the time, but it signifies a breakdown of common sense.

  78. that is the impression theists want you to have .. by jopet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just because the "establishment" does not want to discuss totally futile nonsense like the squaring of a circle or perpetuum mobiles, this does not mean they have closed minds. Its is just extremely boring and a useless waste of time to go through the same nonsense over and over again.

    Creationims is nonsense. It adds nothing to scientific insight. Theism is useless. It adds nothing to scientific insight.

    Yes, scientists can be very closed minded and stubborn and even stupid. And "the scientific community" can falsely disregard insights and new ideas for a while. That has happened and still happens all the time.

    But creationism is so fundamentally wrong and nonsensical in so many ways that the contrary can be said: somebody actively supporting anything that so fundamentally goes against all scientific rational thinking disqualifies him- or herself as a scientist.

    A physicist building a perpetuum mobile should get fired. A biologist teaching creationism or ID should get fired on similar grounds.

  79. Law as science? by backwardMechanic · · Score: 1

    But the rules of law are made up, and can and do change. Gravity doesn't work the way it does because Newton said so. Science is about describing the underlying laws of nature. As scientists we try to figure out what those laws are, but say nothing of why they are there. Man-made laws and scientific laws are different. Now if you were asking about economics as a science, that would be areally interesting conversation...

  80. Re:What I am opposed to ... by sizzzzlerz · · Score: 1

    Bullshit! Provide some fucking evidence that could lead to actually proving that the evolutionary theory is false and don't fall back on the tired old responses creobots have trotted out before. They've all been debunked with extreme prejudice. Provide the evidence of your "creator". Simply waving your hand and intoning jedi-like "these aren't the theories you're looking for" just doesn't cut it.

  81. I think he is right by Vexorian · · Score: 5, Funny

    He's totally right, science in academia should be more about discussing what you believe and less about what science people have found out after observation and experimentation.

    For example the other day when my chemistry teacher told me that material stuff is made of atoms, I really couldn't believe him. I think I should have been given the right back then to discuss with them about my theory that everything is conformed by milk derivatives.

    I shouldn't really have to prove my theory or even get the smallest amount of evidence pointing to the certainty of my theory before being given the opportunity to have kids at school discuss about it.

    And all what I said in this post is the truth, because if you read this post you may lose your job.

    --

    Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
    1. Re:I think he is right by superyooser · · Score: 1

      The whole point of the movie is that there are lots of "science people" who deduce from observation and experimentation that the evidence points to the existence of an Intelligent Designer. They are scared of presenting their conclusions due to the retribution of the intolerant, humanistic establishment.

    2. Re:I think he is right by kabocox · · Score: 1

      For example the other day when my chemistry teacher told me that material stuff is made of atoms, I really couldn't believe him. I think I should have been given the right back then to discuss with them about my theory that everything is conformed by milk derivatives.

      That's really an excellent topic where the students just need alot of faith that the teacher is right, but the teacher usually can't provide anything for the students to use to test it out if they think its false. There are days that I think that we need to throw out everything we teach kids that they aren't given the tools to test for themselves if it actually is that way. You take it on faith that the teachers and book are right.

    3. Re:I think he is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole point of the movie is that there are lots of "science people" who deduce from observation and experimentation that the evidence points to the existence of an Intelligent Designer. How the hell do you come to that conclusion?

      If this was really true, why would the film makers have to resort to lying? You'd think they'd come up with real, verifiable examples, instead of presenting provably false stories.

      The reality is that there are lots of 'science people' who deduce from the bible that there is an intelligent designer, and these people are largely ignored because they can't prove their beliefs.
    4. Re:I think he is right by Alsee · · Score: 1

      lots of "science people" who deduce from observation and experimentation that the evidence points to the existence of an Intelligent Designer.

      You've been given misinformation. There are only a handful of people actually attempting to do any science on it. In all of the earth and life sciences a survey several years ago found only one in six or seven hundred gave any credence at all to the "science people" claiming such experiments or physical evidence. I seriously doubt that the percentage has changed much from that 0.15% level in just a few years.

      There's a substantial percentage of atheist or non-religious scientists, and a large percentage of Christian scientists who reject the "science" of supposed physical evidence of God, and just a few percent of Jewish or Muslim or other faith scientists, but the number of people you are talking about is effectively zero. It is zero percent. Even to the first decimal point it is only zero-point-one or zero-point-two percent.

      Out of a few hundred thousand earth and life science people, yeah zero-point-one percent or zero-point-two percent may be a "large number" in that it is maybe a largish three digit number. Oooohh! It's HUNDREDS!!! Yeah, and there are doubtless hundreds of "medical people" who think that crystal vibrations will cure diseases. It is a gross deception for them to claim that the number is large. It is still ZERO percent.

      -

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    5. Re:I think he is right by notrandomly · · Score: 1

      No, students need to learn scientific consensus. Scientific consensus might turn out to be wrong, but to find out that it is wrong, you must first know what the scientific consensus is. After you know that, you can either just move on, or you can get to work doing science yourself to verify or invalidate the current consensus. But the foundation is the scientific consensus. Without it, you are without a proper foundation.

    6. Re:I think he is right by superyooser · · Score: 1
      I'm talking about the thousands of scientists of all fields (who are secretly not dogmatically materialist), who, in the normal course of their work of observing and experimenting, learn things about the earth or universe about which they can't help but conclude, or at least seriously entertain the thought, that the things they're seeing were designed by an intelligent Being.

      Moreover, it doesn't require an academic to perceive a Creator.

      For ever since the creation of the universe, His invisible qualities - both His eternal power and His divine nature - have been clearly seen, because they can be understood from what He has made. - Romans 1:20
      God is not the God of the elite. He gave plenty of "low-hanging fruit" so that everyone, from the brilliant scientist to the slow-witted child, could understand and appreciate His awesomely complex and beautifully designed world.
    7. Re:I think he is right by Alsee · · Score: 1

      And I am talking about hundreds of thousands of religious scientists (and of course plenty of atheist or non-religious scientists) who essentially all agree that Creation Science and ID are bogus.

      They all agree that the theory of optics explains rainbows.
      The religious ones say that God created the universe and all the laws of the universe, and that optics is God's mechanism for creating rainbows.
      The non-religious ones say optics is the mechanism creating rainbows and shrugs at the philosophical issues.
      The atheists say optics creates rainbows and that we never needed any Noah story to explain rainbows.

      All three groups laugh at any crackpot trying to deny optics and trying instead to scientifically prove "Intelligent Coloring" that God specially creates rainbows.

      They all agree that the evolution explains the diversity of life on earth.
      The religious ones say that God created the universe and all the laws of the universe, and that evolution is God's mechanism for creating diversity of life.
      The non-religious ones say evolution is the mechanism creating diversity of life and shrugs at the philosophical issues.
      The atheists say evolution creates diversity of life and that we never needed any Genesis story to explain the diversity of life.

      All three groups laugh at any crackpot trying to scientifically prove "Intelligent Design" that God specially creates the diversity of life.

      You seem to be fixated on the notion that evolution is anti-God, and that Intelligent Design is pro-God. NEITHER is true.

      Effectively all religious scientists accept evolution MUST be God's mechanism for creating the diversity of life, because the evidence demonstrating evolution is vast conclusive and crystal clear.

      Intelligent Design isn't pro-God, just as attempting to refute optics would not be pro-God. It is anti-evolution nonsense, it is as much junk pseudoscience as attempting to refute optics.

      For ever since the creation of the universe,
      --A universe with perfect and complete laws that produce the mechanism of evolution and the awesome flowering diversity of life thereof, just as that universe and those laws produce the mechanisms of optics and thereby rainbows--
      His invisible qualities - both His eternal power and His divine nature - have been clearly seen, because they can be understood from what He has made. - Romans 1:20

      You are as a small child looking up in the sky at a rainbow and saying "Wow, Beautiful, God made that".
      The scientist LOOKS PAST the the small simple rainbow and sees the wondrous physics of the universe and how it AUTOMATICALLY creates rainbows along with everything else. One unified perfect creation. The idea that God would need to specially create rainbows would grossly ruin the beauty and perfection of the universe and its laws.

      And the child runs off crying that the mean old man was "saying God doesn't exist", when all the man did was try to share the deeper beauty, tried to share his view of how the rainbow was created by the same beautiful laws that run everything else.

      For ever since the creation of the universe, His invisible qualities - both His eternal power and His divine nature - have been clearly seen, because they can be understood from what He has made. - Romans 1:20

      What do you think that is speaking of?
      Is that the rainbow?
      Is the rainbow "ever since the creation of the universe"?
      Is the rainbow "what He has made"?
      Is it the rainbow that allows us to understand His eternal power and His divine nature?

      Or is it speaking of the very laws of nature with the astounding ability to provide everything from rainbows to DNA to the very air we breathe?t
      Are the very laws of nature "ever since the creation of the universe"?
      Are the very laws of nature "what He has made"?
      Are the very laws of nature what allow us to understand His eternal power and His divine nature?
      The very laws of nature that show us rainbows without us needing to see or understand t

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    8. Re:I think he is right by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      The problem with that "point", howeevr, is that it is false. Additionally, those who do claim that evidence "points" to such a "Designer" have offered no explanatory mechanisms by which any "design" was implemented. If the physical processes by which an event occurred cannot be specified, then the event itself can never be more than pure speculation; it is impossible to derive predictions of the aftermath of an event if the event itself cannot be described in terms of physical processes.

    9. Re:I think he is right by superyooser · · Score: 1

      They all agree that the theory of optics explains rainbows.
      The religious ones say that God created the universe and all the laws of the universe, and that optics is God's mechanism for creating rainbows.
      The non-religious ones say optics is the mechanism creating rainbows and shrugs at the philosophical issues.
      The atheists say optics creates rainbows and that we never needed any Noah story to explain rainbows.

      The "religious" view here is the same as that of ID'ers and creationists.

      They all agree that the evolution explains the diversity of life on earth.
      The religious ones say that God created the universe and all the laws of the universe, and that evolution is God's mechanism for creating diversity of life.
      The non-religious ones say evolution is the mechanism creating diversity of life and shrugs at the philosophical issues.
      The atheists say evolution creates diversity of life and that we never needed any Genesis story to explain the diversity of life.

      Some ID'ers may agree completely with the "religious" view. Creationists do, in part, accept it. The latter make a distinction between "macro-" and "micro-" evolution (although Answers In Genesis opposes this terminology). In fact, the account of Noah's Ark relies heavily on the truth of evolution, i.e. post-Flood speciation within created/preserved "kinds" ("kinds" translated from an ancient word; modern classifications are, well, modern).

      Effectively all religious scientists accept evolution MUST be God's mechanism for creating the diversity of life, because the evidence demonstrating evolution is vast conclusive and crystal clear.

      Yes, speciation or "micro-evolution." Not molecules-to-man or even monkeys-to-man evolution. (Or evolution of monkeys and men from a common ancestor.)

      For ever since the creation of the universe, His invisible qualities - both His eternal power and His divine nature - have been clearly seen, because they can be understood from what He has made. - Romans 1:20
      What do you think that is speaking of?

      All of the things you said. The obvious visible things, for some people. The laws behind those things, for the inquisitive who have taken the time to discern them.

      A rainbow, a rose, a waterfall, a sunset, the stars in the sky, all are aspects revealed of a deeper unified beauty behind them all, that can and does produce them all, that shows us each of those things.

      Whatever wonder and beauty you see in the universe is but a manifestation of that deeper unifying beauty that encompasses all those things and more.

      What do think about that "deeper unifying beauty"? Didn't something beyond nature have to exist before nature existed?

      "Of old You founded the earth, and the heavens are the work of Your hands. Even they will perish, but You endure; and all of them will wear out like a garment. Like clothing You will change them and they will be changed. But You are the same, and Your years will not come to an end." - Psalms 102:25-27

      Something so grand, so beautiful, so brilliant, so... everything!

      "When I consider Your heavens, the work of Your fingers, the moon and the stars, which You have set in place, what is man that You are mindful of him, the son of man that You care for him? You made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honor. You made him ruler over the works of Your hands; You put everything under his feet: all flocks and herds, and the beasts of the field, the birds of the air, and the fish of the sea, all that swim the paths of the seas. O Lord, our Lord, how majestic is Your name in all the earth!" - Psalms 8:4-9

      You see, creationism holds that humans are a special creation. In evolutionary history, at what point would hominids be "crowned with glory and honor"? At one point cave men themselves would be "beasts of the field." At the next, they'd get to lord over the low

    10. Re:I think he is right by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Not molecules-to-man or even monkeys-to-man evolution.

      Let me split a different line in between there. Within science, the very definition of evolution is essentially "microorganism-to-man". :) Evolution starts with early life, explains how life changes over time, and draws global common descent from that earliest life.

      Molecules-to-microorganisms would be abiogenesis. There is some very interesting work on abiogenesis, but I think everyone is in agreement that it is a poorly developed and poorly supported field. As such, it doesn't belong on a highschool biology curriculum much beyond perhaps the mere definition of the word, and the fact that it is distinct from the field of evolution.

      Some ID'ers may agree completely with the "religious" view. Creationists do, in part, accept it.

      No, not really. Not within my intended meaning of what I wrote. Unfortunately there is very often a problem of very blurry language being used around these subjects. To "de-blur" the language I suggest the following two clarifications:

      Within science: Biological evolution starts with early life, explains the mechanisms by which life changes over time, and that those mechanisms are a substantially accurate description that can and did produce the global diversity we see today via common descent.

      I'd say the essential line to define ID lies in the concept of macroevolution. ID is the position that there exists "macro" differences between species that evolution is allegely incapable of producing.

      Let me lay out 4 categories:
      Group 1: People who believe in God, who are Creationists, and who claim evidence that evolution is wrong - in particular they affirmatively assert evolution is incapable of macroevolution.
      Group 2: People who believe in God, who don't really know much about the theories and evidence either way, who might lean in either direction, but who do not have a particularly strong conclusion for or against evolution.
      Group 3: People who believe in God, and who accept that evolution as broadly true and accurate - in particular they no NOT affirmatively assert evolution is incapable of macroevolution.
      Group 4: Atheists who who accept that evolution as broadly true and accurate.

      I'm sure there's some minuscule number of people that somehow escape those 4 categories, but I think we can reasonably overlook them. I would say group 2 is probably the largest, group 3 the second largest, then group 1, with group 4 being the smallest.

      There are some people trying to draw a false dichotomy. People attempting to paint this as a battle between 1 and 4. Note that this is often not a deliberate strategy - many people in group 1 have difficulty with the concept that one could be a Christian AND accept evolution. Many people in group 1 are either unaware, or in denial, that group 3 is in fact larger than group 1.

      In particular the movie Expelled pushes this false dichotomy between 1 and 4. They push this line that evolution=atheism, push this line that that ID is on the side of God, push this line that atheism is oppressing ID and atheism is oppressing Christians and that atheism is Expelling God, pushing the line that if you're not an atheist then ID is who you are & you have to fight on the side of team 1.

      I would say the actual battle is group 1 vs team 3&4. The creationists battling evolution, creationists against evolutionists - where "evolutionists" means a huge number of theistic evolutionists on the same team as a relatively small number of atheistic evolutionists.

      A lot of people in group 2 are following the team 1 banner... they don't know or care anything about ID other than that they've been told that ID is the side that says God exists. And since they believe in God, they are told (and accept) that they are on the ID side of this "battle against atheists".

      Almost everyone in group 3 reject the title "ID" for themselves, considering "ID" to be the title of their opponents. A very small number of peop

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    11. Re:I think he is right by superyooser · · Score: 1

      Wow, thanks for that response. There is too much here to respond to, but I want to address the issue of theistic evolutionists.

      General theism (or deism) and evolutionism could be compatible, yes. I'll grant that. But if the theist purports to be of a religion based on the Bible, and he also accepts microbes-to-man evolution, he is living a contradiction. The creation account given in the Book of Genesis is fundamentally incompatible with many doctrines of modern evolutionism. Everybody gets caught up on the length of a "day" (Hebrew: yom) in Genesis 1 -- Is it 24 hours or millions of years? While I think the answer from the text is pretty obvious and believe that that issue alone is sufficient to make the two views unmixable, the divide goes far beyond that.

  82. Pseudo-science by conureman · · Score: 1

    Would that someone should cast a light on Psychology. Perhaps it is just the tendency of its many adherents to be so batty. (I am not a Scientology sympathizer myself, perhaps they aren't much help on this.) While I like the Tesla theory that we are all automatons, I have some doubts when I see some of the "scientific" work being published.

    --
    The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
  83. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 4, Informative

    Umm... Stein is not discussing the Science. But, the Atheistic philosophy of Darwinism that says its all an accident and random. What exactly is "the atheistic philosophy of Darwinism"? I thought Darwinism was generally used as a (very old fashioned) term for Darwin's theory of evolution, which has absolutely nothing to say about the existence or non-existence of God.

    Now I admit there are a lot of atheists out there who understand science just as badly as some Christian fundamentalists and have turned it into some kind of religion, but that says nothing about the validity of the science itself, just like idiot Christians say nothing about the validity of the Christian faith.
  84. Lemme chime in here... by PontifexPrimus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As another European I can only agree that it seems a particularly American idea that capital-S Science is waging a "war on religion". Most people here seem to be of the opinion that Christian beliefs don't interfere with an scientific approach to most subjects (granted, when ethical decisions come into play religion often tries to dictate a position, but that wouldn't affect the age of the earth or evolutionary explanations). Most religious persecutions happened ages ago, the Enlightenment changed the stance of the general populace a whole freaking lot.
    As an aside: if you really want to see how typically American the problem with Bible-thumping Christians is - just look at the book they take their beliefs from. It won't be the Aramaic original, it won't be one of the early Greek or Latin translations, it will be a comparatively recent translation that has all the biases, word choices and mistranslations from latter centuries built in ("Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live" or "camel through the eye of a needle" come to mind). If those people really cared about their Holy Book, their writings giving to them from a divine being, they'd surely try to get as close to the original, the source, as possible, wouldn't you think?

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    -- Language is a virus from outer space.
    1. Re:Lemme chime in here... by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      There are a assertions over here that the King James version of the Bible was produced via divine inspiration. I'm not sure what the justification is, but it seems to be a popular idea. My aunt was recently making a lot of arguments about ancient Greek being a more "precise" language than Latin (total nonsense, btw, Latin's more grammatically clear) and thus the line of translations leading to her Bible must be more valid than the line leading to her neighbors. Of course, this ends with the divine inspiration thing. /sigh

      --
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    2. Re:Lemme chime in here... by doctorcisco · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Maybe that's why guys like me took 60 credit hours of Greek, 30 of Hebrew, with a bunch of Latin thrown in just for grins. And why guys like me think it's cool when little scraps of 1st century papyrus with Biblical text on them turn up.

      And please, quit with the straw men.

      doc

    3. Re:Lemme chime in here... by kmichels · · Score: 1

      For me the killer argument is not so much about the importance of getting as close to the original source as possible as it is about the original source for their infallible guide to life, the universe & everything not existing!

      If it was *that* important that a divine being (TM) get his message across, and going on the assumption that the aforementioned divine being (TM) was omnipotent and omniscient and all those good things, it could surely not have been that hard to ensure the survival of the original manuscripts as well as a huge number of speakers of the languages it was written in, for posterity?

    4. Re:Lemme chime in here... by jafac · · Score: 1

      If I recall correctly, the KJV controversy has to do with a divergence in the cannon scripture that occurred when the Vatican contracted out some Egyptian Coptics to transcribe the collected works into a single "Majority Text" - but when the KJV version was created, there was a Church of England split with the Vatican, (of course), so they specifically chose the Minority Text as source material.

      To date, most bibles that have been retranslated have come from the majority text source (including the NIV). And the KJV is the only popular version that comes from minority text source.

      The KJV "enthusiasts" believe that the Egyptian Coptics purposely mistranslated portions of the text, to change the meaning, and that they were inspired by the devil, and that the Catholic church is the work of Satan, meant to drive people away from the true faith.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    5. Re:Lemme chime in here... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The KJV "enthusiasts" are more insane than you give them credit for.

      If you like I can dig up a link ranting that if the KJV English text conflicts with the Original Aramaic source text, then it is the ORIGINAL that is wrong. It's on the FSTDT.com top 100 list. FSTDT = Fundies Say The Darndest Things. They have tons of hysterical quotes like that. I particularly like the quote from a mother who finds a male-porn magazine under her son's bed and complains about her son being secretive for not telling her he has a girlfriend (this unseen girlfriend obviously being the person who left that porno mag there). Oh, and I love the one about atheists being a different sect of muslims too.

      Back to JKV, now I'm just going to make shit up here.... but as far as I can tell some people have the notion that God actually speaks English(*) and moreover that God deliberately gave people the wrong text thousands of years ago knowing how it would be mistranslated, and that God gave those errors in the original text with the specific design that the mis-translation into English would create his correct One True Word for them to follow today.

      (*) AmericanEnglish thankyouverymuch. No faggy Brits with their fairy english need apply.

      -

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    6. Re:Lemme chime in here... by jafac · · Score: 1

      thanks for the fstdt link.

      I try to not give the "KJV Enthusiast" community a hard time, lest I incite an ugly flame war. But they truly are among the nuttiest nuts out there.

      During the Republican YouTube debates, one of them held up a KJV bible, and asked Huckabee if he believed in THIS bible as the one true source from God. Now; to Huckabee's credit (and he IS a politician, after all), he dodged the obscure meaning of the question - and confirmed that, if he *is* a KJV nutter, he sure wasn't going to announce it during a national debate, even if the real meaning of the statement was lost on about 99% of the people watching.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  85. Criticizing creationism - Nazi death camps by BenParr · · Score: 1

    There's no way I was the only one that caught that. At one point in the trailer, while talking about how rough it is to be a creationist in this time it briefly showed a clip of a Nazi concentration camp. That is utterly ridiculous and out right offensive.

    No reasonable person could draw any similarities to the treatment of creationists to the targets of Hitler's final solution.

    There is no proof of creationism, what there is however is a bunch of speculation that fails every single rule of imperial inquiry. Calling creationism a science, is like call spam a filet mignon. To an average third grader they may seem similar at the surface, but there's no fooling anyone once you look a bit closer.

  86. Warning by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

    In the trailer he even warns you that if you are a scientist you may lose your job by watching 'Expelled.'


    Sure, if by "job" he means "temper" or "sanity".
  87. Science. It works, bitches! by PMBjornerud · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean? Evolution can be falsified. Something like a pegasus would be completely impossible under the current theory of evolution. Separate species don't converge, birds and horses cannot breed and horses cannot have genes for a feature evolved further down a different evolutionary path.

    Intelligent Design cannot be falsified, therefore it is not science. ID can explain Pegasuses, dragons unicorns and cyclopses just fine. That makes it useless, since that also means it cannot predict anything. Without predictions, you cannot have new scientific insight.
    --
    I lost my sig.
    1. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Something like a pegasus would be completely impossible under the current theory of evolution

      No - the laws of physics are what prevent a flying, or even gliding, horse who's wings (surface area) are horse sized!

      Functionally similar features have often evolved more that once (wings in birds, insects, bats all evolved seperately).

      It's hard to imagine the circumstance in which a genetic mutation giving rise to additional limbs in a large mammal would be useful, but there's no fundamental reason why it could not happen. Of course there's a long way from a six legged horse to a flying one!

    2. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad logic behind a good point. Evolution is indeed unique in that it can be falsified, but not by cross breeding between species. See liger for more details.

    3. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evolution can be falsified. Something like a pegasus would be completely impossible under the current theory of evolution. Platypus.

      Sorry, that one didn't quite fit your simple black and white world view.

    4. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Hutz · · Score: 1

      Why can't God and Evolution co-exist? Darwin doesn't state that we are a freak accident of mud and electricity -- why can't God have created life and evolution and then let them be?

      Science theorizes what happened from about 10(-43) seconds after the Big Bang, what came before? Where did all that stuff come from? If the Universe is expanding, what is it expanding into?

      There is still room for God in Science. If Science is about trying to understand and describe Nature and God created Nature, then Science is about understanding God. There need not be a contradiction.

    5. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      Functionally similar features have often evolved more that once (wings in birds, insects, bats all evolved seperately). To clarify: Functionally similar features are fine.

      With a pegasus, I meant the classical description: a horse with bird wings. It's the bird genes that exist in the different evolutionary path and would. Horses evolving their own mechanics and improving their own horse genes is perfectly fine.
      --
      I lost my sig.
    6. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      Platypus Do they have platypus DNA, or do they mix DNA from various species? It fits fine.
      --
      I lost my sig.
    7. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by lovebyte · · Score: 1

      Why can't God and Evolution co-exist? Because an alledged god is totally irrelevant to science. Science is about observations and theories, not about myth.

      Science theorizes what happened from about 10(-43) seconds after the Big Bang, what came before? Your god? What came before him/her/it? It is not because we do not yet know something that an old man in the sky did it.
      --

      I'll do it for cheesy poofs.

    8. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Evolution can be falsified.

      Not really, in terms of how evolution is typically presented in debate. Typically, you'll hear a round of mocking the "creationist" distinction of "macroevolution" versus "microevolution", with assertion that they are "the same thing". And they are, with the sole exception of relative probability of the required degree of modification to the genome. Absent acknowledgement of probability, there is no reason that, say, a dog could not mutate into your pegasus in a single generation, or for that matter any given possible permutation of the genome into any other one, immediately. Given that criteria for evaluation, there is no possible way any proposed evolutionary progression could be falsified.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    9. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by SQL+Error · · Score: 1

      So, let me get this straight. What you are saying is that if we ignore what evolutionary theory actually says, it can't be falsified?

      True, I suppose, but rather beside the point.

    10. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Feel free to provide some content with that.

      In the abstract, it's unfalsifiable, e.g. genetic change from simpler to more complex organisms.

      In terms of specifics, it's continually falsified, or, "revised" in terms of the structure of the "tree" of the specific transitions proposed at a given time.

      Did you want to comment on some particular level, in a non-handwaving way?

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    11. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Tack · · Score: 1

      Science theorizes what happened from about 10(-43) seconds after the Big Bang, what came before? Where did all that stuff come from? If the Universe is expanding, what is it expanding into?
      The God of the Gaps. Indeed, you may wish to inject god into the gaps where science currently has no (or less than satisfying) answers. The problem with that is that the gap is and always has been narrowing. Religion is constantly losing ground to scientific discovery; there is nothing for which our best explanation is a now religious one that has displaced a scientific one.
    12. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Hutz · · Score: 1

      1st day of high school physics my teacher asked us to prove the Moon orbits the Earth based on personal observations, calculations, and deductions. We couldn't do it. We take huge amounts of science on faith that someone has checked this stuff.

      You put a great deal of faith in "science". There is very little that you can independently confirm. I for one have huge problems with Big Bang Theory, because it cannot explain some big questions and it has to be fudged with dark matter and dark energy. That's why there are also competing theories and frequent revisions.

      The point is, that there are many in the academic/scientific community (you know who you are) who feel that faith in God, means you're not a real scientist. I suggest that you can use your faith in God to scientifically study His universe and that there is no conflict.

      I can provide eye-witness testimony (the Bible -- heavily vetted and researched) to the existence of God. Can you provide eye-witness accounts of, say, another planet outside our solar system? No. But you might be able to provide some convincing math supporting it, if I could understand the math. Alas, I probably can't so I'll have to take it on faith...

    13. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Absent acknowledgement of probability, there is no reason that, say, a dog could not mutate into your pegasus in a single generation,

      This is completely wrong. The pegasus offspring would either die in the womb or the mother would die during pregnancy. You can't get massive changes like that in a single generation.

    14. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by onemorechip · · Score: 1

      I for one have huge problems with Big Bang Theory

      Yeah, that show's pretty weak.

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
    15. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Zalbik · · Score: 1

      There is still room for God in Science. If Science is about trying to understand and describe Nature and God created Nature, then Science is about understanding God. There need not be a contradiction.

      No. This is the most dangerous assertion I see put forward (by either side of the evolution debate).

      There is no room for God in science for the same reason there is no room for Accounting in science, for Literature in Science, or for Hockey in Science. The two are unrelated and should not be taught in the same classroom.

      Science is not about "trying to understand and describe nature". That's philosophy.

      Science is about using a very specific toolset to try and understand and describe nature. The toolset is the scientific method. This toolset is incompatible with any discussion involving God simply because claims involving God are typically unfalsifiable. Falsifiability is a requirement for any claim made using the scientific method.

      It is of course perfectly acceptable for a scientist to be religious in his personal life, but when heading to work, questions of religion should be left at the door.

      As an analogy (apparently those are mandatory on Slashdot now), it's perfectly acceptable for an accountant to be a hunter in his spare time, but he really shouldn't show up at the office with a gun...

    16. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by Hutz · · Score: 1

      But if the Accountant goes to work and talks about his hunting trip last weekend, should he be fired?

    17. Re:Science. It works, bitches! by riondluz · · Score: 1

      What about a tomato w/a fish gene? If humankind is capable of mucking w/the blueprints of life, why is it so much of a stretch to think that a higher life form isn't doing it as well?

      --
      resist propaganda
  88. Interesting YouTube bias by andawyr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Anyone look at the comments on YouTube? Almost unanimous support for Stein's movie. How interesting....

    1. Re:Interesting YouTube bias by erbbysam · · Score: 1

      The person who posted the trailer probably has it setup such that he moderates each comment before it is posted... and is extremely selective in which he makes visible.

    2. Re:Interesting YouTube bias by viva_la_toast · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, http://xkcd.com/202/.

    3. Re:Interesting YouTube bias by andawyr · · Score: 1

      I hadn't seen this episode on xkcd - thanks!

  89. Conservative modus operandi by br00tus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Noam Chomsky said a number of years ago that since conservatives have been successful in rolling back virtually all of the New Deal (with Social Security the only thing left really), they were now working on rolling back the achievements of the Progressive Era. The prime example of that for me was the Exxon (aka Standard Oil of New Jersey) and Mobil (aka Standard Oil of New York) merger, putting back together an oil monopoly that had been broken up by the government in 1911. Now that the Progressive Era seems beginning to falter, it looks like they are taking an ax to an even older structure. Which would be the foundations of liberalism (classical or otherwise) and the Enlightenment - rationality and the scientific process.

    1. Re:Conservative modus operandi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that a better (or at least equally good) analysis would be that Conservatives, and social conservatives in particular, have all the prudery and hangups of the Victorians, with none of the Victorian curiosity or inventiveness.

    2. Re:Conservative modus operandi by notabaggins · · Score: 1

      Noam Chomsky said a number of years ago that since conservatives have been successful in rolling back virtually all of the New Deal (with Social Security the only thing left really), they were now working on rolling back the achievements of the Progressive Era. The prime example of that for me was the Exxon (aka Standard Oil of New Jersey) and Mobil (aka Standard Oil of New York) merger, putting back together an oil monopoly that had been broken up by the government in 1911. Now that the Progressive Era seems beginning to falter, it looks like they are taking an ax to an even older structure. Which would be the foundations of liberalism (classical or otherwise) and the Enlightenment - rationality and the scientific process. The neo-conservatives have always--like their twins, the radical Islamists--been opposed to modernity. Ironically, they accept that evolution is true, they just consider it too dangerous for you to know. You are supposed to believe in "god" to keep you in line. The (self-appointed) elite are the ones who are allowed to "know better".

      The neo-conservatives buy into Strauss' concepts of "Grand Lies". Fictions meant to keep society orderly. IDers are liars. They know they are liars. They not only don't care, the lie is the point.
    3. Re:Conservative modus operandi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm trying, and failing, to even remember the last time I saw an Exxon or Mobil station, much less purchased anything from one. That sure must be one powerful monopoly they're forming!

    4. Re:Conservative modus operandi by InvisblePinkUnicorn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is convenient to be able to lump everyone into one category. If you support the elimination of Social Security, then you must be opposed to scientific progress. Convenient, but entirely false, and by doing so, you are rejecting those who actually hold some of these ideas on grounded principles. You miss out on those principles, and are basically left to accept what two corrupt political parties decide should be the definition of "liberal" and "conservative".

      For example, it is possible to reject both religion and the New Deal reforms if you hold rationality and independence as cardinal virtues.

    5. Re:Conservative modus operandi by br00tus · · Score: 1

      Considering that ExxonMobil has the second largest revenue in the world of any corporation - $361,000,000,000 in revenues in the last year - I would say yes, that is one powerful monopoly they're forming.

    6. Re:Conservative modus operandi by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      The neo-conservatives have always--like their twins, the radical Islamists I think we need a new version of Godwin's law covering comparisons to radical Islamists. How about Mohammad's Law?
    7. Re:Conservative modus operandi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean a powerful company. They would only be a monopoly if they had no significant competition. "Monopoly" is not a code word for "a company that is larger than I am comfortable with". From the link you provided, the third, fourth, seventh, ninth, and tenth largest companies by revenue are also oil companies, which pretty much rules out any idea of a monopoly.

      Can I trivially buy oil that does not come from ExxonMobil? Yes. Therefore, are they a monopoly? No.

    8. Re:Conservative modus operandi by jafac · · Score: 1

      It's called the "counter-Enlightenment".

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  90. Please, no! by Nimey · · Score: 1

    If I'm taking a biology class, I don't want some know-it-all punk wasting everyone's time by arguing with the teacher over science-vs-superstition. I'm there to learn the science.

    It would have its place in a philosophy or philosophy-of-science class, but not in a serious science classroom.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
    1. Re:Please, no! by grolaw · · Score: 1

      I doubt that it would fit history of science - it was called "creationism" then.

      It doesn't fit philosophy because it is a carve-out designed to beat existing legal determinations of science.

      It would fit in a contemporary legal history class....

  91. Why by GottliebPins · · Score: 1

    For centuries science has debated on the how of everything and every few years what we have been taught as truth turns out to be false when some new truth is discovered. Evolution is a theory and like all theories it is not a fact until it can be proved. And theories that are proved can just as equally be disproved when new facts are discovered. But for all the thinking and proving there's one question science can never answer, and that is "why"? The universe exists. Why? Life exists. Why? Life changes and evolves. Why? Only God knows why. We are not allowed to ask why in public schools. Things are because they are because the state says they are, because the approved dogma says they are and don't dare question it. If the state says we came from apes then we came from apes. If our rights come from our creator and the state says there is no creator then from where do our rights come? From the goverment of course. And what government gives government can take away. Those of us who believe in the why will protect the freedoms of those who do not. You may mock us all you want.

  92. God forbid by WiglyWorm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Someone is challenging us to ask questions?

    Someone is telling us to stand up for our beliefs?

    Seriously people, Ben Stein is doing a service to the scientific community by encouraging critical thinking and making people challenge the status quo. Besides, science is the biggest group-think boys club there is. Just ask anyone who's ever challeneged string theory. There's scant evidence supporting it, there are way too many variations of it to be taken seriously, and anyone who comes up with an alternate theory (see variable gravity theories) is laughed out without anyone even looking at their paper.

    1. Re:God forbid by notrandomly · · Score: 1
      But the problem, you see, is that Ben stein is not challenging us to ask questions; he is challenging us to ask his (dishonest) questions. He is not telling us to stand up for our beliefs; he is telling us to stand up for religion in an epic battle with materialistic science. He is not encouraging critical thinking and making people challenge the status quo; he is encouraging his thinking and making people enforce religious dogma at the expense of science and progress.

      You have fallen for his tricks. Expelled is full of lies and deception, and your comment about the "group-think boys club" reveals a lot about you and your lack of critical thinking when it comes to these things.

  93. Re:What I am opposed to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    80 years ago the "establishment" was the same people, the people like Ben Stein, fighting evolution today--on religious grounds, not scientific ones. The scientific establishment had well accepted evolution then.

    Don't try to shove your dirty laundry on us.

  94. Re:Monkey's uncle? by spamking · · Score: 1

    People are going to believe what they want no matter what. Man decided what qualifications something had to meet to be known as a "theory". To a lot of folks, this is limiting what they believe God can do and implies that man may be smarter than God.

  95. No need for debate by jr76 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I still am in awe on how idiotic people are in 2008.

    There is no need for conflict between the two.

    It is not incomprehensible to see the universe was created by a higher power, who set into motion the laws of natural selection and everything we see in it.

    Ugh.

    I firmly believe in science and a higher power that created it all, so it baffles me every day (well, it doesn't entirely, an average IQ of 100 does explain it well) that people are debating something that doesn't need a debate and are arguing something that has no conflict.

    Now, does anyone have a link to that paper?

    1. Re:No need for debate by tomcode · · Score: 4, Funny

      Clearly education isn't working. The average IQ has held steady at 100 for as long as records have been kept.

      --
      f u cn rd ths u cn gt a gd jb n cmptr prgmng
    2. Re:No need for debate by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 3, Informative

      The average IQ is *defined* as 100.

    3. Re:No need for debate by N1ck0 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. If you assume that everything is created by an all knowing, all powerful (truly omnipotent) being/entity/etc you interesting points that date back to the founding of philosophy and science itself.

      1. There is nothing stopping this entity from creating everything if 6 days. As being all powerful time would not be a challenge at all (it could be done in a femtosecond). The universe could have been created in its current state 30 seconds ago...how would we know.

      2. If this entity created such detailed designs such as physical laws, gravity, particles, fields, etc that all seem to work in a logical and coherent manner. Such an entity would probably not have issues seeing the need for a process in which the universe changes/evolves/etc.

      3. Thus if there was a intelligence behind such a massive design, would it not have designed the nature of the universe itself around such a 'ultimate plan', including the mechanics and science of the universe itself. If so how can science be opposed to such beliefs, is science not just details 'encoded into that existence.

      4. If time/matter/etc constraints does not matter to this entity, would it not know all possible events, all possible knowledge, how everything 'turns out'. If such conditions/outcomes are all known, what would the point of creation actually be? If they are not known, can this entity truly be all-powerful?

      5. If this entity created evidence of a history of evolution, it would have been for a reason. So is it not then religiously correct to study such evidence? Under the same logic, if the universe was created 30 seconds ago, and all memories/matter/etc was created in the current state, should you ignore your memories of yesterday...how about your education, or raised beliefs.

      I could go on with these thought-experiments for years. Or you could go read the works of some old-greek/roman/early-Christian/muslium/etc people and think about them for yourself.

      But basically I've gone by the idea that if god created the universe, and the universe is governed by science, then wouldn't god have to have been a scientist (among other things).

    4. Re:No need for debate by kindbud · · Score: 1

      It is not incomprehensible to see the universe was created by a higher power, who set into motion the laws of natural selection and everything we see in it.

      Nor is it useful. Postulating a higher power explains nothing, but it does raise the new question: From whence came the higher power?

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
  96. When others have said it best by mcstudent · · Score: 1

    Just link off to their work. Slate magazine did a three part piece on how our culture has gone from skeptical to paranoid to essentially delusional about science in general.
    From the article;
    "The success of these programs shows how the public's understanding of science has devolved into a perverse worship of uncertainty, a fanatical devotion to the god of the gaps."
    It works for evolution, global warming, tobacco/cancer links, etc.

  97. Bueller? Bueller? by decalod85 · · Score: 0

    "Can anyone tell me what the real name of Intelligent Design is?" "Something D-O-O Science."

  98. Re:Monkey's uncle? by HungSoLow · · Score: 1

    No one should assume Evolution is true. They should consider the evidence, and then make a decision. That's the very reason why ID holds no weight because it puts forth no evidence. Saying something is too complex for YOU to understand is not evidence. Having belief in God as a creator is not evidence. A 4000 year old storybook is not evidence.

    The point is, the same scientific method that has shown time and time again that evolution is a fact, is the very same method scientists have used to develop every other technological device and process we used today. But why is evolution challenged? Because it's one of the only scientific theories that directly challenge that dusty old text.

  99. Darwinism promotes poor science education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    All I ever hear on slashdot is "ID promotes poor science education". I think the same way about Darwinism. If you define science as "acquiring knowledge based on scientific method", Darwinism has no shred of evidence. Give me a break, the first cell was created off of the back of crystals? Where have you observed that? Show me a reproducible experiment?

    Both Darwinism and ID are ideologies which can be used to explain the origins of our species. Thus, I am not against having them taught along with Science. However, they are not science and neither can claim the "higher ground" of science. However, the more we learn about the complexity of information stored in the cell, the less plausible Darwinism becomes.

    1. Re:Darwinism promotes poor science education by Tiger4 · · Score: 1
      Evolution has been demonstrated hundreds of times. Natural selection of successful mutation has been shown thousands of times. There is even an industry called Animal Husbandry that takes advantage of the fact that species can be bred to emphasize some characteristics and de-emphasize others. That's right, those same Patriarchs of the Bible that ID says popped into existence whole and complete were using a form of forced Evolution to make their livings. Ironic, no?

      And by the way, it isn't Darwinism, it is Evolution. Darwin lived and published 150 years ago. It isn't 1860 anymore, we've learned a lot since then and, in a Scientific fashion, updated the model to conform to observed reality.

      --
      Behold, this dreamer cometh. Come now, and let us slay him... and we shall see what will become of his dreams.
  100. ben stein seems smart by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    so what underlies an otherwise intelligent religious person to resist evolution?

    we need to confront the real underlying psychological issue here: faith in humanity

    religious folk view something like evolution as a path to meaninglessness, nihilism, cynicism. your typical secular humanist expresses their faith in mankind directly: there is no conflict between evolution and being positive about mankind's future

    but religious folk's minds don't work like that. for a religious person, their faith in humanity is indirect. it is tied up in symbols and code words, like god. god is really just a psychological manifestation of an abstract concept: an ideal man, what humanity strives for, progress

    and around an idea like god, you get all of these related mythologies that again, are really just props for retaining and reaffirming and indirect positivistic faith in society and mankind

    so what really divides the secular humanists and the religious folk are those with no faith in mankind. when you look at something like evolution, and you consider your traditional religious symbology that enforces your faith, you are confronted with a crisis. and you look at some of the nihilism in the world. not the atheists who believe in mankind, but the cynical, empty, boorish loud kind of atheist who sees no meaning in life, and you react to that. and so you react to evolution: it seems to be a path to this sort of empty faithless indolent nihilism

    in other words, the negative reaction to evolution by otherwise intelligent religious folk is really a reaction against the idea of meaningless in life

    this is the psychological issue which underlies the rejection of evolution by otherwise intelligent religious folk. and so the real way you defeat their resistance is by criticizing faithless nihilism. those who use evolution as a story about how mankind is meaningless, pointless: you attack and reject them

    you talk about evolution, AND you talk about faith in humanity and you talk about evolution as reinforcing meaning, not destroying it. and in such a way, you draw down the resistance of intelligent religious folks to evolution, by demonstrating to them that evolution is not a threat to the idea of faith, that plenty of secular humanists with faith in mankind can also beleive in evolution, without some sort of psychological dissonance

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:ben stein seems smart by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      so what underlies an otherwise intelligent religious person to resist evolution?

      we need to confront the real underlying psychological issue here: faith in humanity I think it's more a matter of sociology than psychology.

      Religions mutate all the time; you aren't likely to find *any* belief that some self-identifying Christian doesn't accept while another rejects it. Religious beliefs seem to be altogether arbitrary, except that religious people usually find or form in-groups that believe the same thing they do, and then start working in the futile effort to get everyone else to conform.

      I think the rejection of evolution is just as arbitrary as arguments over the existence and nature of the Trinity or whether people who die as babies get a free pass to Heaven. Someone gets a notion in their head and decides it's a fact of Ultimate Reality.

      Many Christians fully accept evolution, while others choke on it. What's the deal? Maybe people just need a bunch of boolean propositions to distinguish their sect from the one that meets two blocks down the street.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:ben stein seems smart by kabocox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      we need to confront the real underlying psychological issue here: faith in humanity

      Um, do we really? I view both sides of the topic as having too much faith. No one really bothers to think. I know just enough that I'm happy with most of evolution. I still believe in God and that god could ID using evolution/selective breeding whenever/however with most of the desired results that god wants. (Or that God just fucked up, got us and hasn't figured out what we are good for yet.)

      I look at the entire climate change issue there. I find those think humans are evil and all our actions cause bad things to happen to mother earth to be guilty of having a bit too much faith in their new religion. I believe that our actions are a percentage of it, but what magic percentage? I typically think all human activities have effected global environment less than 5 percent. The masses have far too much faith in their various high priests that what they are told is right and they should do it without any more thinking involved thank you very much.

      Here on slashdot, it's taken as faith that linux, open source, apple, or google is good and closed source, Microsoft, or the government is evil.

      I figure that we all have our faith blinders, and we use them differently depending on the crowd that we are in at the moment.

    3. Re:ben stein seems smart by notrandomly · · Score: 1

      I view both sides of the topic as having too much faith.
      That is obviously false, since science is not about faith. It is about facts.
    4. Re:ben stein seems smart by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No faith is needed for evolution. There is mountains of evidence, and it makes predictions.

      Now, most believers and theologians understand that Genesis is a parable, and understand that evolution is good science. As solid of a theory as the theory of gravity.

      The Catholics understand the evolution is real, and believe that good gave us a spark at a critical time.

      The people that created the Discovery Institute work very hard to be sure people equate evolution to atheism; which is just plain wrong.
      The anti-evolution is primarily an American phenomenon.

      Don't confuse faith with Faith.

      faith is based on prior events. For example, when my son says he is done' with is homework, I have faith he is done. This is because in the past he has always been done.

      Faith is just blind faith with no evidence. Faith in God.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:ben stein seems smart by B-Dubyah · · Score: 1
      Ahh the "funny religeous folk."

      If ONLY it were that simple.

      The previous post is yet another feeble attempt to dismiss an arguement by waggling a bony, pointed finger toward a group, branding them with 'mindless psychosis' and attempting to call it a day.

      The argument in question however cannot be reduced to such a simple assertion. Sure there may be a lack of "faith in humanity" among people of faith... but in fair critique, people of faith are not alone in this matter. Nazi examples aside, there are copious daily reports of atrocities across the globe being wrought against various people groups in the name of one wholly "rational" ideal or another.

      This IS plenty of legitimate reason to fear "humanity," and is true for ALL the people on this planet. You cannot pin down one side of the scientific debate of Darwinism on a dubious psychological claim... especially the questionable "goodness of man", which is a whole other debate.

      "[POSTED]--The negative reaction to evolution by otherwise intelligent religious folk is really a reaction against the idea of meaningless in life"... This statement mearly addresses a symptom of the larger debate's implications. It is also totally divorced from the other, more crucial aspect of the arguement... summed up here as, the total lack of foundational support for the current Neo-Darwinist theory.

      Granted, upon brief inspection, the theory itself seems to make perfect sense from the mile-high view. But upon closer inspection--at the microscopic level (and beyond) the theory continues to break down, turn after turn, especially in light of the observations found in other scientific disciplines (most notably archeology... complete lack of an "evolving" fossil record, and in physics... 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts the assertion of mutation as a positive agent of progressive change). The rabbit trail goes much further, but suffice to say these are but two of many MAJOR hurdles that Darwin's theory hasn't even begun to persuasively address. So while its fun to show diagrams of land-bound squirrels turning into flying bats (over millions of years) it has proven hand-wringingly impossible to show a lump of coal turning into a fully funtioning cellular organism. There has been nothing observed in nature that can demonstrate the leap from in-organic matter to organic life. There just simply isn't. Period.

      Foundational unexplained fissures in the otherwise beautiful theory of Darwinism aren't going away anytime soon. And just because its easy to label opposing views as religeous zealotry isn't lending any credence to the current establishment. There is plenty of myopic zealotry to go around on both sides of the arguement.

      The honest "reaction" would be to admit personal bias. What we all have to admit is that ultimately there is a larger worlview attached to whatever side of the arguement we find ourselves. And let there be NO delusion (or progress for that matter) that the origin of life debate will simply end by name-calling the opposing view. The debate exists and persists because biology at its current level of maturity simply cannot give sufficient support/evidence to the root-level precepts that govern Neo-Darwin beliefs. And if scientists were truly honest, they also would admit that in the investigation of these core problems, biology is still in its infancy.

  101. I will never understand the arrogance ... by jopet · · Score: 1

    I will never understand the arrogance of religious people. The arrogance of putting "faith" in the particular story taught by their religion over all rational thinking, over all (lack of) evidence, in a word, over all else.
    There are hundreds (historically thousands or more) of competing stories other people have "faith" in, and those people are equally sure that their story is the correct one.
    Noone of those people has ever seen any of their gods, has not even had the slightes, tiniest indication for the existence of anything remotely similar to a "god". Yet, these people insist that their god must exist.
    Why does god exist? Why is their religion just like it is?
    These people do not feel the need to answer any of this. They just "have faith".

    They use their story and their god as an explanation of what they do not understand. Yet, this explanation is still harder to understand and there is even less indication for it than for the things they try to explain with it.
    What makes the existence of a god more likely than the existence of the universe?
    Why do these people feel more comfortable with an unexplainable god than with an unexplainable universe?

    Did they ever consider that this comfort comes from the fact that their imaginary god is humanoid, intelligent, like man?

    People who believe in god are like children who think that the ball runs down the hill because the ball wants to go there out of his own will.

  102. Dear Ben Stien, et al. by scorp1us · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First, I would like to say that I a fan of Ben Stein. But this movie is blemish in what I think is an outstanding career. I will explain.
    I too have asked the same exact questions that your trailers ask. But I do have answers. I've followed the I.D. vs evolution debate, and I come down firmly on the evolution side. But that is not what you ask about...

    Scientific inquiry first clashed with religion when a man innocently attempted to determine the motion of the heavenly bodies in an effort to determine God's intent. This man was Newton, but he started a long battle of God giving up ground to science. For as long as science is practiced, the domain of God has reduced. It is likely that at some time in the future that we have "God" reduced to the fundamental constants of the universe. (Only in terms of a mechanical sense, not spiritual) This can only be the case if scientific inquiry is allowed to continue.

    The problem I have, and as it seems schools (public and private), and government have as well with I.D. people being key in scientific discovery , is that it threatens further scientific discoveries. The threat is not intentional, or, at least I believe in most cases it is not intentional (but the Dover school district it was quite intentional). The reason why it threatens scientific discovery, was shown in the Dover court case. The cellular structure that was heralded as 'irreducible' was actually shown to be reducible. Once the researcher was content with the idea that the structure was irreducible, scientific inquiry ended. This is not acceptable. It is not acceptable in projects funded by public or private grants. I fear if I.D. was ever accepted as a viable answer, all sufficiently complicated systems would be described as I.D. and we'd throw our arms up and declare ourselves done. I could imagine a time when all things are attributed to I.D. and such a time scares me.

    I do not think that all professors who suppose I.D. would be haphazard, but it is not a risk we do not have to take. The question is if there is room for I.D. and a mind that is willing to probe deeper. Can someone have reverence and probe deeper? Newton did, so it is possible, but I doubt all of the I.D. proponents could.

    The biggest failure of I.D. is to factor in the value of processes. And really this is what it boils down to. With I.D. there is no process, and it is all design. With science it is all process and no design. For the past 400 years, we've had nearly every process that has been attributed to God be re-attributed to a process. The question then is God a process, or is God designed? If God is a process then there can be no irreducible complexity, and I.D. effectively eats itself. Processes happen in the domain of time, so the question then becomes what is the domain of time for life on earth. We see evolution happening here on earth, so when did that start? And then the question is what was the process for earth? Answering that question is a question of celestial processes arising in planet formation and going back to the beginning of the universe.

    Given then that we are the result of processes, how relevant or prevalent is I.D.? Is there any I.D. still left? It would seem that if the I.D. of our creator was irreducible, then we could never replace any part of the design. This would mean we could only add-on to make alterations (adaptation) and this would create more complication from the base simplicity. The neat feature is that any design is completely mutable. You can bury the original design so deep it could not be discerned. What I am describing of course is DNA. However the smallest number of genes for an independent organism is 1500 genes. This would be a boon for I.D. as until there are 1500 genes, there is no way to evolve and combine 1500 genes at once. However, these genes do contain junk DNA, showing that they were created by a process. The only thing I can conclude, and indeed others should be able to conclude, is that we don't understand the process. This is where scientists who don'

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    1. Re:Dear Ben Stien, et al. by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      I would like to say that I a fan of Ben Stein. But this movie is blemish in what I think is an outstanding career.

      Indeed. Thanks to this propaganda piece, I may never be able to fully enjoy Stein's speeches for President Nixon, his game-show repoire with Jimmy Kimmel, nor his Clear Eyes eyedrop commercials again.

    2. Re:Dear Ben Stien, et al. by N1ck0 · · Score: 1

      Actually the history of Science clashing with Religion goes back long before Newton. The greek priests used to have issues with using mechanical devices to make statues of gods move. Some thought it was morally wrong, but of course in the end manufacturing 'acts of god' brought in better offerings. And you can go back before that. On the other hand to good thing about religious run civilizations like Egypt, was that the discovery of scientific principals was instantly adopted as something that the gods intended for that person to discover (sometimes I think that might have been a slightly better way to do it).

      The other thing is there is a difference between "Intelligent Design" and believing in a design created with intelligence. The former was solidified with all sorts of crazy notions and rules, instead of it remaining purely the fact that everything may have been planned to turn out this way. Of course some people easily get confused with "Intelligent Design" and the concept of an intelligent design (sort of like "The Flat Tax", and a truly flat, tax design not being identical).

      The down side with an intelligent design that no one in religion tends to want to deal with. Is that if things were designed to end up in the way they are, at which point does the design end and free will begin? Does it end...could we be destined by some complex intelligent design of matter, physical laws, events, etc to get to some later fate. Uh oh...that would sort of crush the god gave us free will thing wouldn't it?

      So I end with this one question...If god designed the universe with a grand design that is so complex that we haven't figured it out yet. Do you really think you could ever conceptually grasp the entire thing in our limited intelligence, without ourselves being god? Isn't it just possible that every concept we have is wrong, but partially right? So why does it all have to be opposed to eachother?

    3. Re:Dear Ben Stien, et al. by wfolta · · Score: 1

      Can someone have reverence and probe deeper? Newton did, so it is possible, but I doubt all of the I.D. proponents could.

      The list is much longer than Newton. Many early scientists were "delving into the mysteries of creation" as it were. Heck, Bayes was a minister, right?

      I think it depends on whether "ID proponents" simply means the "I'm not real good at math" type of person, or if it might include those who are in fact trained and skilled with the tools of science. I'm sure there were many ignorant proponents in Newton's (and Bayes', and...) day as well.

  103. Re:What I am opposed to ... by unapersson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Evolution is observable fact. The theory is as to how it occurs. Scientific theories need to be based on observable facts and be falsifiable. So in no way can the theories of evolution be called bad science unless you're not talking about science at all.

    You can hand wave about conspiracies all you like, but science has an easy to follow method, and creationists can introduce any scientific theories they like. They merely need to be scientific.

    Now ID is "bad" science as it doesn't put forward any testable theories at all, put in a few testable theories based on facts and you might have something that looks like science. Though they may have some problems getting there.

    It sounds to me that a lot of the noise in the ID crowd is to close minds to the facts and replace them with fantasy rather than anything that can be tested.

  104. Re:Monkey's uncle? by ghostdoc · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's the other way around. 'God did it' is a remarkably easy thing to understand and believe if you believe in a God in the first place. The hard bit to understand is how millions and millions of tiny adaptive changes make up the vast array of life around us (and us, of course). But when you do finally grok it, it's amazingly elegant and a constant source of wonder. I share an ancestor with every living thing on this planet. Isn't that amazing?

    --
    Business/App ideas are like arseholes: everyone's got one, they're mostly shit, but very rarely they contain a diamond
  105. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  106. Creationists can be useful! by rclandrum · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Because creationists refuse to accept facts they make fairly poor candidates for any position that requires actual thought, but they make excellent manual laborers. My daughter plans on a career in physics and she said that she would consider allowing them to tend her garden or trim her hedges so long as they didn't actually speak to her.

  107. Darwin believed in God. by splutty · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's a bit sad that this discussion always seems to fall back to 'But evolution contradicts god' and similar bla bla.

    The point most people miss, is that the person that actually wrote down a lot of his observations, which lead to the idea of evolution, was trying to show how marvelous God created this universe. That a God could make something so complex and self sustaining as evolution amazed him endlessly.

    His point was more along the lines that 'Intelligent Design' created all the basework for the great replication and diversion of what came to be known as 'Evolution'.

    As I said, a shame a lot of people seem to completely miss that point.

    --
    Coz eternity my friend, is a long *ing time.
  108. That Ben Stein... by boris111 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    he's a rebel. He's stickn' it to the establishment by conforming to an establishment... He's a tricky one. Thank GOD for people like him that compel us to think inside the box.

    BTW on his game show "Win Ben Stein's Money" I recall him doing poorly on the SCIENCE and SPACE categories.

  109. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Poorcku · · Score: 1

    not to be picky, but that is not really a standard normal distribution. Something like that is nowhere to be found in nature. No intelligence distribution will ever yield a normal distribution (there are bumps at both ends - just to point that out), no average height of all ppl in the world will not yield a normal distribution. In that image the distribution is a bit left skewed. Why? Dunno, I am no gene scientist :)

    I believe Darwin was right, but the abiogenesis stuff, we are not much further than the 19th century. That field lacks so much understanding I am even afraid to ask. All we have are a bunch of hypotheses. the same ones all over again. And when all are over we turn to panspermia which doesn't even explain anything, just moves the problem from here.

    --
    I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
  110. Magical Thinking by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

    It is about "magical thinking" and fundamental control.

    When all is said and done, it is about the "authority" losing a tool of control. As long as there is ingrained a perception of an unknowable unseeable god, enforced in science, "authority" will use that god as a whip.

    It is no different than parents saying to their kids: "Be good or santa won't bring toys." At least parents follow through with santa. The current authority has a great deal, you get it after you die. Brilliant!

    I becomes hard to sustain a "god" delusion if we can explain how we came to be without one.

  111. Why did Ben $tein $ign On? by grolaw · · Score: 1

    It'$ a My$tery to Me, why Ben $tein $hould $hame himself in $uch a $hoddy film.

    1. Re:Why did Ben $tein $ign On? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      It'$ a My$tery to Me, why Ben $tein $hould $hame himself in $uch a $hoddy film. Perhaps he merely had a house payment due, but remember that he's a former Nixon speech writer, so he may be all to happy to support the right wing war on science.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  112. Catholic School used to teach a variation of ID by peter303 · · Score: 1

    I didnt realize it until later, but they used to teach fairly standard evolution, but it was directional progressing to man and the spiritual. Both Aristotle and Teilard de Chardin teach this. This is called teleology, or goal-direction, but definitately verboten according to the Harvard biologists.

    Basically evolution goes in all directions to fill all ecological niches. Soemtimes you complexication toward verbrates and intellignece to fill that niche. At other times you see simplication and parasites such as viruses and leaches, etc.

  113. The why question. by jopet · · Score: 1

    I understand that people want to answer the why question. Why is there something rather than nothing?
    What I do not understand is why the are satisfied by answering it with something that makes things even more complicated: the question "why is there a god" or even "why is there a christian god" or even "why is there a lutheranian christian god" is not easier but much much more complex than "why is there a universe". Simply because we have evidence for a universe but no evidence for a god, christian god, or lutheranian christian god, let alone any evidence why among all gods ever thought out by humans the lutheranian christian god should be the one that actually exists and is responsible for EVERYTHING.

    What is beyond me is how people can feel comfortable with such a monstrous, unnecessary crazyness for only a second when the universe alone is a much simpler, much more beautiful and much less confusing monstrousness than any god-story every was.

    1. Re:The why question. by Cerberus7 · · Score: 1

      You guys are avoiding the biggest issue. Death. All of those questions are basically meaningless if death is the end of existence. If death is really the end, then nothing matters. Justice is a lie, good and evil are illusions, and all of this is for nothing.

      "Why is there a god?" To ensure us something more than oblivion.

      --
      I don't know about you, but my servers run on the power of cotton candy and happy thoughts. -Anonymous Coward
    2. Re:The why question. by jopet · · Score: 1

      This is nonsense. Of course death is the end of existence. But why shouldn't things matter why one lives if that is the case? I'd say, things matter a infinitely much more because if live is would only be the finite part of an endless live, THEN life really wouldn't matter.

    3. Re:The why question. by CompCons · · Score: 1

      You are entirely correct. However you are missing something. Science can NEVER answer the why question. It is not within the domain of science to answer why. When people think of god they conjure up an intelligent being. Intelligent beings can have reasons, justifications, you can guess at why your god created you. You can't guess at why the universe created you... becuase there is no reason. THAT is why people are so scared by Evolution. That is why they get so upset and make comments like "so it's just random" or "I refuse to believe that we could be created by random". They want a reason and science will never be able to provide one. So they look to an omniscient being who could possibly provide a reason

  114. Re:Monkey's uncle? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    A monkey could understand "that the other theories actually mean".

    There just isn't that much to it. Ultimately it's just a strawman for all of
    the evangelicals to rally around since they obviously don't have strong enough
    faith otherwise.

    Stacking the two sets of literature side by side can be very illuminating.

    Why do you assume that thost that philosophically identify as scientists haven't
    already done this? It's the nature of the beast. We do not fear "the entire universe
    changing" because our understanding of it improved.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  115. There is no spoon by argent · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sorry, I mean "there is no Darwinism".

    The theory of the origin of species through natural selection does not actually address the question of the origin of life, it merely documents a mechanism that has been demonstrated sufficient to explain the phenomenon of speciation. That's all it attempts to do, and that's all it needs to do.

    You are creating a straw man, called "Darwinism", that doesn't bear any but a superficial relationship to the reality. Attacking straw men is a blast, it's great fun, but it belongs in the pages of "Mad Magazine", not in the courts and public debate.

  116. Oh there is SOOO much more by Technopaladin · · Score: 1

    Lets start with telemeres...like a lil fuse of life when the fuse ends poof your body stops regenerating most things and thats that. We have several organs that are prone to failure, appearently alligators have better immune systems. We only have one heart and one brain...we get redundant other things. Some people have tails...well most people just most of us cant see ours. Endometreosis, Allergies, vulnerable to Heavy metals and other VERY natural poisons. The list goes on and on.

    Humans(the Chosen Species) lack nightvision, Cant see into the Ultra or infra ranges, no sonar, Have limited capacity for underwater breathing and our planet is COVERED in the stuff. Our survivable tempature ranges force most of population to the most viral, Bacterial areas of the planet.

    Truly if there was an intellgent designer he could have done better then this...Heck Sci-fi and comic book writers do on a daily basis.

    1. Re:Oh there is SOOO much more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that argument actually shows a flaw in evolution. if everything you said is true, shouldnt man have evolved those characteristics.

    2. Re:Oh there is SOOO much more by Tack · · Score: 1

      that argument actually shows a flaw in evolution. if everything you said is true, shouldnt man have evolved those characteristics.
      No, your conclusion does not follow, given how evolution works. If you think it does, feel free to put forward an argument.
    3. Re:Oh there is SOOO much more by lgw · · Score: 2, Funny

      Not to mention the optic nerve connects to the wrong side of the retina, producing a completely unnecessary blind spot at the center of vision. And what sort of "intelligent" designer puts a sewage outlet in the middle of a playground, I ask you?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  117. nobody says that Darwin was right with everything by jopet · · Score: 1

    Of course it is nonsense that he assumed a god beyond any necessity.

    All rational theories are better off without some imaginary god from some ages-old story book. There is hardly anything more useless than the idea of some god to explain things.

  118. Dissenting views by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well what about in Maths. Attempt to work with trigonometric or logarithmic integration with "pi" being 3.

    You'll get rejected outright.

    Bastards!

    The problem isn't IDers being dissenters but IDers trying to be scientists WHEN THEY HAVE NO SCIENTIFIC THEORY.

    Just as if I went to Biology and espoused that evil demons were the cause of all ills and proper praying was the only answer, I would NOT get my doctors degree and would in all likelihood be thrown out.

    Not because they don't want dissenters, but they are supposed to produce DOCTORS.

  119. Feed that hype... by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

    They're trying to build hype for the movie, and guess what? Slashdot has just thrown them a bone... You know what astroturfing is, right?

    This is the same tired old game - the loaded, one-sided documentary, made to appeal to people who already feel a certain way about a contentious issue... Stein's become a counterpart to Michael Moore - which given Stein's books and such maybe shouldn't be surprising.

    --
    Bow-ties are cool.
  120. Without An Epistemological Doubt by FurtiveGlancer · · Score: 1
    Throughout time, many of our most successful scientists have been those that were blatantly non-conformist. While I might not choose evolution vs intelligent design vs creationism as the preferred canvas, any method of incentivizing people to think for themselves should be applauded. How many average citizens accept every poll or newscast as "gospel truth" without analyzing the margin of error or scrutinizing the source of the data. For years, studies funded by tobacco companies consistently showed no correlation between smoking and cancer. I think we know how that turned out.

    If Ben Stein is getting people to question and verify what they see, what they hear and what they are taught, then my hat's off to him.

    --
    Invenio via vel creo
  121. Tongue in Cheek? by zx75 · · Score: 1

    I have not watched the trailer, the movie, or seen any of the backlash it has caused.

    That being said, if the movie does espouse a hard-line creationist/ID shall I say revolution? Attempting to spur the masses on to make a stand to support creationism and ID and seeks to marginalize true scientific input.

    I have a VERY hard time believing this wasn't done with tongue firmly planted in cheek. Ben Stein probably has the driest wit of anyone I've seen. Truth be told I would be very surprised if this wasn't an attempt to force the issue for the purposes of being able to destroy the arguments made by the ID people, and that a lot of people are making a mistake believing it to be actually supporting ID.

    But then, I haven't seen it for myself.

    --
    This is not a sig.
  122. Re:Monkey's uncle? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Atheists tend to understand a lot about evolution since it's one of the first
    things we get hit over the head with by evangelicals as soon as they find out
    that we're atheists. Not intent to live and let live, they insist on tearing
    you and your beliefs down.

    Although this isn't limited to fundies. Pretty much any branch of xianity will
    clash with the others and you end up with silly arguments (among a group of
    people from the same religion no less) about who is and isn't going to go to
    hell.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  123. God is a metaphor for science by dbc001 · · Score: 1

    It's simple really. "God" is a metaphor for science. God is a word intended to describe nature, mathematics, physics, biology, etc. Of course, nowadays, you're much better off using the academic words I just mentioned.

    So Intelligent Design is just a metaphor for evolution - except that it pretends that there's an invisible hand behind the evolutionary process.

    1. Re:God is a metaphor for science by Spiked_Three · · Score: 1

      It is a shame you did not get to post this earlier where it is more prominent, and hopefully modded up.

      I agree. The real question is not evolution v. ID. The real question is 'is God really some sort of being?' and for many 'who had a son?'

      I actually like when stuff like this Ben Stein thing happens as it raises the awareness of the few people who can think on there own. What the US and the world in general needs is to bring this whole 'God as a being who writes books' thing to very high level so that it can be treated as witchcraft once was. By the way, I have a lot more faith in there having been actual witches who practice forgotten sciences, than a 'God being'. But anyhow, it takes events like 9/11 and the recent polygamist sect raid in the us to put these religeous fanatics in the spotlight for what they truly are; people using the fear of God to control the weak minded and to justify otherwise unthinkable acts.

      --
      slashdot troll = you make a compelling argument I do not like the implications of.
  124. Re:that is the impression theists want you to have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree wholeheartedly - belief in God is as stupid as believing in a square circle! It adds nothing to scientific knowledge. As proof of this, I have a list of some of the stupid, anti-science, perpetuum mobile-builders of the past whose belief in a God and creation influenced their "scientific" work:

    Copernicus
    Francis Bacon
    Isaac Newton
    Michael Faraday
    Louis Pasteur
    Johannes Kepler
    Gregor Mendel
    William Thomson Kelvin
    Max Planck

    A real bunch of dummies, who set the scientific community back by centuries...

  125. Re:What I am opposed to ... by DissentingClown · · Score: 1

    I also like the fact that the "enlightened pro-evolution" people are usually the ones resorting to argumentum ad hominem... As opposed to the videos Argumentum ad Hitlerum ? I think we can both admit that their are idiots on both sides that arrive at logical fallacies. The word "usually" in this case is a weasel word that only detracts support for your position.
  126. "Darwinism" by Blitz22 · · Score: 1

    Just to clear something up, THERE IS NO DARWINISM. The combining of Darwin (a scientist, who observed, hypothesized, and developed a theory) and the suffix "ism" would suggest a dogmatic belief system. A belief system which can be accepted or rejected based on taste with equal validity. This is not the case. The evolutionary theory is SCIENCE! It involves a specific process where any and every assertion can and is challenged, and must be backed up by EVIDENCE to be accepted.

    The term "DARWINISM" is used by opponents of evolutionary theory just to get a seat at the table, likening ID to science and saying we should teach competing views. However, "ID" in general, is unwilling to submit itself to the rigorous scientific process where evidence for any notion must be provided.

    You're free to believe whatever you want, but if you want to play in the Science ball park, you have to play by the Science rules. Stein's movie which suggest a purging of the ranks, has it all wrong. You have evidence for your hypothesis? Fine, present it. Otherwise, get out of Science! How tolerant would a church be if someone went in and started to challenge dogma, asserting that differing views should be preached?

    --
    If I went around claiming I was an emperor...they'd put me away!
  127. Re:Monkey's uncle? by PhireN · · Score: 1

    If the ID people want to be taken seriously. They can produce good research and put forward a good testable hypothesis that can better explain the world or the liars for Jesus can just STFU. But as the trailer points out, people have done the research (no idea if its correct) but the second they try to publish it, the Darwinans label them crackpots and shot out: "Its not Darwinism, so its wrong"

    Acting like that is just childish. If Darwin was right, then you have nothing to lose by carefully writing a counter paper, countering the evidence.
  128. Can you please link to the CNN article? by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I will illustrate your point, with an example I saw on CNN:

    But you don't really illustrate the point - the OP was talking about scientists, and you illustrated the point with a story about a journalist and an environmental activist.

    Oh - and can you pls link to the CNN article?

    --
    There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
    1. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "Oh - and can you pls link to the CNN article?"

      It almost certainly doesn't exist. It was probably invented by electrictroy (912290) or some liar in media.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    2. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by sm62704 · · Score: 3, Funny

      But you don't really illustrate the point - the OP was talking about scientists, and you illustrated the point with a story about a journalist and an environmental activist

      "The OP was talking about Christian preachers, and you illustrated the point with a story about a journalist and Jerry Fallwall!

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    3. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by benito27uk · · Score: 5, Informative
      The Daily Telegraph Talks about this, two thirds of the way down this page... http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/04/13/do1307.xml

      Reprinted below:

      A talking point among "climate sceptics" on both sides of the Atlantic has been the bizarre tale of how the BBC's chief reporter on climate change censored an item on the BBC website after being harried by a "climate activist".

      On April 4 Roger Harrabin posted a story on the fact that world temperatures have not continued to rise in the past 10 years, and this year will fall to a level markedly below the average of the past two decades.

      Citing the World Meteorological Organisation, Mr Harrabin accurately reported that "global temperatures have not risen since 1998, prompting some to question climate change theory".

      This was a red rag to Jo Abbess of the Campaign Against Climate Change (Hon President, George Monbiot), who emailed Mr Harrabin demanding that he "correct" his item.

      Mr Harrabin insisted that what he had written was true. There are indeed eminent climate scientists "who question whether warming will continue as predicted".

      This only angered Ms Abbess further. She said it was "highly irresponsible to play into the hands of the sceptics", to "even hint that the Earth is cooling down again".

      Mr Harrabin, though he has led the BBC's tireless promotion of warmist orthodoxy, stood firm. Even in the "general media", he replied, "sceptics" highlight the lack of increase since 1998: to ignore this might give the impression that "debate is being censored".

      His item had, after all, added "we are still in a long-term warming trend".

      This was too much for Ms Abbess. She responded that this was not "a matter of debate". He should not be quoting the sceptics "whose voice is heard everywhere, on every channel, deliberately obstructing the emergence of the truth".

      Unless he changed his item, she said, "I would have to conclude that you are insufficiently educated to be able to know when you have been psychologically manipulated". She threatened to expose him by spreading his replies across the internet.

      At this point the BBC's man caved in. Within minutes a new version appeared, given the same time and date as that which he had consigned to Winston Smith's memory hole.

      Out went any mention of "sceptics" who question global warming. After a guarded reference to this year's "slightly cooler" temperatures, a new paragraph said that they would "still be above the average" and that we will "soon exceed the record year of 1998 because of the global warming induced by greenhouse gases".

      Of course we have long known where the BBC stands on climate change. But it is good to have such clear evidence that, even when one of its reporters tries to be honest, he can be whipped back into line by a pressure group.

      In the end, Ms Abbess still circulated the exchanges on the internet, to show the great victory she had won for the "emerging truth".

    4. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by Danse · · Score: 1

      If organizations like the BBC and CNN aren't willing to support their reporters, then they don't deserve to be called news agencies. I wonder if these cases were just the reporters getting cold feet, or if they actually went up the chain to see if they would be supported. After all, these aren't scientists that are calling them out, they're activists. Activists are often misguided and spend so much time trying to drill a certain set of beliefs into people that they are unable to see past their own propaganda and adapt to changing information and understanding of that information.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    5. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by abe+ferlman · · Score: 1

      This article is sorely lacking any explanation of Ms. Abbess's position beyond her conclusions, I can't help but think that she probably had a reason for saying what she said.

      More importantly though, in any politically charged debate, you're going to have idiots on both sides. The way to get the best treatment of the issue is not to pick an idiot to use as your straw-person, but instead to find the most sensible commentators on an issue and see how their ideas clash. So you found an activist who doesn't properly respect open debate, you want a cookie?

      --
      microsoftword.mp3 - it doesn't care that they're not words...
    6. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by asynchronous13 · · Score: 5, Informative
      This is a poor example because 1) it has nothing to do with biased scientists 2) the statement in question is deliberately mis-leading.

      global temperatures have not risen since 1998

      This statement was widely quoted to discredit climate change/global warming but it's really just a case of cherry-picked data. It was anomalously hot in 1998, and it's deliberately mis-leading to make generalized statements from anomalous data.

      It is accurate to claim that global temperatures in every year 1999-2007 have been cooler than the temperatures of 1998*. However, stating that the temperatures "have not risen since 1998" implies that temperatures have been cooling since 1998, which is not true. Temperatures from 2000 through 2005 certainly rose every year.

      Here's some pretty graphs to back up my statements.

      * It depends on the data set (land, ocean, atmospheric, US only etc). For certain data sets, 2005-2006 was hotter than 1998, but on average 1998 wins.

      I don't care which side of the argument you're on, I just hate it when someone deliberately mis-represents the data to support their side.

    7. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Might be worth loosening the Slashdot hordes on Ms Abbess to tell her "that you are insufficiently educated to be able to know when you have been psychologically manipulated"....

    8. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by damburger · · Score: 1

      Thankyou for providing the facts behind this bit of disinformation.

      The fact that people are willing to be so blatantly dishonest with figures demonstrates what is at stake between science and those who wish twist science into supporting their ideological and often authoritarian positions.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    9. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by t0rkm3 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, the article does exist. It was published by the BBC on April the 3rd, the author was Roger Harrabin.

      The quasi-retraction is here.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2008/04/climate_change_debate.html

    10. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by t0rkm3 · · Score: 1

      More important would be the BBC article. It was published April 3 and authored by Roger Harrabin.

      The transcript of the email conversation that may have precipitated the change can be found at
      http://www.jennifermarohasy.com/blog/archives/002906.html

      The quasi-retraction:
      http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors/2008/04/climate_change_debate.html

    11. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      from Jo Abbess to Roger Harrabin
      date Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 10:12 AM
      subject Correction Demanded : "Global temperatures 'to decrease'"

      Dear Roger,

      Please can you correct your piece published today entitled "Global temperatures 'to decrease'" :-

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7329799.stm

      1. "A minority of scientists question whether this means global warming has peaked" This is incorrect. Several networks exist that question whether global warming has peaked, but they contain very few actual scientists, and the scientists that they do contain are not climate scientists so have no expertise in this area.

      2. "Global temperatures this year will be lower than in 2007" You should not mislead people into thinking that the sum total of the Earth system is going to be cooler in 2008 than 2007. For example, the ocean systems of temperature do not change in yearly timescales, and are massive heat sinks that have shown gradual and continual warming. It is only near-surface air temperatures that will be affected by La Nina, plus a bit of the lower atmosphere.

      Thank you for applying your attention to all the facts and figures available, jo.

      =x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=

      from Roger Harrabin to Jo Abbess ,
      date Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 10:23 AM
      subject RE: Correction Demanded : "Global temperatures 'to decrease'"

      Dear Jo

      No correction is needed

      If the secy-gen of the WMO tells me that global temperatures will decrease, that's what we will report

      There are scientists who question whether warming will continue as projected by IPCC

      Best wishes RH

      =x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=

      from Jo Abbess to Roger Harrabin ,
      date Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 10:37 AM
      subject Re: Correction Demanded : "Global temperatures 'to decrease'"

      Hi Roger,

      I will forward your comments (unless you object) to some people who may wish to add to your knowledge.

      Would you be willing to publish information that expands on your original position, and which would give a better, clearer picture of what is going on ?

      Personally, I think it is highly irresponsible to play into the hands of the sceptics/skeptics who continually promote the idea that "global warming finished in 1998", when that is so patently not true.

      I have to spend a lot of my time countering their various myths and non-arguments, saying, no, go look at the Hadley Centre data. Global Warming is not over. There have been what look like troughs and plateaus/x before. It didn't stop then. It's not stopping now.

      It is true that people are debating Climate Sensitivity, how much exactly the Earth will respond to radiative forcing, but nobody is seriously refuting that increasing Greenhouse Gases cause increased global temperatures.

      I think it's counterproductive to even hint that the Earth is cooling down again, when the sum total of the data tells you the opposite. Glaringly.

      As time goes by, the infant science of climatology improves. The Earth has never experienced the kind of chemical adjustment in the atmosphere we see now, so it is hard to tell exactly what will happen based on historical science.

      However, the broad sweep is : added GHG means added warming.

      Please do not do a disservice to your readership by leaving the door open to doubt about that.

      jo.

      =x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=

      from Roger Harrabin to Jo Abbess ,
      date Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 10:57 AM
      subject RE: Correction Demanded : "Global temperatures 'to decrease'"

      The article makes all these points quite clear

      We can't ignore the fact that sceptics have jumped on the lack of increase since 1998. It is appearing reguarly now in general media
      Best to tackle this - and explain it, which is what we have done
      Or people feel like debate is being censored which makes them v suspicious

      Roger

      =x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=x=

      from Jo Abbess to Roger Harrabin ,

    12. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      On April 4 Roger Harrabin posted a story on the fact that world temperatures have not continued to rise in the past 10 years, and this year will fall to a level markedly below the average of the past two decades. The first part is so stupidly worded and misleading(*) and the other (if true) just means it will still be warmer than any year before 1980 despite being so "cold". And it still remains to be seen: Met Office Hadley Centre observations datasets

      We have recently changed the way that the smoothed time series of data were calculated. Data for 2008 were being used in the smoothing process as if they represented an accurate esimate of the year as a whole. This is not the case and owing to the unusually cool global average temperature in January 2008, it looked as though smoothed global average temperatures had dropped markedly in recent years, which is misleading.
      (*) Why misleading, you ask? Because the last ten years were the warmest, the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 11th and 12th warmest on record. Claiming acooling trend based on the fact that 1998 was the warmest year is plain stupid.
      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    13. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by ralphbecket · · Score: 1

      I hate to burst your bubble, but even ignoring the high point of 1998, the trend over the last ten years is cooling if you don't cherry pick your source (see e.g., http://rankexploits.com/musings/2008/ipcc-projections-continue-to-falsify/ which uses GISS, HadCRU, MSU, and NOAA).

      As I scientist I see it as my job to be skeptical - that is, to pay at least as much attention to falsification as to confirmation. I'm constantly amazed at the shrillness of the climate debate where, for most, scientific detachment seems to have been replaced with emotional involvement.

    14. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by ralphbecket · · Score: 1, Troll

      Ooh, testy. Is this one of those irregular verbs?
      - you PROVIDE facts;
      - they DISTORT facts;
      - we (right thinking people) have CONCENSUS;
      - they (oil company shills) are DELUDED or FRAUDULENT.

      Of course, the tone of your post suggests that your position is neither ideological or authoritarian.

    15. Re:Can you please link to the CNN article? by wfolta · · Score: 1

      But you don't really illustrate the point - the OP was talking about scientists, and you illustrated the point with a story about a journalist and an environmental activist. Please explain where the meta-magical process takes place to make a Scientist... the kind that is obviously far above any journalist, activist, or the rest of us mere mortals. (Oops, I'm a scientist, too. It was part of my job title for a while, even. How could I have missed the special ceremony empowering me with absolute neutrality?)
  129. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do people assume that we don't understand the 'other theories', just because we accept the Theory of Evolution?

  130. Good review by Genevish · · Score: 3, Informative

    Scientific American has a good review of the movie (from the viewpoint of the evil scientists of course): http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=ben-steins-expelled-review-john-rennie

    1. Re:Good review by Misch · · Score: 2, Informative
      --

      --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
  131. Ben Stein Is An Idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... a wealthy idiot, but an idiot nonetheless.

  132. Why are you asking a science teacher about God? by argent · · Score: 1

    But for all the thinking and proving there's one question science can never answer, and that is "why"? The universe exists. Why? Life exists. Why? Life changes and evolves. Why?

    Why are you asking a science teacher to explain a philosophical or religious question? Would you ask your history teacher how to derive the pythagorean theorem? Would you ask your philosophy teacher how C++ templates work? Would you ask your english teacher to explain continental drift and subduction zones? Would you ask your math teacher about Donne's use of metaphor?

    The origin of life isn't what "Origin of the Species" is about. It's not part of the theory that you're attacking. It doesn't matter whether the theory of evolution can explain it or not, because it's not about the the origin of life, the universe, and everything, it's about speciation. That's all.

    Go ask your debate teacher about the term "straw man".

    1. Re:Why are you asking a science teacher about God? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why are you asking a science teacher to explain a philosophical or religious question?"

      Why do scientists write philosophy books and hoist them up as scientific fact (Dawkins)?

      Why do 90% of the posts on this topic that come from those who are scientifically minded include some mocking reference to Flying Spaghetti Monsters, relating it as science rathar than philosophy? (i.e. I'm right, there's not evidence -- which is a fallacy).

      You want to attack ignorance you should do it evenly.

    2. Re:Why are you asking a science teacher about God? by argent · · Score: 1

      Why do scientists write philosophy books and hoist them up as scientific fact (Dawkins)?

      They're responding to philosophers and theologians writing philosophy books and hoisting them up as scientific fact.

      I'm not a philosopher or a theologian, so you'll have to help me here.

      Can you pull up some actual quotes where Dawkins is making statements that aren't supported by the evidence? Refuting false statements doesn't qualify. Claiming that this or that religious or philosophical position isn't necessary to explain the evidence doesn't qualify, unless there's evidence that actually requires one take a particular religious or philosophical position. Oh, and "we don't know X" doesn't imply "you need theological entity A to explain X".

      Why do 90% of the posts on this topic that come from those who are scientifically minded include some mocking reference to Flying Spaghetti Monsters, relating it as science rather than philosophy?

      Because it's a humorous way of pointing out that "we don't know X" doesn't imply "you need theological entity A to explain X". Belief in the FSM is as "scientific" as any other religious position: that is, it's not scientific at all.

      The fact that the FSM, theological entity A, or Murphy's Law is "not scientific" is not a judgmental statement, mind you. It's simply pointing out that religion is not part of science, it's not testable by scientific methods. You might as well say that they're "not tasty" or "not blue".

  133. No-win for science by DissentingClown · · Score: 1

    The whole argument is a no-win situation for scientists. They are presented with an insidious counter argument to the theory of evolution, and can respond in one of two ways.

    1.) Ignore it based on the fact that it does not follow the proper rules for discussion ( i.e. it isn't, and can never be, a scientific theory ) - The opposing side can then paint them as arrogant and anti religious ( and nazis apparently ).

    2.) Bend to public pressure and discuss it in the same forum as those hypothesis that do follow the proper rules for discussion - An "alternate faction" with no ties whatsoever to the first ( sarcasm intended ) can claim that science compromises its neutrality and is biased by public pressure and opinion, thus bringing into question all of the scientific discoveries...ever; undermining the hardearned respect science has garnered over the past however many years.

    I think that scientists have correctly determined that if they lend ID any amount of weight in a scientific discussion they are slitting their own wrists. Unfortunately the leaders of the opposition are very good at spin. Since the majority of the individuals that make up the opposing group don't like to think about anything longer then it takes their leaders to tell them what to believe, they will never understand that science will never and can never enter in to a scientific discussion of ID without invalidating itself. Without that realization its very easy for an individual to be convinced that scientists are 'arrogant' ( and apparently nazis? ).

    Some of the blame for the current state of this situation is to be laid at science's figurative feet. The representatives of science are not very good at PR, and often take the stance that if someone is too stupid to understand something after having it clearly explained to them, then its not the scientists problem. Its easy to paint someone as arrogant when they often are. They need to do a better job of responding to the criticism with explanations of how important their guidelines are, and how compromising them leads to fundamental cracks in the only thing they consider inviolate, their integrity.
  134. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

    And because there are no testable alternative hypotheses. Even if you swallow the full Creationism/ID pill, you still need a way to explain and predict things like bird flu. It may well be that his Noodliness is driving our speciation, but how does he do it?

    --
    I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
  135. Re:What I am opposed to ... by davidannis · · Score: 1

    Which is why I have tirelessly advocated for the teaching of alternative viewpoints to the THEORY of heliocentrism. This "scientific" theory has been contested since the 1600s. I now know that my failure to get an appointment in a high class academic institution in astronomy or geocentric universe studies is clearly another example of how genuine debate is stifled by the scientific establishment. -- David http://teachthecontroversy.com/

  136. That is simply a false claim by jopet · · Score: 1

    While there might be biologists who claim that evolution is answering the question about why life exists, it is simply a false claim to say that this would be the standard. Unlike creationists, theists, and other whackos, most scientists know what they do not know. Sometimes they accept a weak theory as a in place of a simple "dont know", but overall, most biologists will tell you that the question of why life exists is not answered. Also, we do not know why the universe works the way it does, or why it even exists.
    There are scientists who think they know more about that but some of them are nearly as crazy as creationists.

    The bottom line is: the scientific community is well aware that 1) we do not know a lot about why life has come into being and 2) god is not the answer and explains nothing at all.

  137. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Tranzistors · · Score: 1

    >They can produce good research and put forward a good testable hypothesis that can better explain the world or the liars for Jesus can just STFU.

    I hope you understand that science has nothing to do with truth. It is about predictions (thus usability). If a theory (in loose sense) doesn't predict anything, pragmatic scientist would go 'so what? It is of no use to me.'

    What you are saying is that if something cannot be tested, than it is false. That is stupid. Take GÃdel's Incompleteness theorem. Form an abstract:

    The implication is that all logical system of any complexity are, by definition, incomplete; each of them contains, at any given time, more true statements than it can possibly prove according to its own defining set of rules.

    Even in world that we define ourselves, there are true things we cannot prove. I will make bold and intuitive guess that it is so for real world.

  138. Dawkins' view on Expelled by robbo · · Score: 2, Informative

    Richard Dawkins offers his views: Lying for Jesus?

    --
    So long, and thanks for all the Phish
    1. Re:Dawkins' view on Expelled by DeVilla · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid I don't care enough to read the Dawkins article or read all the review of Stein's movie nor do I care enough to watch the movie. (But yes, I'm skimming /., shut up.) I had to chuckle at this. If this is really Dawkins' views about Ben Stein's movie, that Stein is Lying for Jesus, it's just great. Isn't Stein Jewish?

  139. RAWilson spoke of this 22 years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in a book called The New Inquisition. Good reading.

  140. I'm sick of the hypocrisy by FireDownBelowski · · Score: 0, Troll

    I can't stand when supposed Christians claim that ID has no place in the classroom. I can only assume that absolutely no research has been done into the subject. Most posters quote evidence for evolution in their debates, which tells me that they only researched one side of the argument. If people are so dogmatic about their precious evolution, why are they so hesitant do any research into any other theories? 400 years ago it was ridiculous to think that the earth was round; there was simply too much evidence to the contrary. Why are we as a people so proud that we can't admit that maybe, just maybe we are in a time when the widely accepted theory of the origins of life and the adaptation of our species can't have another explanation, even if that theory has massive ramifications. The fact that any intelligent discussion on opposing theories to evolution (intelligent design or otherwise) is completely shut out of any discussion for being âoeridiculousâ, shows that our society is hardly progressive. No matter what people think, there is MASSIVE scientific evidence for ID, itâ(TM)s just that in this day and age (and in every one for that matter), whoever makes the most noise is right. ID advocates donâ(TM)t have the press to back them up, or most of the ego-centric scientific community for that matter. Itâ(TM)s not that the evidence is lacking, itâ(TM)s that admitting evolution has HUGE flaws is something the scientific community is not willing to do. They hide behind their grossly over generalized theories and hope that people canâ(TM)t wade through their garbage enough to know any better. Open up your eyes people, ID advocates arenâ(TM)t the closed minded ones here.

    1. Re:I'm sick of the hypocrisy by BetaJim · · Score: 1

      there is MASSIVE scientific evidence for ID
      Why don't you provide some of this evidence then? I bet that you have none. No ID proponent has ever shown any positive evidence for ID. I wonder why that is?

      evolution has HUGE flaws
      Why don't you elaborate on what these flaws are? I bet that these flaws are simply your misunderstanding of what evolutionary theory actually says.
      --

      "Drug related crime" is a misnomer, "prohibition related crime" is the more accurate and correct phrase.

    2. Re:I'm sick of the hypocrisy by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "I can't stand when supposed Christians claim that ID has no place in the classroom."
      science classroom to be more precise, because ID is not science.

      "why are they so hesitant do any research into any other theories? "

      there not, there is nothing to test with ID. No falsifiable tests at all.

      "400 years ago it was ridiculous to think that the earth was round; "

      not true.
      "there was simply too much evidence to the contrary. "

      there was none, and in fact there was a falsifiable test to prove the world was round.

      "The fact that any intelligent discussion on opposing theories to evolution (intelligent design or otherwise) is completely shut out of any discussion for being ÃoeridiculousÃ, shows that our society is hardly progressive."

      Again, not true, but you need to bring some testable hypothosys to the table,.

      "there is MASSIVE scientific evidence for ID, "
      there is exactly no evidence. none, zip nada.
      Theologically speaking, I would argue there can't be, because there can not be proof of God. God needs faith. That's another discussion.

      "whoever makes the most noise is right. "
      hard to do that in this day in age specifically because we can test and make predictions with the theory of evolution.

      "that admitting evolution has HUGE flaws is something the scientific community is not willing to do"
      and this flaw is...?

      "grossly over generalized"
      no, there pretty specific actually. Like, we should find this type of creature at this point in the earth. and they find it.

      "Open up your eyes people, ID advocates arenÃ(TM)t the closed minded ones here."

      since they are the ones with no evidence at all, and refuse to even understand evolution, they are the closed minded ones.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  141. Flock of Dodos by jalefkowit · · Score: 5, Informative
    If you want to see a movie that:
    • pretty thoroughly debunks ID;
    • at the same time, challenges scientists to be less dogmatic and more open in how they connect to the public;
    • and is actually funny and fun to watch to boot
    ... go grab "Flock of Dodos" on DVD. (Here's the Amazon reviews page for it.) It's a smart, insightful film that challenges assumptions on both sides of the issue. If it got one tenth of the exposure that the craptastic "Expelled" is getting, the country would be a better place.
  142. The sad thing is what it leads to by Epeeist · · Score: 1

    One of the things the film does is associate the ToE with Nazism. It certainly seems to have frightened this gentleman - http://richarddawkins.net/article,2488,Open-Letter-to-a-victim-of-Ben-Steins-lying-propaganda,Richard-Dawkins

  143. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Just+Another+Perl+Ha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually... it's much more likely that they don't know what "theory" means.

  144. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

    No. But evidence suggesting that the flat earth theory may be flawed is NOT evidence that the pyramid earth theory is correct.

    Similarly, if you think there is a problem with the theory of evolution, that does not automatically make your alternate theory true.

    --
    "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
  145. its all fantasy by methuselah · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    From what i am reading here I am sure this will never see the light of day but, here goes. I read post after post indicating that you have to be a moonbat to take anything but evolution seriously. This all based on the fact that the "experts" agree. Well let me draw an analogy that will work here, "according to the experts windows is the best operating system"! Now after visiting oh say 1,000 mainstream websites on the subject of computing it could be pretty safe to run around and state rather authoritatively windows is the source of all computer greatness. Oh, sure there is a group of nutbags that keep mumbling irrationally about bsd and linux but, the experts assure us that they are fanatics and there is nothing whatsoever to what they are saying. I know what I believe, and I also know, that enough people are full of crap on a wide variety of topics, and that they pontificate about pure dribble in front of some pretty impressive backdrops to add legitimacy to their bunk. So much of what is declaratively said by "scientists" is based on a long convoluted rube goldberg set of suppositions and extrapolations that accepting what they say as the incontrovertible truth, and therefore the final word, makes you an idiot. I am not agreeing with intelligent design but, I do agree with what I think is the premise of the movie which is, a lot of scientists that espouse theories are really narrow minded self important megalomaniacs that in all reality have no definitive answers. Especially when they insist that anyone that disagrees with their "facts" is a poopy head.

  146. Re:Monkey's uncle? by deander2 · · Score: 1

    would you please link to said other theory? the only source i've ever seen referenced seems to be simply a collection of (largely unverifiable) stories. there is a history of people claiming verifiable predictions, but AFAIK the world still hasn't ended yet, so these can hardly be taken as support. it still surprises me the current draft made it through whatever peer review process the early catholic's had...but who am i to judge?

    i don't ask for proof that god exists. *any* verifiable evidence i would consider a miracle at this point.

  147. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Just+Another+Perl+Ha · · Score: 1

    But..... I thought the Earth was only flat because the Pope decreed it to be so.... ;-)

  148. Geek Cred Now Zero by sohp · · Score: 1

    I used to love watching "Win Ben Stein's Money", and he was even a guest at JavaOne and hosted a game for the attendees. We all thought he was a smart geeky guy. Talking about burning your geek credential in a fiery blaze of a flamewar.

  149. Let them speak out by damburger · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    There are a lot of stealth creationists out there that conceal their idiotic beliefs in order to pass through the academic establishment. I recently met a physics graduate who when sufficiently interrogated admitted that he thought the universe was less than a million years old. He had got through his exams and coursework simply by lying about what he really thought.

    So I say lets do as they are accusing us of doing anyway and persecute the motherfuckers. Thinking one thing and saying another to get ahead is entirely antithetical to the principles of science, so it isn't at all out of order for us to expel these intellectually dishonest retards from out midst.

    Prominently featured in the propaganda reel of a trailer is a straw-man science teacher being unable to answer Steins question, and the same question being addressed to Professor Dawkins and his admission that science doesn't know for sure being portrayed as an admission of God.

    Perhaps I shouldn't be so aggressive. Maybe its the wisdom teeth I currently have erupting from my gums like a pack of angry xenomorphs, but these people make me feel extremely confrontational and aggressive.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    1. Re:Let them speak out by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      Dude - gotta come out against you on this one. Einstein had to pass tests on Newtonian physics, as did Schrodinger. If you've got a radical idea that overturns conventional logic, then by all means, "lie" on the tests - or mentally preface them with "According to current theories...". I personally don't believe everything I was taught in physics classes, but would never have been so arrogant as to push my own pet theories in a test environment.

      And if someone is capable of pursuing mainstream science, while looking for validation of their own theories in their spare time (or funded by someone they've managed to convince), then that *is* science.

      Bottom line, I guess: less science education is *not* the answer to a lack of science education.

    2. Re:Let them speak out by damburger · · Score: 1

      Rubbish. All the people you mention learnt the existing theories extensively and then began to overturn them. Newton studied and understood the physics of his day (such as it was) and obtained his degree before he began the work he is now famous for. Einstein was well aware of the aether, and only overturned it because experimental evidence 20 years prior had shown aether to be nonsense. Schroedinger developed the ideas of quantum theory to fill in the theoretical gap left by the Bohr atom, and had to draw on his knowledge of both that and classical wave theory to do it. Simply put, you cannot extend the boundaries of scientific knowledge without first being understanding all that knowledge.

      None of them intentionally lied in order to attack the scientific and educational institutions from within. How dare you compare these great men to creationists? Part of the comment you just made suggests you may be one of them yourself. Can I ask how old you think the Earth is? The Universe?

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    3. Re:Let them speak out by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      Heh - you've accused the wrong guy. My disagreements are more with the particle physics side of things, and I'm well aware that I haven't had enough schooling to take on established theories.

      But let's say I did go back to school to gain that knowledge. Should I answer all of the questions on tests as if my theory were right and the established ones were wrong? No. As you said - I have to first understand existing theories if I want to be taken seriously when challenging them.

      The same rules apply to creationists. If they want to take on established theories, they shouldn't be shunted out of schools just because they do not already hold the view that what they're learning is correct. The privilege of learning the details of a subject in order to challenge it should be open to *everyone*. You seem to want to shut the door on the people who need to learn *the most*.

      I'm not saying it wouldn't be nice to shut the door of science to those who are unwilling or unable to actually perform science. But it's a pie-in-the-sky idea. There is no way of telling who is unwilling/unable, and who is simply ignorant and in need of education. And educating the ignorant is far more valuable than cultivating a "pure" academic environment.

      Further, if we start allowing people to be dismissed for beliefs they hold, it opens the door for all sorts of abuse.

      Finally, science is supposed to be impersonal. It doesn't matter who says something, or what beliefs they hold. What matters is what they put down on paper, and whether it passes the basic test of "is this reasonable?". If a creationist who believes the earth is 6k years old can show that in certain circumstances, carbon dating is off by X%, what does it matter that he's a creationist? If the numbers are right, they're right.

      Don't confuse this with supporting anyone pushing a creationist agenda. I've seen a lot of creationists with what I can only describe a contempt for science, ignoring those findings which do not match their expectations. But just because there are a few bad apples (80 or 90 percent :) - doesn't mean we should close the door to people willing to examine the evidence.

  150. Intelligently Designed Darwin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would call my self a "Intelligently Designed Darwin". In other words to fill in the gap of how it all started I think there was some intelligent design but evolution did happen. I think of it this way. I can create bread. When I do so I put the ingredients together and mix (Intelligent part). Then I let it stand (The Darwin part). In the end I took away from the movie that we should allow ideas to flow and if you can prove them all the better. If not well there is always tomorrow to try to prove it. (After all no one can PROVE how it all started....)

    1. Re:Intelligently Designed Darwin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I totally agree and you are in the minority here with this opinion.

          The complexity of life, especially intelligent life, itself cannot be reasoned away to chance as many in science believe, there must be a designer who then created the seedlings of life of which evolution is a natural progression.

          Whats interesting is that science has duplicated this in electro-mechanical format by designing robots that learn and evolve via onboard AI and todays they are stricly electronic in nature and in the future will be biologicaly based.

          But ask this same group if there is the possibility there is a creator or even creator's and most of them shudder at the possibility reasoning that the most complex systems, intelligent life known to science are due to chance.

  151. Questions? No, please... by aron1231 · · Score: 1

    i thought the whole basis of science was an openness to questioning and critique. is this any less true for science itself (as a field of study within society), than it is for the hypotheses it produces? i don't see the cause for uproar... if science is as good as it claims (and i believe that, for the most part, it is), than it should easily stand up to widespread critique.

  152. Brahma year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When it comes to people pointing out how spookily accurate the Bible has been in predicting things before they happen, presaging science, I always think of the Brahma year.

    It's about 4 Billion years.

    Spookily close to the age of the earth.

    So how come this little spookily accurate prediction was missed out of the Bible and instead turns up in a mostly non-theistic religion? Should we drop the bible and move over to Bhuddism?

  153. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    Stein is not discussing the Science. But, the Atheistic philosophy of Darwinism that says its all an accident and random.

    It's a good thing that Darwinism doesn't say that it's an accident, or random.

    Nor is there any such thing as an "Atheistic philosophy".

  154. I agree with the idiocity by jopet · · Score: 1

    And it baffles me every day why people get so happy in believing in a "higher power" that created "it all" without any necessity or evidence whatsoever. Why does it make anyone more happy to believe in his religion's special version of some imaginary god who did it all instead of just the universe itself?
    In reality there is no need to believe in a higher power or god. The concept of god (any version of it) is useless and *much more* complex as an explanation than what is explained by it.
    And why do those who continue to babble about "higher power" or "god" never every despair in trying to explain the existence of their "higher power" or "god"?

    I'd say, everything points to born-in insanity and irrationality that somehow developed during evolution.

  155. Welcome! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to our take-us-back-to-the-Stone-Age overlords.

    Ben Stein doesn't know jack about science or the scientific method.

  156. Not just American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Seems like the UK has it's own problems with the cdesign proponentists.

    When given a choice of three descriptions for the development of life on Earth, people were asked which one or ones they would like to see taught in science lessons in British schools:

            * 44% said creationism should be included
            * 41% intelligent design
            * 69% wanted evolution as part of the science curriculum.
  157. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Epeeist · · Score: 1

    Umm... Stein is not discussing the Science. But, the Atheistic philosophy of Darwinism that says its all an accident and random. Lets take this one bit at a time:

    1. There is no such thing as "Darwinism". If you want to talk about "Darwin's theory of evolution then that's fine.

    2. Darwin's theory offers a possible mechanism for evolution. It is a scientific theory. It is not a philosophy

    3. The second element of the theory, mutation, is random (though not completely). The critical third part, selection is not random. This is the bit that cretinists always fudge.

  158. science popuilarity by hany · · Score: 1

    There were times, when Arabs were we can say scientific superpower. It was (maybe as a coincidence) at times when science was not greatly popular in Europe (middle ages).

    So the question is, whether USA is following similar path taken previously by ancient Europe and then by Arabs. (side question is, whether something like renaissance will occur on islamic countries)

    --
    hany
  159. Re:What I am opposed to ... by Sockatume · · Score: 1

    That's what the producers of the movie, and the Discovery Institute, want you to believe. Fact of the matter is, natural selection is always under attack in biology, because nothing makes a career like coming up with a novel mechanism for evolution. Why are intelligent design "researchers" getting terse treatment? Their research is bad. That's why. Most "intelligent design" (basically, everything the Disco Institute has contributed) is just a co-opting of the term by creation science, and has nothing at all to do with the search for evidence of design, so isn't even science at all.

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  160. Making his point for him. by jav1231 · · Score: 1

    "is simply an anti-science propaganda film aimed at creating controversy where none exists, while promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students."

    In actuality that statement simply augments Steins point. We loath Microsoft for slamming competition but for some reason science wants to be immune. ID may be a crock but let these things be debated, not taken for granted.

    1. Re:Making his point for him. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      ID may be a crock but let these things be debated, not taken for granted. Sure. But what's up for debate that isn't already being debated? And what does this movie contribute to the debate?
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:Making his point for him. by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Well I think it highlights an issue. Which is that there's a discriminatory nature towards those who hold a differing opinion. This is something that isn't limited to this debate. We see it throughout the political debate as well. Maybe it's human nature but it borders on bigotry. But hey, we're all comfortable behind our walls surrounded by like-minded people.

      The disturbing trend in science is that we're seeing it in other areas of debate like climate science. In that area experts in the area are being marginalized in the media for not towing the line. Granted, it's not a perfect comparison but does speak to polarization, discrimination, and marginalization.

  161. Re:Monkey's uncle? by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    Some of the evidence is underwhelming and very poor, indeed. I've seen links here in slashdot to bird studies that claimed speciation occurred on the basis that that minor physical attributes (colors, mostly) were resulting in birds of the same species choosing not to mate after events in human time-scales physically separated the populations for a time.

    Certainly that could be a first step, possibly a necessary step. But it is not sufficient to the claim of speciation.

    The point is that most people arguing about it really don't understand evolution. They latch onto it with all the religious fervor of misplaced faith. And ironically, these adherents to some kind of "atheist" white labcoat cult use it as a bludgeon to bash the religious. So, it's no surprise that they try to fight back with nonsense like ID.

    Ignorance is should not be ignored wherever it is found. Especially if it occurs in or around scientific fields.

    About your sig:
    If someone doesn't trust ssh, which has popular open and closed-source implementations, and been reviewed by many, why would they trust some home-grown alternative with a significantly smaller base of eyes?

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  162. On science and the strength of arguments by Tetsujin · · Score: 1

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean?


    Because the evidence for evolution is overwhelming?

    You know what's really frustrating about this whole thing?

    Someone could write a very large, very thorough, very convincing document that establishes an iron-clad argument in support of the current scientific understanding of the world - but to those not inclined to read and learn to understand that document, it's no more convincing that (probably less convincing than) a catchy 10 second sound bite, or a rallying cry filled with logical fallacies, misinformation, and ad hominem attacks... Much like the film which Slashdot is now astroturfing...
    --
    Bow-ties are cool.
  163. Even Darwin himself admitted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    ...that it would be absurd to think that the eye could have come to be through the process of natural selection.

    "To suppose that the eye, with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest possible degree." -- Charles Darwin 1872

    1. Re:Even Darwin himself admitted... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Nice troll.

      For the curious, the rest of the paragraph reads:
      "When it was first said that the sun stood still and the world turned round, the common sense of mankind declared the doctrine false; but the old saying of Vox populi, vox Dei ["the voice of the people = the voice of God "], as every philosopher knows, cannot be trusted in science. Reason tells me, that if numerous gradations from a simple and imperfect eye to one complex and perfect can be shown to exist, each grade being useful to its possessor, as is certain the case; if further, the eye ever varies and the variations be inherited, as is likewise certainly the case; and if such variations should be useful to any animal under changing conditions of life, then the difficulty of believing that a perfect and complex eye could be formed by natural selection, should not be considered as subversive of the theory."

  164. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Sockatume · · Score: 1

    It'd be kind of helpful if he did discuss the science, because all of the people he claims were "expelled" were actually flunked (or denied tenure, in one case) for doing a completely cack-handed job. Nobody was thrown out just for "questioning evolution", they were thrown out for engaging in the career-killing albatross of Disco-Institute intelligent design creationism. (As distinct from intelligent design, the concept.)

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  165. "Research Papers" by Tony · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The reason they don't get published is because their work isn't science. That's the problem with ID as a scientific hypothesis -- there's no way to test it.

    IDers present stupid arguments, and then complain they are being persecuted by scientists. Apparently, idiots hate it when you call them idiots.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:"Research Papers" by PhireN · · Score: 1
      You can't test evolution either, only state example from the world.

      Just hear me out on this.

      Michael Behe wrote a book on 'irreducible complexity' stating that (among other things) the Bacterial Flegella is made up of over 40 incredibly complex proteins, that self assemble into a molecular motor, complete with a driveshaft (see animations here)

      If a single one of those components was missing, then the motor would simply not function.
      And as Darwin pointed out in the origin of a species (page 90 in the first edition):

      If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down. So far the scientific community haven't provided a way for the Bacterial flagella to evolve, just that a small subset of those same components could be used for another function, see wikipedia

      Until you solve this small kink, you can not prove that evolution is correct.
      The reason you have never heard about this before: Behe's book was labeled fringe science, and shunned by the scientific community.

      But the observation that the flagellum couldn't evolve with our current understanding is completely valid science.

    2. Re:"Research Papers" by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      And as Darwin pointed out in the origin of a species (page 90 in the first edition):

      Evolution and the scientific method have come a long way since the 1800s.

      Until you solve this small kink, you can not prove that evolution is correct.

      This is a complete fallicy, there is plenty of other evidence. Second, there is no such thing as proof, only evidence. And there is plenty of that.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    3. Re:"Research Papers" by cycik · · Score: 1

      Michael Behe is one of the liars for Jesus I am talking about. He tried to use such a broad definition of science to include ID at the Kitzmiller et al v. Dover School Board trial that he had to admit under oath that be his definition astrology would be admissible as science. Also in the same trial the devout Catholic biochemist Ken Miller specifically debunked the bacterial flagellum, in that the I believe the Type 3 bacterial secretory system has a majority of the components of the bacterial flagellum, and could be a functional system that evolution co-opted for the flagellum. Also a large stack of books and papers were placed in front of him showing scientific research on how this type of system could have evolved. But I suppose having an arguement so utterly trounced in court that even the Bush appointed Christian judge pretty much called the defense (i.e the creationists) liars in his court decision and found for the prosecution. Is no reason to bring up the debate here. Not even the fact that Michael Behe's book _Darwin's Black Box_ at this point has been so discredited that he has a new book trying to make god the great mutator since the god of the gaps arguments in the previous book do not hold water. Interesting too that he still has his job at LeHigh university. He does apparently know his biochemistry in other areas. Even though he is a complete shill for the Discovery Institute (the creationist lobby). Kind of goes against the whole premise of the Expelled movie. Why is that? Probably because the people who made Expelled are complete and total liars and know they don't have a real fact to stand on.

    4. Re:"Research Papers" by PhireN · · Score: 1

      Its not a complete fallicy, with scientific method it only takes a single flaw to disprove a theory, see Falsifiability
      Of course, this doesn't prove that evolution is wrong, just that it might need some tweaks.

    5. Re:"Research Papers" by calcapt · · Score: 1

      You are correct to say that IF we cannot provide hypotheses explaining how these proteins managed to aggregate and form the structure of a flagella we cannot prove evolution.

      But, if one argues that our current state of knowledge provides no explanation for the evolution of the flagella, I would say they lack imagination.

      Here's a hypothesis:

      If the flagella began as a protein export mechanism, it could have evolved into the Type III secretion system and then into a flagella.

      Further speculation:
      The motor of this proposed protein export mechanism could have started out as a simple pore complex geared towards protein export. Mutations cause some of these exported proteins to adhere to extracellular portions of this export mechanism, forming the tube like structure of the Type III needle. Over time, mutations alter the structure slightly, without harming the function of this apparatus in protein export, causing it to resemble flagella more and more. Without selection pressure against these developments, these changes persist. In fact, genetic drift may cause these changes to become fixed in a population. Gradually, even more changes occur contributing to the drive motor, resulting in the flagella you see today.

      Granted, all of the above is merely a story, but that's not to say that it isn't true. I don't think this scenario is that far fetched, and further study of the flagella may even validate it.

      At this point I'd like to point out that it could be interesting to look at research into the specific events occurring during flagella assembly; if you think about it, the flagella IS assembled piece by piece. One would think that flagella intermediates would resemble intermediates in flagella evolution. By studying these "assembly line intermediates", function could possibly be derived (my old biology teacher's mantra: form gives function), further answering the question of flagella development.

    6. Re:"Research Papers" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unsolved kinks != falsifiable results.

  166. Expeleld from commenting on the youtube video by objekt · · Score: 1

    The owner of the video must be screening comments and not allowing alternative views. Irony, anyone?

    --
    -- Boycott Shell
  167. Jesus and chaotic weather by davidwr · · Score: 1

    I thought he came to save us from chaotic weather patterns.

    *joke*

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  168. Bueller...Bueller.... by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

    In light of this recent information regarding Ben Stein's teaching methods, Ferris Bueller's decision to skip school looks better and better.

    Way to go, Bueller.

  169. Philosopher's Burden? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If Philosophy were lumbered with ID, I can see three potential ways to include it in the Cambridge syllabus (which is the one I took).

    1) A short article about it could be used in a first year discussion group alongside Hume's 'On Miracles'.

    2) It could be mentioned tangentially when studying Hume's 'Dialogues of Natural Religion' and the contemporary philosophers who defend Cleanthes.

    However, against 1 and 2, serious metaphysics hasn't much interest in ID per se. There are hardly any arguments in support of it that haven't been around since the 1600s, and they've all been criticised to death.

    What is new is the fact that abductive reasoning is being promoted as science even when the thing abduced (and its properties) are undiscoverable/unverifiable by empirical means. (Compare abductive reasoning that posits the existence of a planet because of unexpected movements in other celestial bodies.) So perhaps the question is:

    3) What properties should a theory have in order to be usefully called a scientific theory, and what are the wider consequences for science if ID-like theories are admitted? (e.g. what new sort of explanations could you legitimately give to existing phenomena if ID-like reasoning were acceptable? Are those explanations worth having?)

    To wit, it's not ID itself that's interesting, but whether or not relaxing the requirements of scientific methodology in this way is damaging to science as a mode of inquiry.

    JPSS

  170. Hold it a second.. by BRUTICUS · · Score: 1

    So if you believe in creationism the Darwinists will release a herd of Cheetahs on you?? That is just WRONG. Do Darwinists have no morals whatsoever???

  171. The comments here indicate the movie was a success by Evangelion · · Score: 4, Informative

    The comments here are basically taking the movie at it's word -- that Intelligent Designers are being "expelled" from academia.

    This is a lie. The whole movie is a lie. The irony of both invoking Nazis, yet so successfully implementing the "Big Lie" strategy has to set some kind of reprehensible high water mark.

    The three "expelled" people presented in the movie -- these are the worst stories the filmmakers could find -- involved a professor who failed to get tenure because he wasn't good enough, a woman who had her contract run out and didn't have it renewed, and them someone who said he was "fired" from the Smithsonian, despite actually being an unpaid research assistant whose term ran out.

    Compare and contrast.

    This movie makes utterly baseless claims that the academic freedom of ID proponents is under attack.

    This is a lie.

    Yet, they tell the lie, and then you look at comments about the movie, and you have people assuming that the truth is "somewhere in the middle", or that "both sides need to be considered", or some other trite cliche.

    Why do they get a free pass here? Seriously, the production of this movie has been filled with lies by the makers -- these allegedly religious people -- and yet, people still take the movie at face value.

    They lied to the interviewees, they attempted to pirate animations used in the movie, after being humiliated during the pre-release screenings they lied to cover it up, they lied to the people who wanted to see screenings -- they're liars.

    And then you look at comments here, and people talk like the movie makes valid arguments -- it does not. Aside from lies about academic suppression, it's just one long Godwin -- "there's a very tenuous link between social Darwinism and the philosophy of the Nazis, therefore believing in Evolution leads to the Holocaust".

    If, in an argument, someone tells baseless, reprehensible lies about a subject, the truth isn't "somewhere in the middle". The liars are really just lying.

  172. Don't confuse the POINT for the EXAMPLE by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, Ben Stein's POINT (about the scientific and academic communities developing an orthodoxy of thought and belief which they defend as mindlessly and reactionarily as any medieval Pope) is tainted by the particular point he choses to use as an example: Creationism.

    Look, truth in reporting here: I'm a long time questioning Christian whose faith seems to be strengthening as I pass 40. I think Creationism - and the idea that it should be taught as some sort of alternative scientific theory (ID being nothing more than camouflage for that) - is ludicrous and the very idea would be funny if it wasn't so serious. FWIW on this subject, I don't think the miracle of creation is any less miraculous having taken billions of years, instead of 6 days. (Shrug.) So that's where I'm coming from on his particular choice of issues.

    But no honest observer can deny that there is a (ironically) near-religious mania in academia today for defending certain points of view. Even this wouldn't be so bad - fervency itself is no sin. But the fact that certain subjects seem to be held as above questioning, and that anyone who does raise such an issue isn't merely disagreed with, but subjected to vicious ad hominem attacks and bitter calumny...well, that's the tragedy.

    The scientific community has no moral obligation to treat & debate every idea equally, certainly. The guy who thinks the earth floats on the back of a turtle shouldn't anyone's time in an astrophysics discussion. Creationism is about that credible: dispense with it, and move on. But there are a number of other subjects which ARE NOT so certain - from Anthropogenic Global Climate Change to the forbidden idea that different ethnic groups (or even the two sexes) might have different intellectual capabilities. Friendships are broken, careers destroyed over simply RAISING questions about these topics.

    Honestly, what's happening in the debate over ID and evolution is the closest real-world analogue I've ever seen to simple internet trolling: merely bothering to argue the point, means the troll has won.

    --
    -Styopa
  173. What a waste of Ben Stein's Money by joeyp · · Score: 1

    Ben, newsflash for you, there is no God, and the bible is simply a book of really good stories. Sorry to break it to ya, pal.

  174. subduction leades to orogeny by fishdan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, there is a good bit of symmetry here. I often say that the Intelligent Design(ID) people admire how the Man Made Climate Change (MMCC) people have pushed their cause. If you believe in the scientific method you have no problems with anyone challenging a theory. In fact, you'd welcome it because it either disproves the theory or makes it more accurate.

    Evolution has advanced in it's "completeness" as a theory because of many challenges made to it over the years, and those challenges have helped science immensely. Just because a theory is wideley accepted however, does not mean that it is correct. Prior to Plate Tectonics being widely accepted it was scorned and rejected by leading scientists who had careers built on "old science." This incidentally what the subject line of this post refers to: subduction is one continental shelf sliding under another, and orogeny is mountain building (of course since this is /. let me point out IANAG).

    Yet because the heart of Geophysics is still physics, these great scientists were able to accept challenges and look at the new theory and say "yes -- this fits better." And that's what's awesome (and to me holy) about SCIENCE. You can challenge ANY assertion, and if your model is better, it will persuade people. I'm sure some physicist can help me out and show how the theory of gravity has changed massively since Newton -- even though a lay person would say "yeah, I get gravity."

    So here's where Expelled and ID fall down -- we KNOW their theory. What is being taught in schools about evolution is mostly demonstrable. We can show evolution in anti-biotic resistant strains of bacteria, that directly impacts humans and health. ID is being taught in the appropriate places -- houses of worship -- where challenges are heresy. Yet in teaching SCIENCE in schools we want to teach that every assertion CAN be challenged and should be observable. That's what science is -- an attempt to understand the universe through observation and experimentation. If someone wants to challenge something in science and can bring legitimate observations to the table, they should be welcomed for the CRITICAL (pun intended) role they play in the process. ID has to reject the scientific method, science always looks for challenges to make the model more accurate -- but ID is by definition perfectly accurate already, and cannot be challenged.

    I support everything the MMCC people want as an end result -- I'd like to see us embrace alternative energy, stop burning fossil fuels and generally be more conscious of the impact we have on the planet. I also think that there is a real harm being done to science when people with legitimate complaints about the SCIENCE of MMCC are treated as pariahs. Although I tend to think that MMCC is real, and there is certainly no harm in proceeding to curb our carbon emissions, I welcome the legimate claims of people who think that solar cycles are responsible, or that this period is not particularly warm on a geological chart of temperatures. These are legitimate scientific ideas based on observation and empirical data. MMCC as a theory will gain much more respect when it embraces challenges, instead of treating them in the same way ID treats challenges -- by throwing the scientific method under a bus. On the other hand, if the MMCC people do succeed in making challenges to their "science" become heresy, the ID people will be sure to take notes in how that happened.

    --
    Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
    1. Re:subduction leades to orogeny by John+Jamieson · · Score: 1

      I wrote well, except for one statement. "What is being taught in schools about evolution is mostly demonstrable."

      If you look at most textbooks being used in school to teach evolution, you would be disapointed. They use misleading statements and embrace half truths(lies). Time to clean up the texts and stick with truthful representation.

    2. Re:subduction leades to orogeny by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      MMCC as a theory will gain much more respect when it embraces challenges, instead of treating them in the same way ID treats challenges -- by throwing the scientific method under a bus. I agree totally. And some of the MMCC people are indeed zealots. But there are reasonable and science-oriented people on that side who still bristle at the challenges, because they see them as mainly political challenges, not scientific ones. The game is to create the appearance of scientific controversy, which is then used to undermine political action. It is a game the tobacco companies, for example, played for years.

      For more on this, see The Manufacture of Uncertainty.
    3. Re:subduction leades to orogeny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      We can show evolution in anti-biotic resistant strains of bacteria, that directly impacts humans and health.


      that's not the same as the creation of 100s of millions, if not tens of billions, of new species, all of which apparently went extinct when the latest and greatest version came on board. it is as though the new species' first act was always genocide of the old species.

      what is the explanation for this 100% extinction rate of every transitional entity that has ever existed - and remember, the transitional population is theorized to always have been much larger in size than the evolved version.

      "it was better adapted" isn't a logical reason for 100% extinction of tens of millions of transitional entities, either, as no animal currently on the planet has the exact same adaption to any given environment.

      so, prove an existing animal or or plant is a transitional entity or or we are stuck with something bordering on the absurd... 100s of millions of dramatically larger populations went extinct in 100% of all transitional entities that led to the discrete "end species" we see today.

      the problem is that there is absolutely ZERO direct evidence an so the *imagination* is free to run wild with vivid images of "primordial soups" and a slightly better adapted entity surviving while hundreds of thousands of just slightly less adapted entities all disappear - 100 million out of 100 million times.

      i've never heard this line of challenge ever brought up, let alone answered.

      i'm open, though, but i think the challenge will be difficult to over come.

    4. Re:subduction leades to orogeny by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I also think that there is a real harm being done to science when people with legitimate complaints about the SCIENCE of MMCC are treated as pariahs.

      The attacks I see are attempts to use "science" to create doubt, not to seek the truth. Keep in mind that, if true, by the time it is proven scientifically (if it even could be without creating an identical world to play with the variables), it would likely be too late to address the issue. The standard for MMCC is that the costs of acting and costs of not acting must be weighed against the likelyhood of it. Looking for a scientific proof, if found, would be a case of too little too late. There are real economic consequences to doing nothing if it is true, and real economic consequences to acting. So we need to decide to act now or not based of what information we have right now, and evaluate that decision as new information becomes available. So the question of whether it can be proven is a simple "no, it can't be proven or disproven."

      With that out of the way, it is time to get to the real questions: Is there a real climate change happening. If so, what, if any, is man's contribution to it. Whether man is contributing to it or not, what can man do to stabilize the climate. If the climate does change, what will the result be, and how will that affect man. Since we know we can't know the answers, what are the probabilities and the expected costs for acting and not acting in all cases.

      Arguing over 0.1 degrees is what the anti-science people want. They want to get people so tied up in the details that they stop trying to see the big picture. Any delay in action has the same result as declaring MMCC to be 100% false, so it's a win for them.

  175. What is close-mindedness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I admit that I have closed my mind to some individuals.

    I don't bother listening to their statements or arguments, because after doing so, I've determined that they are a huge waste of my time.

    Does that mean I'm close-minded?

  176. MOD PARENT INSIGHTFUL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And/or funny :-)

  177. but guys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    evolution is only a "theory", and intelligent design has the word "intelligent" in it. i know where im placing my bets! can i get a LOL?

  178. It is so sad. by DinZy · · Score: 1

    I find it so sad that this article gets posted on Slashdot with a paragraph giving the movie credit as if it were an actual documentary and not what it is, propaganda. It took another poster to add that in. Then looking at the comments I am saddened by the lack of critical thought put into them. People think Ben Stein produced this film to get the word out. Ah,,, no. It was produced by some guy Mathis(?) who hired Ben to be the narrator/host.

    Then there is the people who think that there are other theories that explain the ever changing diversity of life on this planet besides the one presented by Darwin over 150 years ago and modified and expanded by countless thousands of biologists with mountains of evidence since then. There are no other theories. Further intelligent design is creationism as written in the bible/ old testament. This movie is just old testament vs science and anyone who has spent any time with improving themselves through education should be appalled that such a movie would be put out there and that many people would fall victim to it in the sense that they think it has any merit at all. If you are such a person all I can say is that you can read up on the history of this film, study evolution, try to find a so called alternative theory that does not come from the bible, and decide for yourself.

    1. Re:It is so sad. by Stormcrow309 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Two points.

      (a) All documentaries are propaganda. They are designed to present the film maker's view point of a situation. Objectivity does not exist in such works, since their purpose is to influence peoples thoughts.

      (b) The major premise of Expelled is that scientific debate is squashed due to view point elitism. (I actually watched the movie) It does not matter what the debate is about, but when the stance is that 'you cannot oppose us', then there is a lot of problems. We see this in a lot of fields. Climate Change is a good example, but so is Health Care Management, Health Care Economics, and a plethora of many other fields. You can try this in the classroom. Challenge a professor on a topic that they are ideologically strong in, such as I did. I asked a Sociology professor ,who believed everything could be described in the Marxist Dialect, to describe the fall of the Berlin Wall in the Marxist Dialect. Her response was to scream at me and call me names. No discussion or debate, just hostile action. When I teach, I encourage debate and learning in the classroom. However, many of my fellow professors do not.

      As a side point, I would recommend that you do not make assumptions on where people's viewpoints come from. It is a logical fallicy to assume that opinions that disagree with yours to be from the Bible. It is called a strawman arguement and is an invalid line of reasoning.

      --

      In God we trust, all others require data.

    2. Re:It is so sad. by rholland356 · · Score: 1

      (a) All documentaries are propaganda. They are designed to present the film maker's view point of a situation. Objectivity does not exist in such works, since their purpose is to influence peoples thoughts.


      Rubbish and hogs wallop! Documentary film is made to "document" a subject, by showing us many aspects of that subject. Saying all such films are propaganda is naive.

      Does a documentary have a POINT OF VIEW? Yes and the best present many points of view. Look to the series Frontline for an example of political documentaries that present many different points of view.

      I watched a marvelous film recently that DOCUMENTED food production in the modern world. Not one word of narration. Not one spoken line. Just workers filmed in action or at rest during every stage of production of many types of foods.

      A documentary can be as objective or as subjective as the filmmaker desires. Automatically dismissing ALL documentaries as propaganda is counterproductive.
  179. Not about evolution by 18hrs · · Score: 1
    I see the real issue here not I.D. vs. evolution, but the manner in which the scientific community has behaved towards I.D. proponents-- nervously and aggressively.

    Why does science feel threatened? Let the ideas stand on their own. If a scientist lets his faith influence his ideas and methods, then let his work go as far as it'll go, don't destroy his career.

  180. re: You were modded flamebait for THAT comment?? by King_TJ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I was about to say the exact same thing!

    Any journalist who would delete one his/her paragraphs just because of pressure from some activist group doesn't deserve to have the job.

    Since when is news reporting supposed to be about changing the facts to please special interest groups?

  181. Objectivity by Brain-Fu · · Score: 1

    "Objectivity" is very easy to say, but very hard to do. Objectivity is not by any means the path of least resistance. The scientific method (and everything that surrounds it) is our attempt to overcome our own inherent lack of objectivity in our investigative processes. Not all humans who strive to be good at it actually succeed.

    But a handful of people calling their non-scientific practices "science" do not automatically undermine the value of scientific inquiry, nor do their mistakes automatically invalidate the compelling warrant that has already been established for actual scientific theories.

  182. Re:Dear Ben Stien, et al. (abbreviation) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since PP was somewhat long, I decided to summarize it for the benefit of those with a cramped time schedule:

    Dear Ben Stien, et al.

    Fuck you.


    (OK, OK, I know he didn't say that, but I could resist.)

  183. Really? by Nerdposeur · · Score: 1

    Stein actually told the people he interviewed for the movie that he was making a completely different film (philosophy, I think)

    How do you know this? (I don't know any different, but that's a pretty strong statement to make.)

    1. Re:Really? by mcmonkey · · Score: 2, Informative

      Stein actually told the people he interviewed for the movie that he was making a completely different film
      How do you know this?

      Six Things in Expelled That Ben Stein Doesn't Want You to Know...

      As Richard Dawkins, PZ Myers, Eugenie Scott, Michael Shermer and other proponents of evolution appearing in Expelled have publicly remarked, the producers first arranged to interview them for a film that was to be called Crossroads, which was allegedly a documentary on "the intersection of science and religion." They were subsequently surprised to learn that they were appearing in Expelled, which "exposes the widespread persecution of scientists and educators who are pursuing legitimate, opposing scientific views to the reigning orthodoxy," to quote from the film's press kit.

      To say those interviewed expected a 'completely different film' is a bit of a stretch--it's not like they thought they were doing voice-over work for the latest Pixar movie. But it is clear some interviewees were deceived.

    2. Re:Really? by joib · · Score: 1

      One of the biologists they interviewed mentioned it in his blog:

      http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2007/08/im_gonna_be_a_movie_star.php

    3. Re:Really? by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      It's worth noting that the interviewees, despite being in the credits of the film, weren't allowed to see it. PZ Myers was barred from an open invitation screening as hilariously related on his blog here.

      There was further discussion about how open the invitations to that particular screening were, but the fact that Myers (and Richard Dawkins) was IN THE FILM and NEVER allowed to see it makes the overall situation quite clear.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
  184. Akin to a religious zealot? by Xest · · Score: 1

    She is a religious zealot or close enough! -

    http://www.christian-ecology.org.uk/ealing.htm

    That said I don't entirely disagree with the points she put across to the BBC, the BBC were somewhat misrepresenting some of the facts in the original article by failing to point out clearly enough that a short term trend of cooling (almost certainly due to La Nina) does not mean there's not a longer term trend of warming. Their approach in the article essentially also gave voice to those who were making unfounded claims about global warming not being true whilst not giving enough time to the thousands of scientists who have worked hard to actually provide some factual evidence to demonstrate the existence of global warming.

  185. Creationism != belief in God by Tony · · Score: 1

    You do realize the parent post talked about creationism, and not belief in God, right?

    As for your list -- what are you trying to prove? That intelligent people can believe in God? I think that is well established. What is *also* well-established is that each of those mighty thinkers you list made their contributions to science in an objective way, without resorting to God as an explanation. God may be an inspiration, but he is never an explanation.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:Creationism != belief in God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I do. You do realize that each of these scientists were creationists, don't you? That is, they believed God created the universe out of nothing. They did not believe in a "Big Bang-leading-to-evolution" (macro evolution, not micro-evolution, which is observable fact) as an explanation for the origin of life. And it most definitely DID shape how they thought and in turn influenced how they worked, if you read up on their personal writings.

      And no, if you read the majority of comments on this thread, it is NOT well-established (in the minds of people on this board) that people who believe in God can be intelligent. Those who believe the universe was created by a divine, self-existent being are ridiculed and belittled as intellectual midgets or morons, incapable of practicing or even understanding legitimate science.

  186. You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Epeeist · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, but ID != creationism.

    It's an unprovable theory (as unprovable as the existence of God). ID is not a theory - there is no evidence for it, it isn't testable and it isn't falsifiable.

    And as for ID not being the same as creationism, would you like to explain this - http://www.pandasthumb.org/archives/2005/11/missing_link_cd.html

    1. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by gfxguy · · Score: 0

      Of course it's a theory... do you really want to nit-pick about definitions?

      While I don't feel inclined to read your link, I will say ID is the theory that has perhaps supplanted the classic creationist theory. I already said it wasn't scientific (unless you consider theology a science... I don't), but someone who believes in ID doesn't necessarily believe the world was created 6000 years ago, believes dinosaurs absolutely did roam the planet, etc., etc.

      The most innocuous IDers absolutely believe evolution happened, but that "natural selection" and deviations were guided by the hand of God... you cannot prove nor disprove it, and it absolutely is a theory.

      For what it's worth, I'm not defending ID as a science, I'm saying that mentioning that some people believe God guided evolution is an accurate, 100% true fact. To be marked off or failed for mentioning it is exactly the kind of thing that FIRE gets involved in, and for a very good reason.

      The kind of intolerant responses to the suggestion that ID might exist is exactly the kind of thing Stein is railing against. Nobody is trying to force you or anyone else to believe in ID, nobody is brainwashing your kids, they're merely throwing out a theory that some people believe. I don't believe it, but if they mention it in my kids school, I'm not going to whine about it either, and I'm not going to try to shout down anyone whom I disagree with. I think ID is absolutely valid for religious people and it allows them to reconcile science with religion. If that's what they need to accept evolution, fine.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    2. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      ID is not a theory - there is no evidence for it, it isn't testable and it isn't falsifiable. That's interesting that you believe that. I'd encourage you to check out a book by Dr. Walt Brown titled "In The Beginning" (Buy on amazon). This man uses scientific studies done by evolutionists to prove that evolution simply is not true. He intentionally only uses studies by evolutionists so that he cannot be accused of cooking up the results.
      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    3. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ID is not a theory - there is no evidence for it, it isn't testable and it isn't falsifiable.

      It may not be a scientific theory, but the word theory does not have such limitations in general usage.

      And as for ID not being the same as creationism, would you like to explain this - http://www.pandasthumb.org/archives/2005/11/missing_link_cd.html

      You want someone to explain a joke?

      Creationist believe God created the earth about 6,000 years ago. Some believe that was it, and no changes have occured since then, others believe evolution began occuring almost immediately.

      ID'ers believe evolution does happen, but it is guided by the "hand of god".

      Yes, there's a lot of overlap between the two groups, and ID was created by creationists to involve god into the evolutionists theories. But its not same thing, and claiming it is weakens your position by making you apear to be a moron.

    4. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by spun · · Score: 1

      It's not nit-picking definitions. You need to understand that the word 'theory,' in scientific terms, means something quite different than it does in every day terminology. The common understanding of the word theory is something like a guess or a supposition, what in scientific terms is called a hypothesis. ID is a hypothesis.

      A theory in scientific terms is something far more concrete. It has certain characteristics that differ from common usage. For something to be considered a scientific theory, it must be falsifiable. That is, it must be possible to prove it wrong. "God did it" can never be proved wrong, so it can never be called a theory.

      This is how the word is used by scientists. It is not intolerant, it is simply a different, more specific use of language.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    5. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by protolith · · Score: 1

      ID is not a scientific theory.

      In scientific terms ID is at best and idea, a weak hypothesis, almost a model, but not a scientific theory.

      you presented an idea:
      ""natural selection" and deviations were guided by the hand of God"
      If you can present a scientific test of this hypothesis you presented, then you can begin to justify the mention of ID long with evolution as a competing scientific idea.

      Otherwise you are just doing the equivalent of saying "some people believe the earth is flat, and that's a theory, so they should be represented in geology books to rectify their beliefs with common scientific knowledge".

    6. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by protolith · · Score: 1

      I will take your ID vs Evolution Pepsi challenge any day, The book you cite turns the Pepsi challenge into a comparison between an icy cold Pepsi and a warm cup of piss.

      "He intentionally only uses studies by evolutionists so that he cannot be accused of cooking up the results"

      In other words, "we fed Coca cola to a dog and this warm cup of piss came out came out, it's made of the same stuff, see it came from Coke, how can you not compare the two?"

    7. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by jinxidoru · · Score: 2

      Here's the main thing that bothers me about ID discussion. People show problems with evolution then claim that it is support for ID. Even if evolution were shown to be completely false, that does not mean that ID is correct. Proving that a particular animal is not a dog does not make it a cat.

    8. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      That's addressed in this book. He has opposing theories for many of the commonly held, but poorly supported, evolution-centric theories.

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    9. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That made so little sense and was so far from actually representing an intelligent argument that I'm impressed. You, sir, are right. Scientific evidence refuting evolution is *just like* drinking two different beverages and deciding which one you prefer.

    10. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by cthulu_mt · · Score: 1

      Best analogy ever! Mod parent up.

      --
      Virginia is for lovers. EVE is for griefers.
    11. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Spasemunki · · Score: 1

      The fact that, as you say, "you cannot prove or disprove it" is exactly why ID is not a scientific theory. The fact that it isn't a scientific theory is exactly why it shouldn't be taught. It is not the government's job to provide me with religious interpretations; as a matter of fact, the government has no right to provide me with religious interpretations, because that conflicts with my right to come up with my own.

      Scientific theories need to be falsifiable; that's what makes them scientific theories that can be tested in the lab rather than religious beliefs. ID is not falsifiable. A leading ID proponent admitted in court that a definition of "science" that includes intelligent design would also admit astrology as a scientific theory. Should we teach that in school because some people believe in it? We don't teach that maybe God is guiding evolution for the same reason that we don't teach that invisible, massless pixies are responsible for guiding objects towards Earth when they fall. It's a proposition about which science can say nothing. Should we also teach that maybe 1 + 1 = 2 because God wants it to? That computers might be operated by invisible gremlins? None of these things can be proven false.

      Furthermore, I would think that religious people would be pretty unhappy with attempts to teach any single religious interpretation of the facts. For Biblical literalists, the notion that God is simply guiding evolution is an unacceptable compromise. Why should their children have to listen to someone else's religious interpretation of current scientific theories? Should we also teach how current views of large-scale cosmology are compatible with the Hindu belief that we're all living inside the body of Vishnu?

      Separation of church and state doesn't just protect secular people from being evangelized to. It also protects religious people from having a particular interpretation of religious phenomena selected or championed by the government. The only approach that protects everyone's rights is to say: "These are the testable, measurable facts as science currently understands them. This is the state of research in this scientific community. If you want insight into what that means about your relationship with ultimate Truth, go ask someone else."

    12. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Bou · · Score: 1

      He has opposing theories for many of the commonly held, but poorly supported, evolution-centric theories. Care to give a few examples? How do they involve a creator? What observations would falsify them?
    13. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      Oh geez, anything I write here is going to vastly simplify what's written in the book and lack all of the associated citations and context that actually give the statements weight. Having said that, I can try and paraphrase something he said about organic evolution...

      Organic macroevolution has never been observed. Mendel's laws of genetics and their modern-day refinements explain almost all physical variations observed in living things. Mendel discovered that genes are merely reshuffled from one generation to another. Different combinations are formed, not different genes. The different combinations product the many variations within each kind of life, such as in the dog family. A logical consequence of Mendel's laws is that there are limits to such variation. Breeding experiments and common observations have also confirmed these boundaries.

      Some would say that mutations - rather than typical genetic reshuffling you see within dogs - explain evolution. Mutations are the only known means by which new genetic material becomes available for evolution. Rarely, if ever, is a mutation beneficial to an organism in its natural environment (you ever see the picture of the cow with 5 legs from Chernobyl? yeah...). Almost all observable mutations are harmful; some are meaningless; many are lethal. No known mutation has ever produced a form of life having greater complexity and viability than its ancestors.

      [paraphrasing] Finally, if evolution is truly something that's been happening for billions of years - where are the intermediate species? Why don't we see any today? Why aren't there any in the fossil record?

      Yes, I know I'm fired for not involving creation yet... but I have to get back to work. lunch is ovah!

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    14. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Lurker2288 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll grant that you're paraphrasing from this book from memory, but I can tell you that these are all tired creationist arguments that have been thrashed, again and again, and that can easily be debunked by anybody with a bit of biological knowledge.

      First, your comment is self-contradictory. You first claim that "Different combinations are formed, not different genes," and then you state "mutations are the only known means by which new genetic material becomes available for evolution." When a mutation occurs in a gene, then a new gene has been created. It may not be a very useful mutation, and it may not be maintained, but it is undeniably new. Further, if you accept common descent, it should be obvious that you and I have genes that, say, hamsters do not. Hell, corn has got about three times as many genes as you or I--are you still claiming recombination is the only difference?

      Next, mutation is far more complex than you make it out to be--not the kind of complex whereby a single changed nucleotide in a key geen turns a fruit fly into a blue whale, but the kind of complex that has the potential to introduce all sorts of variation. Changes in regulatory elements, for example, can leave most of the genes unchanged and still have major consequences for the organism's development. A simple example of this is the mutation that causes fruit flies to sprout legs where there antennae should be--granted, not much of an improvement, but it should suggest to you the power of mutation in changing living things.

      Lastly, the concept of transitional forms is sticky for a lot of reasons. For one, by definition you'd expect them to be fairly short lived (once an organism starts to develop a useful trait, we'd expect selection to drive it pretty quickly toward a stable phenotype). Next, as you're probably aware, the fossil record is terribly fragmented--even in Darwin's time he wrote that there would probably never be thorough fossil evidence for descent. And finally, 'species' is a fairly digital concept: we see an animal (or its fossils) and we stick it into one category or another. But life forms are analog--there ought to be a whole series of 'transitional species' that show the progression from A to B, but rather than trying to classify them all separately, they often get lumped in on one side or another. So the argument that there are no transitional forms is specious, because A) we have found some, and B) the entire concept is fairly ill-defined and based on a fragmentary record.

      So again, I recognize that you're probably not giving a fair accounting of the book, but if those are his most compelling arguments, then he probably ought to sit in on a few college bio classes before he does any more writing.

    15. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

      Hehe, you misread the first part. It's stating that a poodle is recombination of a boxer terrier. Not that it's a recombination of corn. In fact, it's saying the opposite - by forming different combinations you're selecting from among a limited number of slightly different versions of the same thing - not a whole new animal. Thus making a dog from a cat isn't a possibility.

      I didn't mean to imply that mutation is simple - but that it has never been demonstrated nor has it ever been observed to create a more viable, more biologically complex organism. Whether it's simple or complex, the fact is - it doesn't make a better organism.

      It seems a little strange for an evolutionist who is relying upon billions of years of time to account for the biodiversity we see today to suggest that macroevolution happens quickly. If macroevolution were a fact of life we would still being seeing that process happen today. Just because people showed up doesn't mean the rest of the world stopped functioning as it did prior to our existence. I also always find it interesting when the same fossil record that's presented as evidence for evolution is later blamed when there's no evidence of transitional species. :)

      The book is great; even if you disagree with it, it will make you think. I was serious when I said that nothing I could type here would do it justice. It's like saying "tell me about string theory in a quickie slashdot post!"... you're not going to get much of an explanation! As much as I can I just try to make people think and then direct them to something they can look into on their own time. There's no way for me to recreate years of research and condense down into a post I write up in a few minutes. :)

      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    16. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      Please spend some time over at the Talk.Origins FAQ. You don't sound like a howling dumbass, so there's still hope for you.

    17. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by arminw · · Score: 0, Troll

      ... it must be falsifiable....

      In that case, a major tenet of evolution is falsified by the second law of thermodynamics. Nowhere do we OBSERVE today the natural unaided progression from the simple to the complex, which evolution requires. We only observe the breakdown of complex natural and manmade systems into simpler, usually nonfunctional components. The evolutionary assertion that the complexity we see all around us started out as "simple" forms has NEVER be observed today. It is pure faith that the mechanisms that drive micro-evolution also work on the grand scale needed to turn a one celled amoeba into an elephant or a monkey into a man.

      --
      All theory is gray
    18. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...scientific theories that can be tested in the lab...

      So tell me, has any lab ever bee able to show how an amoeba, or some other collection of one celled organisms becomes an organism even as lowly as a worm?

      Has there ever been an experiment to show how that life can come from non-liveing chemicals? Has any lab ever determined where the immense amount of information originated that is inherent in any living cell?

      Evolution is a faith based conjecture of how life came into being, without reference to a Creator God. ID is a conjecture about the same thing, except it hypothesizes some intelligent creator. Both are based on belief. Neither has any present day lab experiments to show its own correctness nor the other's falsity.

      --
      All theory is gray
    19. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Spasemunki · · Score: 1

      So tell me, has any lab ever bee able to show how an amoeba, or some other collection of one celled organisms becomes an organism even as lowly as a worm?

      Has there ever been an experiment to show how that life can come from non-liveing chemicals? Has any lab ever determined where the immense amount of information originated that is inherent in any living cell?


      There are hundreds of experiments into just these areas that have been going on for decades. We've seen the production of (fairly) complex organic chemicals from non-organic mixtures. Research is ongoing into how, and in what environment, the first cell membranes were created. Research into genetics makes it possible to attempt to isolate smaller and smaller differences between strains of a species, and when and where changes might have occurred. Have final answers been reached? No. But unlike with ID, work is ongoing in the field. There are always new experiments being performed, and theories and hypothesis are being re-evaluated and refined over time. Science creates more science.

      ID does not progress. You get to a point and you say "OK. I don't know. God did it. Let's put down our tools and go have lunch." There are not testable hypothesis being produced. At any time when a difficulty is reached in reconciling observation with theory, you can just throw up your hands and say "magic happened". You can't do that in science. When observation doesn't fit theory, you have to either 1) check that you didn't screw up the experiment (repeatability), 2) modify the theory, or 3) discard the theory. If a theory has stood for a long time it takes a lot of evidence to justify 3, but it does happen.

      Evolution continues to provide a useful framework for creating new experiments, and to survive the experimental tests that it has been put through. ID does not, because it rests on non-negatable premises having to do with the existence of omnipotent, undetectable actors. Any piece of evidence can be dismissed as "God wanted it to be that way"- exactly what some ID proponents say about the fossil record.

      Evolutionary theory isn't perfect. There are limitations, some of which are based in our abilities, and some of which come from the incomplete information that we have to work with (see fossil record). But it keeps being tested, and it keeps being refined. ID proponents typically fail to grasp that flaws in the current evolutionary theory don't argue for intelligent design; they just argue that evolutionary theory is still a work in progress. However, unlike ID, it's a work in progress that provides a framework for future science, and which has proven to have fantastic properties in terms of guiding new areas of research and explaining observed phenomena.
    20. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Lurker2288 · · Score: 1

      No, I read it fine, I just didn't give it much credence. Nowhere in evolutionary theory is it suggested that you could make a dog from a cat. It is, however, understood that you could have some kind of mammalian precursor which speciates over time to produce two different lineages: one canine, and one feline.

      Next, you've got a few things tangled up here. Evolution does not necessarily mean a gradual increase in complexity--no single mutation will take you from a 'simple' life form to a more complex one. However, over incredibly long periods of time, significant mutational variation can develop which, shaped by natural selection (and other forces such as drift, or founder effect) can result in an increase in complexity. As for the effects of a single mutation, well, you might consider sickle cell anemia. A single mutation in the hemoglobin gene that provides carriers with protection against malaria. A fairly minor point, but it's enough so that when you map areas of high prevalence for SC and malaria in Africa they overlap almost perfectly--a clear example of a new phenotype, generated by mutation, which proves adaptive in the environment.

      Next, how ridiculous is it for you to call out evolution because you can't see in a human timescale processes that take millions of years? Would you argue that the Grand Canyon couldn't have been formed by erosion because you've never seen any canyons formed that way? Creationists like to use the word 'macroevolution' to try to separate the real meat of evolution from the limited examples we CAN see in our lifetimes--the only difference is scale.

      And finally, if you read my post, you'll note that I commented that even Darwin despaired over the value of the fossil record for proving his point; he put much more emphasis on his study of living things in their environments. We are able to draw some broad conclusions from it, but you'll find far more evidence for evolution from molecular biology and biochemistry these days.But then, the book you're touting not only proposes to discredit evolution, but also more or less everything else that science currently accepts about the history of the planet, so I have relatively little hope that you'd be motivated to learn more about the volumes of evidence stacked up against that quack Walt Brown.

    21. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Why don't you read a little bit about the second law of thermodynamics before you continue to regurgitate this ridiculous, ignorant claim.

      Were you a baby once. Have you grown? Have you become larger and more complex? Aren't you standing there in violation of the second law yourself? I demand that you immediately regress to a slimy puddle of mingled menses and semen.

      Nothing in evolution violates laws of physics or chemistry, and the properties of organisms depend on the second law. We burn food, increasing its entropy, to decrease entropy locally in our bodies; the net change is an overall increase in entropy, but the bit we care about, ourselves, can use that increase to drive a local decrease. All of this is obvious, with even a minimal understanding of the principles involved.

    22. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by EightMillion · · Score: 1

      The theory of evolution predicts that intermediate forms, consistent with our knowledge about evolution from other data (morphological, genetic, et cetera) will be found in the fossil record.

      This prediction has been triumphantly confirmed; we now know of many thousands of sets of fossils which can be lined up in a chain showing clear morphological intermediates.

      When Darwin wrote the Origin of Species, no one knew of any such fossils. If you don't know where the intermediate forms are, you must have missed the last 150 years.

    23. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by howlingfrog · · Score: 1

      1. What part of "in a closed system" do you not understand? The earth is constantly being bombarded by massive amounts of energy from an outside source--the sun. Every decrease in the earth's entropy is matched by an increase in the sun's (actually, much much more than matched, since the sun shoots out energy in every direction and only about 45 quadrillionths of a percent of it hits the earth).

      2. Please look up the terms "photosynthesis" and "gametogenesis." Both are examples of "natural unaided progression from the simple to the complex." And while the micro-evolution you imply that you accept usually isn't an increase in complexity in the colloquial sense of the word, it most certainly is a decrease in entropy and an increase in complexity in the formal sense of the word.

      I'm not a biologist--I'm not qualified to present arguments in favor of evolution, so believe what you want. But please don't enter such blatant nonsense into a debate and expect to be taken seriously.

      --
      The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    24. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nowhere do we OBSERVE today the natural unaided progression from the simple to the complex

      Sure we do. Our entire galaxy was initially a bunch of star clusters and some cosmic debris, and now it's a vast and complex system.

      There are countless examples.

    25. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Finally, if evolution is truly something that's been happening for billions of years - where are the intermediate species? Why don't we see any today? Why aren't there any in the fossil record? "

      If this is what the author of the book said, then he's either ignorant or a lying charlatan, because there are many existing transitional animals such as some species of snakes and cetaceans which have vestigial pelvises and legs inside their bodies. The fossil record also contains _many_ examples of such transitional species (both plants and animals).

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    26. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "If macroevolution were a fact of life we would still being seeing that process happen today. "

      You are falling into the major logical fallacy of assuming that things we don't observe aren't happening.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    27. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Have you become larger and more complex...

      My body has grown larger, but not more complex. All information needed for human development is right there in the genetic codes, as stored in the DNA after conception. All reduction of entropy occurs by the application of energy and INFORMATION. Energy by itself is not enough. When you clean up your room or build a house or something, you expend energy and your MIND directs that energy toward the outcome your WILL has determined. Energy applied without the direction of a mind and will NEVER increases order, but only decreases it.

      That can be demonstrated in the lab and you experience it every single day of your life. If the car you are driving is not directed by your attentive mind, its energy of motion becomes very destructive to you, itself and any object it crashes into because you did not control it with your mind, giving the car the information it needs to stay on the road.

      --
      All theory is gray
    28. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....We've seen the production of (fairly) complex organic chemicals from non-organic mixtures...

      That is like saying we've been able to make nuts, bolts, valves, pistons, crankshafts and other components of an internal combustion engine, but have not yet built any engine that actually runs. Most, if not all of these organic components were assembled from bits and pieces that were once part of a living organism. Nobody has yet constructed even a simple protein from the available 92 or so basic elements. Nobody has yet duplicated the process of photosynthesis. All scientists ALWAYS have to start with pieces that were once alive.

      (..You get to a point and you say "OK. I don't know. God did it. Let's put down our tools and go have lunch...)

      No you don't. You can say God did it and now let's do experiments to figure out how He might have done that. A theory of how God may have built something can be tested just as readily as a theory that postulates time and chance was the originator. We reverse engineer human creations all the time. So now the scientists can and do reverse engineer some of the things that God first came up with. Cameras and Sonar are just two examples of man copying God's designs. Good thing He doesn't sue us for patent and copyright infringement. Science can work just as well or even better with the underlying idea of investigating God's clever designs and make them useful for the service of humanity.

      --
      All theory is gray
    29. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by Spasemunki · · Score: 1

      That is like saying we've been able to make nuts, bolts, valves, pistons, crankshafts and other components of an internal combustion engine, but have not yet built any engine that actually runs. Most, if not all of these organic components were assembled from bits and pieces that were once part of a living organism. Nobody has yet constructed even a simple protein from the available 92 or so basic elements. Nobody has yet duplicated the process of photosynthesis. All scientists ALWAYS have to start with pieces that were once alive.

      Scientists see engines at work, and make engine parts from non-engine parts, and postulate: "There must be a way to get there from here. Lets keep experimenting until we work it out." Progress is incremental, but possible. Creationists see working engines and parts made in a lab and say "We don't currently know how to get from A and B, so lets assume that a supernatural being intervenes. We can look into how he did it, but if at any point we see evidence that doesn't match up with the theory, that's OK because it's supernatural." Once you start admitting supernatural causes, it's just a question of where and how frequently you are willing to apply them.

      No you don't. You can say God did it and now let's do experiments to figure out how He might have done that. A theory of how God may have built something can be tested just as readily as a theory that postulates time and chance was the originator.

      ID lets you ask "how does it work" (how does god accomplish this effect in a living creature), but not "how did it get there". If you accept that organisms changed over time to reach their current capabilities, you're accepting evolution. If you reject change over time, you're saying that an organism at some point in the past emerged fully formed from nothing by the will of a creator. That isn't reconcilable with science. That also doesn't address the fact that creationists reserve the right to reject information that does not gel with their preexisting interpretation of the facts on the basis of divine will.

      A theory of how God may have built something can be tested just as readily as a theory that postulates time and chance was the originator.

      How can you test that god built something? If you're saying explore alternate physical processes by which something may have happened, then you're not figuring out how god built it; you're figuring out a natural process (science) and then attributing it to a supernatural entity (religion). If you're exploring processes not compatible with reality as we understand it ("maybe God reversed thermodynamics for a little bit, in a localized region"), then you're not creating a testable hypothesis. You can carry out an experiment that says "under these circumstances, random chance doesn't suffice", but that doesn't argue for a supernatural origin, it just argues against the circumstances and mechanism proposed in the experiment.

      We reverse engineer human creations all the time. So now the scientists can and do reverse engineer some of the things that God first came up with. Cameras and Sonar are just two examples of man copying God's designs. Good thing He doesn't sue us for patent and copyright infringement. Science can work just as well or even better with the underlying idea of investigating God's clever designs and make them useful for the service of humanity.

      We've had some success investigating how to duplicate function (though in the case of cameras and sonar, I don't know that success came primarily from copying nature; it's just as likely that understanding non-biological effects like lensing of prisms and carrying of noise underwater were primary drivers. Echolocation was demonstrated in bats in 1938; patents for echo sounding devices date to 1912-1913 according to Wikipedia. Likely we discovered marine mammal echolocation as a result of creating devices to measure sound underwater, ra

    30. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...If you accept that organisms changed over time to reach their current capabilities...

      That's a big IF to accept (believe) without evidence of this happening today. Evolution believers generally trot out small observed changes due to organisms adapting to environmental stress. There is no doubt that living things are very adaptable, but to extrapolate from that adaptability, to the large jumps in complexity and structure in the huge variety of living things is not observed or observable. It is believed to have occurred in the distant past, but is has never been demonstrated to happen today.

      (..an organism at some point in the past emerged fully formed from nothing..)

      Thats pretty much the evidence we see in the fossil record. There is the sudden appearance of fully formed rather complex creature and no transitional forms, such as there should be if the gradual change mechanism were at work. Evolution believing scientists even have a fancy name for this. They call it "The Cambrian Explosion". Now we all know that an explosion is s sudden event.

      (.. but not "how did it get there"..)

      It isn't the business of science, nor is science equipped to ask those kinds of questions. Science is about experiments to determine how things work presently. How can we utilize quantum effects or build a space elevator. Is it even theoretically possible to make a material strong enough? That's real science.

      We as limited humans have no direct access to the past nor the future. We are limited to the present for direct experimental evidence. We are limited to *believing* and _interpreting_ whatever we think may have happened in the past. We have no direct evidence, for example, as I read recently. A Muslim Saudi Professor denied that the Holocaust of the Jews of WW2 occurred. Nobody can time travel to that time, but we can and should BELIEVE the records thereof and the testimony of those who are still alive and experienced its horrors. However history cannot be _demonstrated_.

      (..How can you test that god built something?..)

      We can't test WHETHER and how God built something, but we can test to determine HOW whatever He made operates. We can determine the laws He formulated by which the Universe operates. Once we know something about these laws, we can build devices and processes that use these laws to either good or evil. Attributing a law or process to God is entirely separate and distinct from learning how that law or process works and using it to build up our knowledge of nature.

      (..If we were content with the creationist account of life, we would likely have never discovered DNA as the carrier of heredity..)

      Why do you assert that? DNA has information codes required for cells to make proteins. However, DNA itself is made of proteins. So where did the information arise for the protein making instructions. This question cannot be and need not be answered by science any more than science can answer; what came first, the chicken or the egg. We have chickens and they lay eggs. We have DNA making proteins. We can learn how it works, entirely apart from asking or answering the question of where or how DNA or chickens originated and we can also eat eggs for breakfast and chicken for dinner, all without asking or answering the chicken and egg question.

      (..Natural selection also provides a great deal of explanatory information regarding animal behavior and development..)

      Indeed it is a valid observed mechanism that shows how living things cope with and adapt to stress. Extrapolating from this adaptability and trying use that as a mechanism to explain the large complexity chasm between the various living things is a belief that has never been observed today or verified by present experiments. Natural selection can never explain the gap between reptiles and birds, even though evolutionists postulate that the latter descended from the latter.

      (..instead of looking for a purpose rooted in the physical world..)

      Again, purpose is beyond science, but is a v

      --
      All theory is gray
    31. Re:You must be a cdesign proponentsist by ArtDent · · Score: 1

      You want someone to explain a joke? Sadly, it's not a joke. It's on the record in Kitzmiller v. Dover, and contributed to the creationist/ID defeat in that case.

      The first intelligent design textbook, Of Pandas and People started its life as a creationist textbook. The evidence presented in court shows that its "evolution" to ID consisted of little more than a find/replace operation, which immediately followed the Supreme Court's 1987 ruling against creation science in Edwards v. Aguillard.

      "Cdesign proponentsists", jokingly referred to as the intermediate species, was actually the product of a sloppy replace in this effort. It really is irrefutable evidence of the origin and intent of the Intelligent Design movement.
  187. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    Atheists tend to understand a lot about evolution Don't kid yourself. There as many idiot atheists as there are idiot Christians. It's just that in the US, idiot Christians tend to be more vocal about it.

    Not intent to live and let live, they insist on tearing you and your beliefs down. Plenty of Christians have no problems leaving you to your beliefs, just like there are a lot of atheists that seem to have a problem with my beliefs. Insecure people in general simply feel threatened by people who believe something else. That fear is not confined to any particular world view.
  188. Where is the open mind? by rayk_sland · · Score: 0

    Boy, when it comes to this debate, lots of perfectly reasonable slashdotters turn into religious zealots. I don't understand. Why can't God be part of a hypothesis? Especially when we've personally experienced him? What we are all looking for is a theory that fits everything. Evolution doesn't fit everything. ID might. It's worth a look, Without the raillery.

    What happens to a evolutionary scientist who has a God experience? He has to reform his theory based on new evidence. His new connection with righteousness, (God) demands honesty in a way that nothing has before. He makes public his difficulties with the scientific establishment's views, and voila, he is expelled. Whether or not the movie covers that, that is how the story has repeatedly gone.

    Come on people! Cut the crap and ask God if he exists. And if so, to prove it within some time frame. That at least is a falsifiable experiment. The only requirement on your part is that you actually mean it. If he doesn't come through, you're off the hook. If he does, then you may need to alter your theory to accommodate the new evidence.

    --
    Jedis are stupid. If they were so powerful, why couldn't they handle counseling for a kid who missed his mom?
  189. One does not believe in evolution by hallucinogen · · Score: 0

    One either understands it or does not. It's as simple as that.

  190. DN from MKD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I was educated in a system that was left over from the socialists that ruled my country in the past.
    I know that lots of people hated their guts, we did too, but one smart thing they did was - teach sound science in schools. There are some young religious groups emerging this last decade but they are all being laughed at just because people are well educated and know better than to believe nonsense.
    Those ID folks trust the same source that said the earth was flat and the sun went around the moon. Just how many time does science need to prove the religious establishment and the bible wrong before it's clear to everybody that the good book is just an allegory at best and fairy tales at worst.
    I am not saying that people shouldn't have faith of believe whatever they want to believe, but ask yourself if you want to have your sick child taken care of in a modern hospital by doctors that practice scientifically based medicine, or go to the church and light candles and prey that god takes care of it?
    Religion is a white lie that helps people accept the difficulties in life, it makes them feel good for a moment, feel that they do have someone to turn to, no matter what they did or what they expect.
    It helps them accept the problems, not solve them.
    That's where reason, hard work and usualy science and proven knowledge comes in.

  191. Wowzers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow the zealots are out in full force. I thought this type of frothing mouth goodness only came from the right wingers.

  192. Re:Monkey's uncle? by notabaggins · · Score: 1

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean? There are no other theories.
  193. IMHO, Stein picked the wrong issue completely.... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    The most interesting things I've seen coming from Ben Stein were his editorials on finance.

    It honestly took me by total surprise that he made this movie, taking up the evolution/creationism issues. He wrote some rather interesting pieces for Forbes, including one denouncing people's willingness to forgive stock market scandals (like the Steve Jobs and Apple stock back-dating situation that came up last year). Given the sagging economy and so much distress over America's financial future in the "world marketplace", it would be a great time for him to release a film discussing these topics.

  194. Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by protein+folder · · Score: 5, Informative

    See this for some hot debunking action.

    To briefly (and probably not completely accurately) summarize: 1) one guy did get fired, but that's because he wasn't getting published or graduating many students. Sorry you didn't perform. 2) a guy who said "I was fired" from the smithsonian wasn't actually fired (and was never employed there anyway), still has access to the collections and an office there, etc. They did move him to a different office, so the fact that he said "they changed the locks on my office" is true. Even worse, this is the guy who, in his last month as editor of a scientific journal (not because he was fired, but because his time was going to be up anyway) basically took it upon himself to wave a publication into print without peer review, saying that he was the only qualified editor, when there were others who could have and should have been able to review this paper.

    So the ID advocates portrayed here seem to be acting in deceitful or unethical ways, and then this movie is compounding their deceit.

    There are a lot of interesting questions still to be answered in evolutionary theory; rehashing the same battles over and over again with these people is a distraction at best.

    --
    Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    1. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      That's what it's all about, really. Forget about ID, forget about evolution, forget about persecution - from beginning to end the movie is lying to its audience. That's reason enough to be pissed off at it.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    2. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So the ID advocates portrayed here seem to be acting in deceitful or unethical ways, and then this movie is compounding their deceit.

      Welcome to America, 2008. Deceit and a lack of ethics raise concerns among people who post comments on blogs and news sites, but not necessarily among a majority of people who vote and write letters to their legislatures. We've arrived in an era in which there are two truths: right-wing truth and left-wing truth. You can pick either. Each has its own dedicated news and opinion services dedicated to it, so regardless of which one you pick, you can safely pretend the other doesn't exist until a talking head points out how silly the other side looks.

      Here's the catch: most of the emotional advantages are firmly on the side of right-wing truth. Think of what feels good and it's true. America is the best country on earth, and everything we do is therefore moral. Oil production will never peak. The environment will take care of itself regardless of what we do, because it was put there for us by God. What industry lobbyists say about the climate is more correct than what most scientists say, because the scientists are communists. Human beings are special: not a type of animal that evolved along with other animals, but higher beings on a pedestal above animals.

      See? Emotionally the right wing is far more satisfying. If you pick right-wing truth, there's no need to apply any scrutiny to it, and it provides a mirror of left wing truth in every respect, aside from a lack of creditability its adherents don't seem to miss.

    3. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      one guy did get fired, but that's because he wasn't getting published or graduating many students. Sorry you didn't perform. Failing to make tenure is hardly the same as getting fired. Tenure isn't an entitlement. People who *do* perform sometimes don't make it.

      And unless a freshly minted PhD is utterly clueless, he knows that when he signs on for the job, and has it continuously on his mind for his six years on the chain gang before the decision comes up.
      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    4. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by protein+folder · · Score: 1

      Yep, you're right. In my mind I have "not getting tenure" and "getting fired" associated with "very bad things associated with the end of an academic's career at an institution" so I confused one with the other.

      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    5. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by protein+folder · · Score: 1

      Exactly--if you can get people thinking that there aren't any objective facts, or that they can't trust science because scientists are just a bunch of agenda-pushers, you can inject enough doubt into a political situation to get people to act against their own interests.

      --
      Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
    6. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by Shirakawasuna · · Score: 1

      Oh, the hilarity of the Sternberg controversy doesn't end there. One of the primary reasons for his reshuffling at the Smithsonian was because his sponsor, essentially his boss, passed away. In situations like this, a person with a poor record is often dropped, however to avoid the martyrdom firestorm someone quickly sponsored him. Rather than move to a nearby office with other coworkers, he chose an office on the other side of the building.

      I imagine he did receive some flak from coworkers, but should we expect anything less for someone who had just committed a high-profile (in biology circles), unethical, antiscientific act? For some reason, antievolution martyrs always act like spoiled children who get caught with their hand in the cookie jar...

    7. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Absurd belief in the naturallistic fallacy, a belief that the cruel survival-of-the-fittest law of the universe can somehow magically be undone with feel-good, no-side-effect, ineffective wealth re-distribution, woman and men are completely identical (except in trivial body parts differences) and not in basic psychology honed by millions of years of differing evolution, biodiesel is great and not a negative-net-energy waste, eating only vegetables kills no animals (well, except the billions of them killed by soil tilling to grow those vegetables, but hey, those animals are below ground and ugly), etc., etc. etc.

      Yeah, there's nothing stupid and emotional about liberal "reasoning" either.

      Get a clue. Ninety percent of the people on both sides are mostly emotion-driven in their beliefs and, especially, their actions.

    8. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Clue yourself. I've yet to hear a single liberal claim that women and men are identical, and I've never heard progressive tax plans justified by a silly "wealth redistribution" argument. I think biodiesel is an awful fuel strategy that only makes food more expensive (and it's a policy pushed far more heavily by the right wing than by the left - our current biodiesel mess has been touted by President Bush as an "accomplishment" for years).

      Personally I don't subscribe to any of the fallacies that you listed, and I'd wager that most liberals don't match the convenient template you've set up for them. But feel free to poke the straw man all you'd like.

    9. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Here's the catch: most of the emotional advantages are firmly on the side of right-wing truth.

      I don't know about that. It feels pretty good to convince yourself that you're somehow saving the world. Whenever I can self-righteously condemn a large group of people for being bad stupid, ignorant, or evil, it gives me a little warm-fuzzy feeling because I know I'm not them. I know I'm better than them. I get to be part a a group of superior people who know better and do "the right thing".

      Now, I can get all those warm-fuzzy feelings by being "a good Christian", and talking about how we should "make the world safe for democracy" by "hunting down the terrorists". Or I can get that same sort of feeling by buying Nabisco cookies that are labelled "organic", complaining about "corporate America" and global warming, and trying to convert everyone to Atheism.

      I'm not such a big fan of either, but both of those attitudes have emotional advantages.

    10. Re:Except the people who lost their jobs didn't... by DrEasy · · Score: 1

      Here's the catch: most of the emotional advantages are firmly on the side of right-wing truth. Think of what feels good and it's true. America is the best country on earth, and everything we do is therefore moral. Oil production will never peak. The environment will take care of itself regardless of what we do, because it was put there for us by God. What industry lobbyists say about the climate is more correct than what most scientists say, because the scientists are communists. Human beings are special: not a type of animal that evolved along with other animals, but higher beings on a pedestal above animals.



      See? Emotionally the right wing is far more satisfying.

      Wow, I never thought of it that way! I always suspected that there was a different mentality to being right wing (resp. left wing), but I just couldn't put my finger on it. You nailed it.

      Being left wing definitely makes one a grumpy, going against the grain, nail-on-the-chalkboard type of guy. Doesn't make you feel warm and fuzzy. Not electable.
      --
      "In our tactical decisions, we are operating contrary to our strategic interest."
  195. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 2, Informative

    not to be picky, but that is not really a standard normal distribution.

    You're right! There's noise in the data! But can you show that the 'noise' rises to the level of statistical significance? Can you show that there's a recognizable chance that there's a 'signal' in that noise? I said that it fit a bell curve "very, very well" - I didn't say it fit "perfectly", because you don't get perfection in the real world.

    The point is, despite a lot of people looking very very carefully, nobody's been able to show any statistically-significant deviation from random in mutations. That doesn't prove that such deviations don't exist, but it does justify a presumption of randomness until and unless someone can show something different. Feel free to get started - if you succeed, the Nobel Prize awaits.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  196. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have read the "other theories" (e.g., irreducible complexity). I understand them. They are mathematically naive (do these people even understand how many permutations can take place in a period of 4.5 billion years over a set - the collection of all genomes - with a population that at the very least is in the trillions?), philosophically inept ("mutations must always be bad, because information can only be lost by stochastic processes, never created" - apparently someone has never played Boggle), and biologically unsound ("there is no way this process can develop from simpler processes" - except, of course, no one says that any "simpler" version of the process even existed in the predecessor organisms; simple genetic change does not preclude complex phenotypic change).

  197. AND there's no evidence for ID/creationism: by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    There is no scientific evidence whatsoever for creationism. None, zip, zilch, nada. Supernatural silliness at it's best. I undid my moderation in this discussion to post that.

    Want to see some raw uncut creationism? Check this thread out:

    http://grassrootsmotorsports.com/board/viewtopic.php?id=30455&p=1

    I admit I was fairly pissed when I started it, and became extremely pissed and mentally exhausted as the thread progressed. After that, I realized that many people just don't understand the basic concepts of science, and never will, and there is no hope for them.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  198. Cack-Handed? by kalidasa · · Score: 1

    How dextrocentric of you.

  199. It's about control, stupid! by Dreadneck · · Score: 1

    Ben Stein's pseudo documentary has nothing to do with fact and reason. It is all about maintaining control over the ignorant masses by means of religion. People who believe in invisible sky faeries can be easily maneuvered using the lever of the pulpit. People who embrace empirical evidence, logic and reason are much more difficult to control.

    Does anyone think it coincedence that this movie comes out just in time to stir up mindless, knee-jerk religious animosity towards 'godless liberals' when the republican candidate is not well liked by the religious right?

    --
    Power does not corrupt - power attracts the corrupt.
  200. Why are we legitimizing this movie? by Reikachu · · Score: 1

    This needs to stop being presented as a two-sided issue. It is only two-sided in the sense that one can be right or wrong. ID has no answer to the basic problem of falsifiability, and so its proponents must resort to faked controversy in order to generate any sort of buzz for their position. There is no controversy over ID within the greater scientific community.

  201. Re:Monkey's uncle? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Plenty of Xians eh?

    Then how do you explain the Red States?

    We've had 8 years of George Bush for no other reason than
    xian moral conservatives are blindsided immediately and
    completely by any sort of "moral issue" even when it doesn't
    have any direct impact on them.

    Now I wasn't even talking about that in my previous rant, I
    was speaking of the relatively sedate upscale yuppie suburbs
    where the relevant Xians seem more interested in conspicuous
    consumption than piety.

    They're content to let you go to hell even if they will gladly
    clue you in about your predicament.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  202. flunked is different from expelled by Presto+Vivace · · Score: 1
  203. Hey, ID works for me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But my spiritual beliefs are based on Huna and Tao. I sure don't want that Christian dogma forced on my kids!

  204. Re:Monkey's uncle? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    But as the trailer points out, people have done the research (no idea if its correct) but the second they try to publish it, the Darwinans label them crackpots and shot out: "Its not Darwinism, so its wrong"

    If you had a job or tried to get a job as a writer of short stories, but handed a publication, or university, or publishing agent a blank book and told them you had sung a great tale at it... what do you think would happen? They'd tell you to get lost, not because they're anti-singing, but because they're looking to pay people for writings.

    Real scientists aren't rejecting studies or papers promoting so-called intelligent design because they are against writing random stuff, but because it is not science. You have to start with a testable hypothesis and then you need to test it. If you haven't done that, you shouldn't even get to the peer review stage of science. They're not saying what the people have done is wrong, just as they may not think consulting a tarot card reader is wrong. It just isn't science.

    Acting like that is just childish.

    What they're doing is following a formal method that makes personal bias fairly irrelevant. It isn't childish, it is their job.

    If Darwin was right, then you have nothing to lose by carefully writing a counter paper, countering the evidence.

    There have been thousands of scientific articles debunking such "evidence" over the years. Why would scientists waste their time trying to show people for the hundredth time where they failed to follow the scientific method, something every educated person on the planet should already be able to tell them. If advocates of intelligent design or people who dislike the theory of evolution want to participate in science they are welcome. If they want to pretend to be participating in science while actually just producing rhetoric, they will be deservedly ignored by scientific publications and refused jobs as scientists. It's a level playing field, but creationism has lost over and over and over again on that playing field, so now creationists are trying to avoid the playing field, while arguing that they really are there, and how it is unfair for their "goals" to not count, just because they made them in a goal they themselves built somewhere else entirely.

  205. Re:What I am opposed to ... by Angostura · · Score: 1

    I have no problem with anyone raising the possibility that Darwinian evolution is bad science, in the classroom. But that's really not what is happening here; this is an attack on the scientific method itself. Scientific theories hold dominance until a better scientific theory comes along. At that point there is a highly entertaining battle and paradigms shift.

    Currently no better scientific theory has come along. Instead we see the theory of Darwinian evolution being attacked by rebranded religious dogma. That's what I have a problem with. And look I managed that without resorting to argumentum ad hominem

  206. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> They lied to the interviewees, they attempted to pirate animations used in the movie, after being humiliated during the pre-release screenings they lied to cover it up, they lied to the people who wanted to see screenings -- they're liars.

    You've obviously gone to great effort to check out the facts. If you propagate a lie does it make you a liar too?

  207. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Poorcku · · Score: 1

    ah but you too quick to dismiss the data that does not fit as "noise". I repeat, I am not a gene scientist :), in my field (psychology) such "noise" is normally attributed to different causes - be it evaluation bias (which is very, very different from "noise"), be it missing values (to which you can ask yourself, why the question was not answered) . But the data, if correct, never lies :). So noise can be a very tricky issue.

    But i diverge; your point is sound and valid. I was just trying to get some crappy methodological issues across :)

    --
    I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
  208. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

    If someone doesn't trust ssh, which has popular open and closed-source implementations, and been reviewed by many, why would they trust some home-grown alternative with a significantly smaller base of eyes?

    Because it's a lot smaller, simpler, and easier to check. For example, you only need to look at about 58 lines of code (including comments) to determine that remote buffer overflows are impossible.

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  209. Only in USA by Findeton · · Score: 1

    As an european, i can only laugh hard at this movie. I see some people here is supporting ID in some way (fortunately, they are a minority). Well, there's nothing to discuss, ID is not Science and those who support creationism/ID are simple-minded religious zealots.

    1. Re:Only in USA by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Don't laugh too hard. You're sure the reason europeans score better in the statistics is not just that the local religious leaders aren't pushing creationist viewpoints? alright, so Europe is less religious. Parts of Europe. Maybe most europeans never heard of creationism.

      I mean, think about it. You want to belong to the same club as two thirds of the population? That can't be right.

    2. Re:Only in USA by Findeton · · Score: 1

      "I mean, think about it. You want to belong to the same club as two thirds of the population? That can't be right."

      If that two thirds of the population are the ones who accept evolution as a fact, which btw it is, yes, i want to belong to that club. Your question is the same kind of "Do you want to belong to the same club as 99.9% of the population of your country, which strongly believe that torture (like what you americans do in Guantanamo) should be absolutely illegal?" Of course i want!

      BTW, i'm from Spain, which scores in that table about 70%, your country scores 25%, you americans should be ashamed of your ignorance. It's not god who blesses USA (because god doesn't exist), it is ignorance.

    3. Re:Only in USA by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      I'm not wholly being sarcastic. If two thirds of the population are holding the right point of view then the reasons are suspect. Many people's interpretation of (neo-)darwinism is pretty shaky and it could be subverted if they got exposed to alternative views, say a litterate Intelligent-Designer. But they didn't get exposed.

      So Europe scores better than average America, with good margin, but don't overestimate that safety margin.

      Apart from that, there might well be big differences in statistics between red and blue states in the US. It makes more sense to compare Spain with a coast state.

    4. Re:Only in USA by Findeton · · Score: 1

      "Many people's interpretation of (neo-)darwinism is pretty shaky and it could be subverted if they got exposed to alternative views, say a litterate Intelligent-Designer. But they didn't get exposed."

      Maybe in the USA many people's interpretation of evolution theories are shaky, but don't underestimate the education on that matter in europe. Try to talk to a spanish in spain about ID/Creationism, they will send you to (the inexistent) hell. No one really questions scientific facts like evolution, not even believers. No one here knows ID/Creationism exists, and in fact when i talk about it with anyone, let it be my mother, my very christian grandparents, friends who are themselves believers... THEY JUST DON'T BELIEVE THERE EXIST CREATIONISTS IN THE USA, because it's so so so sooooooo stupid and lame that they just can't believe such people actually exist. And i'm not joking at all with this, they just can't believe such a stupid person as a creationist actually exists in the USA.

      I don't know what's happening there in the USA, you tell me, but here? here no one, not even the Church questions evolution. It is an unavoidable fact and so it is taught in schools, whether they are private catholic schools or not. There can be many scientific theories on evolution, but evolution is an unavoidable fact, just like there are many scientific theories on gravity (newton's, einstein's), but gravity is a fact. And that is well understood here.

  210. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

    Also, do we not have a bit of a self-selection problem here? Lets say you hire a scientist, and tell him or her 'Ok, let's discover which gene is responsible for hangnails.'

    Should the scientist then reply 'God causes hangnails. I believe they were put in on day 5. Next project?' do you really think he or she will have a long and stirling career in science?

    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  211. For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 0, Troll

    First off, Creationism/Intellident Design/Evolution aren't necessarily competing ideas. Why couldn't everyone be created and then evolve from that point? I'm not arguing that's how it is, it's just that the two sides generally fail to realize it in this completely worthless and time wasting debate.

    Second off, the THEORY of Evolution is a theory because it's not been proven. If there was a mountain of evidence, as some idiot put it in his comment, it'd no longer be a theory.

    You all might want to start reading something before just taking sides without information because you like or dislike something you hear. Start reading or STFU about it, seriously.

    1. Re:For all the rtards out there... by BRUTICUS · · Score: 1

      EVOLUTION is not a theory it is a fact. If you believe that your hair color, eye color, body type from your parents then YOU believe in evolution.

      The only part that is up for debate is whether or not evolution is the only cause of our existence. The only reason this is even up for debate is because no one person has been alive for a billion years.

    2. Re:For all the rtards out there... by sizzzzlerz · · Score: 1

      You obviously don't understand the use of the word theory as it applies in the scientific domain. Go read a book on the scientific method and educate yourself and won't appear to be such a fool. The fact of the matter is that the theory of evolution is backed by mountains of evidence, is recognized as valid by biologists everywhere, and does provide the most accurate explanations of life available.

    3. Re:For all the rtards out there... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      The name "theory of evolution" is just historical baggage. It's just a consequnce of DNA and "natural selection" (the fact that we're not all created equal - nature sorts out the winners), not a theory at all.

      We define evolutionary "fitness" as a catch-all description of those hereditory traits that cause one individual to tend to leave more descendents than another in a given environment. In terms of animals this is mostly about things like abililty to attract mates, compete for food, fertility, disease resistance, etc. Fitness doesn't have any connotation of good or bad - it is just about number of descendents (all that matters in terms of your genetics suriving/dominating over many generations).

      fact: fitter individuals leave more descendents than less fit ones
      fact: genetics encodes fitness
      fact: genetics is hereditory

      consequence: each generation tends to be evolutionally fitter than the preceding one

      In other words, evolution is not a theory - it is a consequence. At the time Darwin wrote "The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection" (aka the theory of evolution) it was technically fair to call it a theory since it depended on the assumed existence of an hereditory traits mechanism, but since the discovery of DNA there is nothing left but plain fact.

      New species are created when two subgroups of an existing species evolve in different directions such that they can no longer interbreed (hence, by definition create a new species and are bound to diverge since due to lack of interbreeding their gene pools can no longer intermix). Speciation is just an example of evolution in action - it's simply what happens when genetic divergence takes you past the point of being able to interbreed (e.g. lion/tiger almost there, horse/donkey just diverged, man/chimp more longer diverged).

    4. Re:For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 1

      Get your panties in a bunch because someone threatened your narrow views?

      You're as much a joke as the religious zealots.

    5. Re:For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 1

      I'm going to quote my original post for you:

      "You all might want to start reading something before just taking sides without information because you like or dislike something you hear. Start reading or STFU about it, seriously."

    6. Re:For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 1

      Alright, the theory of evolution has been proven then, ey? Wow, I thought I would have heard that on the news. Where's your sources?

      While we're at it, has the theory of gravity or relativity been proven now too?

    7. Re:For all the rtards out there... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      You're confused on terminology.

      "theory" means one thing in the everyday english language, has a seperate formal meaning in science and yet another in math.

      A mathematical theory can be either be proven or falsified (or even provably unknowable) or merely hypothesized.

      A scientific theory can never be proved, only falsified.

      The "theory" of evolution doesn't need to be proved because it isn't, nor ever was, a theory other than in the sloppy english sense. It is just a consequence of natural selection acting upon hereditory traits, which is precisely what Darwin's insight was.

    8. Re:For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 1

      A scientific theory is a possible explanation based on observation. The only problem is that the explanation covers more years than we'll ever exist. So we have small clues that lead us towards believing one thing or another but the truth is that it's believed on faith, not scientific fact. No one can observe whether it's actually true or not.

      You can't point me to credible sources that say it's 100% true with evidence because it's not even remotely possible at this point in time. I'm not here to convince people what they believe is true or false though, only to try to get people to read and understand what it is they're even talking about.

      There were a few good comments on this article but most of the comments were pure crap coming from uneducated minds that think they're smart. It's a mob mentality and it's one of the reasons I don't visit Slashdot much anymore.

    9. Re:For all the rtards out there... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      A scientific theory is a possible explanation based on observation.

      Yes, but you are not listening. Evolution is not a scientific theory - it is simple logic like (A > B) && (B > C) => A > C.

      If two individuals P and Q have children, but P has more children than Q, then in the children's generation there will be a greater percentage of P's genetics than Q's, agreed? Would you call that a sciwntific theory, or accept it as just plain logic?

      That is all there is to evolution at the core - the fitter genes are more represented in each successive generation.

      The HISTORY of evolution is what you are referring to - exactly how did it play out over the last millions/whatever of years? That's an interesting question, and one we know quite a lot about, but it's also an entirely different question that "do species evolve due to natural selection acting upon hereditory traits", to which the only answer can be "yes - it's unavavoidable".

    10. Re:For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 1

      I think we're talking about slightly different things here, Norm. When I said "Theory of Evolution", I was referring to Darwin's Theory. His ideas were based on Macro-evolution. You seem to be talking about Micro-evolution, which according to him, leads to Macro-evolution.

      Regardless, though, it's not the ideas I have a problem with it's the armchair mob. Microsoft's evil, Linux rocks, Creationism is for retards, Evolution is fact, etc.

      If we're going to talk Micro-evolution then yea, there's proof of that. It's not the entire theory though and it's not what his ideas focused on. It can't be used to prove the rest of his ideas are correct. I'm talking about whole ideas here, not partials. Hell if we were going to do that, Jesus was a real guy right? Well, I could say that proves God exists.

      Looking at your user number here, I'd say you've been around Slashdot for awhile. I'm pretty sure, just because of that alone, you know what I'm talking about. No one's perfect but people here need a wake up call IMO.

    11. Re:For all the rtards out there... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      I don't think it makes sense to distinguish micro and macro evolution - it's just a matter of degree of change.

      The key to understanding macro evolution is to realize that the only definition of species that makes sense is based on the ability to interbreed. If two animals can interbreed (and produce healthy young) then they are defined as being the same species, else they are not.

      The reason this definition is useful is because if two populations can't interbreed then they can't mix their DNA - they are now on different branches of the evolutionary tree. However if they can still interbreed then however much they may have diverged it's not yet past that point of no return. Note that this definition of species is more stringent than that which has been historically applied which was based at least partly on appearance and habits; e.g. lions and tigers are offially named as seperate species, but since they can interbreed we know those differences are not yet necessarily permanent (they could still re-mix).

      Given this stringent definition of species, it is now easy to see how new species get created - it's just a matter of two populations of a single species genetically diverging apart (due to some form of seperation preenting them from much interbreeding while they are still able) until they get past the point of being able to interbreed. Initially the two halves of such a species split will still appear very similar (e.g. horse and donkey - effectively diverged since their offspring - mules - are sterile), but since they have pased that no-turning-back point their DNA can no longer mix and they will almost certainly slowly drift further and further genetically apart.

      Note that macro evolution aka speciation, the creation of new species, is (like evolution itself) just a matter of logic. If two populations have drifted apart to the point of inability to interbreed (not that it always happens) then they are simply by definition new species, and will necessarily now form their own branches on the evolutionary tree.

      The HISTORY of macro evolution is again a seperate issue. We don't need to know which species branched, and when they did, to accept that occasionally they must do so - there is no force that only allows genetic divergence up to a certain point and not beyond the loss of ability to interbreed. Of course the fossil record, and nowadays gentic sequencing, does in fact let us know an awful lot about the history.

    12. Re:For all the rtards out there... by 00Monkey · · Score: 1

      Well, then to you the theory makes complete sense and that's great. I refuse to believe that we're all a bunch of randomly evolved creatures at this point from way back in the day when we were tadpoles in the water. It's simply retarded to me and the day I'll believe it is the day we get it on record.

      GL to you Norm, this is my last post. Although I completely disagree with you, I have to respect you for at least not being an idiot.

    13. Re:For all the rtards out there... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Thanks, Monkey.

      I respect your point of view, and realize that we're not going to agree, but let me just leave you with one final thought..

      However counter-intuitive the idea of all life, us included, having evolved from a common source may be, and however much it may clash with other beliefs you may like to hold (maybe for very good reason), there is still the reality that evolution has to be happening, even if it may not be the whole story (although I think in essence it is).

      Micro and macro evolution are the same thing - just a matter of the genetics of successive generations becoming better matched to the prevailing environment, and as we've seen the logic is inescapable. All that seperates micro from macro evolution is how far the DNA of any population of a species has diverged from any other population (e.g. indian elephants vs african elephants), but since evolution/adaptation is a never ending process you can't expect it to just conveniently stop before crossing the line of incompatability (lack of ability to interbreed - creation of a new species).

      So, whatever other forces you believe may also be at work, you can't just ignore evolution. Evolution IS happening, and IS creating new species, regardless of what else is going on, and since the result of evolution is to make each generation better suited to the environment (if I plant two types of apple tree in sandy soil, one that likes sandy soil, and one that doesn't, which one will leave behind more apples and little apple trees? ...), the result of this dumb/mechanical process may give the appearance of intelligence.

      Even if you like to believe that there is a designer that put life in some form on earth (maybe there was - evolution doesn't conflict with that possibility), or that may be intelligently nudging evolution of different species in different directions, there is no need to reject the reality that evolution is also occuring, and it would be entirely illogical to do so. If you believe that life was designed, then DNA - the ability to evolve - was certainly part of the plan!

      See you on another thread!

  212. Ad-hominem by pikine · · Score: 1

    On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc. On the other side, we've got.... an ex-Nixon speechwiter/game show host.

    There are two kinds of people. One kind asserts that they're neutral, unbiased, and objective. The other kind always loses argument ad-hominem. Really, when you start putting labels on the people supporting each side of the issue, the outcome is obvious.

    Science should be scrutinized, not believed, even if it is generally neutral, unbiased, and objective. I look forward to Darwinism being taught in classroom as long as students are allowed to criticize it, not learning it as the absolute truth. After all, it's just a model of how someone understands nature to be.

    I've pointed out flaws in this model before, e.g. the common ancestry assumption. Most species get their genes from two parents as opposed to just one. Viruses, on the other hand, duplicates asexually. That explains why Darwinism is more readily observable on virus than sexed species. And some science fanboys (they might not be scientists at all, mind you) love to say that whatever works for viruses applies to humans and other animals too.

    At least whoever wrote Genesis (it is believed to be Moses) has some sense that human can't origin from one Adam alone. And that Noah didn't just pick one animal of each specie (he picked several pairs) when the flood came because one animal can't breed by itself.

    --
    I once had a signature.
  213. The importance of provability by Tetsujin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Serious question: should the inability to prove or disprove a theory automatically preclude it? In certain circumstances, such as science, yes.

    The whole scientific process is an accumulation of knowledge over many generations. Because so much of our accumulated knowledge was established in the distant past, we need the process as a way to establish or maintain its viability as a part of the model of the world. Even when accumulation of knowledge spans a single lifetime, we still need the process in order to ensure we haven't gravitated to the answers we "like", but that we've actually come up with a sensible model for the world and that it has, so far, continued to be reliable.

    How it works is we find a mystery in the world and attempt to explain it - then we attempt to work out, if that explanation really is true, then what else must also be true? And so we come up with tests... "If combustion is a process of release of Phlogiston, then there must be no material which gains weight as it burns" or "If our calculations about the orbital path of this planet is correct, then on this date at this time, the planet will be observed at this position." As test results come in, the results lend support to the theory, suggest the need for refinement, or else contradict it completely - in any case, so long as the process is properly followed and the results well documented, our total knowledge of the world has increased.

    The reason why useful scientific ideas must be disprovable is because if they weren't, we would have no means of establishing the idea's reliability. You can use an untested idea to attempt to model the world in the hope that this model will provide you with some useful information - like playing a hunch, sometimes it does pay off - but to bring that idea to the point where you can rely upon it you must be able to test it.

    The reason why I limited my answer to "in certain contexts" is this: I do not deny the value of discussion of creation in a philosophical context, only in a scientific one. Philosophy, like science, attempts to use logic to make reasoned assumptions about the world - but unlike science it does not limit itself to what can be measured or tested in physical terms. It is the proper venue for discussing the possibility of creation as the origin of life. Science deals with data, and the ongoing process of attempting to understand that data. As such, the assumptions made can't stray too far beyond the minimal assumptions possible from the data.

    Creation theory and Intelligent Design are not only impossible to disprove (for the same reason it'd be impossible to disprove, for instance, the idea that we're in "The Matrix") but it's very difficult to base any meaningful understanding of the world upon them. Do you accept that the world was "created"? If so, how does that help you to understand how it was created? Intelligent Design claims that its idea could be a viable model for understanding biology - if one assumes things were "designed" then one can attempt to understand what the designer had in mind... But how can one hope to understand the thought processes of an unknown creator? And it's hard to see how that assumption could serve you better than the more conservative assumption that "there is some logical basis to how biology works" - and yet it can serve you worse, by leading you astray...
    --
    Bow-ties are cool.
  214. How do we know? by drewness · · Score: 1

    Stein actually told the people he interviewed for the movie that he was making a completely different film (philosophy, I think)


    How do you know this? (I don't know any different, but that's a pretty strong statement to make.)

    Mark Mathis (the producer) and Ben Stein told many of the interviewees that it was for a documentary called "Crossroads: The Intersection of Science and Religion" "about the disconnect/controversy that exists in America between Evolution, Creationism and the Intelligent Design movement." Mathis even pretended to be pro-science.
  215. Not just a theory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This site explains why the phrase 'Evolution is just a theory' is a load of crap.

    http://www.notjustatheory.com/

  216. Intelligible Design Pattern by deanston · · Score: 1

    Scientific acceptance is simple, pretty like the Apache Foundation motto - Meritocracy in Action. Useful ideas or software GET USED. Intelligent Design, aka Creationism, is a nice theological idea, but not a testable scientific hypothesis. Whereas the Theory of Electro Magnetism has helped us built most of our modern technology, ID proponents so far have solved no real world problems of any practical value. You can use Genetic or Evolutionary Programming methodology to solve real problems. You cannot apply Intelligible Design pattern to help build that next generation chip or pursue the solution to the multi-core programming challenge.

  217. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Poorcku · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well you seem to be pretty sure of yourself. Here check for yourself what happens when a very, very solid study and the authors get into trouble when the data shows something other than the "scientific consensus".

    Even the mighty House of Representatives condemned the study (a first in our modern and very scientific times). The data was solid, the methodology was stone hard and still, when talking to a bunch of retards it does not matter. Especially if the retards are SCIENTISTS. That is why i am very weary when it comes to "consensus".

    --
    I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
  218. But I want a dragon! by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    ID can explain Pegasuses, dragons unicorns and cyclopses just fine. Dude, dragons are kickass. This evolution thing is a major bummer. ID creatures are WAY cooler. They have dragons and unicorns and the best we get is a frickin' platypus that doesn't fly OR breathe fire.
    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  219. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the evidence for evolution is overwhelming?

    Out of curiosity (and I mean this in all honesty) how might one disprove evolution as it is currently theorized? I mean, certain specific aspects are "disproveable" and have changed over time, but how is it possible to falsify the theory that creatures have changed over time to enter their current states?

  220. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scientists never thought the earth was flat. The greeks knew it was round and even measured it's circumference using some clever techniques over 2000 years ago(they also measured the distance to the moon, and the distance to the sun. Smart buggers).

    The whole earth is flat thing has been completely overblown. Many uneducated people probably thought the earth was flat in the middle ages, because it looked flat. But anyone educated knew it was round. (And yes, that includes people in the time of Columbus. No one actually thought he was going to sail off the edge of the world.)

  221. Science & Religion by hendridm · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why the right is so adamant that religion be taught in science class. I don't mind religion being taught in public schools, but it should be in a religious studies or philosophy class. If you want more than that, consider private schools or bible study.

    Religion is incompatible with the scientific method, and a religious studies class could expose aspects of all mainstream religions (and not simply focus on Judeo-Christian beliefs). Free thought wins.

  222. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just like idiot Christians say nothing about the validity of the Christian faith. Not strictly true: it proves
    a) that having Faith is no obstacle to being an unpleasant bigot
    b) puts people like me off the whole idea of Xtianity
  223. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Evangelion · · Score: 1
    I wouldn't consider it "great effort", but since this apparently hard:

    Richard Dawkins on meeting Mark Mathis:

    Could Mathis have been sincere when he originally told PZ and me the film was an honest attempt to examine evolution and intelligent design? The evidence that they had already purchased the Expelled domain name argues against this. Certainly Mathis' friendly demeanour disarmed me into cooperating with him -- indeed, I went out of my way to HELP him on his visit to Britain -- in a way that I never would have if I had had the slightest suspicion that his outfit was in fact a creationist front. I may have misremembered the details of our exchanges, by eMail and by telephone, but I vividly remember his reassuring me, over the telephone, that he was on the side of science, and he made no attempt to distance himself from my sarcastic jokes about 'Intelligent Design'.

    The Cell video plagiarism is mostly documented at ERV. There are too many posts on the issues to link individually.

    After they humiliated themselves, they proceeded to tell lies to cover up their incompetence.

    Since their screenings were such a fiasco, they attempted to "filter out" any critics by lying to anyone who might be critical by saying that the showing was cancelled, while telling people they deemed "okay" when it was on.

    The people behind this movie are pathological liars. It's like, telling the truth about anything is alien to them.
  224. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    Plenty of Xians eh?

    Then how do you explain the Red States? I blame the Americans. None of the European Christians ever voted for Bush.

    Besides, isn't Obama Christian too? Wasn't Clinton a baptist or something like that? You can't blame everything on Christians. Not even in the US.
  225. Re:What I am opposed to ... by mbaGeek · · Score: 1

    I agree.

    I was taught the theory of evolution as "proven fact" - with the caveat being that the professor wanted to distinguish between "micro" and "macro" evolution

    "Micro" evolution was demonstrated with the fruit fly experiment (which countless students probably still perform each year)

    "Macro" evolution (i.e. one species turning into a separate species) on the other hand takes "large periods of time" and cannot be directly observed.

    Therefore the "theory of evolution" will remain a "theory" for the foreseeable future (while we are waiting on the "gaps" in the fossil record to be filled).

    Since "macro" evolution cannot be directly proven, a certain amount of "faith" is required. So we are actually discussing one of those things about which reasonable people can disagree.

    Q.E.D.

    --
    It ain't what they call you. It's what you answer to. http://mylyceum.us/
  226. Godwin's Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm wondering when Godwin's "law" became a "law" outside of a select group of discussion boards. Mind you, he's jewish and WW2 wasn't so long ago that there aren't still lessons to be learned. In addition I think it was long enough ago that people are starting to forget. I think we shouldn't let Godwin's law erase part of history.
     
      WW2 was a big deal, it changed the world, it shocked everyone to realize the horrific behavior and ideologies that significantly large groups of people are willing to commit and believe, so we're still processing it so we still talk about it. So I think Godwin's "law" is like a child putting his fingers in his ears saying "la la la" whenever his parents want to talk to him about the birds and the bees.
     
    Admittedly, WW2 is often times misused to validate ideas or viewpoints, but sometimes it's correctly used. So lets be reasonable and use our minds and not a "law" to counter arguments we disagree with.

  227. Re:Monkey's uncle? by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    We've had 8 years of George Bush for no other reason than xian moral conservatives are blindsided immediately and completely by any sort of "moral issue" even when it doesn't have any direct impact on them.

    Caring about moral issues only when they have a direct impact on you is called "selfishness". Christianity preaches against that.

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  228. For those seeking a more rigorous analysis. by Irvu · · Score: 1

    I would recommend the work of Robert T. Pennock who has written a well-reasoned book on Intelligent Deisgn and it's nonscientific nature. He does so as someone who takes both science and religion seriously rather than dismissing it out of hand he makes a clear refutation of the theory argumebnts.

  229. Zealotry by georgep77 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Pirsig has a great line in his novel which I paraphrase as "nobody screams and shouts that the sun will rise tomorrow", it's a given and there is no discussion. It seems to me that the people who are afraid of discussion are the screamers. If people argue that the world is flat there is no need to shout them down and freak out at them etc, if you _know_ something to be true you should not be offended or upset if someone else believes otherwise. If your knowledge (belief/faith) is in doubt perhaps then you would scream/shout/freak out. That is what I've taken from the trailer linked here, it totally reminded me of the fanaticism part of "Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenence".

    Cheers,
        _GP_

    1. Re:Zealotry by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 1

      Hopefully you fall on the religious side of the arguement ... and you will continue to not scream or shout ... and you and your kind will slowly fade into history.

      Religion is an inherited disease. Speak out and break the cycle.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  230. Re:What I am opposed to ... by protein+folder · · Score: 1
    --
    Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
  231. Re:Monkey's uncle? by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

    Of course no.t. But people started accepting the fact that it was round when evidence was gathered on that fact. We are all still waiting for the slightiest, tiniest, smallest, most insignifcant piece of evidence for the existence of, say, God...

  232. Thunderf00t's reply by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    For those of you who don't read other social news sites, there's a video reply made by Thunderf00t, where he debunks Ben Stein's allegations.

    Stein's fallacy is exposed this way: "I don't understand how evolution works, therefore evolution can't be true".

  233. good opinion piece from January by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.iansbrain.com/2008/01/08/movie-expelled-just-more-creationist-blather/

  234. Re:that is the impression theists want you to have by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

    It's fascinating that you believe that the bible adds nothing to scientific insight. Particularly when the bible itself states that the earth "hangs on nothing", that is to say, it floats in space. This was written during a time when all cultures believed something had to be holding it where it was .

    If, however, you are only interested in real scientific facts done by real evolutionary scientists - I'd encourage you to check out Dr. Walt Brown's book "In the Beginning". The entire book is based on research done by scientists with an evolutionary viewpoint.

    --
    You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
  235. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Deadplant · · Score: 1

    What exactly is "the atheistic philosophy of Darwinism"? Darwin's theory of evolution is unequivocally heresy. If you dare to question the word of God in any way then you are an athiest, a servant of the Devil sent to test the faith of Gods children and a communist.
    It requires a time-frame significantly different from that which your Lord and Saviour conveyed to the world with His word: the Holy Bible.

    When God spoke through his disciples he indicated that the world was 10,000 years old and was created in stages over 7 days.

  236. Re:What I am opposed to ... by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    Science is always open to new ideas. Some of the greatest revolutions in science have come the unexpected. Einstein's General Theory of Relativity was radical in it's treatment of space, time, and gravity. Before him, Newton, Copernicus, etc. The problem that pro-evolutionists have with the alternative like Intelligent Design is that it is not ground in science but religion. It cannot be tested; it cannot be replicated; it cannot be falsified. By definition, it is not science. Yet ID wants to be the same status as evolution without having been tested. At best ID is a unproven conjecture.

    Compare that to a real scientific controversy: Was T-Rex a scavenger or a predator? For years, Jack Horner advocated that T-rex was a scavenger. This is contrary to the historical view of T-rex. To this day there is still some debate about this in paleontology. However, Jack Horner's reasoning is based on evidence: T-Rex had a disporportionately large olfactory system compared to brain size similar to modern-day scavengers. T-rex had small arms unsuitable to being used in attacking, etc. As more evidence is uncovered about T-rex, this can be proven or disproven. ID will never make it that far.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  237. Unlike 99.9% of you, I saw the actual movie by slowjel · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The movie raises some good points and he interviews people that were fired after even mentioning ID. This is propaganda and lies? Hmmm.

    Besides that, the primary point of the movie is that ID is not open for debate in the scientific community. If you doubt this and are in a position to test it, write an article or paper about ID and see what happens. Let us know how it goes. The fact is, evolutionary theory has problems, big problems, and any debate would expose such problems. Otherwise, why not debate the ID folks and send them to an early grave? The fact that evolutionary science has problems has nothing to do with ID -- those problems exists within the theory itself, therefore it cannot be debated because it cannot be fully defended.

    My question: if evolution and global warming are the "consensus", why are there so many scientists devoted to these causes? Sure there should be a handful working on these topics, but there are many of them at every university around the world. Why so many for "settled science"? Fact is, there are more questions than answers on ID and global warming. How exactly is this settled science? Seems there is room for debate and alternative theories, rather than this fit-the-data-to-the-theory approach to science.

    Never mind the fact that evolutionary science starts after the first cell. No one has a better answer than "God" for how that first cell came about. In the movie, Dawkins even concedes that ID is possible, by arguing that the first cells could have been "seeded" here by aliens. This is Intelligent Design, folks.

    There is another "scientist" in the movie (I forget his name) that claims the first cells came about by mutations on the "backs of crystals"! This is science? This is somehow more scientific than allowing for intelligent design. Want to convert me to evolution and atheism? Grow me some cells (from nothing) on the backs of crystals!

  238. What I would like to see..... by Doug52392 · · Score: 1

    ... is a documentary about how fucked up education in the United States is right now, from kinder gardeners getting in trouble for "sexual harassment", "Zero Tolerance" policies, now used at many schools, that punish EVERYONE, treating innocent kids and victims as bad people, how No Child Left Behind is continually destroying education, etc.

    Although this film _does_ look somewhat interesting; every documentary and TV report I've seen on TV about this subject is usually pro-Darwinist and, most of the time, completly ignores ID... It'll be interesting to see how they back up ID with scientific facts......

  239. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Sancho · · Score: 1

    Nah, it's far more common that people don't understand what a scientific theory is. They believe in the lay definition, which is "an idea." A comparable term in science for the lay person's definition of theory would be a hypothesis (however it's not an exact correlation.)

  240. Re:Monkey's uncle? by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    Creationists like to use the term "Darwinism," since it makes evolution sound like a philosophy rather than a scientific theory. In fact, while acceptance of the reality of evolution is essentially universal among biologists, there are many religious biologists who do not find evolution to be in opposition to their beliefs. Evolution is, after all, accepted by all major Christian sects.

  241. Committed Christian Here by SupraTT+GOP · · Score: 0, Troll

    OMGosh, what is it with you science people? It seems that what is needed here is an introductory course in epistemology and philosophy 101 or something.

    Sooo committed to pure science, so many of you are, yet unable or unwilling to realize that this very commitment is religious in nature. Science can not demonstrate that science is important, that we ought to teach it in our schools, or that is better than religion. If you believe any of the aforementioned, please realize that these are your beliefs. And if you fervently, even zealously, endeavor to defend, proselytize or promulgate these beliefs- you are a RELIGIOUS person. Why is this so difficult to grasp? I dunno, I dunno... But at any rate, if you now realize that you are one of these people, please stop attacking your religious brethren, as though they are the mindless.

    And on a semi-related note, I for one favor educating children in basic philosophical concepts, along with sciences, and perhaps even religious concepts if they so desire, so that when they "get big", they will not be so confused, as so many of "us" are.

    1. Re:Committed Christian Here by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1

      Um... no.

      I hate to break it to you, but scientific reasoning is based on reproducible evidence and empiricism, not faith. There may be some belief, but those beliefs are based on facts that have been clearly observed in controlled, repeatable experiments. (I believe in the Law of Conservation of Matter, but only insofar as nobody has ever managed to produce a verifiable counter-example.)

      This is a bit more reasonable than someone saying "well, God did it".

      --
      --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
    2. Re:Committed Christian Here by SupraTT+GOP · · Score: 1

      ummm apparently you didn't perform your reading comprehension when you read my comment. I don't know if yours is even worth replying to... because it's as if you are replying to someone else's comment. But in the event that you are replying to my comment and/or in the event that others may be similarly confused (I think this is what I was referring to in my initial comment, actually) I will reply.

      Science can NOT demonstrate that science MATTERS. There- I changed the order of the words. Hope that helps. "Matter-ing" is a matter of faith and belief. This is really not up for dispute. (Unlike the position that children "ought" to be taught science and "ought not" be taught philosophy or religion or meta-physics, for example)

  242. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    Why do people automatically assume Evolution is true just because they don't understand what other theories actually mean? Are you claiming that Ben Stein has a theory?

    If so, I'd certainly like to hear what it is. Though I would wonder why he didn't make a movie presenting the evidence for his theory, rather than telling lies about a real theory.
    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  243. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

    If the ID people want to be taken seriously. They can produce good research and put forward a good testable hypothesis that can better explain the world or the liars for Jesus can just STFU.
    Why do people assume a completely untested assertion is a legitimate competitor in the marketplace of ideas?

    What fascinates me, besides the positive modding you have, rather than just pure flamebait, is that it seems that you have had very little discourse with anyone who espouses ID.

    Jesus, or any other religious entity, has very little to do with ID. Sure, you can point at one of them and say "this is behind it," but that would be veering away from ID. ID is the discussion that it is very improbable for a world as complex as the one we currently reside in to have occurred randomly.

    Evolution, while a theory, is a statement of truth. It is an observation of the natural world, of the order of things, and how future iterations become defined.

    It is rather unbecoming of anyone who purports to follow "science," to delve into ad hominem, but the parent of this post has managed to do so quite effectively. This is what Stein is really pointing at - the rejection of additional theories because they might possibly infringe upon the basis of a belief system. There is no intelligent discourse here, only spitting and fist waving.

    And hell, if you're going to quote someone, at least quote Dawkins or some other scientifically credible source. Hitchens is just as bad as Bill O'Reilly.

    --
    You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
  244. Re:Only in USA...EUROTRASH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Ha ha ha ha, being a member of the intellectually superior european coalition I laugh at you American ID swine since you cant prove your creationist delusion. We Europeans have it all figured out and you fool Americans are simple minded god loving idiots."

    Thats me putting words in place of your self assured smugness.

        Really MR Euro Trash you John Kerry appeasing dimwit!

    What evidence do you offer about pre-evolutionary origins of life?

          NOTHING, YOU HAVE NOTHING, YOU SIMPLY CHALK IT UP TO RANDOMNESS, CHAOS OR LUCK I GUESS

    To evolve you would have to first be created, now show me where Evolution offers 1 grain of evidence proving creation as we know it, just happened. Beyond having proved natural selection of which I do agree, Evolution cannot answer the greatest question.

        But what you and the rest of these Slashtards ignore while many ID'ers like myself are shouting back at you is in regard to the lack of proof that all that we know was not derived of Intelligence.

          So in the same breath, you fault the belief in a creator but yet offer NOTHING to the contrary disproving creationism.

          I believe some form of reasonable Creationism/ID Theory can also be regarded as valid hypothesis alongside of Evolution and until its disproven, ID is a theory.

          But to talk to most evolution proponents, the case is closed, especially if you a smug and intellectually superior european

  245. Stupid is as Stupid thinks? by itsybitsy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ben Stein's Expelled trailer presents itself as an advocate for free speech for academics who are being ostracized for their belief in, or even the slightest hint of, Intelligent Design. In that regard he free to say what he wants and I support his right to do so no matter how stupid what he or the others say is.

    Of course I also have the freedom of speech to say what I want and what he says in his movie trailer and other video clips I've seen of him is, well to be kind, stupid.

    As someone said, he misses the point that theology belongs in it's own space and not in the academic world of science.

    As we all know, but not all like, science requires evidence. So while the "mud" might have gotten a kick start with lightening to produce fully functional 747's it's just a hypothesis at this point how lift got started. Once we can create life with mud and lightening in a lab ourselves we'll have definitive proof about one way that life can get started - there could be others, such as life starting in outer space in asteroids, possibly with the energy of a collision, or the warmth from the sun during a close flyby. In any event science considers these potential hypotheses that require evidence before they can be considered a potentially valid theory.

    Ben Stein shows his preference, in fact he doesn't hide it at all, when he states that he used to believe in God at the beginning of his life. Well he still does believe in God although he doesn't directly say so. It's a media manipulation technique since he makes one consider the possibly that he changed his mind but then he never delivers on that and instead makes himself out to be a crusader for an injustice.

    It is an injustice to call someone's (many someone's) ideas stupid? Should a stupid idea and the person who purveys them not be called what they are? Should the intelligent among the human species not call it like they see it? Isn't that an attempt by Ben Stein to prevent free speech?

    Also, his use of the Richard Dawkin's quotes are likely taken out of context. They are effectively used to impune all scientists who communicate the lack Intelligent Design in Intelligent Design.

    In his trailer Ben Stein makes the statement that Darwin is a dangerous idea however he doesn't follow through with what he means by that. Of course, to people like Ben Stein, Glenn Beck, Jerry Falwell, the Pope, and other god fearing people, Darwin's ideas are dangerous since the notions of evolution and natural selection might just leave them without any god - and that would destabilize their world view beyond their ability to function normally in everyday life. Oh wait, it sounds like it has as stupid is as stupid does.

    Yes, Ben Stein, you can question the authority of Darwin's ideas all you want, however, don't go crying by making a whimpering movie about being expelled when those with some actual intelligence counter question the intelligence of your questions as well as their underlying premises. When the underlying premises of the so called "questions of Darwin's authority" is a supernatural notion such as God you'll have to answer questions yourself about the bigger holes supporting that hypothesis.

    Here's a question for you Ben: who created your intelligent designer? Maybe the intelligent designer evolved from lightening stuck mud to create the entire universe where we find ourselves? If so where did the mud come from that created the designer?

    For someone who claims that some ideas, such illegal immigration to the USA, are too complex for you (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHbdMbSLfb4) you've sure made up your mind about the first cause of God, something which has zero evidence for it. It seems to me that illegal immigration is a much simpler concept to solve by many orders of magnitude than how the universe got started assuming of course that it ever had a beginning. (A beginning to the universe might not make sense to us mere humans as time *may not* have existed before the universe began).

    Stupid ideas are just th

  246. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

    Yorkshire is not a city, you insensitive clod!

    The town of Huddersfield, in the county of Yorkshire, is where the Yorkshire Terrier originated.

    --
    "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
  247. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    But as the trailer points out, people have done the research (no idea if its correct) but the second they try to publish it, the Darwinans label them crackpots and shot out: "Its not Darwinism, so its wrong" No, you're buying Stein's propaganda.

    The cdesign proponentsists do not, as far as anyone knows, submit their work to peer reviewed science journals (except as in the Sternberg case, when they have an editor who will slip it in without actually sending it out for review). And with good reason: a peer reviewed science journal will reject any article that does not support its claims with evidence, regardless of what the article's ultimate claim is.

    Acting like that is just childish. If Darwin was right, then you have nothing to lose by carefully writing a counter paper, countering the evidence. One of the big science journals (Nature, IIRC) gave the cdesign proponentists a free lunch by letting them publish their positions in a special issue. None of the claims have stood up to scrutiny.

    And BTW, there is no evidence for ID for anyone to counter. All ID has is a clique of religious PhDs who offer sciency-sounding arguments based on factual and logical fallacies to support an untestable hypothesis. That won't make the grade in *any* field of science, whether religion is involved or not.
    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  248. Dear Yoko: GARNISH Ben Stein's money. by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1
    The producers of this flick are not the sharpest tools in the shed. You can see why after reading P. Z. Myers' blog about his adventures during the advanced screening and media conference calls. (Too funny.)

    But another issue that nobody has talked about is that John Lennon's "Imagine" was used without any licensing. The producers apparently thought it was in the public domain, and inserted it into a montage of Holocaust imagery.

    There's no word yet on whether or not Yoko Ono will sue the producers as a result. I hope she does, if only because it's morally wrong to allow stupid people to keep their money.

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  249. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Monsuco · · Score: 1

    Because other theories are largely unscientific, untestable, and not falsifiable?
    It isn't a science. That does not make it evil or ignorant, but it is closer to analysis of a religion than science. It attempts to answer the question "is there a god?" using scientific concepts (such as the unlikelyness of the laws of physics working in a way that allows for life to exist, the near impossibility of cells self assembling into something that is able to survive and reproduce with functional DNA from nothing more than a collection of chemicals, etc.) It should not be treated as science.

    That said, many in the scientific community do have an elitist mindset and seem to treat anyone who doesn't agree with the theory of evolution or even questions it as a 13th century fundamentalist.

  250. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    Darwin's theory of evolution is unequivocally heresy. If you dare to question the word of God in any way then you are an athiest, a servant of the Devil sent to test the faith of Gods children and a communist.
    It requires a time-frame significantly different from that which your Lord and Saviour conveyed to the world with His word: the Holy Bible. Thing is, the bible doesn't actually say anything about evolution or vice versa. They're not at odds with each other.

    When God spoke through his disciples he indicated that the world was 10,000 years old and was created in stages over 7 days. I'd be very interested in which book, chapter and verse says that the world is 10,000 years old.

    I admit it does describe a 7 day creation period, but then again, if you take it that literally, it also describes a pretty contradictory creation sequence in the next chapter.
  251. Great, now the Muslims are smacking empiricism too by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1
    I am not making this up.

    How any location on the Earth's crust can be the "center of the earth" eludes me.

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  252. They ARE doing this!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You obviously do not follow the Christian Broadcasting Network:

    http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/news/050627a.aspx

    Quotes:

    ohn Brown is the founder of Zion Oil and Gas, a company dedicated to discovering oil in Israel. He founded the company on what he says is a God-given mission - now almost 25 years old - to discover a major oil deposit in Israel.

    "To Israel, obviously, a huge oil discovery would change the economics, both politically and the structure of the company, or the country, and we see that also as a huge positive thing for the restoration of Israel," Brown said.

    "And what is the potential here? It's hugeâ¦,â Brown declared. âoeWe have a good handle on it because of the geology that we have here in Israel. There are certain structures that we see - our geologists, geophysicists and the Petroleum Institute of Israel say that we have a combination of reefs, and [they] are very important in huge oil fields. So we have a lot of significant points that tell us that we're onto something that could be wonderful blessings."

    Zion Oil and Gas bases the drilling in Israel on promises from the Bible. One of the main promises is found in Genesis, chapter 49, verse 25. It is where Jacob tells his son Joseph that God will give him the "blessings of the deep that lie beneath."


    No follow up on whether they found anything better than tax losses
  253. Fire the lot of them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The more creationists that get canned, the less tax money wasted.

  254. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    just like idiot Christians say nothing about the validity of the Christian faith. Not strictly true: it proves
    a) that having Faith is no obstacle to being an unpleasant bigot Would be nice if it was. In fact, I think it should be, considering the words of Jesus I read in my bible, but apparently some people have a completely different interpretation.

    b) puts people like me off the whole idea of Xtianity Christians are Christianity's biggest enemy.

    Nevertheless, the fact that Christians can be just as stupid as other people doesn't prove that Christianity is wrong. It just proves that some Christians are wrong, and that Christianity doesn't automagically make them right (although some seem to think it does).
  255. Tests for ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll give you two more general predictions of ID.

    1. The kind of life on Mars: when it is found (if it ever is), it will be preserved old earth life; specifically certain kinds of bacteria and fungi that are particularly hardy and capable of space travel (yes it's possible).

    2. The first form of life was a photosynthetic autothroph.

    The first one is not particularly meaningful. The second one is a fair test since it is a direct opposite to the common origin of life theories which predict a chemosynthetic heteratroph (or chemosynthetic autotroph in one particular scenario).

    Apologies for my bad spelling.

    1. Re:Tests for ID by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. The first form of life was a photosynthetic autothroph. We can check this when we invent time travel. :)
    2. Re:Tests for ID by Woundweavr · · Score: 1
      I see no meaning in #1. Even if true, it would not demonstrate ID (it would suggest an extra-terrestrial origin of life perhaps but if anything would undercut the arguments ID puts forward)

      #2 is actually telling because it demonstrates the logical fallacy ID proponents are depending on.

      2. The first form of life was a photosynthetic autothroph. ...The second one is a fair test since it is a direct opposite to the common origin of life theories which predict a chemosynthetic heteratroph (or chemosynthetic autotroph in one particular scenario).

      There is no evolution/ID binary necessity. If evolution is wrong, that does not make ID right. Thats exactly what ID proponents are depending on... they create false 'problems' with evolution and then essentially say "we're the only other game in town."
  256. Journalist just needed to add citations by claykarmel · · Score: 1

    Please... The journalist should have followed a proper scientific process -- he should have cited the names/articles of the scientists he references.

    He could anticipate the next objection by citing evidence (degrees, peer reviewed articles) establishing the stature of the scientists he referenced.

    If he was to edit his own article, it should have been to add citations or recant the claim if he couldn't. Not to obscure it.

    Neither journalist nor 'activist' behaved well here. Why is THAT news?

  257. Ben Stein does not believe in evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then again, if I had worked in the Nixion Administration, perhaps I wouldn't believe in evolution either...

  258. Godwins Law Not Applicable in this context by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    Godwins is not applicable in this context, because the movie's claim that the Nazis used Darwins theory to justify the extermination of the jews (and other parts of their ugenics program) is true. The theory of evolution was the "rational" and "scientific" basis of ugenics.

    They believed that a utopian society could be created through the use of selective breeding to remove undesirable traits from the gene-pool.

    Godwins applies when you make a comparison to Hitler or the Nazis, not when there is a direct connection. Otherwise, it would be practically impossible to debate facism, anti-semitism, or human experementation without violating Godwins.

    1. Re:Godwins Law Not Applicable in this context by Foggerty · · Score: 1

      Animal husbandry, which has been around for centuries (or more) was the basics of eugenics. That is, artificial selection. What Darwin proposed was natural selection. For a more in depth explanation, please read this: Open letter from Richard Dawkins.

    2. Re:Godwins Law Not Applicable in this context by Copid · · Score: 1

      Godwins is not applicable in this context, because the movie's claim that the Nazis used Darwins theory to justify the extermination of the jews (and other parts of their ugenics program) is true. The theory of evolution was the "rational" and "scientific" basis of ugenics.
      Let's take this to be true for the moment. My simple question is, why was this a main focal point for the movie? It seems a rather disparate set of points to be making. The movie supposedly about how ID is not being given a fair shake. Why throw in the additional Nazi references if not simply as an attempt to poison the well? Frankly, it seems to me to be simply another anti-evolution argument meant for those with no intellectual gag-reflex.

      Also, it's important to note that there is a huge difference between, "X was used to justify Y," and, "Y follows from X."
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    3. Re:Godwins Law Not Applicable in this context by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen the movie, so I don't know if this was the focal point or not. But if it was, then it would be fair to say that the movie is trying to draw parallels between scientists who subscribe to Darwinism and the Nazi officials who used Darwinism to justify ethnic cleansing. Of course, since we know that the Nazis were wrong, it may be an indication that the modern scientists who think along similar lines are also wrong. I really have to see the movie before I can say what is going on here. But you can't apply Goodwin's law to every use of the word Nazi, and it's important to realize that.

      "Also, it's important to note that there is a huge difference between, "X was used to justify Y," and, "Y follows from X.""

      But if X was used to justify Y, then it may mean that Y follows logically from X, no? That's usually how a justification works.

    4. Re:Godwins Law Not Applicable in this context by Copid · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen the movie, so I don't know if this was the focal point or not.
      I have. There's no shortage of it.

      But if it was, then it would be fair to say that the movie is trying to draw parallels between scientists who subscribe to Darwinism and the Nazi officials who used Darwinism to justify ethnic cleansing.
      Which is sort of why it's a grossly offensive pile of bullshit. That's my point.

      Of course, since we know that the Nazis were wrong, it may be an indication that the modern scientists who think along similar lines are also wrong. I really have to see the movie before I can say what is going on here. But you can't apply Goodwin's law to every use of the word Nazi, and it's important to realize that.
      No, not exactly. "Scientists are wrong about the correctness of evolutionary theory" does not, in any way, follow from, "Nazis were wrong to commit genocide." There is no meaningful analogy or cause and effect relationship. The reasoning is broken from the outset. It makes no more sense than trying to discredit gravity based on a cult that believes that a moral imperative to drop bricks on babies follows from it.

      Godwin's law applies when you make a ridiculous comparison to Nazis in an attempt to discredit somebody. It's spot on in this case.

      But if X was used to justify Y, then it may mean that Y follows logically from X, no? That's usually how a justification works.
      No, not at all. If the justification is completely broken (evolution => genocide), then the consequent doesn't follow. The fact that one can apply broken logic to true statements to come to a ridiculous conclusion doesn't mean that the ridiculous conclusion follows from those statements. If it did, the holocaust would also have followed logically from Christianity. I wonder how many fans of Expelled would swallow that one.

      Further, even if it was the case that evolutionary theory somehow caused the holocaust, it has absolutely no effect on the correctness of the theory or whether or not it makes sense for the scientific community to support it. The atomic bomb followed from relativity. The atomic bomb caused deaths of lots of innocent people. Therefore, we should question the veracity of the theory of relativity? No, that's not right. Therefore, the people who support the theory of relativity are war mongers? No... Therefore the people who crusade against relativity aren't being given a fair shake in academia?

      I'm just not seeing it. Given the people behind the film, it's far easier to believe that this is just a naked case of well-poisoning designed to pander to their chosen audience: people with limited critical thinking skills who are unfamiliar with the subject matter.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  259. Re:Only in USA...EUROTRASH by Findeton · · Score: 1

    "What evidence do you offer about pre-evolutionary origins of life? NOTHING, YOU HAVE NOTHING, YOU SIMPLY CHALK IT UP TO RANDOMNESS, CHAOS OR LUCK I GUESS" Well, What do YOU offer? Science hasn't proven everything yet but that doesn't mean that, automatically, ID is right. "I believe some form of reasonable Creationism/ID Theory can also be regarded as valid hypothesis alongside of Evolution and until its disproven, ID is a theory." It can be a theory, but not a scientific one, as it is not based on evidence, reason, makes no predictions, and it's not falsifiable/testable.

  260. Inquisition? by morari · · Score: 1
    From the article:

    Painting the current scientific community as just as bad as the Spanish Inquisition, an extended trailer of Ben Stein's "Expelled" has a lot of people (at least that I know) talking. It looks like his movie plans to encourage people to speak out if they believe intelligent design or creationism to be correct. That sure is a funny comparison. Last time I checked, the Inquisition worked the other way. You had to believe in creationism of else some nice priest would brutally torture you in order to save your soul from eternal damnation. Just one case in a long list of travesties caused by nut cases following the word of their god (whether it be Christians, Muslims, or Jews... all the same god)

    People that believe in these barbaric superstitions should be embarrassed to speak out. And that's being nice about it.

    --
    "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
  261. Re:Only in USA...EUROTRASH by Findeton · · Score: 1

    "What evidence do you offer about pre-evolutionary origins of life? NOTHING, YOU HAVE NOTHING, YOU SIMPLY CHALK IT UP TO RANDOMNESS, CHAOS OR LUCK I GUESS"

    Well, What do YOU offer? Science hasn't proven everything yet but that doesn't mean that, automatically, ID is right.

    "I believe some form of reasonable Creationism/ID Theory can also be regarded as valid hypothesis alongside of Evolution and until its disproven, ID is a theory."

    It can be a theory, but not a scientific one, as it is not based on evidence, reason, makes no predictions, and it's not falsifiable/testable.

  262. "Going to heaven" is very different than most peop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh gee, have you been there?

  263. I am only going to say this once... by catdevnull · · Score: 1

    OK, I'm only going to say this once (or at least this one last time):

    Shut up. Seriously. No matter what your conviction is about religion, science, or politics, do everyone a favor and just keep your opinion about it to yourselves. If you're hoping that an acrid little reply on a comment thread will somehow assuage the masses of idiots, you fail to see that you're just one of them contributing to the noise and the petty bickering. ...kind of like this comment.

    Move along now...

    --

    I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
  264. Your example doesn't mean what you think it does by snowwrestler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As example, scientists once thought the planets moved in perfectly-circular orbits, but when observations showed that was not true, these same scientists refused to believe the data. It took several years (and the death of the stubborn scientists) for a new generation to propose ellipitical orbits. The refusal to accept new data is called "protecting your paradigm" aka your belief system, even in the face of facts that challenge it. How do you know that this is such a good example? Because the system worked--the correct theory DID win out, despite the human failings.

    Any example of how scientists "had it wrong" at one point in history implicitly provides support for the power of science to get things right. By citing such examples you are attempting to illustrate the failings of science by appealing to more accurate scientific knowledge--a logical contradiction. If science fails so easily, how has it produced the successes that illustrates the failure?

    The power of science is not that scientists are individually superior humans. They are obviously subject to the same failings as anyone else. The power of science is that the system of group organization compensates and corrects over time for the failings of the individuals. Thus today we know that orbits are elliptical.
    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  265. Re:What I am opposed to ... by abb3w · · Score: 1

    ... is the closing of minds
    ideas are dangerous to closed minds.

    However, an open mind is no reason not to properly categorize things.

    The question of what is versus what isn't science is one of philosophy. Science requires certain underlying philosophical assumptions; the question of what assumptions should be used is fair to debate... but is NOT a scientific question.

    Assumptions of basic Boolean logical and Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory axioms are exceptionally uncontroversial in philosophy. They allow for construction of most of the familiar mathematics geeks play with. If you make the assumption of the Strong Church-Turing Universe Thesis to bound complexity, you can derive (or, being sensible, read the papers where Wallace/Dowe and Vitanyi/Li derived) a formal relationship between "Minimum Description Length Induction, Bayesianism and Kolmogorov Complexity", which allows for a rigorous definition of science as competitive testing for a very formal sense of "simplest descriptive explanation for all the evidence". And, no, "God Diddit!" doesn't win, because it's insufficiently descriptive of the evidence under the formal criteria.

    As such, Intelligent Design becomes a candidate hypothesis rejected because it does not descriptively explain the evidence anywhere near as concisely as Evolution. Intelligent Design is not science, any more than the idea of the Luminiferous Ether is. Perhaps the Search for Intelligent Design might remain a scientific pursuit (as SETI is), but to do so it must admit that it has failed even more miserably than SETI.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  266. I think I see your argument ... by jopet · · Score: 1

    ... which is of course entirely psychological. For me personally, it is hard to put myself into that place, because it is very easy for me to have a couple of unanswered questions and definitely easier than make up some fairy tale stuff about humanoid god-things that did it all.
    But there is obviously some kind of gene in us all that is hard to impossible to overcome with ratio. And it probably works in the way how you described.

    But then, people firmly believe in zodiacs and bad omens and homoepathy and alien abductions, so why should we be surprised? ;)

  267. Re:Only in USA...EUROTRASH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It can be a theory, but not a scientific one, as it is not based on evidence, reason, makes no predictions, and it's not falsifiable/testable."

          Today that is, tomorrow maybe not and how would you know unless you try and how can science even try when its too busy debunking without even trying?

          Todays science was yesterdays theory and hypothesis and much of it remained untestable until recently.

            Now how are you going to argue against that historical truth of which is timeless

          Its not that we lack answers, we dont even know what questions to ask and will not know if science remains so convinced of its own arguments of which much is lacking especially the big one

    WHO MADE WHO
              AC/DC

  268. Re:Monkey's uncle? by ivano · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Crap, Greeks knew the Earth was round and could measure its circumference to within 10% (Eratosthenes). Scientists kept this knowledge alive, or tried to, unlike the Christians who liked to burn down libraries and people for that matter. There's a reason why the Christian dominated times were called The Dark Ages. It's the Bible where we get the phrase four corners of the Earth. I love how ignorant of history fundamentalists are. Or are you just stupid?

  269. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Deadplant · · Score: 1

    Thing is, the bible doesn't actually say anything about evolution or vice versa. They're not at odds with each other. The bible says that god created all the creatures of the world all at once in their current form. (including Man in his own image)
    Evolution says that the diversity of species came about gradually over billions of years.
    That Man came to his/her current form by way of natural selection.

    These are contradictory assertions.

    I'd be very interested in which book, chapter and verse says that the world is 10,000 years old. My understanding is that you can calculate it using the information provided.
    http://www.albatrus.org/english/theology/creation/biblical_age_earth.htm

    Not that I really give a crap.
    who gives a hoot what a book like that says?
    how many glaring, even shockingly incorrect statements can a book contain before people will stop referencing it?
  270. More than just two theories... by carp3_noct3m · · Score: 1

    First, let me say that I have not seen the movie, but since this whole discussion has turned into more about evolution vs creationism, I will take the bait. Despite not having seen the movie, one thing that I think it may try to address is not that sciences theory is wrong, but too narrow-minded. Evolution may be part of the formula, and so also might creationism. Science, supposing to be unbiased and neutral, seems to me to not be looking at any other possibilities and to only want to test a singe theory until they can prove it. Warning: a bit long-winded, but interesting read ahead. My personal believes don't prevent me from being open to new ideas, and just recently a friend has opened my eyes to some other possibilities. I looked up and did some very light research into what he was saying, and I find it very intriguing. He was telling me about the oldest civilizations, generally considered to be sumer, aka the Sumerian's, and what they believed in regards to creationism and religion. Seeing as it was one of the oldest religions, there is a lot to be learned from the study of it. They spoke of Annunaki, strange creature-gods who mad man to serve them. The Sumerian's also have been believed by some to have known details about the solar system that science didn't discover till much later. This is also one place where the infamous 12th planet,"Planet X" theories come from, a scroll cylinder that had a depiction of the solar system with 12 planets in the orbit of the sun. Annunaki, translated means "Those who from heaven to earth came." I find this interesting, because the bible talks about nephilim,(which also means those who from heaven to earth came) or giants, the offspring of angels. Anyway, getting a bit long winded, but to sum it up, there are plenty of people that believe that these "Gods" in Sumer, and these "sons of angels" in the bible, and the "gods" who created man in the mayan myths, may actually be.. gasp...aliens. Assuming there is another race in the universe that is extremely technologically advanced, it is possible that they have such mastery of DNA and such to "create" humans. Sounds far fetched I know, but it is just one example of the many alternative theories that I'm sure exist to creationism and evolutionism that both scientists and religious people seem to cast to the side. Regardless, I think the point of the movie should not be that one is right and one is wrong, but how close minded both theories can be.

    --
    "It's ok, I'm completely secure as long as my iron is off"
  271. Re:What I am opposed to ... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    ... is the closing of minds Then you must really be offended by this movie, since its whole purpose is to keep True Believers from considering evolution on the basis of its evidential merits.

    ideas are dangerous to closed minds. Yeah, that's why the backers of this movie tried to keep anyone but creationists from reviewing it before its release.

    80 years ago the "establishment" was opposed to teaching the theory of evolution - now the "establishment" doesn't want to discuss the possibility that evolution is "bad" science. You can discuss the possibility all you want. But it's a meaningless discussion unless you bring along some evidence to support the idea that it is.

    I also like the fact that the "enlightened pro-evolution" people are usually the ones resorting to argumentum ad hominem... "Usually"?

    You wouldn't by chance be able to support that claim, would you? There's no denying that internet discussions are rife with ad hominems from people on all sides of all arguments, but can you honestly say that "evolutionists" are worse about it?
    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  272. Quantum physics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We do not understand quantum physics, there is a great difference in opinion on how it works at many levels and quite possibly all of it is not 100% correct. However, despite differences on how it works you can use a USB flash drive which functions upon known behavior of quantum physics.

    Its the same for climate. We know enough to work with the observed behavior and to have a huge
    majority agreement; while not fully understanding or agreeing upon why it behaves the way it does.

    It is NOT in any way reasonable to portray strong science as weak simply because we don't have complete consensus on why it works as observed.

    Furthermore, the media frequently HARMS the public by placing lesser opinions as being equal in merit. In the USA, they often put up extremist nuts as balance to reasonable experts or moderates. Its actually uncommon to have equally extreme opposites presented.

  273. Re:What I am opposed to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea! And the "establishment" shouldn't discount my psycic powers just because they fail to change the world in a measurable way!

    You see, that's the problem. A few hundred years ago someone went and made a hypothesis. Then they tested it and found it to make accurate predictions, and so called it a theory. Since then literal mountains of evidence have come to light, with entire new branches of science (genetics) explaining the unexplained portions of evolution (how was the information passed to each new generation?). And then one day, someone says "no, your dating method is inaccurate, the earth is 6000 years old and my uncle isn't a monkey - evolution is wrong, god did it!" And so the scientific establishment examined the proffered evidence, found it was based on 50-year-old measurements by soviet scientists who admitted to having falsified the data and which has never been reproduced... and duly declared that evolution was still the most valid theory. Since then, a dozen more pieces of supposed evidence have come to light... each of which either doesn't say what it claims to say or was just plain false.

    And so, offering no validated evidence and no testable predictions, ID continues to try to say "evolution is false, god did it." And what, you expect science to compare the mountain of evidence for evolution to the absolutely zero evidence for ID/creationism and say "well, I suppose ID is possible?" That's not how science works. You need evidence and testable predictions to be considered.

  274. Re:Monkey's uncle? by zehaeva · · Score: 1

    actually some time in the 6th century bc some nice men in robes in greece measured the world to with in a few hundred miles of its actual circumference, and they knew and proved the world is round. that whole flat earth thing was will full ignorance foisted upon the people by a overbearing church.

  275. If ID is correct then.... by ivano · · Score: 1
    1) They could explain things better than evolution,
    2) Be able to explain things that evolution can not,
    3) Be able to use this theory to predict how species do evolve and use this knowledge in the medical and pharmaceutical industry, that evolution never could, and
    4) Use this new found money and wealth to further more research.

    Compare this to what really happens:
    a) It is the only "scientific theory" that has to be pushed in schools instead of the normal academic means (yeah, people will disagree with you - but every Nobel prize winner had to do it that way),
    b) when they had their day in court they couldn't get just a smidgen of evidence to show that it *was* a science (you didn't have to prove it was even a good scientific theory), but you failed at such a simple task,
    c) You still never show why ID is better than evolution; you never show something that ID can predict that evolution can not; you never demonstrate a new drug or cure using ID that evolution can not, and
    d) ID has everything to do with power struggles (like the Reformation all over again) and conspiracy theory (the Wedge document); you lie, cheat and steal and then complain why people don't give you equal time.

    In other words, you cry like spoilt children who actually have to spend a day doing real work but instead you put on a fake smile and say "all we want is a debate": but *every* *single* *one* of your points are refuted by the present scientific knowledge, yet, you cover you eyes and ears and still scream like a spoilt teenager.


    Rant over.

  276. Irreducible Complexity and a Small God by match621 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let me get this first bit out of the way. I love science, and evolution works - heck, without an evolutionary nothing in my field of study (biology) makes any sense at all. So yeah, I'm biased. But I still would like to share my views on intelligent design, so I quit lurking as AC and made an account for this post.

    Anyway, let's talk about irreducible complexity. These are supposed phenomena that have occurred in science (biology in these cases) that have caused some folks to say, "Well, I can't possibly imagine how that would have come about through evolution, so this must disprove evolution - Aha! A creator!" Time and time again such "irreducibly complex" structures have arisen (and later been reduced), so that most arguments now center around the difficulty evolution would have making the first cells. I mean that's it, we have mountains of evidence for evolution in everything else, so ID boils down to observing tiny, marvelously complex things and using those observations to support a Designer.

    It's been discussed here already that such a stance on a discovery would necessarily end further inquiry, and as such is particularly detrimental to scientific investigation, but what does it say about the Designer? To me, this results in what I call a small god. So you believe in an all-powerful creator who set in motion the cosmos and caused the Earth to produce life, but early on this Designer got careless or lazy, and fudged a few of the details. How is that an attractive idea? You've got a Designer who set up the universe flawlessly - except for a little bit where his evolutionary process couldn't quite cut it making I don't know, flagella or something*, so he just stuck it in there himself and called it a day. I'd much rather believe in a creator who actually made everything run smoothly on its own, who had so much foresight and cleverness that all he had to do was configure an infinitely small point of matter properly, such that it exploded into the wonderful universe we have today. To me, this is a much more attractive, larger god than the one that produces irreducible complexities. And who knows, maybe the Big Bang itself isn't irreducibly complex, as I've represented it. But the point is that we won't know if we dismiss things as irreducible and preclude scientific inquiry.

    Along with the lack of qualities that describe a good scientific theory, this small-minded approach lies at the heart of my problem with ID. Just because we know how the Earth works doesn't make it any less amazing - in fact, I would argue that it makes it even more impressive. I know how plate tectonics creates mountains, but mountains are still beautiful to behold, and I feel the same way about the infinite complexity of life.

  277. public is ignorant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouldn't describe somebody fighting for the law of conservation of energy as being religious about science. Its not a belief, its heavily supported fact and therefore can not be religious.

    We are told E=MC^2
    But it is in fact wrong. C is a different value but we are not told at great length about C and how its not the constant for the speed of light and how the actual constant is ...insert 10 pages of high level physics...

    There is a CUT OFF where the expert summarizes the results so the layman understands without having to become an expert.

    I am not surprised when experts who pursue truth for a living get angry when others distort the summary so much there must be a deliberate motive to subjugate the truth they work so hard to discover.

  278. Re:Monkey's uncle? by cycik · · Score: 1

    What you are saying is that if something cannot be tested, than it is false. That is stupid. No I am saying if it is not testable it is not science. Science cannot give you the Truth however as it works it asymptotically approaches the Truth. Which is better than someone who just pull some wild guess out his ass. If what you are talking about is actually true science will eventually come up with some approximation. You just can't admit that some bronze age civilation 2000 plus years ago might not have has as good an idea of the natural world as we do today.
  279. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    They lied to the interviewees, they attempted to pirate animations used in the movie, after being humiliated during the pre-release screenings they lied to cover it up, they lied to the people who wanted to see screenings -- they're liars. You've obviously gone to great effort to check out the facts. If you propagate a lie does it make you a liar too? Alas for you and Ben, but those are indeed all facts.
    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  280. Dating fossils... by warrax_666 · · Score: 1
    (... and I'm not talking about old people.)

    Fossils aren't just dated with carbon dating. Fossils are dated with many different, independent methods which all agree to within some known error margin.

    If you're actually interested in learning about evolution I suggest you browse through the Talk Origins site. They already have answers for all your questions.

    I also do not think of human beings as animals.

    Well, that's nice and all, but it's generally not conducive to rational thought to start out with preconceived ideas. Besides, there are senses in which humans are very different from most animals.
    --
    HAND.
  281. I met Ben Stein by Spinlock_1977 · · Score: 1

    I met Ben Stein once - riding up an elevator in Manhattan. Had I known he was going to produce a movie like this, I would have kicked him in the shins right then and there. As it was, we chatted and there was no kicking.

    --
    - The Kessel run is for nerf herders. I can circumnavigate the entire Central Finite Curve in a lot less than 12 parse
  282. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Evangelion · · Score: 1
    I don't see the analogy.

    Intelligent Design hasn't produced anything even remotely approaching a "very, very solid study".

    The Templeton Foundation doesn't even touch the Intelligent Design people.

    The Templeton Foundation, a major supporter of projects seeking to reconcile science and religion, says that after providing a few grants for conferences and courses to debate intelligent design, they asked proponents to submit proposals for actual research.

    "They never came in," said Charles L. Harper Jr., senior vice president at the Templeton Foundation, who said that while he was skeptical from the beginning, other foundation officials were initially intrigued and later grew disillusioned.

    Intelligent Design is a political movement founded in religious belief. Anything that presents it as doing anything but donning the trappings of science is a lie, pure and simple.
  283. Alas, they can't! by warrax_666 · · Score: 1

    I really wish doctors would prescribe 'prayer' as a cure for ill people who don't believe in evolution.

    Alas, they can't! You know, the whole "first, do no harm" thing :)
    --
    HAND.
  284. Micro- vs. macroevolution by pyrr · · Score: 1

    I have a degree in macrobiology and I don't recall much of anyone with scientific credibility arguing that microevolution and macroevolution are "the same thing." What evolution science does postulate, however, is that microevolution and macroevolution are inextricably linked together, in that macroevolution is the theoretical cumulative result of microevolution in a population on a massive timescale. The only way this is falsifiable is to wait thousands upon thousands of years while generations of scientists make very careful observations of populations. We have time. That is of course a work in progress, but the field of scientific research is still far younger than the history it's studying, and what has been observed in realtime thus far is barely a blip on the timescale it's making observations about.

    The difference in degrees of falsifiability, though, which is what this boils down to, is that evolutionary theory is THEORETICALLY falsifiable, as I outline above. Intelligent Design/"Relabelled Creationist Nonsense" or the other imaginative theories lurking in the wings are utterly unfalsifiable theories. It's not just that they're unpractical, yet possible, to falsify from a theoretical standpoint, they're not even in the same ballpark. This is the standpoint these theories are mocked from, since they will never be falsifiable and they'll never change. It's simply not possible to prove that God (I'm not keen on humoring the pretenses that ID advocates harbor that they're being objective by not pinning-down a specific deity by using the term "designer") didn't create everything. Until a Creationist or objective scientist proposes a theory that's remotely falsifiable, they're going to be mocked when attempting to play the game of science, AND RIGHTLY SO.

    1. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Okay...

      ID falsification: Refute all proposed irreducibly complex structures, once they are enumerated.

      Seems straightforward enough to me. This isn't new as a proposal, nor is the mere endlessly-repeated claim that no form of falsification is ever offered, in the face of plain reality.

      As for your "theoretical falsification", I'm not clear on how you're suggesting that would be the case, as whatever happens, I can ascribe it to "evolution" with the caveat that any given transition would be, at worst, merely incredibly, astoundingly improbable. I assure you no probability whatsoever will dissuade an individual predisposed to see evolutionary mechanism as the sole causal factor in play.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    2. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Copid · · Score: 1

      ID falsification: Refute all proposed irreducibly complex structures, once they are enumerated.
      So basically, fill in all the gaps that are currently filled by god-in-the-gaps. How many IC moles need to be whacked before we conclude that the idea of irreducible complexity is flawed at its outset?

      The problem with the ID hypothesis is that it amounts to, "Somewhere, at some point in history (or maybe continuously throughout history), some entity of some sort applied some sort of intelligence to life using an undescribed mechanism, changing it in an unspecified way by adding an unmeasurable type of complexity/information to it." Until somebody can make that pile of jelly firm enough to nail to the wall, I don't think that you'll see many people making the attempt.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    3. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Empiric · · Score: 1

      How many IC moles need to be whacked before we conclude that the idea of irreducible complexity is flawed at its outset?

      Well, yeah, presuming your conclusion is neat and all... and true, we usually call a moratorium on testing theories in science after about a dozen tries, but perhaps in this particular case we can make an exception.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    4. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by pyrr · · Score: 1

      Okay...ID falsification: Refute all proposed irreducibly complex structures, once they are enumerated.

      That still can't falsify the theory of ID. Even if science is able to demonstrate that macroevolution does work in practice and that nothing biological is irreducibly complex, that's not the information required for falsification. The main tenet of ID is that there is a creator who created life. These people are not concerned about science in the least, the complexity and lack of explanation isn't what bothers them. They have an agenda to declare that there is God, and that God created life, because they MUST prove the scripture that says that's what happened to be true, or they've been believing in a lie. Science would have to prove the lack of existence of this creator god, which is not possible.

      This is the fundamental problem with ID-- it's a foregone conclusion that begged for its own hypothesis. The ID hypothesis is basically, "We believe there is an intelligent desginer/creator, and our rationale is that the theory of macroevolution doesn't satisfactorily prove life evolved from inorganic chemicals on its own beyond a shadow of a doubt, and biological mechanisms are too complex for them to explain so a creator must've done it". This sort of hypothesis violates every rule of science.

      And theoretical falsification is not the ideal, but it's falsification nonetheless. No, it won't necessarily prove anything about origins of life if a scientist manages to facilitate the creation of life in a laboratory from inorganic chemicals, but it would show that life is not irreducibly complex. Again, though, it still could NEVER disprove the existence of a creator. That element of ID, which uses a supernatural cause to explain the unknown (rather than just leaving that spot on the shelf o' knowledge empty) is the root of why it's unacceptably bad science. "We can see this, but we don't know why," is a hypothesis that doesn't require falsifiability..."We know something we can't possibly know through scientific means, prove we're wrong!" is not falsifiable.

    5. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Empiric · · Score: 1

      The main tenet of ID is that there is a creator who created life. These people are not concerned about science in the least, the complexity and lack of explanation isn't what bothers them.

      Okay, lie.

      It is trivial to demonstrate that "these people" are "concerned about science", unless you propose that, say, Behe pursued an advanced degree in Biochemistry and then a professorship for the sole purpose of advocating theism, upon which ID does not rest anyway. For myself, I also understand that theism does not rest on ID, but if in fact there are particular instances of "intervention" into the processes of evolution demonstrable (evolution itself, lending itself to being considered as of theistic origin, regardless), I consider that to be of considerable interest, much as awareness of the phenomenon of Punctuated Equilibrium is, as a basic matter of science, history, and knowledge.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    6. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Copid · · Score: 1

      Well, yeah, presuming your conclusion is neat and all...and true, we usually call a moratorium on testing theories in science after about a dozen tries, but perhaps in this particular case we can make an exception.
      You didn't answer my question. How many failed attempts to posit an irreducibly complex system should we bother looking into before we start realizing that it's unlikely that any such systems exist? There are substantive arguments against IC in theory, not least of which is the fact that it seems to be nothing more than a simple god-in-the-gaps argument. Should we go through every biological system in existence and posit a theoretical pathway to get there and prove by exhaustion that no such systems exist? Should we read the light spectrum of every star in the visible universe just in case there are some that aren't operating via nuclear fusion, or are only the first hundred billion enough?

      I would be much more inclined to see Behe's work as something of substance if he could address some of the logical arguments presented against it in theory rather than throwing out examples of things that aren't fully understood and then declaring victory when no other scientist does his research for him. The ID crowd in general seems to think that by claiming the null hypothesis as their own that they're doing significant work. That's not how it's done.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    7. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Empiric · · Score: 1

      You didn't answer my question. How many failed attempts to posit an irreducibly complex system should we bother looking into before we start realizing that it's unlikely that any such systems exist?

      All proposed ones, whenever proposed, as the processes of science would dictate. Same answer for "how many" times any scientific theory should be tested for proposed atypical contexts.

      Should we go through every biological system in existence and posit a theoretical pathway to get there and prove by exhaustion that no such systems exist?

      Yes, why not? If nothing else, it would add to our understanding of evolution tremendously. Saying science should only investigate some, for a while, seems ludicrous to me.

      Incidentally, there is no "god of the gaps argument", only Dawkins', and your, irrational failure to understand what a false dichotomy fallacy is, as you propose such a characterization as meaningful.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    8. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by Copid · · Score: 1

      All proposed ones, whenever proposed, as the processes of science would dictate. Same answer for "how many" times any scientific theory should be tested for proposed atypical contexts.
      Personally, I'm not satisfied that all stars glow because of fusion. Until each and every one of them has been tested, I will assume that some of them burn marshmallows. I will take every instance of an astronomer doing something other than testing these things for me as evidence in support of my position. Or, I could *start doing my own damn work* and investigate the topic further myself rather than complain because people are starting to think I'm crank.

      Behe is suggesting that something called an irreducibly complex system exists. Many people have discussed reasons to believe that no such system exists. Perhaps if Behe actually explored his topics a little bit rather than simply tossing out examples of things that look complex to him, people would take him more seriously. People have played Behe's whack-a-mole game for years now, and no system has been shown to be irreducibly complex. If you play the game that way, at some point, people are going to stop believing that you have something interesting to say and move on. Declaring victory at that point is just stupid.

      Yes, why not? If nothing else, it would add to our understanding of evolution tremendously. Saying science should only investigate some, for a while, seems ludicrous to me.
      Why not? Because we could posit an infinite number of such challenges, and because responding to them seems to elicit nothing more than jeers of "Not good enough!" and "Just-so story!" from the challengers. Look, it's not as if evolutionary biologists aren't trying to understand the evolution of complex systems every day with or without Behe's comments from the peanut gallery. My point is this: Every time they find another interesting answer and result, it's a little more evidence that there are no IC systems. At what point does Behe's stuff stop being an interesting critique of evolution and start being philosophical wanking with no real results to back it up? It's certainly not getting any better, because while biologists are working to close those gaps in our understanding, Behe is doing essentially no work actually supporting his hypothesis.

      Incidentally, there is no "god of the gaps argument", only Dawkins', and your, irrational failure to understand what a false dichotomy fallacy is, as you propose such a characterization as meaningful.
      I have to admit that my jaw practically hit the floor when I heard somebody supporting intelligent design actually accuse somebody of failing to notice a false dichotomy. The whole existence of ID "theory" is a false dichotomy. There is no positive evidence for intelligent design. It exists entirely as, "Evolution can't explain this, therefore intelligent design is true." The fact that nobody has made any positive, testable claims based on ID is evidence to that end. And no, "Your theory doesn't explain this, so my theory wins by default" is *not* a positive, testable claim. That's why we call it god-in-the-gaps. ID simply seeks to occupy the spaces we don't know the answer to yet. Its domain gets smaller and smaller as time goes on, and it will continue to do so until they start actually making some meaningful contributions.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    9. Re:Micro- vs. macroevolution by pyrr · · Score: 1

      Okay, lie.

      Oh, please. You can't have "intelligent design" without an "intelligent designer" any more than you can have "creation" without a "creator". You're not pulling the wool over anyone's eyes when you say I'm lying when I say, "blue is blue". ID is about theism, and it's promoted by theists, plain and simple.

      More to you missing the point, biochemistry isn't exactly evolutionary biology, and you'd have to ask Behe what his agenda was and why he decided to pretend to be an expert in a field other than the one he studied. It's chemistry. Biochemists do NOT study living organisms or populations, they primarily analyze and synthesize molecules that are part of organisms or have effects on organisms, e.g., pharmaceuticals. A biochemist is to the life sciences what a jockey is to basketball. It's funny how almost everyone in the parade of ID "experts" is in a non-biological field. You wouldn't consult with a history professor on a legal matter, just saying someone is a "scientist" doesn't mean he possesses expertise in a tangentially-related discipline. This is evidenced in the way he and other pseudo-origins-experts speak on the subject of life sciences. There are plenty of ID proponents in physics and chemistry, but not in the life science disciplines, simply because, while the scientific method is largely the same through all branches, the subject matter and approach to research are substantially different.

      I personally consider there to be many unknowns than are necessarily comfortable in the theory of macroevolution. They're interesting, I can't explain some of the chicken-before-egg paradoxes with cellular machinery. But there are down-to-Earth explanations for phenomena like punctuated equilibrium. Most simply, that there are multiple phenotypes coexisting within a population (consider human population, where we have different blood types, eye colors, skin colors, heights, and a host of trivial differences and non-lethal genetic defects), until some external pressure causes one or more phenotypes to suddenly be wiped-out, leaving only a subset, which may be significantly different than the general population was. They may have survived based on one trait that improved survivability dramatically, but any other morphological changes in that population would be part and parcel of the punctuation. Implying that the Hand of God (tm) had to be involved with such things is both unsupported by any evidence, but it's utterly unnecessary.

      Being curious is what science is all about. Noticing interesting things or possible flaws in an existing theory and digging deep to answer them is how science gets done. I, for one, welcome interesting questions and objections to theories, regardless of who they're from. But it's antithetical to any of the sciences to fall back to supernatural explanations for those interesting things. Gravity isn't a magical force field. Chemistry isn't alchemy. Astronomy isn't astrology. And life science isn't about creators or intelligent designers. At least not until compelling evidence is produced as to the precise nature and existence of that being so it's not an unfalsifiable unknown entity.

  285. Well put... by warrax_666 · · Score: 1

    ... and I'll just mention that Behe(!) testified under oath during the Dover trial that relaxing scientific inquiry such that ID could be admitted would also make astrology admissible as a scientific theory.

    --
    HAND.
  286. SCIENCE is not about BELIEF. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "SCIENCE is not about BELIEF" -- bullshit it isn't, it's a construct for understanding implemented by imperfect people; and people with sometimes imperfect information.

    Not recognizing it as such you hide behind word definitions (to placate your own ego) rather than seeing the reality of the matter.

    It's all about belief; belief that the data you have obtained is correct, belief that the methods you used to obtain that data, belief that the results you obtain validate some quasi-philosophical viewpoint you wish to foist.

    The only difference is your "belief" is tempered by research, observations, etc.; the amount of which defining whether something is a fact, theory or otherwise.

    Don't give me B.S. about the state of the current scientific community not being about "belief" when your apparent hero Dawkins espouses a bunch of philosophical viewpoints absolutely unrelated to HARD SCIENCE by YOUR OWN DEFINITION.

    Oh, and FYI -
    Follow your own f*cking advice; philosophy isn't science.

    The "Flying Spagetti Monster" you deride cannot be commented on (pro or con) from a scientific viewpoint as there is no data that will support or deny it. The fact that you place that in a post about what is and what isn't science shows me you are an egotist or an idiot.

    1. Re:SCIENCE is not about BELIEF. by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "SCIENCE is not about BELIEF" -- bullshit it isn't, it's a construct for understanding implemented by imperfect people; and people with sometimes imperfect information.

      Science is about the persuit of truth through observation and testing. Religion is about persuit of truth through being told what the truth is. "Belief" is what parents mean when they say "because" in response to their children's questions of "why?" If science is "belief" then there is no truth. I "believe" that I am a person. I "believe" that there is a car parked in the garage. I can't "know" that there is a car in my garage because I'm not in the garage to observe it. Even if I was looking at it, my senses are flawed, so I have to "believe" them. When you use "belief" as you have, the word has no meaning. Or, more accurately, it has all meanings and everything is "belief." That makes a cute trick for attacking others, but for actually having a discussion makes it pretty much impossible.

  287. Nixon $peechwriter$ by grolaw · · Score: 1

    $urely you don't mean to impugn the hone$ty and integrity of the fine people who brought u$ Watergate?

    Think of all the good the Nixon Admini$tratuion has brought u$:

    (1) Ethic$ exam$ for law $tudents.
    (2) Jerry Ford'$ Pardon.
    (3) Ronald Reagan'$ pardon$.
    (4) GHWBu$h'$ pardon$.

    Rummy, Cheney and a $hitload of other retred$ from the Ford Admini$tration.

    At lea$t we can be happy that Ben $tein didn't continue his political career!

  288. Frustration with the science cabal by foobarbaz · · Score: 1

    It must be exhausting for creationists to have to fight against the geologists, astronomers, physicists, botanists, zoologists, archaeologists, and paleontologists and who are all deluded by "evidence" in their respective fields that the Earth is really old.

  289. "Darwinism" does not exist by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    No school teaches a biology class or unit called "Darwinism." No scientist identifies themselves as a "Darwinist." You cannot get a degree in Darwinism or publish a paper on Darwinism or read The Journal of Darwinism.

    It is a language construction by those who seek to promote their own ideology, typically a fundamentalist religious ideology. They give it a religion-like name so that they can promote the same arguments against it that are promoted against religions. It's the mirror to the ID strategy, which gives the religious doctrine of creationism a veneer of scientific language so that it can be promoted with scientific-sounding arguments. In either case they seek to twist the language to obscure real differences.

    You're right that a doctor does not need to be an expert in biological taxonomy to treat the flu. But where you are wrong is in thinking that these are unrelated fields of study. When in fact, both are based on the exact same theory--the modern theory of genetic evolution. This is one of its most powerful proofs actually: the same theory can help improve understanding of both speciation AND the treatment of disease.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  290. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by kabocox · · Score: 1

    The three "expelled" people presented in the movie -- these are the worst stories the filmmakers could find -- involved a professor who failed to get tenure because he wasn't good enough, a woman who had her contract run out and didn't have it renewed, and them someone who said he was "fired" from the Smithsonian, despite actually being an unpaid research assistant whose term ran out.

    But that's even better. That's exactly what's needed. See these people were expelled. He didn't get tenure not because he wasn't good enough, just that those judging him didn't find his topic worthwhile. The other two are even better there you could say that they did something that the community would displease of, but instead of being fired, their contracts just renewed when they came up next. That's so much better.

    I'm surprised that tenure still exists and that all professors/scientists aren't on yearly contracts. You say or do something that your bosses don't like and you won't be fired; your contract will just not be renewed next year because you weren't performing up to par. For bonus points add in monthly performance reviews that are mostly negative and if that employee ever has others look into then it looks like they deserved to be fired, but were allowed to continue out their term instead of being fired.

  291. It went more like this: by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    *insert nice sensible evolution discussion here*

    "Bah, I don't beleive in any of that nonsense!"

    "Why's that?"

    "I beleive God created everything"

    "Well sorry but we're having a strictly scientific discussion where deities are not involved, but those guys over there are discussing philosophy and that bunch over there is discussing theology, maybe you should take your discussion to them..."

    "HOW DARE YOU deny the existence of my God!!! WAAH YOU SHOW RESPECT FOR MY BELIEFS AND ACKNOWLEDGE MY DEITY IN YOUR DISCUSSION RIGHT NOWWWW!!!"

    "Say what now?!?!"

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    1. Re:It went more like this: by n9uxu8 · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes, yes...the monkey trials were amusing for all...well...except the dead guy, I suppose.

      Regardless, the parent comment said something on the order of:

      "People, being people, fail to distinguish that proof of evolution can not be equated to proof of the non-existence of God"

      I said that in the context of a political campaign, evolution is still a difficult issue because of the fact that people don't get the above and presented an amusing (to me only apparently) discussion along those lines.

      You come in and say that, no in fact, it's not science it those Godmongers...they've got their god in my evolution to which the Godmongers might complain that you've got your science in their creationism.

      It would seem that it is an emotional and polarizing argument, wouldn't it?

  292. RD's Open Letter to a victim of Ben Stein's lying by geekotourist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Richard Dawkin's " Open Letter to a victim of Ben Stein's lying propaganda" is relevant.

    The creationism / evolution debate has been done many times here on Slashdot. There'll be comments making one or more of the hundreds of old and refuted creationist arguments(1). It's possible that a couple of comments will use arguments even the Answers in Genesis creationist group says not to use(2). Someone will say there's no evidence for Macroevolution and someone else will point out 29 plus evidences for Macroevolution(3).

    The point of Expelled is to make people think they've learned about the creation / ID / evolution debate, but to feel that Darwin= Holocaust. Note how they interview scientists of all sorts, but they don't interview academics who cover antisemitism in pre-20th century Europe. Even one hint or reminder that, say, Martin Luther wrote On the Jews and Their Lies in 1543 would ruin the Darwin -->Holocaust propoganda.

    ----------
    (1) "evolution requires faith," "Piltdown," "Midocean magnetic anomalies are not reversals"...
    (2) "there are no beneficial mutations," "no new species have ever been produced"...
    (3) Even if there were no fossils, how to explain how biochemistry matches phylogeny? It's one thing to claim the designer re-uses code to explain similarity, but why would a designer reuse broken code?

  293. Goes both ways, kid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "He's totally right, science in academia should be more about discussing what you believe and less about what science people have found out after observation and experimentation."

    Then scientists should stop writing philosophy books claiming the philosophy is science.

    1. Re:Goes both ways, kid by Vexorian · · Score: 1

      Yeah evil scientists and their philosophy plot to take over the world. Could you please give me a referal where anybody claims "philosophy is science"? A google search for such thing gives quite unrelated results.

      --

      Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
  294. Real academic freedom by onemorechip · · Score: 1

    Doesn't academic freedom imply freedom from interlopers? I think the interlopers should, by all rights, be able to set up their own academic field. But forcing those in an existing field to accept doctrine that fails the standards established for that field, just to get a free ride on its coattails, isn't freedom. It's anarchy.

    --
    But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  295. Theory. You keep using that word. I do not think.. by pyrr · · Score: 1

    ...it means what you think it means.

    A scientific theory is falsifiable. That is, there is a possibility that the hypothesis can be conclusively proven to be untrue (and a negative cannot be proven, and is thus unfalsifiable). There are no alternative theories to macroevolution that have a shred of supporting evidence or are conceivably falsifiable. Macroevolutionary theory is at least theoretically falsifiable, which makes it THE theory.

    Everything else is just an unsubstantiated hypothesis. Here are some of the alternatives:

    • "We just don't know, it's too confusing and complicated..."
    • "In the beginning, God created..."
    • "In the beginning, an "intelligent designer" created..."
    • "It must've been advanced aliens"

    Non-scientific, unfalsifiable hypotheses don't belong in science classes, period. It's not fair to present them on the same footing as an actual theory, and it's not fair to waste time tearing them up in the scientific arena. It's like in the movie where Indiana Jones brought a gun to a swordfight. Or the Egyptian thug brought a sword to a gunfight.

    That is why it is WRONG to teach these hypotheses in a science class-- either the unsubstantiated, unfalsifiable hypothesis will be ridiculed and trashed by a zealous science instructor, or non-science will be elevated in status to real science. Either way, a student is done a disservice, either by having his/her religious believes thrashed, or by not being taught credible science. That is the point you missed from the satirical post you responded to. Science has at least theoretically falsifiable theories for the absurd alternatives suggested, which Christians have believed in the past, and some continue to believe (i.e., that illnesses are caused by demons and cured by praying, and that natural phenomena are the result of benevolence or malevolence of gods). It's just that science, aided by Occam's Razor, has all-but eliminated the superstitious and fantastic explanations for most natural phenomena. We don't teach alternatives to those theories.

    And if you don't understand what the implications of what I'm saying are, I challenge you to prove that the "God Germs" hypothesis is false. (Hint: you can't, no matter how foolish it sounds...just like ID.)

  296. Re: You were modded flamebait for THAT comment?? by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Informative

    That's the scary reality of the situation. When you put what is in one hand and what will happen in the other, often the what will happen influences the what is beyond a point of accurate renditions of what is.

    Take the weather channel chick a while back calling to remove any and all AMA certifications from weather reporters who state some anomaly in the weather isn't because of global warming. Sure the certification doesn't remove any credentials he has but it effect the implied accuracy of his forcasts and thereby effect ratings which means he would lose his job. Hence the reason people now think global warming is fact and if it isn't, it is a good idea anyways.

    There are quite a few other places where this has been complained about. It seem that attacking someone's livelihood seem to be the choice weapon instead of attacking statements with facts. How anyone can look at that and think it is objective and impartial is beyond me. How anyone can watch this shit and not think a scam is happening explains why people are defrauded all over the world on a daily basis.

  297. Try again. by mutube · · Score: 1

    So far the scientific community haven't provided a way for the Bacterial flagella to evolve, just that a small subset of those same components could be used for another function, see wikipedia


    Your mistake here is to assume that things cannot evolve with one purpose and then be co-opted to another. Close relations of bacterial flagella proteins have been found in ancestor bacteria and many continue to feature elsewhere in cells found today. Once existing and in use they have been adapted or simply appropriated to this new purpose.

    Incredibly unlikely? Maybe. But bacteria had a long time to chance this out. This pattern of development is the very reason why the design of the flagella is so unnecessarily complex: it's a biological botch job. If this is 'intelligent' design, the designer was on crack.

    'Irreducible complexity' of a functioning trait and 'numerous, successive, slight modifications' to achieve it are not mutually exclusive.

  298. No zealots in science! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no zealots in Science because they have the truth behind them! (sarcasm)

    Zealots are not the problem, it's the mainstream scientists who conflate science and philosophy and call it science and therefore cannot be wrong or a zealot because the scientific method is perfect and they are reflecting the "truth".

    Even the OP is guilty of this: "...respect them and provide for them sound arguments against it." Against what, God? Last I heard you cannot comment on / about something you have no observations for in a scientific manner; otherwise, it's philosophy or a belief.

    Dawkins has some awfully silly writings based solely on belief rather than science. The innate problem is when his beliefs are hoisted up as scientific fact.

    The complaint is always about ID, etc. being un-scientific and never that some scientists try to re-define philosophy as science.

    One is bad science.
    The other is a lie about what truth is.

    Which is more dangerous?

  299. Try again. by mutube · · Score: 1

    it is testable speculation based on observation.
    There, fixed that for you.
  300. Re:Only in USA...EUROTRASH by Findeton · · Score: 1

    "Todays science was yesterdays theory and hypothesis and much of it remained untestable until recently."

    The point is that this yesterday's theory was a SCIENTIFIC theory. BTW, it looks like you have no idea of what a scientific theory is. A scientific theory is a scientific model of reality, which errors are delimited, supported on evidence and which makes predictions. Darwin's theory is a scientific theory on evolution, evolution is a fact, in the same way that newton's theory on gravity or Einstein's theory on gravity are scientific theories, but gravity is a fact.

    "Its not that we lack answers, we dont even know what questions to ask and will not know if science remains so convinced of its own arguments of which much is lacking especially the big one"

    You are the stubborn here. You know? you and all creationists are exactly the same kind of people who denies that earth is an sphere and says it is flat. You are a phanatic, a religious zealot, because one thing is to doubt darwin's theory on evolution (which i do, because there are new and perfected theories on evolution), but what you cannot doubt is the fact: EVOLUTION.

    Creationists = people who believe earth is flat, when it's a proven fact that it's not.

  301. Re:Overly Melodramatic by clichescreenname · · Score: 1

    Even your summary is ripe with sensationalism. There's nothing particularly unique or surprising about Ben Stein's movie. It's what we've all known for some time, and have come to expect from the Church of Darwin and their acolytes. But, I suppose even vampires seeing their _true self_ in the mirror for the first time must be shocking.

    Yawn... This comment is full of scientific inaccuracies; vampires don't even HAVE reflections!
  302. Creationism verses Evolution - I believe BOTH! by __aajxax2722 · · Score: 1

    I actually believe in creationism and evolution. And I will explain why. I do believe that God did create everything around us, and I believe that he set the stage for everything to evolve.

    The bible states that God created everything in six days and resting on the seventh. So answer me this one question? How long is a day to God?

    I know for a fact that I do not know and I am almost sure that no one else does either. Dr Steven Hawkins and Dr Albert Einstein may have had a clue, but I know I do not.

    I accept God created everything because who could not believe in a higher being than us when you see your newborn child for the first time, or the Earth in its beauty from outer space?

    I agree with Ben Stein on a lot of subjects and I believe that everyone is entitled to believe what they want as long as it does not hurt or harm anyone else.

    May your higher being watch over you. I believe my God does.

    I do not consider myself a "religious freak" either. I've been in trouble with the law and I have a cruel streak. I do not consider myself perfect. But I respect other opinions. I ask that you respect mine.

  303. Someone actually gets it! by pyrr · · Score: 1

    Except he's being misleading and his goal isn't to get scientists to look at ID, it's to get the public to think that they can't trust those evil godless scientists, because all they're doing is agenda-pushing. If you can get people to doubt objective facts, there's no limit to what you can do!

    EXACTLY! Steins' approach is tangential, which is particularly effective for propaganda purposes. And, amazingly enough, Stein happens to be a career propagandist!

    One thing I've had trouble doing with Creationists is convincing them that just because they can pull some random, unquantified, and untested potential causes of error in scientific methods out to raise doubts about a scientific method not only doesn't disprove the particular method, but it also wouldn't support Creationism if it somehow did manage to do so.

    For example, take my discussion with a Young-Earth Creationist a year or so ago. I described dating methods. She attempted to foster doubts about radiocarbon dating by talking about how "there could've been different concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in the past" and about K-Ar igneous rock dating with something nearly as spurious. For the sake of diligence, I looked up these doubt hypotheses myself, most hits were to Creationist websites and not detailed. I then asked her to elaborate on these hypotheses, to be specific on the margin of error these doubts could potentially introduce. Unsurprisingly, she wasn't able to put-up so she wound up shutting-up.

    "What would the concentration of carbon compounds in the atmosphere have to be in order to change a date from on the scale of tens of thousands of years, to fewer than 5,000 years, and what mechanism would you propose that would account for this sort of change?"

    "Is the potential flaw in the K-Ar dating method substantial enough to cause an igneous rock that solidified less than 5,000 years ago to appear to have solidified hundreds of thousands of years ago based on isotope ratios?"

    The moral: you want to object to a scientific method, you'd better have thought about the method and magnitude of the sources of error you're trying to convince scientists of; it's not like faith, where the mere shadow of doubt is catastrophic. Doubts must be quantified and their implications analyzed before any meaningful damage is done to a theory.

    Ben Stein wins at propaganda, but fails at science.

  304. Creationist arguments already used in this thread. by geekotourist · · Score: 1

    A. "Science can not demonstrate that science is important, that we ought to teach it in our schools, or that is better than religion. If you believe any of the aforementioned, please realize that these are your beliefs. And if you fervently, even zealously, endeavor to defend, proselytize or promulgate these beliefs- you are a RELIGIOUS person."

    CA610. Evolution Religious "Consider some attributes of religion and how evolution compares..."

    B. "ID is not open for debate in the scientific community...why not debate the ID folks and send them to an early grave"
    CI401. The methodology of science rules out even considering design.

    C. "the THEORY of Evolution is a theory because it's not been proven. If there was a mountain of evidence, as some idiot put it in his comment, it'd no longer be a theory."
    CA201. Evolution is only a theory.
    CA202. Evolution has not been proved

    D. "Seriously people, Ben Stein is doing a service to the scientific community by encouraging critical thinking and making people challenge the status quo."
    CA000--CJ533. Do you know how old and tired these challenges are? How worn out but still repeated, over and over they are? The creationist claims are status quo. The scientists' replies change. 50 years ago the creationists would say "Why, Darwinists say Man is like a Mouse, but look, Man is closer to a Cabbage and so Evolution is wrong," and scientists had to go into an extended lecture about comparing molecules. Now, when creationists claim the same thing, scientists can simply say "Go online. Here is the human genome. Here is the ape genome. Here is the mouse genome. Here is the rice genome. Now, what was that again?"

    E. "So far, I have yet to see any convincing arguments that mutation can produce innovative changes."
    One of the 'Even a major creationist group says not to use this argument' arguments. Or if you're saying that while the mutations are positive, they don't create something new...
    CB101.2 with a list of mutations that caused new features.

    And that's just from the last couple of hundred comments.

  305. What Stein Wants by DynaSoar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You need to know Stein's background to see what he's after. Although a conservative, he's also an exceedingly intelligent iconoclast aiming to reveal problem behavior where it's typically not admitted.

    His purpose in Expelled is not to promote creationism, either in and of itself or in comparison to evolution. His intention is to point out that SOME OF the scientific community is participating in the same sort of hair-on-fire hysteria as the most vocal creationists. While the latter are widely know and fairly expected to employ this as a tactic, or just emotionalism, the scientific community "should" be above it, but isn't.

    He rightly shows that the "evolution/creationist debate" isn't. He shows that it is instead a construct. Creationists claim it in order to put their ideas on equal footing with science, and science unwittingly helps them when some of its members react to what they expect rather than what's actually being said. His movie is a case study in precisely this, both within itself and as a social phenomenon, and you can bet your ass this is exactly what he intended.

    It's easy to poke holes in the highly vocal creationists' stance, and quite popular to do so. It's more difficult to poke holes in their scientific counterparts, and supremely unpopular if you assume his intention is to promote creationism. Promoting creationism is his tool, exposing intellectual bigotry is his intention, and before the movie even premiers, he is succeeding admirably.

    If one isn't convinced, consider the fact that he's targeting only those that overreact to the situation. For the most part both religious and scientific adherents (and those who hold to both) coexist and even discuss their viewpoints without any acrimony or "debate". They see no contradiction because the two thought systems are orthagonal -- entirely independent and incomparable. It's those in science who can't grasp this due to perceived peer pressure or fear that overreact and so unwittingly lend credence to that which they oppose by the sheer act of opposing it.

    And keep in mind that although the movie pokes at one side, that doesn't mean he considers the other side to be right. He's going after the one target too few have the balls to attack. My money says that when it's died down, he'll make a statement that he has no intention of supporting creationism, only that he intended to do what I've described above.

    The movie is a masterful piece of agitprop (agitating propoganda). It gets its targets to react wildly to it as though it were their traditional perceived enemy, while its true intent to show that those targets are themselves reacting wildly when they, as the supposed intellectuals, should be reacting with due consideration, if at all. And at this point it doesn't matter if the movie even comes out; it's already done exactly what Stein wants it to.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
    1. Re:What Stein Wants by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      That sounds like a great movie! Now that he's finished making Expelled, I hope Ben gets to work on it.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    2. Re:What Stein Wants by notrandomly · · Score: 1
      I have a hard time accepting your analysis. In this movie, Ben Stein engages in outright mud slinging and anti-science propaganda. What do you base your claims that he isn't really attacking science and promoting creationism on?

      What bigotry has he exposed in the scientific community? Where is the hysteria?

      How is he succeeding at exposing any intellectual bigotry besides his own, when all he has achieved so far is to rally religious fundamentalists to his cause?

      Basically, show me the sources of your claims.

    3. Re:What Stein Wants by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Your analysis fall flat on its face because it is not only hardcore atheist terrorist like Dawkins who have renounced this film. Huge numbers of christians, including biologist Ken Miller, have met the film with nothing but contempt, just like Dawkins and his fellow atheist terrorists have.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  306. I used to like and respect Ben Stein by wwphx · · Score: 1

    I enjoyed his TV shows, and I didn't have a huge problem with him being a speech writer for Nixon. More than enjoying his shows, I respected his intelligence and would have loved an opportunity to meet him.

    Then I started seeing his NeoCon affiliation and his support for Bush policies that I don't agree with or support.

    Sorry, Ben, it's over and I won't be seeing your movie. You're more than entitled to your political opinions, but I am not required to like them or support you.

    --
    When you sympathize with stupidity, you start thinking like an idiot.
  307. Where can I watch this for free? by Protometheus · · Score: 1

    I want to see this movie for the purposes of entertainment based on stupidity value, and to be able to retort to my friends and family who will inevitably bring it up, but I'm hesitate to give money to a twit such as Stein by seeing it in theaters. Does anyone know where I can (in order of preference) stream, download, or torrent this film?

    1. Re:Where can I watch this for free? by Doug52392 · · Score: 1

      Hope someone brings their camera to the movie, films it, and puts it on BitTorrent :) Maybe they'll release it free though...

  308. Evolution by AmericanGladiator · · Score: 1

    If man descended from monkeys and apes, why do we still have monkeys and apes? --George Carlin

  309. Scientists are biased too ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    On one side we've got a bunch of scientists - who's philosophy espouses striving for neutrality, lack of bias, objectivity, etc.

    That statement is as mythological as any found in a religious text. :-)

    Scientists are biased too. The scientist who discovered the big bang theory was a Roman Catholic priest and some scientists rejected his theory because he was a priest and the theory sounded too much like genesis. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georges_Lemaître

    Furthermore, it is naive to think that science is devoid of politics. If scientists are dependent upon politicians for money then science will be politicized.

  310. Re:Monkey's uncle? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

    Acting like that is just childish. If Darwin was right, then you have nothing to lose by carefully writing a counter paper, countering the evidence.

    Except time, of course. If you spent time carefully dealing with all half-baked claims that pop up (many of which make the same errors) you'll waste all your time. Rejecting a claim that's too similar to a previously refuted claim is a way to save time.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  311. Definition of Intelligent Design? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can someone please provide a definition of intelligent design?

    Does it mean that God created everything in one fell swoop, or does it allow for intermediary steps along the way, such as the creation of a single-celled organism that evolves into many different species?

  312. Big Bang Theory rejected because priest offered it by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    But you don't really illustrate the point - the OP was talking about scientists, and you illustrated the point with a story about a journalist and an environmental activist.

    I'll assist him. The big bang theory was initially rejected by some scientists because it was offered by a Roman Catholic priest and sounded too much like genesis.

    One. scientists are human and subject to human biases. Two, scientists are dependent upon others and must serve those masters, if scientists are dependent upon politicians for money then politics will influence science to some degree. It is naive to expect otherwise. Three, there are few facts in science. Theories are merely our best current approximation/explanation and are limited by our current understanding. It is therefore quite legitimate and proper to question political sacred cows and investigate such questions as: is global warming predominantly a result of human action?

  313. Ask people to speak out? Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "plans to encourage people to speak out if they believe intelligent design or creationism to be correct."

    Let's stop and think about this for a minute. Why should joe average speak out about what he BELIEVES? Does it really matter and should it influence policy or ultimately, science??

    Let's look at it this way: Say NASA is planning to launch a manned rocket somewhere. We don't know how gravity works, but we have lots of theories around it based on what we can measure and extrapolate from this. Now, we could hit up the average joe and joan on the street and get some sort of "what do YOU believe the trajectory should be" to get this rocket into space safely, but we don't. And the average J would agree that it's best to leave that kind of stuff to the scientists who know what the fuck they are doing!

    This idiotic evolution controversy is the same damn thing. Fuck the bible, trust the scientists and let them do their damn jobs!!!!

  314. Re:Monkey's uncle? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

    "God did it" is easy to express in our language but I can't think of any sufficiently accurate descriptions of how God did it or how God works.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  315. suspicion-faith as confidence approaches infinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If existence was created by the creator, how did the creator come to be?

    Another riddle:
    If all events are predestined and now is traveling backwards in time, and you forget more of the future everyday, how could you tell?

  316. Common ancestry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Humans didn't descend from monkeys and apes. Humans and apes descended from a common ancestor.

  317. Science Talk Podcast on Expelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Science Talk, the Scientific American did an excellent episode last week on Expelled. See http://www.sciam.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=34145C53-079F-CA62-1A6616EAA8567357

  318. By Neruos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When speaking about biology...

    Evolution is the physical mutation or change in a physical life form that gives the life form a positive or negitive advange in survival. Evolution does NOT mean CREATION only CHANGE. It is an adaptive ability that all living life forms contain.

    Evolution does NOT explain creation of life, nor the beginning of life, how life came to be or anything else with the initial startup of said life.

    In biology, it takes life to make life. Science has yet to provide a detailed enough understanding to explain or theorize how life is created. Humans only recently where able to create snythetic life, but used life itself to create it.

    Minerals/Elements/Carbon + Water + electricity != life.

    Beliving that a ooze soup of elements created life is no different then believing a magical person did.

  319. Nondeterministic chaos by AlpineR · · Score: 1

    The weather ain't deterministic, at least not to modern physics. Some processes like radioactive decay are truly random. Those processes are injecting unpredictable little bits of energy into the weather system. Due to the sensitivity to initial conditions, those little bits can cause drastic change.

  320. Re: Spurious Reporting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The journalist wrote "Not "all" scientists think man caused the problem. Some don't even think it's a problem, saying it's just part of a natural cycle that's been happening for the last 10,000 years." While this statement is technically true, it strikes me as being just a little loose with the verbage, portraying a greater degree doubt in the scientific community than actually exists. Yes, there are some scientists who think it's a natural cycle, that man's role isn't as great as some make it out to be, that the current data is conclusive, or that global warming is a myth. But those people are in the vast minority within the scientific community.

    Using the journalist's criteria, I could make a similar statement if I found a couple of scientists who think the world is flat. "Not "all" scientists think the world is round. Some think it's flat and rests in the back of a turtle, while others think it is indeed round, but in the shape of a discus."

    Reporters are judged based on the accuracy of their research and the articles they write. In my opinion this person could have easily pleased both camps with a slightly modified statement.

  321. Will Florida make this movie mandatory to see? by Doug52392 · · Score: 1

    I've noticed Florida seems to enjoy destroying education (Besides being the residence of Jack Thompson, I heard they wanted teachers to be able to substitute their own beliefs for the scientific facts behind evolution). Maybe this movie will become a mandatory film to show in Florida high schools?

  322. Re:that is the impression theists want you to have by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

    Given that, at the time, none of them knew of the theory of evolution, I think it's safe to give them a pass.

    On the other hand, if Pasteur were alive today, working in biology, and claimed that creationism was the source of all diversity on earth, then damn right he should be fired. And the same goes for the rest of them.

  323. intelligent design, gaia hypothesis, teilhard by mercurywoodrose · · Score: 1

    ive read "darwins black box" by michael behe. its a fascinating book that presents, in an apparently scientifically honest manner, some problems in evolutionary biochemistry that the author says are not addressed by any of the research in this field. the ability for our blood clotting mechanism to evolve from a simpler form is questioned with some intelligence. the problem, if i may summarize, is this: there appear to be some holes in the fabric of evolutionary theory which may not be explainable by the current theory. the idea of a conscious, intelligent designer (not necessarily "god" but definitely something many orders of intelligence beyond our own) may help to explain these holes.

    i am not as interested in the debate about whether creationists are trying to use scientific language to infiltrate their religious dogma. yes, they exist. for me, the question is: can such a theory of intelligent design be proven, or be falsifiable, and if not, what class of idea is it?

    i would say the idea is similar to the Gaia hypothesis, by james lovelock, where he proposes that the biosphere can be viewed as a single living entity, self regulating, that maintains optimal conditions for life. can this be proved? doubtful, but the search for evidence to support it may lead to new discoveries. its more of a paradigm shift.

    also, the history of combining science and theology has some very bright spots. pierre teilhard de chardin, a jesuit priest, tried to combine christian cosmology with scientific evidence, and his books, including "phenomenon of man" are full of interesting ideas of the nature of evolution. are we moving towards an Omega point? is there purpose hidden within evolution? again, this may not be provable or falsifiable, but it creates a new way of thinking, which may be necessary as we try to incorporate our own personal experiences of the divine (entheogens, anyone?) with our scientific training.

    we may be at a genuinely new, or novel, point in our thinking. old ways of thought (materialism, scientific rationalism, religious fanaticism, mysticism) may have reached their end of life. people married to rigid ways of thinking will overstate their case, deny truth in others views, to bolster their false sense of security. can we truly have any security in this world? are we not challenged every day to consider alternatives to our own well entrenched thought patterns? i know i am. its exhausting, but also exhilarating. and i dont see any slowdown.

    of course, im probably just insane. after all, dec 21 2012 is just around the corner, and the I ching told me that the king wen sequence has personal meaning to me by giving me the 3rd hexagram back as an answer to my question "does the king wen sequence have any relevance to me, and should i be worrying about these big issues at all?" the third hexagram is the key to king wen, as the first two are logical beginnings to any ordering of the i ching, while the third doesnt appear to have any logic. see terrance mckennas books for more on this.

    hope this was entertaining.

    --
    You hear about the person who didn't rely on anecdotal evidence to support his belief system?
  324. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by griblik · · Score: 1

    Why do they get a free pass here? They don't. If any of my kids ever come home asking about intelligent design, I'll take the time to explain the flaws in the idea in the same way that I'd talk them through the idea that the earth is flat and balanced on turtles (all the way down).

    They've made their case, and their arguments don't stand scrutiny. I'm not wasting any more time on this than I do on any other conspiracy theorist barking insanities in the street. That's not the same as a free pass; they're just not worth wasting energy on.

    I know most people aren't overly smart about most things (and I'm including myself in that), but we're not entirely stupid.
    --
    Warning: May contain nuts
  325. What's American for "Towelhead"? by theolein · · Score: 0

    This continual back and forth in the USA between Creationists, Intelligent Design proponents and Evolutionists is as utterly bizarre to a good many people elsewhere in the world as the religious bloodshed in the middle east is to Americans. It's as if the Americans, in some way, are the same as the "Towelheads" that they despise in Iraq, caught up in a struggle that neither side can really win, for the simple matter that it is very, if not extremely hard to convince any person that his or her beliefs are "wrong".

    Belief may not be science, but the sheer number of religious adherents on this planet shows that the need to believe in something is very strong. Science will not win against Creationists or IDers. It's very similar to trying to convince a beautiful person with a terrible sense of inferiority that they are, in fact, totally ok. Their belief is that they are not, and telling them that they are will certainly not change it easily.

    On the other side, the Creationists and IDers struggle to "win" can not succeed in the face of scientific evidence either. There is no scientific basis to either Creationism or ID. The irony of Creationism is that they take a bible litterally that wasn't even written in the language that they are reading it in, and claiming that the bible represents the word of God ignores the fact that the version that they read had gone through many translations over the centuries and even today Theologians argue over numerous points in the translation.

    What is, however, very dangerous, is that this continual debate threatens to make the USA slip even further into the polarised society that it has become. American schools, rightly or wrongly, already have a terrible reputation outside the USA, and this debate is certainly not something that attracts potentially great scientific minds to come and study in the US, and this, added to the paranoid anti-terrorism laws in the US and the difficulty of foreign students and highly qualified workers to get Visas is not helping the USA when it really needs every chance it can get.

    This is not 1960, nor is it 1990. The USA is not the world's only powerful economy anymore. There are many others who are willing and trying to take that position.

    This set of arguments only helps them.

  326. Its about free speech. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you evolutionists are so absolutely correct in your position why are you so defensive. Why do you feel the need to attack those with differing opinions. Me thinks thou protests too much.

  327. Your source is wrong. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1
    Your source is dangerously misinformed. The Eugenics movement sprang forth as a direct result of Darwin's work. It was even invented by his cousin, not that that means anything in particular. See the wikipedia article on Darwin:

    Following Darwinâ(TM)s publication of the Origin, his cousin, Francis Galton, applied the concepts to human society, starting in 1865 with ideas to promote hereditary improvement which he elaborated at length in 1869.[134] In The Descent of Man Darwin agreed that Galton had demonstrated the probability that talent and genius in humans was inherited, but dismissed the social changes Galton proposed as too utopian.[135] Neither Galton nor Darwin supported government intervention and thought that, at most, heredity should be taken into consideration by people seeking potential mates.[136] In 1883, after Darwins death, Galton began calling his social philosophy Eugenics.[137] In the 20th century, eugenics movements gained popularity in a number of countries and became associated with reproduction control programmes such as compulsory sterilisation laws,[138] then were stigmatised after their usage in the rhetoric of Nazi Germany in its goals of genetic purity.[V]
    1. Re:Your source is wrong. by Foggerty · · Score: 1

      Ah ok, didn't know that. It still doesn't change the fact that eugenics is NOT evolution as described by Darwin (again, artificial vs natural selection).

      The thing that annoys me, is that even if Hitler, Stalin and Eugenics were all directly influenced by and required evolution, it still doesn't mean that evolution is wrong.

    2. Re:Your source is wrong. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      No, but it does give one pause. The fact that it was used to promote genocide makes me worry when I hear other people using it, especially in reference to government policy.

      Even today it is easy to find people who hold the opinion that the state should regulate parenthood. They often site the need to promote the selection of "good" traits to counter the downfall of natural selection brought on by technology. In a very real way, these people are using Darwinian evolution to argue for establishment of a Nazi-like authoritarian government. So I think the connection is real, and important.

      Of course, that doesn't make evolution wrong. It just means that you should be wary when you hear someone talking about it.

  328. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Dogun · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, the turtles hypothesis is more valid (from a scientific perspective) than Creationism. You see, you could launch satellites, confirm the spherical nature of the planet, and observe there is no turtle anywhere in sight - the theory is falsifiable.

    Not so with creationism or its equally dubious cousin intelligent design. There is no way to demonstrate them to be false, making them deficient.

  329. worshipping the god of stoopid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there is nothing in darwin's theory of evolution to say that some god didn't take a handful of slime and order it to grow and evolve into life as we know it today. as a catholic, i'm told, by the same folks who hounded galileo, that there's no contradiction between faith and evolutionary theory. they've learned and evolved. what these flat earthers don't like is someone whose god is smarter / more sublime than theirs. it's just more intolerance among the stoopids.

  330. The simplest proof is right here: by Fluffeh · · Score: 1
    --
    Moved to http://soylentnews.org/. You are invited to join us too!
  331. I think everyone is missing the points..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There were two points to this movie - I'm wondering why there are so many comments from people who I'm sure have not seen it. Not that having no basis for your communication ever stopped a Slashdot conversation....
    1. there ARE questions about specific parts of theory of evolution. The problem is the people who state that it's a dogmatic fact and will not allow any discussion where there IS room for questions.
    2. I'm sure that this will get poo-poo'd by the so brilliant crowd, but what is Darwinism? Survival of the fittest. There are people (maybe not YOU, but Hitler, for one) who go with that and say that they need to cull any old, ill, non-productive people out of the human gene-pool. We'd be missing many great cosmological theories because Stephen Hawking would not be with us. How many people are the children of diabetics? They wouldn't be around because their parent would have been put to death. It is NOT a far line to extend, despite what you think. Americans are all safe? Are we? Big Brother is getting closer all of the time. The second point is when someone else who has power over YOU cares not one little bit about you and decides your fate for you, without you being able to make a comment, fight the decision, or even have them look you in the eye because they are at a desk somewhere else and the guards do it because it's just their job - then YOU lose. With your life. Lets have a poll: how many Slashdotters have a disease, condition, or deformity? Then, take those results and bar them from Slashdot for a week. See how boring a place it is with just the remaining folks. Because eventually, if you are true to darwinism, they will all be gone anyway.

  332. What else is there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody cares if you question evolution. Alas, no one has done it. Present some evidence that suggests evolution might possibly not fit. Or work from the other direction: present a theory that fits the evidence as well or better than evolution. Shit, we can even lower the bar on that: present a theory that is 1% as good as evolution, and maybe a bunch of smart people will start working on it to get it to 2% or 99%.

    But nobody ever does it. Evolution is still the only game in town, simply because no one has come forth with a single alternative.

    And then there's the Intelligent Design guys. They get a lot of press, but don't ever present any evidence, nor do they ever bother to even present a theory! They won't even do that minimal 1%. Was that too much to ask?!?

    Hey Stein, why do you want to join such under-achievers?

  333. Raising questions by questionsaddict · · Score: 1

    Why, if god created us as his ultimate bmw, are our bodies so not-elegant? anybody who saw the real version of the inner life of a cell ( http://multimedia.mcb.harvard.edu/ ) can see how much complexity lies inside us. why is our chest made from an element that's not the most resistant element in the universe? im sure that prosthetic limbs are now getting better (more resistant, etc) than our usual limbs so how can we get 'better' at doing some parts of our bodies if god created us? most of our bodily processes are not straightforward? of course we are very efficient at doing what we do, but the same effectiveness can be achieved by other, more straightforward, methods. [/newline] and how strange it is indeed that most animals survive better on the enviroments they are found and have a hard time on other places.. of course for evolution theory this questions can be answered in one line, i would like to see such elegant explanation to these and many other questions with ID. Please post more questions that fail to be explained by ID, and of course, saying 'god is all-knowing' is not an explanation by ID.

  334. Evolution = false by Art3x · · Score: 0

    I don't know what is more sad, the theory of evolution or those who believe in it.

  335. Evolution can be tested. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    Evolution implies a number of consequences for which evidence can be gathered. For example, an understanding of how DNA is replicated across offspring has led to implications regarding how DNA should appear across various primate species based upon lineages previously established through the fossil record. Thus far, the patterns expected have been observed.

    Your suggestion that the theory of evolution is merely "speculation" is not accurate, and it suggests that you do not actually understand the theory.

    1. Re:Evolution can be tested. by methuselah · · Score: 1

      well,
      so, somehow dna enters the picture. explain to me why a protozoa has so many chromosomes if life is a progression toward a higher order? fancy words like deoxyribonucleic acid might impress the uninformed. I know that all dna does is explain biology. It doesn't do much to bolster the case that we "evolved" from pond goo. You missed my point entirely. To state declaratively that a "theory" that really doesn't hold up to cynical scrutiny as the entire answer is no answer. I understand the merits of the theory and it can make a narrow mind comfortable to just accept it. However, I do not feel that it answers the fundamental question of how it all came to be as there is no fossil evidence to support this long term development that supposedly took place. It also fails to be able to demonstrate how these supposed mutations survived as nature is notoriously cruel to mutation. Mules can't breed for example. I just am saying that because a "zillion" people say something such as the world is flat it isn't fact. Evolution is really a hypothesis not a theory in my mind. A good one yes, definitely a piece of the puzzle yes, an answer to life the universe and everything No. I think I read that its 42 somewhere. So cutting off debate and declaring the problem solved is not science it is just as much theology as saying harry thunder invented the world. That is my point,

    2. Re:Evolution can be tested. by Dimensio · · Score: 1

      so, somehow dna enters the picture. explain to me why a protozoa has so many chromosomes if life is a progression toward a higher order?

      Life is not a progression toward a "higher order". Your question is founded upon a misconception, and thus it is not valid.

      However, I do not feel that it answers the fundamental question of how it all came to be as there is no fossil evidence to support this long term development that supposedly took place.

      There exists extensive fossil evidence for vertebrate evolution. Do you wish for additional information?

      It also fails to be able to demonstrate how these supposed mutations survived as nature is notoriously cruel to mutation.

      Then perhaps you can debunk more than thirty observed instances of speciation documented in multiple peer reviewed studies.

      So cutting off debate and declaring the problem solved is not science it is just as much theology as saying harry thunder invented the world.

      No one has declared that the "problem is solved". Research continues toward a better understanding of various lineages of descent. No "debate" is being cut off. The problem is that advocates of "intelligent design" are seeking special treatment; they have no facts and no evidence, no mechanism and no predictions, yet they insist that their claims be given the status of "theory" in spite of failing to meet all required criteria for a scientific explanation.

    3. Re:Evolution can be tested. by methuselah · · Score: 1

      ok, so despite your need to dissect my argument you fundamentally agree with me. cool well met.

  336. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Dimensio · · Score: 1

    They're continued iconic use of artist illustrations of evolution of man from ape to homo sapien. Even after a fair number of list were proven to be frauds or at best honest but foolish mistakes.

    Please provide specific examples.

  337. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by Evangelion · · Score: 1

    The "free pass" comment was referring to the movie's claim of IDers being "expelled" from academia. A quick skim of the comments showed that most people were taking them at their word -- that academics who professed a belief in ID were being unjustly treated with respect to their academic freedom.

    That claim is simply a lie. Not only is it a lie, but people who take the opposite stance and teach biology without mixing in bad theology get much worse treatment.

  338. Most Slashdot comments in a while... by Doug52392 · · Score: 1

    It's been a while since I've seen such a lively discussion... it seems like evolution debates are always popular.....

  339. Re:Homosexuality is better? by curmudgeon99 · · Score: 1

    Ah, what? Generally, we see Intelligent Design balanced against EVOLUTION. Can you explain how you took that to refer to homosexuality? Do you need to go back on your lithium? Is there something you feel the need to discuss with all of us?

  340. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Copid · · Score: 1

    But as the trailer points out, people have done the research (no idea if its correct) but the second they try to publish it, the Darwinans label them crackpots and shot out: "Its not Darwinism, so its wrong"
    Where are the papers? Show us the papers! Until then, it's all just unsubstantiated whining.
    --
    An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  341. Re:Monkey's uncle? by PhireN · · Score: 1

    I did several posts up.
    Of couse its only a book, because the scientific journals wouldn't accept it.

  342. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Copid · · Score: 1

    Of couse its only a book, because the scientific journals wouldn't accept it.
    Where were they submitted? What were the reasons for rejection? That's the point I'm trying to make. There are lots of claims of persecution and not a lot of evidence that any real work was actually done to get the work published. It's a lot easier to make a bunch of money by playing the victim to the popular press than by taking your rejection letters, improving your work, and laboring in obscurity to get your results into the mainstream like normal scientists to.

    That being said, Behe has not managed to respond substantively to some very basic critiques of his idea (above and beyond the fact that it's clearly just the same god-in-the-gaps that has been applied to just about everything else until we figured out the answers).

    The first is that irreducibility necessarily assumes that to get to a system with N parts, a part is added to a system with N-1 parts. Behe assumes that if we can enumerate all possible systems with N-1 parts, we can show that a destination with N parts is impossible to reach. He ignores the set of systems with N+1 parts entirely. It's like seeing a climber who has climbed himself down into a trap and claiming that he couldn't possibly be here because there was no way to climb *up* into that position.

    The second is the simple fact that Behe goes back and forth between two positions, depending on what part of the argument he's addressing. On its face, irreducible complexity amounts to, "If a system is irreducibly complex, then there is no possible path for evolution to produce it." Then, when somebody posits a theoretical path, he immediately moves to, "Sure, but you didn't prove that it did happen that way. It's a just-so story!" completely ignoring the fact that it devastates his original claim that there is no theoretical way for it to get there.

    Third, there are good reasons to believe that there is no way to show definitively that a system is irreducibly complex. It simply amounts to, "We haven't figured it out yet." I will gladly concede that Behe is the Isaac Newton of the branch of "We haven't figured it out yet" science, but that doesn't really get you into the journals with any regularity.

    Basically, Behe has raised some interesting questions, but they are in no way devastating or even really able to add something meaningful to the body of knowledge, and he hasn't really done anything to flesh out his work. I would be interested in seeing what form his ideas take that he thinks would be novel and publishable, but I doubt that he has made any such thing public. The fact that he's demonstrably not keeping up with the literature or testing his hypothesis is just icing on the cake.
    --
    An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  343. Who says miracles aren't physically possible? by Lovat · · Score: 0

    I'm not just being sarcastic or anything either. I've been creating a world for a game and I wanted it to be mostly Sci-Fi, but at the same time I wanted it to use magic, have knights, and so on. But I'm not just saying "okay there's magic" or anything. This is mostly Sci-Fi, so it has to have enough real science for me to be happy.

    Enter Quantum Field Theory.

    Either figure out for yourself, or if interested email me at cowmonaut@gmail.com and I'll send it to you once its formatted.

    May sound ridiculous, but well quite frankly so do quarks. And they work so why NOT this? Personally I think its BS until proven, and I seriously doubt you'll get enough "thaumatons" gathered in one place to turn water into wine.

  344. I admit.. I just don't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I still don't quite understand this whole 'evolution' thing. I understand that living organisms change, offspring differs from their parents. But once we go back far enough, I don't see how that shows that 'bird' came from 'not bird' at some point in history. That seems like saying 'oh, add 1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + ...; you're always adding non-zero numbers forever, so you get infinity'. How do those small changes we can observe show that when we add them all together, we get the large change we're expecting?

  345. whoa... by slew · · Score: 1

    Let's be a bit more clear here.

    The "experiment" you propose on the bacteria showing evolution hour-by-hour really probably doesn't do what you think it's doing. What's probably happening is that there is a spectrum of genotypes/phenotypes of bacteria that have varing resistance to the anti-biotics you are contemplating applying to them. What applying the anti-biotics do is kill the ones that are more succeptible thus "selecting" them to breed and use resources in the follow-on generation. The existing geno-types/pheno-types were existing in the population already in the span of hours. Over the course of days or week or months or years, you might develop mutations or horizontal gene transfer in bacteria that can be tested in a selecting environment to experience evolution, but in bacteria, anyhow, you get all sort of non-sexual evolutionary development of pheno-types which are not classically geno-types. These type of mutations that can be selected by evolutionary pressure (also known as natural selection) are unlikely to occur in the span of hours.

    It does a disservice to evolutionary scientific theory when these type of explanations are circulated (however well articulated), because they just strengthen the argument that evolution is a flawed theory. The reason evolution appears to be successful in higher animals is specifically because of sexual reproduction slowing the rate of mutation adaptation allowing for better natural selection to occur. In bacteria and viruses, horizontal gene transfer complicates much of the case that proves natural selection and evolution in higher animals and probably just weakens the case for evolution to be believed rather than some weird soviet style biology inheritance (aka lamark or whatever his name was).

    Despite the dogma filtered down to the masses, evolution is actually rather an interesting theory that at the same time is subtle and convincing. However presenting it as this over-arching organizational theory that is popular in the layman press really just dillutes the theory (for example, darwinian theory applied to business), which opens it up to crap like ID (who's to say that the guberment isn't designing the successful businesses instead of business being emergent from a natural competition). It may be a bit too subtle to see how generalizing a theory can make it weaker, but I hope this silly example can show you how overarching claims actually detracts from the "real" theory of evolution.

  346. hit submit too fast by slew · · Score: 1

    ... of course I meant

    What applying the anti-biotics do is kill the ones that are more succeptible thus "selecting" the __survivors__ to breed and use resources in the follow-on generation.

  347. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    Thing is, the bible doesn't actually say anything about evolution or vice versa. They're not at odds with each other. The bible says that god created all the creatures of the world all at once in their current form. (including Man in his own image) The bible says God created all the creatures of the world, but doesn't go into a lot of detail. The "all at once in their current form" is an interpretation not everybody agrees with. And what exactly "in his own image" means means is even more subject to interpretation. I think it refers to Reason, something we share with God, and not with the animals we're related to.

    Evolution says that the diversity of species came about gradually over billions of years.
    That Man came to his/her current form by way of natural selection. There's nothing wrong with the idea of evolution God's tool to create stuff. I've used evolution to create stuff myself, so why can't God?

    These are contradictory assertions. Only in your interpretation. Not everybody agrees with your interpretation.

    I'd be very interested in which book, chapter and verse says that the world is 10,000 years old. My understanding is that you can calculate it using the information provided.
    http://www.albatrus.org/english/theology/creation/biblical_age_earth.htm But that's really pulling stuff way out of context. Remember that Genesis is not an eye witness account, but a thousand years of oral history written down many centuries after it happened. If you're using it as a detailed history book instead of a book with a message about God, you're completely missing the point.

    who gives a hoot what a book like that says?
    how many glaring, even shockingly incorrect statements can a book contain before people will stop referencing it? The shocking incorrectness is in your interpretation of that book. Why cling desperately to an obviously incorrect interpretation, just to use it as an excuse to throw the actual message away?

    I'm not saying the bible is right, I'm just saying your interpretation is so obviously wrong that it's a really lame excuse to hide behind.
  348. Silly or just plain absurd? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So you're telling me they created a counter-web site called Expelled Exposed, and this was the best they could come up with:

    "[Exosed] is simply an anti-science propaganda film aimed at creating controversy where none exists, while promoting poor science education that can and will severely handicap American students."

    The irony of course, is that it is this kind of off the cuff hostility and whitewashing which the film claims to be exposing. IMHO you handicap students when you discourage free and independent thought. Of course Movie goers should be allowed to watch the film and decide for themselves free of threat and intimidation. It seems to me that it is Expelled Exposed who is promoting poor education by it's expressed desire that you do not see or talk about this film.
  349. Expelled by fmhuff · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I saw the movie, liked it and wonder how many nay sayers saw more than the trailer? Not everyone will agree with his views. Many will. His deductions however are verifiable. Be sure to attack the man. Character assassination is often used when you can't attack the argument. His biggest point is a word picture that compares much of academia enclose by a Berlin Wall mindset. This is arguably true. No amount of reason is going to change peoples minds when they don't want to change. It's easier just to put up the wall. Safer too. It's easier to punish those with questions than answer them. Some will think they are doing right by preventing free speech and free exchange of ideas. I believe it was Joseph Stalin who said "We don't let our people have guns, why would we let them have ideas". Where theres a will, there's a wall. ;-)

  350. Other Evangelical Oddities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Other American evangelical oddities:
    - They are hardcore pro-life but justify killing hundreds of thousands of Arab children via bombing
    - They are pro family-values but see not issue in killing hundreds of thousands of Arab civilians
    - They are about love, but advocate torture
    - They are hardcore pro anti-gay but do stuff like this

  351. I think the point of the film is being overlooked by timandmonica · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It seems to me that most responses posted here fail to address the central premise of the movie. I think the premise is this: it appears that many scientists have a legitimate fear of losing or have already lost their employment because they are proponents of Intelligent Design, i.e. they have observed that many things in nature appear to be designed.

    The central point is not whether:

    1. Some things in nature actually are designed.

    2. Who or what that designer may be.

    3. Evolution may also be responsible for all or part of the formation of the natural world and our universe.

    All of these points are ancillary. The film is meant to document the discrimination, fear, and prejudice present in scientific academia. That this point is missed in the forum posts above disheartens me, and I wish I could say that it also surprises me, but it does not. How easily we miss the simple point of something when there are other topics surrounding it that light a fire underneath us. I would hope that we all strongly agree with free speech, tolerance, and choice, regardless of what we may think about the beliefs of those being discriminated against. I will assume we all agree with this statement and will move on to the secondary issues which appear to be the main topic of interest.

    I don't believe any Intelligent Design advocate would disagree with evolution (specifically microevolution) as a scientific fact. In fact I know that many ID proponents believe in macroevolution as well. For example Michael Behe, the author of Darwin's Black Box (which is famous for popularizing the premise of ID) is a macroevolutionist.

    Many scientists have made the point that apparent design in nature and macroevolution are not always exclusive views. In other words, they feel they have the privilege of observing a world which was formed by the mechanism of evolution and the occasional direct work of some kind of intelligence. In this view, that same intelligence is responsible for designing the process of evolution as well and lets it do the job it was intended to.

    Something else that seems to often be misunderstood is the claim that Intelligent Design is the same thing as creationism. I will only note that there are many who believe in ID but disavow conventional creationism, and there are many creationists who disagree with the conclusions of the ID movement (based largely on their belief that the earth is very young). Those who believe that they are the same are only aware of the surface of these subjects, or may simply hope that ID will just as easily meet the same demise that creationism so easily met. Either way they are not in a good position to intelligently criticize ID (or creationism, for that matter.)

    Another error that I see many people make is equating ID to what they commonly term "the watchmaker argument". The real argument they are referring to is the classic Teleological Argument, which happened to receive a breath of life from William Paley's watchmaker analogy about 200 years ago. The argument itself, however, was articulated about 1,000 years before Paley by Plato himself and Aristotle after him, and has benefited from a long list of reworkings and clarifications, as well as much criticism. To quote the "watchmaker argument" at all in this context subtely reveals an ignorance of the subject, similar to how a creationist might think Darwin's evolutionary arguments are sole focus of scientific thought. In any case, we should certainly not dismiss ID so abruptly because the "watchmaker" aspect of the Teleological Argument has had popular critics over the years, because ID and the watchmaker argument are not the same. It is a different argument that appears similar to those who have not learned enough about each to be able to understand how they truly differ.

    From what I have read, the scientists being discriminated against haven't even made ID part of their curriculum or classroom discussions, though I am

  352. People just love a good argument. by cavebison · · Score: 1

    Dawkins.. god, don't get me started. Perhaps someone should refer him to the *sciences* of psychology, history and anthropology, where he would get a perspective on how religion evolved and how intrinsic it is to human nature. His blanket religion-bashing is puerile and worse than pointless. Nowadays, everyone from physicists (sorry, Cosmologists) to economists think they have their finger on the pulse of humanity. It's almost the pot calling out the kettle. It's silly. Sagan knew that religion has its place in the grand scheme of things. Dawkins is not so insightful. It's not Faith we should be worried about, but intolerance.

    And there are so many similarities between science and religion. They are both based around a set of accepted "proofs". We say that science doesn't choose its truth, but it does. The current dogma is accepted until proven otherwise. Some scientists rail against their faith - Einstein hated the dice-throwing Quantum theorists, and likely would still be working to "resolve" it today. Similarly, people live their religions differently, choosing how to integrate it into their life and world view. Neither science nor religion *force* us to believe anything - only a culture has that kind of power.

    Why do some people of faith believe homosexuality is a sin, or sex outside marriage, while others of the same faith do not? There are various standards of dress, levels of tolerance for others, some attend church, some do not. Someone should conduct a study to measure people's strength in their faith, the happiness and peace it brings, set against the various levels of religious literalism or fervour. I suspect, across the board, those who follow a hard line are by and large less content.

    I believe it all comes down to human nature - that is something we cannot ignore. It is very human to have faith, and it is very human to use our brains to solve puzzles - and by doing both or either, so make sense of the world.

    It is also very human to make personal choices, and this is the MOST important point of all: We can choose to believe that God made hard rules, and made some people sinful to keep the rest of us on our toes. Or we can choose to believe that God speaks in riddles (hence the constant contradictions in all major religious texts) and gave each of us the ability to work out the difference between Good and Evil for ourselves. Either way it's a test - either way is a valid interpretation of any faith. Which test a person chooses to take - for that is the real choice here - says the most about them, and defines what they will do with their faith.

    Same goes for science - some people cannot see past the dogma, others keep an open mind.

    Another basic human truth is that people love a good argument, and so we go on.

  353. Re:The comments here indicate the movie was a succ by notrandomly · · Score: 1

    See these people were expelled.
    The comment you are replying to clearly tells you why they weren't.
  354. "Darwinism" by Fished · · Score: 1

    In the first place, let me just point out that "Darwinism" and "neo-Darwinism" are terms used within the study of philosophy of science, quite often. Specifically, they refer to philosophical underpinnings of "species formation by natural selection". It does not imply, in any way, that Darwinism is a religious belief, and frankly those who are trying to misinterpret me that way are pretty much showing their collective arses.

    Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwinism

    In the second place ... what term would you have me use? Would you have me spell out "species formation by natural selection" every time I needed to make reference to that concept? Evolution is not a sufficient term, since saying that species evolve is not the same thing as saying that such evolution is sufficient to explain the variety of species we have around us. Most creationists and Intelligent Design types (and, no, they're not the same thing, which you would know if you had ever bothered to study them directly instead of just taking the party line) will acknowledge some sort of evolution. However, to equate evolution within a species to "species formation by natural selection" is a horrible fallacy of composition.

    In the third place ... if the shoe fits, wear it. The whole point of my post was that "Darwinism" has been attributed an importance it doesn't really merit, for ideological reasons. In response to that core point, I've gotten many screeds about the importance "evolution", on a micro scale, in understanding modern biology--which just shows how little people understand about the Intelligent Design movement. Intelligent design does not deny evolution--it denies that evolution is a sufficient explanation for the variety of biological diversity we see around us. It makes no appeal to the Bible or anything else to justify this--instead, the critique proceeds on scientific grounds. They might be wrong, but they are not "creationists." Creationism proceeds on entirely different grounds--namely, Genesis 1-3--yet even the most hard core Young Earth Creationist will accept that natural selection and evolution are things that are now occurring.

    Last of all, I kind of resent being painted as a fundamentalist. I thought I made it fairly clear in the parent post that I actually accept "species formation by natural selection" as a scientific theory. I think that the poorly thought out, ill-informed way in which people have responded to my original post demonstrates exactly the point I was trying to make. Reading all the responses, it appears to me that much of the defense of "species formation by natural selection" proceeds on rather ignorant ideological grounds, driven by people who've never bothered to understand the real reasons of those they caricature.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
  355. Re:that is the impression theists want you to have by notrandomly · · Score: 1

    It's fascinating that you believe that the bible adds nothing to scientific insight.
    It is a statement of fact, so it is hardly fascinating.

    Particularly when the bible itself states that the earth "hangs on nothing", that is to say, it floats in space.
    At the same time, it claims that earth is the center of the universe, and so on.

    If, however, you are only interested in real scientific facts done by real evolutionary scientists - I'd encourage you to check out Dr. Walt Brown's book "In the Beginning". The entire book is based on research done by scientists with an evolutionary viewpoint.
    Your description is dishonest. Walt Brown is an engineer, and a Young Earth Creationist. He did not do any research himself. Rather, his book contains a list of already refuted arguments, many of which even other YECs would disown. The creationist organization Answers in Creation has even published material refutin Brown's nonsense!

    Here is a bit of information from TalkOrigins as well.

    So basically, you are being dishonest. The book is not based on "an evolutionary viewpoint". It is a rather poor list of arguments for creationism that hold no scientific merit what so ever, and which is even being disowned by other creationists.

  356. Re:Monkey's uncle? by ukyoCE · · Score: 1

    Just wanted to catch a major fallacy here for you:

    >>Evolution says that the diversity of species came about gradually over billions of years.
    >>That Man came to his/her current form by way of natural selection.

    Natural selection and evolution are general terms for well-defined and well-proven facts of the interoperation of entities (both artifical and natural).

    EG:

    * If you kill off most of the non-antibiotic-resistant bacteria, the antibiotic-resistant bacteria will become a larger portion of the population.

    * If you put a bird on an island where food is in deep holes, birds with longer beaks will be able to get more food. Birds that get more food are able to procreate more. So birds with longer beaks will become a larger portion of the population.

    That's darwinism, that's "natural selection" and evolution at work. These are repeatable, provable facts.

    Evolution as a theory of creation of life is another matter altogether, which is much more contentious, and DOES (potentially) contradict the bible.

    Taking darwinism and the bible at face value, there are many interpretations in which they agree. Maybe we all started as humans in basically the form we are now. But natural selection has still applied to us since then, passing around genes for hair color, disease resistance, digestion of lactose, etc.

    Or, still taking both the bible and darwinism literally - how do you (or anyone) know what "God's image" is? Maybe life on earth started as bacteria, and God is an omnipotent amoeba?

    Unless you are talking about life evolving from non-life, it's not in direct contradiction with the bible.

  357. Re:What I am opposed to ... by notrandomly · · Score: 1
    It seems that you were taught wrong. Theories never become facts. Here you go, please read carefully.

    There is no real separation between "micro" and "macro" evolution. Only people who are anti-science will do that. No faith is needed for evolution, whether it is "micro" or "macro". It is all about the evidence.

  358. Re:that is the impression theists want you to have by JCSoRocks · · Score: 1

    My intention wasn't to be dishonest. All of the scientific research he cites was done by evolutionary scientists... so I said that his whole book is based on their research.

    --
    You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
  359. Re:that is the impression theists want you to have by notrandomly · · Score: 1
    When he misrepresents research, the book isn't actually based on that research. It is based on the misrepresentation of that research.

    :)

  360. Erroneous, indeed! by gr8scot · · Score: 1

    Waking up people's minds to conflicting ideas rather than letting them sleep is a good thing...usually. No, not "usually," but specifically when there is legitimate doubt as to which of any set of conflicting ideas is correct, then it is useful to make people aware of real uncertainty. To claim that the supporting evidence for intelligent design or divine creation are in the same league as the supporting evidence for evolution is to lie, outright. Whether such lies are motivated by malice or willful ignorance is a question I'll leave to somebody with greater patience for evil.
    --
    All 19 hijackers were known terrorists 09-10-2001. Lack of FBI intelligence does not justify warrantless wiretaps..
    1. Re:Erroneous, indeed! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Never underestimate the need people have to cling to their identities.

      A person's sense of identity is wrapped up as an amazingly complex set of experiences, beliefs and understandings. For most people, to deny God is to say "You are not who you think you are."

      It's not merely a question of fact based on evidence. It's identity.

    2. Re:Erroneous, indeed! by gr8scot · · Score: 1

      It's not merely a question of fact based on evidence. Science is exactly a question of fact based on evidence. End of discussion.
      --
      All 19 hijackers were known terrorists 09-10-2001. Lack of FBI intelligence does not justify warrantless wiretaps..
  361. Didn't watch it, or missed the point by YouRAllRobots · · Score: 0

    Stein isn't leading a charge against evolution as a whole. He is merely trying to show that anyone with any opposition to the theory has been blackballed. No one is trying to disprove evolution, they are trying to show people that there are inherent flaws in ONE aspect of the evolutionary theory. If you actually watched the movie instead of commenting on information that you see on the internet you have noticed that the argument is with the origin of that first living cell. how the primordial ooze went from non living ooze, to a living cell. The scientists point out that there is no evidence supporting the "origins of life". the evolutionary theory is perfect after that cell is formed, some people just feel that they need to know how they got to that point. the vague explanations and unlikely hypotheses that suggest a jump from the absence of life to the first living cell are enough to trigger an alarm in any rational mind. watch the movie. separate the religion from your thinking, it's not a religious issue.

  362. Re:Only in USA...EUROTRASH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SHUT THE FUCK UP BITCH!

        I am not a "creationist", do not believe the earth is flat you ass

        I am just not like you, some smug over-opinionated intellectual blowhard who thinks he has the answers so fuck you.

          I know what theory is and if you cant understand this "Todays science was yesterdays theory and hypothesis and much of it remained untestable until recently." By recently I meant the modern era idiot. Minds have hypothesized for eons on all sorts of things and there are some areas where it took time for science to catch up to imagination and be able to begin testing older hypothesis and gather evidence to prove or disprove. The possibility of a Creator is just such a topic especially in the face of Evolutions apparent lack in providing answers to the bigger pitcure.

          Fact is science has neither proven or disproven ID but the evidence (DNA as intentional code for creating life) is mounting towards ID.

          If you knew how to read you would know I dont deny EVOLUTION in my posts

    Your a fucking dope and it is your and your kind who are out of control on this, you cant stand the thought of a higher reason beyond your own self described lofty place, you fucking snob.

          ID is a vaild theory and until proven it can remain that way regardless of what you say or do. I never said anything beyond that while acknowledging Evolutions legitimacy, the most important point you missed along with stating that ID could possibly have a place alongside of Evolution after application of rigorous science which could take lifetimes of investigation but so what.

          How else are you going to answer the big question and Evolution cant help you there, YOU MUST 1ST EXIST, BE CREATED IN ORDER TO EVOLVE.

          But no, you did not understand that becasue you a fucking dope!

  363. So who was Socrates ...? by pbhj · · Score: 1

    STREPSIADES
    No, indeed; I thought the Clouds were only fog, dew and vapour.
    SOCRATES
    But what you certainly do not know is that they are the support of
    a crowd of quacks, the diviners, who were sent to Thurium, the
    notorious physicians, the well-combed fops, who load their fingers
    with rings down to the nails, and the braggarts, who write dithyrambic
    verses, all these are idlers whom the Clouds provide a living for,
    because they sing them in their verses. ["The Clouds" by Aristophanes] This is how it went down ... Aristophanes is a fictional writer, a comic (in the ancient greek sense, over-political and unfunny!) he creates a character called Socrates (in about 420BC) who is an archetypal brainbox and an antidote to the corrupt democracy deluded to believing he can survive on reason and his soul's direct response to the gods and doesn't need to work - Something like that, I don't know Aristophanes that well.

    This character then is used as a literary device when wanting to criticise the learned professors who believe themselves to be "The Answer". Plato flips it about and uses Socrates instead to castigate the people for killing philosophy by overzealous democraticism, oh the irony!

    Those dialogs are pretty contrived. He uses current hearsay, the stories of old men, to include historical information and frame himself as one of the "sophistes".

    There are some pretty cool twists in there too, like making Socrates parents part of the elite circle and putting them close to Pericles, the very figure of democracy.

    Xenophon uses Plato's tool, or attempts to, after the alleged date of Socrates demise (died 399BC, I think). He is responding to sophists of his time basically saying "Socrates [our stand in for the world of wise philosophers] thinks you're an ass and he's so wise; you do the math".

    Aristotle, naturally rides on Plato's coat tails in this respect.

    That's not to say that Plato's work (the cave had a profound effect on me as a teenager) nor Aristotles are lacking philosophically. A philosopher who can engage the people is a great thing.

    Oh yeah, there may have been a historical figure called Socrates too, but he's not the subject of these writings!

    Incidentally I'm a great fan of "his" method, http://www.davemckay.co.uk/philosophy/ is a great source for further study.
    1. Re:So who was Socrates ...? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      sorry, the socratic problem is besides the point. it doesn't matter who socrates was, it matters that he was, which is more difficult to establish with jesus. the task was to show anything about anyone using ancient sources, and I showed that the existence of the historical socrates is supported by his contemporaries. either that, or we have an elaborate conspiracy between plato, aristophanes and xenophon, among others. of the three, xenophon even claims to have been present in some of the things he recorded. with jesus, what we have is more like diogenes laertius, because it's all hearsay. including the bible, because of the dating of the books. all of them come decades after jesus' supposed life, and paul doesn't even claim to have met jesus while he was still on earth. if we assume that jesus is fictional, there's also no need for assuming a conspiracy, because paul alone would have been enough to bootstrap that myth

      mind you, all this isn't even touching the other two figures I named, alexander of macedonia and julius caesar. with the second guy, we actually have his own writings remaining, etc.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
  364. Contrived? by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    No, you didn't. You're using this to make some sort of point.

    Or, if you did, you did not use a method of flipping which is fair -- you're using something which deliberately supports this argument.

    You see, a quick calculation shows that the chances of that happening is approximately 0.000000000000088817841970012523233890533447265625%

    Which should also show you something about determinism. At a certain point, we can reasonably discard a possibility -- if you flip a coin a half million times, it won't come up heads every time. Similarly, at a certain point, we can reasonably assume a possibility -- if you flip a coin ten times, then repeat that experiment a million times, you're probably going to get all heads at least once. (In fact, you'll probably get all heads over 900 times, out of a million attempts.)

    I may have the math wrong here, it has been awhile. But predictions like this are easy to come by. In fact, perfect randomness has some patterns in it -- enough that Apple had to make their Shuffle mode less random, lest people start to assume their iPod has a mind of its own.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  365. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  366. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Deadplant · · Score: 1

    The shocking incorrectness is in your interpretation of that book.

    That's kind of a problem don't you think?
    You seem to be under the impression that the book can mean anything you want it to.
    You interpret a passage one way, someone else interprets it in another possibly contradictory way.

    If the book does not mean what it says and people cannot agree on what it means then it is not a useful guide and certainly cannot be considered 'correct' or 'True' in any meaningful way.
    You are projecting your own ideas/ideals onto the book with your creative interpretations.

    Just to be clear, I don't put much stock in any of the nonsense in that book. I certainly don't consider it an authority on anything.
    I have heard people come up with good and reasonable stories and codes of conduct working from that book. I have have heard just as many cruel and dangerous interpretations from the same damn book. My point is that these millions of people thinking of this book as a source of 'Perfect Truth' are in danger of making terrible decisions because they are working from unreliable data.

  367. Re:Monkey's uncle? by mcvos · · Score: 1

    You interpret a passage one way, someone else interprets it in another possibly contradictory way.

    If the book does not mean what it says and people cannot agree on what it means Do you have any idea how many books have been written about meanings and interpretations of other ancient texts? This really nothing special, especially considering and size and scope of the bible.

    then it is not a useful guide and certainly cannot be considered 'correct' or 'True' in any meaningful way. Do you have any idea how many people misinterpret hard scientific theories? Does that make them useless?

    You are projecting your own ideas/ideals onto the book with your creative interpretations. No, I'm applying common sense and an open mind, whereas you apply stubbornness and cling you your own interpretation, ignoring historical context or any kind of other understanding about the history of the book.

    PS: Don't forget the preview button.
  368. Re:Monkey's uncle? by Deadplant · · Score: 1

    You are projecting your own ideas/ideals onto the book with your creative interpretations. No, I'm applying common sense and an open mind... But that's exactly what the other guys say and your interpretations are wildly different.

    The book is meaningless and/or means anything/everything you want it to.
    It is therefore not usefull as a guide and is in fact just a tool to reinforce and provide authority for your own opinions/ideas.