Slashdot Mirror


Oklahoma, Vatican Take Opposite Tacks On Evolution

nizcolas writes "Notable evolutionary biologist, author, and speaker Richard Dawkins was recently invited to speak on the campus of the University of Oklahoma as part of the school's celebration of Charles Darwin. However, Oklahoma lawmakers are working to silence Dawkins with the passage of House Bill 1015 (RTF), which reads in part: '... the University of Oklahoma ... has invited as a public speaker on campus, Richard Dawkins of Oxford University, whose published opinions, as represented in his 2006 book "The God Delusion," and public statements on the theory of evolution demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking and are views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma ...'" Pending legal action, Dawkins is set to speak tonight at 7 pm. (Luckily, we no longer live in the era of Bertrand Russell's court-ordered dismissal on moral grounds from the College of the City of New York.) And reader thms sends word of the Vatican's Darwin conference (program): "The conference, marking the 150th anniversary of the publication of "The Origin of Species," has been criticized by advocates of Creationism or Intelligent Design for not inviting them. The Muslim creationist Harun Yahya, most famous for his Atlas of Creation, also complained about not being invited."

1,161 comments

  1. Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Funny

    Celebrating cultural diversity? You've got to be fucking kidding me.

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    1. Re:Oklahoma? by jamie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No kidding. The resolution begins:

      WHEREAS, the University of Oklahoma is a publicly funded institution which should be open to all ideas and should train students in all disciplines of study and research and to use independent thinking and free inquiry...

      By paragraph THREE it is condemning Dawkins for, and I am not making this up:

      views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma

    2. Re:Oklahoma? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If the majority of the citizens of Oklahoma believed in a vast government conspiracy to cover up the existence of extraterrestrials as a result of watching one too many episodes of The X-Files, would be it okay for them to pass legislation to squash the free speech rights of someone proving that no such conspiracy exists? C'mon, this is just completely ridiculous.

    3. Re:Oklahoma? by Obfuscant · · Score: 4, Informative
      would be it okay for them to pass legislation to squash the free speech rights of someone ...

      You know, if you actually read the bill under discussion, you'd notice that it doesn't squash anything, much less anyone's "free speech rights". All it says is that the legislature opposes his appearance. They didn't ban him, and they don't order anything to be done about it. Oh, yes, they will "order" that their opposition message be sent to the University leaders.

    4. Re:Oklahoma? by Perp+Atuitie · · Score: 1

      Hearing the Wingnuts for Jesus attack all who dare disagree with their dumbass superstitions as a threat it "diversity" is like hearing the thunder after seeing the lightning: fully expected random noise. Ho hum.

    5. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't prove a negative.

    6. Re:Oklahoma? by YouWantFriesWithThat · · Score: 1

      so tough guy, you want to write off a huge swath of real estate because of the actions of one state legislature. if you were interested in anything other than smearing anyone who doesn't live on a coast you could easily find information about the diversity of opinions throughout the country.

      where do you come from, let's give someone the chance to lump you in with your neighbors.

    7. Re:Oklahoma? by geekoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A government taking a stance against free speech does effect someones right to free speech, and in this case it also violates freedom of Religion in the constitution.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    8. Re:Oklahoma? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I did. Whether they are simply advocating the squashing of Dawkins' freedom of speech or are actually squashing, if the University tells Dawkins' to pack it in, the end result is the same.

      Let's also not forget that First Amendment also includes the freedom to practice a religion of one's choosing. This also includes the right to practice no religion at all. IOW, Dawkins' has a Constitutional right to be an atheist and to speak about his own beliefs (or non-beliefs) as an atheist.

      I'm not an atheist myself, but I will defend the rights of atheists to believe (or not believe) what they choose.

    9. Re:Oklahoma? by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      so tough guy, you want to write off a huge swath of real estate because of the actions of one state legislature.

      Oh, FFS. If you want to ignore shit that's been going on in Kansas, Texas and many other states just to make your precious little point, knock yourself out. Just don't expect anyone to take your argument seriously.

      Fucking parsers.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    10. Re:Oklahoma? by edittard · · Score: 1

      You can't prove a negative.

      Prove that!

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    11. Re:Oklahoma? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1, Insightful

      To be fair, I can see them as being offended by the "people who believe in god are delusional" theme suggested by the title of the book. That's no less offensive to Christans than some whackjob running around saying various "atheists are ..." statements.

      Both sides of this argument need to realize when they are being insensitive to the other side, and stop thinking that the other side should clean up it's act when they won't clean up their own.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    12. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I come from Oklahoma.

      And with a minority of exceptions, he's right on the money. Perhaps you should try living someplace like Glenpool, or Atoka for a little while.

    13. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey we Oklahomans celebrate cultural diversity all the time! Why, Oklahoma has one the most diversified redneck populations in the country. As an outsider, you probably wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a Little Dixie redneck and a West Panhandle redneck just by looking at them, but there are important distinctions. For one thing, Little Dixie rednecks show a decisive preference for Skoal chewing tobacco, while West Panhandle rednecks tend to favor the Copanhagen or Redman varieties.

    14. Re:Oklahoma? by PenguinX · · Score: 2, Informative

      I am not surprised at this turn of events because Dawkins' comments in the God delusion are widely considered to be hateful in nature. Consider that, in the United states, some 93-96 percent of people believe in God and some 40% of people believe in evolution. The intersection of these two is still significant, but the symmetric difference of these axioms is not. Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

    15. Re:Oklahoma? by divisionbyzero · · Score: 4, Funny

      This is hilarious. The far-right nutjobs are trying to appropriate the rhetoric of the far-left nutjobs and failing miserably. Lame. But funny. It should go right into the Onion.

    16. Re:Oklahoma? by Frigga's+Ring · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are correct: the state legislature is not banning the speaker. However, what happens if the university rescinds its invitation to the speaker for fear of losing any state funding? You don't have to state, "we forbid you for doing something we don't like" in order to get that message across.

    17. Re:Oklahoma? by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I am not surprised at this turn of events because Dawkins' comments in the God delusion are widely considered to be hateful in nature. Consider that, in the United states, some 93-96 percent of people believe in God and some 40% of people believe in evolution. The intersection of these two is still significant, but the symmetric difference of these axioms is not. Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      The truth hurts, news at 11.

      --

      Operator, give me the number for 911!
    18. Re:Oklahoma? by EyeOn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bah...if anything suggesting that only 53% of human beings living in the US are drooling morons is being generous. Or the world at large, for that matter.

    19. Re:Oklahoma? by YouWantFriesWithThat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      okay captian flamer, look at a county by county voting trend and tell me that it is valid to blame an entire _region_ for the actions of some people you disagree with. there are a lot of people with a variety of opinions everywhere you go. don't generalize and you won't sound like an elitist coastie.

      and i don't care one bit what you take seriously or not.

    20. Re:Oklahoma? by ByOhTek · · Score: 2, Informative

      actually, if you consider the people that belive in evolution as existing, but influenced by God (but not no-God evolution), then it jumps to more than that.

      I heard the statistic a couple weeks ago, I just remember that evolution was lower than creationalism in percentage, unless you counted the people who believed in evolution influenced to some extent by God.

      The statistics I remember correctly, were
      1) Evolution*: 35 %
      2) Evolution influenced by God: 15%
      3) Creationalism: 45%
      4) Uncertain/undecided: 5%

      * I usually lump #2 in with #1 (and actually, although it's conjecture, I'm pretty sure a lot of people voted #1 although #2 is a better fit, I know I'd vote #1 if #2 were my view because some ass would try to make a distinction between #1 and #2 so that creationalism** look like it had more support than evolutionary theory.
      ** This breed of creationalism should be called anti-evolutionism, as their big distinguishing feature seems to be that evolution did not happen, and not a belief that God created the universe.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    21. Re:Oklahoma? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      No. You don't have to be a drooling moron to be Just Plain Wrong. Sometimes intelligent, honest people are Just Plain Wrong. Hundreds of years ago, the religious also honestly believed based on biblical evidence that the Sun revolved around the Earth. They deluded themselves, just as people today delude themselves about evolution, which is as absolutely factual as the Earth going around the Sun.

      And hopefully someday people will realize they are Just Plain Wrong about the existence of God, but unfortunately that's not as easily proven beyond a reasonable doubt as evolution.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    22. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder where all these statistics come from. I know I have not once been asked whether I believe in evolution for a survey.

    23. Re:Oklahoma? by infonography · · Score: 1

      I know that tactic;

      There used to be a strip club near my house, one of those nearly NC-17 ones no booze and almost no business aiming at the Frat crowd. After too much lack of income and protests they turned it into a Male strippers joint.

      They flipped their tactics, so if you can't beat them, make them pay.

      --
      Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
    24. Re:Oklahoma? by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      Perhaps Dawkins is not implying that these people are unintelligent, but that they are unscientific.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    25. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      Sometimes, the truth hurts... but I guess it's still easier to shoot the messenger and then ignore the message than it is to actually roll up your sleeves and DO something, right?

    26. Re:Oklahoma? by geekboy642 · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you've interacted with a statistically relevant slice of American society, you should easily accept that at least 1 in 2 Americans are drooling morons. For Christ's sake, we have *cooking directions* on POPTARTS. We have chain saws with explicit warning labels to keep you from touching the flying blades with your fingers. My tractor's digging bit has a giant warning label depicting someone getting wrapped around the screw, and people STILL get killed by the damn things. At hospitals, motorcycle riders are referred to only as organ donors. How many people have fallen into a wood chipper, or tried to clean an obstruction while the thing was on and gotten eaten? I can't remember the last time I've gone a month without hearing of somebody dying due to their own stupidity. Americans steal high-voltage power lines for the copper, cut through tree limbs above themselves, and screw anything that moves, without protection.

      53% is incredibly generous.

      --
      Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
    27. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Yes, but if the school is being funded my people, they have a right through their lawmakers to say that they don't want their money going to this guy, and its not taking his rights away, he would still be free to go on the street corner and shout all the non-sense he feel like.

    28. Re:Oklahoma? by Grishnakh · · Score: 0

      Yep.

      Who's to say that there isn't a god, and he/she/it didn't design evolution? The whole concept of "god" is outside the realm of science, since it's something that can't be proven or falsified, unless a real god makes itself known (as in, to everyone today, not to a few people thousands of years ago who wrote books about it, and also not just in people's heads (as many people claim to talk to him), but in a real, verifiable physical manifestation).

    29. Re:Oklahoma? by OolimPhon · · Score: 1

      and screw anything that moves, without protection.

      You could have phrased that last bit a little more carefully...

    30. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Did you read what the bill says the stand is about? Seems reasonable to me if it's true, I haven't read his books so I don't know how polarizing they are.

    31. Re:Oklahoma? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Maybe they just pick a popular place, like Wal-Mart, and stop some random people going in and ask them. Meaning, they only get a sampling of the opinion of Wal-Mart shoppers.

      I take any poll results with a large quantity of salt due to this. I know I've never been polled on anything like this.

    32. Re:Oklahoma? by Microlith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No they can't.

      Otherwise the people could have the lawmakers revoke funds for anyone not of religion X, and claim that Y and Z can still do it (if they can secure private funding.)

      The state MUST remain impartial even if the people are raving nutcases. Otherwise you miss the point of the First Amendment entirely. If they force the University to deny Dawkins the ability to speak because he is an Atheist, then they must deny anyone else who comes to speak on religious grounds as well.

      Yes, if the Pope wanted to speak they'd have to deny him too.

    33. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But to not believe, don't you have to acknowledge or believe in something first?

    34. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think it has to do with Dawkin's bashing of religion and religious people in his TV programs and books by using fallacies which some people call it as "Hate Speech".

      If it was some other Atheist who doesn't have a track record of bashing religion and religious people, I think they would not object to him or her speaking about Evolution.

      I feel that people should be able to have free speech and choose their own religion or choose not to choose a religion if they want.

      Not all Christians are opposed to Evolution proof of that is here. What I think the majority in Oklahoma are objecting to is Dawking's bashing of religion and religious people which has made him a bigot over the years.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    35. Re:Oklahoma? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Under GP's formulation of Dawkins's stance, we have the logical expression

      Intelligent thinker --> strict naturalist

      The converse of this is

      not strict naturalist (= believe in God) --> not intelligent thinker --> not intelligent

      Thus, GP was correct to assert the equivalence between "Dawkins holds . . . to be an intelligent thinker . . ." and "Dawkins calls [a lot of people] morons")

      Whether it is a correct assertion that "Dawkins holds . . . to be an intelligent . . ." I do not know. But it is true as a matter of first-order logic that if that is true, then Dawkins is in fact calling a large number of people morons. Drooling morons? I don't know. But morons? Absolutely.

      Full disclosure:
      (1) I have never read The Selfish Gene, so my real exposure to Dawkins has in general been through discussion on /. of what he actually says regarding religion. Thus, if there is massive deceit about his actual writings on /., then I'm misinformed about him and my post in general is not correct analysis.

      (2) I respect some of what Dawkins is doing (advocacy of evolution). However, I think he is the atheistic equivalent of the guy on the university corner with a bugle calling passing girls "sluts" and telling them if they don't believe in God, they're going to hell. He generates bad PR for his cause in the same way fundamentalist believers do.

      Hitchens is far worse, though (although my evaluation of him is colored by his support for the war in Iraq). Dawkins in general I find agreeable (and I am a Christian).

      However, re: Hitchens, I will say that I respect him massively for one reason. He talked up a bunch of shit about how waterboarding wasn't torture. Then he voluntarily underwent waterboarding and published a detailed retraction about how it actually is torture. It takes a professional person to so publicly retract previous statements.

    36. Re:Oklahoma? by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, but if the school is being funded my people, they have a right through their lawmakers to say that they don't want their money going to this guy, and its not taking his rights away, he would still be free to go on the street corner and shout all the non-sense he feel like.

      That's precisely how the First Amendment *does not work*. If it is funded by the government, then it must remain neutral (a-theistic if you will), regardless of the religious affiliations of any or all taxpayers. That is the point of the First Amendment.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    37. Re:Oklahoma? by adisakp · · Score: 1

      WHEREAS, the University of Oklahoma is a publicly funded institution which should be open to all ideas

      Hey, I think that U. Oklahoma should teach intelligent design / creationism in a science class. Preferably in the same class as free energy, structure-altered water, astrology / geocentrism, and other similar "sciences" *.

      After all, since they're publicly funded, they should be "open to all ideas"... even the ones that are provably stupid. (* of course, the actual class would be teaching logical methods and showing how to debunk these pseudo-sciences).

    38. Re:Oklahoma? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      He's saying that they are either unintelligent, unscientific, or nonthinkers.

    39. Re:Oklahoma? by Neon+Aardvark · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The religious don't have a logical leg to stand on, so attack the messenger. That's their idea of debate.

      There's nothing hateful about arguing against mere ideas. Especially bizarre and plain wrong ones.

      --
      Azural - instrumentals
    40. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      So what if the state legislation felt the same way regardless of the resolution and the university funding is cut anyways. Surely is would be if they hosted pedophiles who spoke about rapping their first child. Surely the University is away that it's actions will directly influence the willingness of government funding them. If the University is this disconnected from the community and a resolution is needed to remind them, then perhaps they need more then funding cuts.

      And yes, the resolution specifically states THAT the Oklahoma House of Representatives encourages the University of Oklahoma to engage in an open, dignified, and fair discussion of the Darwinian theory of evolution and all other scientific theories which is the approach that a public institution should be engaged in and which represents the desire and interest of the citizens of Oklahoma. I don't see a problem with that. And it appears that the state government only sees a problem with Dawkins and his positions, not Evolution science.

    41. Re:Oklahoma? by AioKits · · Score: 1

      No kidding. The resolution begins:

      WHEREAS, the University of Oklahoma is a publicly funded institution which should be open to all ideas and should train students in all disciplines of study and research and to use independent thinking and free inquiry...

      By paragraph THREE it is condemning Dawkins for, and I am not making this up:

      views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma

      As an Oklahoma resident, let me assure you, most of us don't think, at all, ever. *hides from angry Okie mob*

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    42. Re:Oklahoma? by ByOhTek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      to put it simply:

      A "god" answer is an answer to /who/ and maybe /why/. Science is about asking /how/.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    43. Re:Oklahoma? by grub · · Score: 2


      But to not believe, don't you have to acknowledge or believe in something first?

      I do not believe there is a miniature, invisible pink unicorn under my bed. Are you saying at one time I believed there was?

      Durrr.....

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    44. Re:Oklahoma? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Polls are often influence by way the questions are worded.
      So the numbers could be way off.

      Lets say you an atheist who doesn't respect the fact that people follow religions. Your questions could cause this effect by Marking as Creationist when people say They believe that Evolution is guided somehow by God, even if the idea that God taped one particle in the beginning of time to create a cause and effect relationship of his planning.

      Or say on the other hand you are Right Wing against Evolution and want to prove that most people are against evolution so you question in the ways that make evolution seem to be against their faith so people are intimated to answer weight in the responders direction.

      Even if you are in the middle of the road timing and the people around could get effected. Say you it right after church.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    45. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Some 87% of quoted statics have an anally related origin.

    46. Re:Oklahoma? by torstenvl · · Score: 1

      This also includes the right to practice no religion at all.

      No, actually it doesn't. The substantive components of the Fifth and Fourteenth amendments' due process clauses, however...

    47. Re:Oklahoma? by torstenvl · · Score: 1

      (by which i mean, textually. it only says that congress cant establish a single religion, or prohibit the exercise of a religion. that's not to say that such a right hasn't been read into the first amendment, just that as an academic textual matter freedom to be atheist would seem to more appropriately be a generalized liberty).

    48. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Name one of Dawkin's "fallacies". Go ahead.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    49. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

        And hopefully someday people will realize they are Just Plain Wrong about the existence of God, but unfortunately that's not as easily proven beyond a reasonable doubt as evolution.

        Perhaps for people who don't comprehend logical, rational thinking. Every religious belief system I'm aware of has enough built-in inconsistencies to make it self-contradicting, which nullifies the system right off the bat.

    50. Re:Oklahoma? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      > Celebrating cultural diversity? You've got to be fucking kidding me.

      Quite frankly, I'm awed as a rhetoritician that they've adopted the phraseology of their enemies. You guys get an A!

      As critical thinkers, you're epic fail, but as populism goes, way!

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    51. Re:Oklahoma? by Obermeister · · Score: 1

      I believe 53% of the people in the United States are morons. It's my right to think that. It's Dawkins' right too. Neither of us are advocating anything hateful against these morons though. So I fail to see how that's hate speech.

    52. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and if we quote just a little bit more we get (from the summary no less): '...demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking and are views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma ...' so it's the intolerance that's not shared by the citizens of Oklahome. Just saying. Selective quoting and stuff.

    53. Re:Oklahoma? by Doctor+Morbius · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Were talking about Oklahoma here. One of their senators is James Inhofe who vehemently denies global warming among other things so it's not surprising that they would pass this resolution. This is all about evolution. This resolution is nothing more than a thinly veiled defense of religion and creationism and intelligent design. The majority of the christians who live in Oklahoma couldn't care less about free thinking. They want to shove their religious beliefs down other peoples throats.

      --
      If I disagree with you it's because you are wrong.
    54. Re:Oklahoma? by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 2, Informative

      Who's to say that there isn't a god, and he/she/it didn't design evolution?

      William of Ockham, for one. When considering a question, you don't introduce entities ("Gods" in this case) for no good reason.

    55. Re:Oklahoma? by psychokitten · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As another (unwilling,) Oklahoma resident - let me agree with this. This is one of the scariest places I've lived in thanks to the fine populace.

    56. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Funny, since Dawkins never said such a thing.

      It's easy to talk shit about people if you can just make things up.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    57. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 0

      Not to mention that a lot of the evolution theory is unprovable itself because of lack of evidence and the constrained testing. Evolution also relies on Abiogenesis and whatever happened before that (big bang) which is in even more limbo and can't really be tested completely or replicated today.

      Then when you get into the entire Idea of the different theories of evolution and topics like the Bubble theory and specialization you find that a lot of evolution is glued together with hope that X is the right way because it can lead to Y.

      Testable and Falsifiable are the two missing parts I guess.

    58. Re:Oklahoma? by wclacy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The constitution does not guarantee anyone a forum in which to express their freedom of speech. Only that you have freedom of speech.

      This is a state funded University, and has made the decision to invite Dawkins to speak. The University is Governed by the state Government, which in this case has decided they don't like the decision made by the University.

      This is not a case about First Amendment rights, but a case of how much control the state Government has over their Universities.

    59. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dawkins' has a Constitutional right to be an atheist and to speak about his own beliefs (or non-beliefs) as an atheist.

      um... isn't Dawkins British?

    60. Re:Oklahoma? by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      where do you come from, let's give someone the chance to lump you in with your neighbors.

      Oklahoma.

      And yeah, he's pretty much on target with his observation.

    61. Re:Oklahoma? by cayenne8 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "That's precisely how the First Amendment *does not work*. If it is funded by the government, then it must remain neutral (a-theistic if you will), regardless of the religious affiliations of any or all taxpayers. That is the point of the First Amendment."

      First...I think the guy should be allowed to speak, and it appears he will.

      However, I'm not so sure about your take on the 1st Amendment. It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion. It is just that there cannot be a national religion that is forced upon the populace. At least that's what the framers we going for I believe.

      I think mention or discussion of religion in general, or even pure scholarly looks at certain religions is wrong in a public institution...like how medieval monks in the churches kept written historical records, etc. I know the trend has been lately to do as you say...take all things public to their lowest denominator (no God)...but, I don't think that was how it was supposed to be translated. I think it really was going for not forcing a religion no anyone...but, not that any religion could never be spoken about. The mere presence of a mention or investigation into religion is not forcing anything upon anyone else..it isn't like you won't pass a course if you don't convert.

      And if you're studying mankind...well, the mere fact that so darned many people out there believe in some form of God(s)....makes it worth while to consider that fact, rather than ban the though or discussion in any publicly funded venue.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    62. Re:Oklahoma? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Seriously? 45% really believe in ID/Creationism?

      God dammit my fellow human beings are fucking stupid.

    63. Re:Oklahoma? by thewiz · · Score: 1

      I can't remember the last time I've gone a month without hearing of somebody dying due to their own stupidity.

      That's because stupidity is supposed to be painful; it teaches us not to do the stupid thing again. Unfortunately, extreme stupidity can also be lethal.

      --
      If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
    64. Re:Oklahoma? by Doctor+Morbius · · Score: 1

      Nothing is outside the realm of science. If you can't prove it it doesn't exist. The burden of proof lies the the person making the claim.

      --
      If I disagree with you it's because you are wrong.
    65. Re:Oklahoma? by Nursie · · Score: 0

      Difference being that genuine belief in god does fit a delusional pattern.

      However, I don't believe that all that many christians have anything more than anything much more than a wishful thiking attitude to the whole thing and like being told that they are good people.

    66. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Name one of Dawkin's "fallacies". Go ahead.

      That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity. ("Supernatural" being, by definition, outside of the purview of science.)

      Dawkins is an impressive scientist, but when he ventures into theology, he reminds me of a Feynman quote: "I believe that a scientist looking at nonscientific problems is just as dumb as the next guy."

    67. Re:Oklahoma? by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      At hospitals, motorcycle riders are referred to only as organ donors.

      As an organ donor, I resent that statement.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    68. Re:Oklahoma? by PenguinX · · Score: 0

      And therein lies the rub. Dawkins is not making a case of mere ideas, opinions, or the evidence of hypothesis and testing. On the contrary, he states that unless you agree with his narrow understanding of reality and truth itself your must be both a deluded and unintelligent individual.

      In other words, we're not talking about science vs. religion, but two competing religions.

    69. Re:Oklahoma? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So I guess things like ethics and philosophy simply don't exist in your universe?

    70. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      affect

    71. Re:Oklahoma? by huckamania · · Score: 1

      Taking polls about God is about as useless as taking polls about Science. Yes/no answers don't reveal what people really believe.

      As an example, how many people in the evolution/creation poll selected creationism but believe in the big bang? Cause there are people who believe that creation started at the big bang. They have no problem reconciling their imagining of God with science.

      Science should be used to advance knowledge and understanding. Dawkins doesn't help much in either regard. It's funny that there were two movies last year that dealt with religion and science and both took the exact opposite stance. I watched both and there are extremes at both end of the debate that will make you laugh.

      People who believe God is responsible for everything are not that different from strict materialists who deny free will.

    72. Re:Oklahoma? by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The intersection of people who find The God Delusion hateful and the people who have actually read The God Delusion is probably less than 1% of the total population.

      Dawkins holds that he is correct, as does everyone else with a position on any given issue. It's hardly his fault that the logical consequence is that people who disagree with him are incorrect.

      If this were, say, a political discussion, Dawkins' message and tone would positively mild compared to partisans like Rush Limbaugh. Political partisans don't bother with implication. They directly insult the other side's intelligence all the time and no one really bats an eye. I don't seem to Dawkins ever telling someone from the opposition to go fuck himself, for example.

    73. Re:Oklahoma? by speedtux · · Score: 0

      I am not surprised at this turn of events because Dawkins' comments in the God delusion are widely considered to be hateful in nature.

      Really? Where's your source?

      And what is hateful about telling Christians that they are immoral, irrational, and plain wrong? I mean that's exactly what Christians tell everybody else all the time.

      Consider that, in the United states, some 93-96 percent of people believe in God

      According to the Pew study, it's more like 85%, but that's assuming that everybody who identifies as a Christian actually is. In my experience, most Christians don't know much about Christian theology, and hence they don't believe in God (i.e., the Christian god), but some other supernatural being.

    74. Re:Oklahoma? by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      I can't remember the last time I've gone a month without hearing of somebody dying due to their own stupidity.

      And that's pretty good evidence of Natural Selection at work. (However, in order for it to work well, they have to kill themselves before procreating.)

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    75. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's not a fallacy at all. Science can most certainly investigate questions about the existence of supernatural entities.

      Just as soon as you claim that this supernatural entity does stuff for you, affects the universe, changes reality, prevents a dude from dying in a plane crash, or any number of other things that religious people attribute to gods, then those things can be investigated and experimented with.

      If you want to claim that your god doesn't touch any part of the world that science can investigate, then that makes you a Deist. And that's a useless sort of god to invent.

      So, go ahead and try again to find a Dawkins fallacy.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    76. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They would probably deny the Pope on the grounds that he's Catholic, and hence has "views" not shared by the majority of Oklahomans.

    77. Re:Oklahoma? by interkin3tic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      you should easily accept that at least 1 in 2 Americans are drooling morons. For Christ's sake, we have *cooking directions* on POPTARTS. We have chain saws with explicit warning labels to keep you from touching the flying blades with your fingers.

      See, to me that doesn't say anything about how stupid we are, that only speaks to how litigious we are.

      Although, they do have stupid warnings in other countries that don't sue as much. On japanese subways they had little stickers on some of the windows. They say "Warning: this window does not open." I guess it's so that no one will break their fingers trying to get a fixed window open?

    78. Re:Oklahoma? by canuck08 · · Score: 0

      The "fallacies" put forth in that Guardian article all appear to actually be 'reading'-comprehension failures by the Guardian author.

    79. Re:Oklahoma? by Em+Emalb · · Score: 1

      thank you for proving his point.

      *sigh*

      I wish people would just leave each other alone.

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    80. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, I'm not so sure about your take on the 1st Amendment. It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

        Isn't one of the big arguments out there whether or not atheism is a religion or not? Seems to me that it's the religious people who tend take the view that it is ;)

        In any case, few atheists I know - and certainly not Dawkins - want to stifle discussion. They just want to be able to put their viewpoint out there without being stifled by the religious fanatics.

        I think that if you look at the history of the debate, and which side it is that makes the greater attempts at silencing their opponent's rights to public speech, you'll find that it's overwhelmingly religious people.

    81. Re:Oklahoma? by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      Perhaps Dawkins is not implying that these people are unintelligent, but that they are unscientific.

      Actually in many of his lectures he implies that religious people are less intelligent. He delights in in the studies that have shown this kind of correlation.

    82. Re:Oklahoma? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      However, what happens if the university rescinds its invitation to the speaker for fear of losing any state funding?

      What happens if they hadn't scheduled him in the first place for fear of losing state funding? What happens if a vocal minority on campus objects and the University revokes the offer? (Oh, wait, it's OK for that to happen when the speaker is a conservative. I guess there's no problem with it happening to Dawkins.)

      Do you really believe that a state legislature is going to refuse to fund the state university over this? Do you understand how many people, meaning voters, have students going to that university? Do you think they'll be happy to hear that the tuition for the university is going to triple because the state stopped funding it?

      No, that ain't gonna happen. This measure says what it says -- strongly oppose. If they had wanted to say "prohibit", they could have. If they intended to tell the university that they were going to stop funding them over this, they'd be doing so informally so that nothing could be tied back to anyone.

      The resolution is only an ass covering for the legislature to make those who oppose Dawkins (not oppose Evolution, but Dawkins' particular lack of perspective on the subject) happy. I mean, someone who writes a book "The God Delusion" has clearly stepped outside the bounds of science and is practicing religion. Science has no means to either prove or disprove God. By calling it a "delusion", he's making a claim under the pretense of science, and he's wrong for doing that. (I don't particularly care what his personal view is, when he pretends that he's being a scientist while making such claims he's overstepped his rights, and as a scientist I object to that.)

    83. Re:Oklahoma? by leathered · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Quotes please.

      Dawkins freely admits you can't disprove the existance of a God or any other supnernatural being, no more than you can disprove the existance of pink unicorns, FSM or Santa Claus.

      --
      For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    84. Re:Oklahoma? by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      I can't remember the last time I've gone a month without hearing of somebody dying due to their own stupidity.

      That's because stupidity is supposed to be painful; it teaches us not to do the stupid thing again. Unfortunately, extreme stupidity can also be lethal.

      and thus the Darwin Awards are appropriately named...

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    85. Re:Oklahoma? by slimjim8094 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Full disclosure: I'm an athiest

      What the hell do you think religious people have been doing? They've gone a hell of a lot further than 'bashing atheism and nonreligious people'.

      I'm not a huge fan of Dawkins, but to be fair, there's a lot less of 'evangelical' atheists (and I'd bet a smaller percentage) than evangelical Christians/Muslims/etc.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    86. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 4, Informative

      It is a fallacy because it is inductive logic, which is not always true.

      Dawkins also uses "Strawmen" to describe religous people and religion, and does personal attacks on them as well. Not worthy of a great scientist.

      Immanuel Kant proved that you cannot prove God exists or does not exist by Science long ago. Anything else is pure logical fallacies like inductive logic, which Dawkins uses as well as circular references and wishful thinking.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    87. Re:Oklahoma? by erichpeterson · · Score: 1

      Amen. Yes, pun intended.

    88. Re:Oklahoma? by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that using the results of studies is not scientific?

    89. Re:Oklahoma? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori,

      People tend to overlook what the term apriori means. It means to hold that position before looking at any evidence. So, to restate, Dawkins says that a person that does not reject out of hand that there may be things that science cannot understand is an idiot. You cannot both agree with Dawkins and believe that "evil" is a meaningful word.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    90. Re:Oklahoma? by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      If you're taking a class on Christianity or Hinduism or Islam, there's no issue.

      If your public university has declared an official religion, there's a problem.

      Hell, I don't even think it's an issue if a professor goes around talking about how great God is. But if s/he inexplicably lowers your grade at the same time that you don't show interest, there's a big problem.

      I think the issue is (and was) that people could be forced into a religious dogma. That's not the case here, and nobody serious is advocating for a moratorium on discussions of religion, anywhere.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    91. Re:Oklahoma? by Tenek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      wishful thinking

      Oh come on. Watch some of his videos. You could get pretty drunk taking a shot every time he says something along the lines of "... but that doesn't mean it's actually true."

    92. Re:Oklahoma? by L+Boom · · Score: 1

      Regardless, the chilling effect is the same. This is just like a local gangster walking into a store and saying "Nice store here. Wouldn't want anything to happen to it." before offering their services to guarantee the building doesn't get burned down.

      Did they burn down the storefront or actually threaten the store owner? No, but the effect is the same.

    93. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to agree doing support for Americans for a few years, it always amazed me how many of them could not find America on a map of the world. These are people from the military to your typical business person or student.

      Hmmm America haha I should know where that is shouldn't I? IS this is not it says Russia, how about here no thats says Peru, how about here nope Mexico , now I know I'm close, but all I can see is Canada???

      Usually it is between Canada and Mexico sir, you see the big bunch of land on the right side of the map, it won't be there, look at the other land on the left side....

      53% is being outrageously generous. Bush's real motto , no child gets left behind, they all do...

    94. Re:Oklahoma? by mario_grgic · · Score: 1

      And hopefully someday people will realize they are Just Plain Wrong about the existence of God, but unfortunately that's not as easily proven beyond a reasonable doubt as evolution.

      These are not in the same category. One is an observable process (and it has been observed at work in the lab), the other is a poorly defined non-observable concept and sometimes even outside of the realm of logic.

      It has been shown that one can either prove nor disprove the existence of god. So, it will not go away.

      More education of the population will not make him go away either. Not as long as we are spiritual beings and as long as we have this need to be fulfilled by our spiritual experiences.

      And I know you were probably talking about Biblical God, but the concept is much wider than that.

      --
      As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.
    95. Re:Oklahoma? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Hundreds of years ago the "religious" believed the sun revolved around the earth because the "scientific" experts (Aristotle, Ptomely others) told them that. The Geocentric Universe was not arrived at from theology. Galileo got in trouble not primarily because of his theories, but because he gratuitously offended powerful persons.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    96. Re:Oklahoma? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      I did. Whether they are simply advocating the squashing of Dawkins' freedom of speech or are actually squashing, if the University tells Dawkins' to pack it in, the end result is the same.

      They are neither squashing nor are they advocating the squashing. They are simply saying they "strongly oppose" his appearance. You're foolish if you think the University is scared they are going to lose funding for going ahead with this.

      This resolution is nothing more than covering ass so the legislature can tell anyone who complains about Dawkins' appearance at a state funded school that they did what they could. This is the most they could. If they intended not to fund the uni because of this, they wouldn't be stupid enough to put it on the record, they'd have an informal meeting with the President of the uni and tell him personally.

      Let's also not forget that First Amendment also includes the freedom to practice a religion of one's choosing. This also includes the right to practice no religion at all.

      Of course it does. Dawkins is quite free to practice whatever religion he wants, even the religion of atheism. Who is stopping him? Certainly not this resolution.

      IOW, Dawkins' has a Constitutional right to be an atheist and to speak about his own beliefs (or non-beliefs) as an atheist.

      And he's going to do so. There is, however, no Constitutional right to speak using the foundation of a public university as your support. Universities don't have the requirement to let anyone who wants to speak at an event do so.

      But the issue is not his religion, it is his conflation of science and religion. When he claims that God is a "delusion" and does in using the voice of science, he's wrong. THAT is the issue that people have with Dawkins. I, too, and perfectly fine with him practicing whatever religion he wants, as long as he's not trying to turn science into religion. As a scientist, I object very strongly to that.

    97. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Others have done so many times over.

      5. The Non Sequitar â" âComments or information that do not logically follow from a premise or the conclusion.â(TM) [24]

      Stephen M. Barrâ(TM)s review of Dawkinsâ(TM) Unweaving the Rainbow is spot on:

      It is not often that one can find exactly the point where an author goes off track, but here one can. It is in the fifth sentence of the preface of the book, which begins, âSimilar accusations of barren desolation, of promoting an arid and joyless message, are frequently flung at science in general.â(TM) However, what people object to in Dawkins is not the science but the atheism. Because he cannot see the difference, he writes a book that is a 300-page non sequitur.

      3. The False Dilemma - Two choices are given when in actuality there are more choices possible.

      When it comes to explaining biological reality, Dawkins asserts: âThe only thing [William Paley] got wrong â" admittedly quite a big thing â" was the explanation itself. He gave the traditional religious answer [that life was created by God]. . . The true explanation is utterly different, and it had to wait for one of the most revolutionary thinkers of all time, Charles Darwin.â(TM) [14] Dawkins fails to point out that belief in the doctrine of creation and the scientific theory of evolution by natural selection are in fact compatible. Michael Poole explains why the choice between creation and evolution is a false dilemma:

      7. Wishful Thinking - âa fallacy that posits a belief because it or its consequence is desired to be true.â(TM) [28]

      Discussing the theory of âchemical evolutionâ(TM) or abiogenesis [29] (the supposed naturalistic appearance of life from non-life), Dawkins says: âNobody knows how it happened but, somehow, without violating the laws of physics and chemistry, a molecule arose that just happened to have the property of self-copying â" a replicator.â(TM) [30] Dawkinsâ(TM) belief in abiogenesis is wishful thinking in that he wants it to be true because it is necessary for an atheistic account of origins, despite there being a large body of scientific evidence against the theory. [31]

      9. Straw Man Argument - âa type of Red Herring that attacks a misrepresentation of an opponentâ(TM)s position. That is called to burn a straw man. It is a surprisingly common fallacy, because it is easy to misunderstand another person's position.â(TM) [36]

      According to Dawkins: âScience shares with religion the claim that it answers deep questions about origins, the nature of life and the cosmos. But there the resemblance ends. Scientific beliefs are supported by evidence, and they get results. Myths and faiths are not and do not.â(TM) [37] But as McGrath responds:

      Dawkinsâ(TM)s caricature of Christianity may well carry weight with his increasingly religiously illiterate or religiously alienated audiences, who find in his writings ample confirmation of their prejudices, but merely persuades those familiar with religious traditions to conclude that Dawkins has no interest in understanding what he critiques. . . The classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality and does not hold that faith involves the abandonment of reason or the absence of evidence. Indeed, the Christian tradition is so strong on this matter that it is often difficult to understand where Dawkins got these ideas. [38]

      10. Ad Hominem â" the fallacy of attacking the individual instead of the argument (Ad Hominem is Latin for âagainst the man.â(TM))

      According to Dawkins: âFather Christmas and the Tooth Fairy are part of the charm of childhood. So is God. Some of us grow out of all three.â(TM) [39] Dawkins implies that anyone who believes in God is childish be

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    98. Re:Oklahoma? by haeger · · Score: 3, Funny

      Not only that. Fox News recently reported that 51% of the american population are now in majority.

      --
      You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your informed opinion. -- Harlan Ellison
    99. Re:Oklahoma? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      I'll take a friend of mine:

      We'll go on some fairly common premises - the are usually most contested by believers, and not non-believers.
      1) God can neither be proven or disproved.
      2) Scientifically, if you can neither prove nor disprove something, you should not say that it does or doesn't exist with absolute certainty, both viewpoints are taking responses well in excess of what the evidence would suggest.
      3) When something can not be proven or disproved, as is the case here, observed evidence can indicate a likelihood, even if it isn't a guranteed. Probability of how likely any given outcome is, should be used to come determine courses of action.

      Circumstantial evidence, to him, suggests it's significantly more likely than not (he says he's 99.9% sure). Personally, I think that's way to far for the kind of evidence given, anything more than "I think it's more likely than not" or "I think it's less likely than so" given the quality of evidence, goes too faru.

      The point is, calling it delusional is just as not-scientific and irrational as calling it absolute truth, unless you can find proof that there is no god.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    100. Re:Oklahoma? by blueforce · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Suppose you believed that Snow White and the Seven Dwarves are real. Is me calling you an idiot fair or bigotry?

      --
      If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
    101. Re:Oklahoma? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 1

      ...which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      Should it be stated less subtly, so the morons might actually understand the point?

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    102. Re:Oklahoma? by canuck08 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ...he states that unless you agree with his narrow understanding of reality and truth itself your must be both a deluded and unintelligent individual.

      Dawkins makes a case for building our understanding of the the Universe on logic and reason.
      Is this the 'narrow understanding of reality and truth' of which you speak?

      Dawkins does not say that religious people are unintelligent. In fact he takes the time to point out that lots of intelligent people are religious. He DOES say that they are deluded.

      Dawkins is only advocating a religion if you consider logic and reason a religion.
      If you think he was advocating religious faith in evolution, newtonian or quantum physics then you misunderstood and might want to re-read his books.

    103. Re:Oklahoma? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Dawkins freely admits you can't disprove the existance of a God or any other supnernatural being, no more than you can disprove the existance of pink unicorns, FSM or Santa Claus.

      Delusion: de-lu-sion n.

      3. Psychiatry: a false, persistent belief
      maintained in spite of evidence to the
      contrary --de-lu'sion-al adj.

      He's a scientist using science to claim a "delusion" in God. It's reasonable to assume he's using the scientific term. If he's claiming you can't disprove God, then where is the evidence to the contrary he is implying by the very title of his book?

    104. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      However, I'm not so sure about your take on the 1st Amendment. It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

    105. Re:Oklahoma? by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      His argument is:

      Religious -> belief in illogical (it is)
       
      Belief in illogical -> Drooling idiot (no intelligence) or
                          -> Hypocrite (scientific, but holding a fundamental contradiction)

      I think that people who believe in a religion are using it to compensate for the craziness of life. I don't think there's anything more to life than simple randomness, and no greater plan, so I don't use it.

      But I don't think religious people are stupid. His argument, though, is being religious and scientific -at the same time- is a form of doublethink. You are holding two contradictory principles to be true... and that's where he gets his conclusion.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    106. Re:Oklahoma? by FlyingBishop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

      Actually, it's neither. It prohibits an established religion controlling the government. The government of Oklahoma taking a stance against someone, by their own admission based on his religious views, sounds to me like unequivocal church sponsorship of a contrary religion.

    107. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a drooling moron, you insensitive clod!

    108. Re:Oklahoma? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      A belief can be "false" whether or not the thing believed in is true or not: the delusion involves the basis for the belief, not the belief itself.

      In other words, "I believe in a supernatural entity that has had absolutely no role in any known physical process whatsover," wouldn't be delusional. What he would debunk are those beliefs in a God who may or may not exist on the basis of, for example, the existence of humans.

      And let's not be disingenuous. I'm sure that the University of Oklahama has hosted several people who were rude and dismissive of the beliefs of others. This is the legislature wading into the cultural war between science and religion, not disapproving of one somewhat brusque and tactless speaker.

    109. Re:Oklahoma? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dawkins is not making a case of mere ideas, opinions, or the evidence of hypothesis and testing.

      Perhaps you have not actually read his books, or else you have not understood them. Dawkins' arguments on the demonstrable falsehood and general malevolence of religions are based on observable evidence and the testing of hypotheses. He is by no means the first or only such advocate, but at the present time he is the most visible and the most excoriated by his opponents.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    110. Re:Oklahoma? by Calsar · · Score: 0

      And hopefully someday people will realize they are Just Plain Wrong about the existence of God, but unfortunately that's not as easily proven beyond a reasonable doubt as evolution.
      ------

      Unless you've been conducting some unpublished research there is no proof for evolution. It is a theory. Not a theory as in the theory of gravity. You can conduct independent repeatable experiments to back up your theory that bodies with mass attract each other. There have been no experiments much less independent repeatable experiments showing evolution. Natural selection leads to evolution is simply our best hypothesis at the moment.

    111. Re:Oklahoma? by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      I think it has to do with Dawkin's bashing of religion and religious people in his TV programs and books by using fallacies which some people call it as "Hate Speech".

      So what? The KKK is allowed to march down the street too (granted, the ACLU had to go to bat for them). And if people committing logical fallacies were banned from speaking, political speech would be essentially over.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    112. Re:Oklahoma? by FrankDrebin · · Score: 5, Informative

      Wow, you seem like a person who has never even read or heard Dawkins or his colleagues, ever. Dawkins of course says you cannot *prove* the non-existence of God. He then points out the same is true for sasquatch, FSM, Xenu, Apollo, Zeus, Thor, unicorns, fairies, elves, leprechauns...

      The funny thing is that we have about the same level of evidence for sasquatch as God.

      --
      Anybody want a peanut?
    113. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      First, you implicitly equate "not intelligent" with "moron". This is nonsense.

      Second, you have no idea how many people Dawkins believes are intelligent. Maybe "intelligent thinker" is an unattainable ideal that we strive for. Then no one is an intelligent thinker, and therefore no one is put down.

      However, I think [Dawkins] is the atheistic equivalent of the guy on the university corner with a bugle calling passing girls "sluts" and telling them if they don't believe in God, they're going to hell. He generates bad PR for his cause in the same way fundamentalist believers do.

      This is where you go completely overboard. You yourself just admitted that you only know Dawkins indirectly through slashdot discussions. The guy has done absolutely nothing to confront you or impede your life in any way. What extra measures do you want him to take to insulate you from his opinions?

    114. Re:Oklahoma? by gedrin · · Score: 1

      It's pretty bad they want to use the existing diversity laws to silence evolutionists. It's a blatant violation of any number of principles relating to the free exchange of ideas. At least they where able to make sure none of the creationists could speak.

      --
      Moderation : -1 Conservative Viewpoint
    115. Re:Oklahoma? by PitaBred · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree with your stance in general, but I believe that many people have forgotten that freedom of religion in some cases implies a freedom from religion. If your religion forbids a caricature of your profit, er, prophet, that should never be even considered being supported by the legal system. You're free to not draw pictures of your prophet, but you have no right to forbid other people from doing so.

    116. Re:Oklahoma? by canuck08 · · Score: 0

      true, there's a whole lot of screwing immobile objects going on.

    117. Re:Oklahoma? by bendodge · · Score: 1

      Hundreds of years ago, the religious also honestly believed based on biblical evidence that the Sun revolved around the Earth. They deluded themselves, just as people today delude themselves about evolution, which is as absolutely factual as the Earth going around the Sun.

      Can you provide some quotes from the Bible regarding this? I've never heard of such a thing. I know Catholic tradition had something to that effect, but I don't believe it's in the Bible itself.

      --
      The government can't save you.
    118. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      That is approximately the number of people in this country with below average intelligence. Coincidence?

    119. Re:Oklahoma? by Slak · · Score: 1

      Prove "Nothing is outside the realm of science."

    120. Re:Oklahoma? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      You are holding two contradictory principles to be true

      I beg you, please tell me what two contradictory principles I hold. Because you obviously know all Christians' beliefs so well.

    121. Re:Oklahoma? by rezalas · · Score: 1

      Then move, we honestly don't want you here if all you are going to do is piss moan about how hard/unfair/scary this place is. If you have the ability to log onto /. and bitch then you have the ability to get the fuck out. so do it.

    122. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      When does Dawkins claim that science can prove the non-existence of God?

      In The God Delusion he demonstrates that logic can prove God's existence is less likely than his non-existence. He further makes the claim that the probability of God's existence is vanishingly small.

      Sounds to me like the fallacy is on your side.

    123. Re:Oklahoma? by Hatta · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think it has to do with Dawkin's bashing of religion and religious people in his TV programs and books by using fallacies which some people call it as "Hate Speech".

      I read that article, and I have to say the irony is pretty thick when a theist accuses an atheist of being intellectually lazy. However, I missed the part where Dawkins bashed anyone. In fact, the entire article was someone bashing Dawkins. If you have examples of Dawkins bashing people (not ideas) I'd be interested to read them.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    124. Re:Oklahoma? by mcgrew · · Score: 2, Informative

      The GP's statement was not well thought out, I think. Actually you do believe something. You believe that pink unicorns don't exists, and acknowledge that fact.

    125. Re:Oklahoma? by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      Evolution also relies on Abiogenesis (...)

      One word: bullshit. The theory of evolution gives a scientific model on the observed changes within species, the observed extinction of species and the observed appearance of new species.

      In no way is this model 'dependent' on how life started; it just models what happens after that. You are actively misstating the truth, which could easily be seen a mortal sin if you are a christian. (Thou shallt not bear false witness.)

      Not to mention that a lot of the evolution theory is unprovable itself because of lack of evidence and the constrained testing.

      There is also a complete practical lack of testability whether or not the theory of gravitivity will still be a valid model in exactly 100 years. That does NOT mean anyone expects apples to suddenly fall upward in 100 years.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    126. Re:Oklahoma? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A "god" answer is an answer to /who/ and maybe /why/. Science is about asking /how/.

      Well, that's true if by "god" you merely mean something like Spinoza's god or some other deist variant (i.e. "god" is that which gave form to the universe and about which nothing else can be known). Although philosophically distinct, there is not much practical difference between deism and atheism. In both cases, the universe is only what can be observed and studied; "god" is irrelevant to one's personal life.

      Unfortunately, religions tend to imbue their gods with numerous other attributes, often quite complex or fantastical. In particular, it is asserted that gods have the ability and motivation to affect the universe in real time, and are believed to do so continuously. That sort of interference is scientifically testable. In fact, numerous such tests have been done, for example statistically testing the "power of prayer" (which is a wierd sort of way that people supposedly control the actions of their gods). The short answer is that prayer had no measurable effect on outcomes in those studies.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    127. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A belief can be "false" whether or not the thing believed in is true or not: the delusion involves the basis for the belief, not the belief itself.

      What part of "false" or "evidence to the contrary" did you miss in that definition? If Dawkins is calling belief in God a "delusion," then he is asserting that it is a false belief and that there is evidence to the contrary.

      The fact that every once in a while he twiddles his moustache*, winks, and says "Of course, we don't reaaaaaalllly know, do we?" just makes him a double-talker.

      * - yes, I know he doesn't really have a moustache.

    128. Re:Oklahoma? by DeusExMach · · Score: 1

      The intent of "Freedom of Religion" is actually meant as a protection against persecution based on your religious beliefs. Freedom of Speech is meant as a protection against persecution based on the expression of your beliefs, be they religious/political/socio-economical/what-have-you. The Individual members of a community have the right to say "I don't agree." The members of religious organizations have every right to say "WE don't agree." But when there is an attempt to use government endorsement or rejection of a specific group or belief-structure, that flies in the face of both letter and intent of the laws based on the Constitution of the United States.

      Freedom of Religion MUST mean Freedom FROM Religion, or else one of the main tenets of our Constitution is being ignored.

    129. Re:Oklahoma? by mcgrew · · Score: 0, Troll

      You know, if you actually read the bill under discussion, you'd notice that it doesn't squash anything, much less anyone's "free speech rights". All it says is that the legislature opposes his appearance.

      dawkins was IMO a piss-poor choice for someone to talk about evolution, as evolution is not his #1 concern. His #1 concern is his evangelical hatred of anyone who believes in God.

      There are two kinds of athiests like there are two kinds of Christians. There are the majority of Christians who aren't going to shove their religion in anyone's faces and most likely won't mention their religion at all unless the subject comes up in normal conversation, and then there are Jehova's Witnesses.

      Likewise there are athiests who have come to the logical conclusion that God doesn't exist based on the facts in front of them, and then there are athiests who are fanatical about making sure that NOBODY believes in God.

      Dawkins is a Jehova's Witness athiest. Unfortunately, like the Jehova's witnesses, this type of athiest, always being in one's face, gives people the impression that all athiests are like that. You see them quite often at slashdot.

      dawkins acts as if evolution is proof of God's nonexistance. It makes it really hard for me to respect his intelligence - even the Catholic Pope has acknowledged evolution.

      There are a lot of respectable scientists studying evolution. There's no reason they had to invite an offensively obnoxious blowhard like Dawkins, no matter that his credentials are stellar.

      Nobody likes an asshole.

    130. Re:Oklahoma? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is a fallacy because it is inductive logic, which is not always true.
      ...

      Immanuel Kant proved that you cannot prove God exists or does not exist by Science long ago. Anything else is pure logical fallacies like inductive logic, which Dawkins uses as well as circular references and wishful thinking.

      Well, go ahead and explain how Kant's proof is still valid today (and will still be valid tomorrow). I bet you'll say something like "well, clearly logic isn't changing" but I dare you to use anything other than induction to prove such a statement. Humans inherently use induction when they assume that the universe, logic, or anything maintains its form over time. Specifically, you believe that because the proof has always been valid in the past (P(i), i<N, for the current time N), and a valid proof now is a valid proof in the near future (P(N) -> P(N+epsilon)), inductively the same proof will always be valid (P(t) for all times t).

    131. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly - which is why Dawkins should quit referring to himself as a scientist while he abuses idiots* for being 'plain wrong'.

      And if any of you think you think the difference between unknowable and plain wrong is mere semantics then i really hope you don't call yourselves scientists either.

      *IMO ofc - I lost what little faith i had in anything decades ago and there's little question in my mind about evolution, but I'll be buggered if won't be a wee bit curious during those final moments of existence.

    132. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a load of bollocks. That goes for both the review and organized religion.

    133. Re:Oklahoma? by funkatron · · Score: 1

      A divine being messing with the universe is a how.

      --
      "Welcome to our world. We are the wasted youth. And we are the future too." Yes, I know these are stupid lyrics.
    134. Re:Oklahoma? by DeusExMach · · Score: 1

      So you're saying there are idiots on both sides of the argument who ruin the discussion for the rest of us? What a remarkable possibility.

    135. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! I'm not delusional, and all the floating, talking, gnome heads behind me will vouch for it! I mean, er, if you could see them. BUT THEY'RE THERE! REALLY!

    136. Re:Oklahoma? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 4, Informative

      He's a scientist using science to claim a "delusion" in God. It's reasonable to assume he's using the scientific term. If he's claiming you can't disprove God, then where is the evidence to the contrary he is implying by the very title of his book?

      Definition of "God" error, basically. The definition that Dawkins presents evidence against is a God that actively changes things in the world today and directly created the world 7000 years ago via special creation. Dawkins cannot present evidence against a deistic god that wound up the universe and let it go, and he does not attempt to argue against such a god (which is not much of a god, really).

      If anything, Dawkins' book can be read as "The (personal, loving, etc.) God Delusion", because he is challenging the concept many people have of a friendly omnipotent guy (or trio of guys) in the sky who loves us but damns some of us to hell after testing everyone with pain and suffering in our earthly life, gave us rational minds that should be able to decide what is actually true and false and what makes sense and what doesn't make sense, yet requires blind faith (yes, a belief that pain and suffering in life can be justified by the afterlife requires, literally, blind faith; faith whose ultimate results cannot be seen during earthly life) in order to obtain infinite bliss.

    137. Re:Oklahoma? by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      Excellent point. I think Dawkins is a prick but people should hear his words and think for themselves. I think he should be allowed to speak but I find it hilarious that the shoe is on the other foot.

      If atheists and religious thinkers would agree to share the public forum things would go a long way towards getting better. I should be as free to believe in God and debate the origins of things as much as I should be free to not do believe in God.

    138. Re:Oklahoma? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      There have been no experiments much less independent repeatable experiments showing evolution. Natural selection leads to evolution is simply our best hypothesis at the moment.

      Well, no experiments other than those pesky observations of new species being created (Google for "observed instances of speciation") and the literally thousands of experiments on cellular life.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    139. Re:Oklahoma? by slimjim8094 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I was Catholic for 17 years, then became an EMT and decided a God wouldn't create a world like this - and if he did, we shouldn't worship him for it. I sure don't claim to know everybody's beliefs, but I know the official positions and most of the sub-positions.

      And I'm sorry if I came off as personally insulting. That 'you' was meant as 'one', as in people in general.

      Having said that, I think what Dawkins is saying is that some people are religious and nonscientific. He's calling those people stupid (really, it's ignorance).

      Then he's saying there are people who believe in a God whose existence is unprovable and undetectable, and a scientific method that says he is irrelevant (if he does exist) because his existence is unprovable and undetectable.

      No matter how you say it, those two ideas conflict with each other. Christianity holds that God exists, and we can't know his ways. Science holds that we shouldn't give a shit if we can't observe anything about it.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    140. Re:Oklahoma? by ucblockhead · · Score: 2, Informative

      I gather you didn't actually read "The God Delusion", because Dawkins writes extensively about what science can and cannot prove, and very explicitly does *not* state what you claim he states. He says explicitly that "God" is an untestable hypothesis.

      --
      The cake is a pie
    141. Re:Oklahoma? by Rumagent · · Score: 1

      And "some people" would call Madeleine Bunting who is known for her advocacy of religion and her dislike of atheism, well biased. She has gone so far, as to suggest that atheists are unable criticize religion, because - get this - they are atheists! Wow, what a great source for your argument by authority.

      Now show one, just one, of the fallacies used by Dawkins.

      Didn't think so...

    142. Re:Oklahoma? by Gregory+Arenius · · Score: 2, Informative

      "That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity. ("Supernatural" being, by definition, outside of the purview of science.)"

      And, if you had actually bothered to read his work you would know that he never actually makes that claim. He never says "We have absolute scientific PROOF that god doesn't exist." What he says is that it is so astronomically unlikely that god exists that its stupid and pointless to base your actions on belief in a god. He actually goes out of his way to show that science can't actually disprove the existance of god.

      Cheers,
      Greg

    143. Re:Oklahoma? by cmdr_klarg · · Score: 1

      Logical? Faith has practically nothing to do with logic. You can talk about the logic of religion (there isn't any) to a True Believer until you are blue in the face, and they will likely be looking at you as if you had sprouted horns.

      --
      THE SOFTWARE, IT NO WORKY!!!
    144. Re:Oklahoma? by Crookdotter · · Score: 1

      That's why one of his chapters in the god delusion is 'why there is almost certainly no god'. That's an appropriate line of enquiry. He never tries to prove the non-existence of god - he is a decent scientist in his own right - but let's face it, the logical conclusion should be that the probablility of god existing is almost zero.

    145. Re:Oklahoma? by Microlith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is about a state government going "we don't like that you're going to have him come talk, please DO NOT LET HIM SPEAK."

      In this case, they are limited and -cannot- force the issue. If they were able to go "YOU WILL NOT LET HIM SPEAK BECAUSE HE OFFENDS US" then they would be forced to do so for anyone else the university invites if they ever offend anyone. Otherwise it is tyranny of the majority and the purpose of government is lost.

      It's not a case about first amendment rights, yet, because the government cannot force the issue.

    146. Re:Oklahoma? by Crookdotter · · Score: 1

      Is there a middle ground to be had here? Can atheists and theists both be right?

    147. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      If he's claiming you can't disprove God, then where is the evidence to the contrary he is implying by the very title of his book?

      According to Dawkins, you can't disprove the existence of god, but the probability of god existing is infinitesimal, so the chance of belief in god being a delusion is extremely much higher than the alternative.

    148. Re:Oklahoma? by wombley · · Score: 1

      Regarding the cooking instructions, not as stupid as it seems (at least in the UK). Talked to two of my (pretty intelligent) housemates a couple weeks ago, neither of them had even heard of pop-tarts: I have no doubt it would have taken them a while to work out to put them in the toaster... Not that I disagree with your general point though: just a few of the things that seem stupid actually have good reasons

    149. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how did they violate his freedom of religion he has no religion. If you call atheism religion then wouldn't it be a problem to pay him for speaking with public money.

    150. Re:Oklahoma? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      The classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality and does not hold that faith involves the abandonment of reason or the absence of evidence. Indeed, the Christian tradition is so strong on this matter that it is often difficult to understand where Dawkins got these ideas.

      This is amusing, because a) classic christianity is the whole souls/demons/angels/trinity/creationism/transubstantiation/divine-revelation/inspired-scripture thing, and b) all the things I listed have scant evidence if you try to look for it. The rationalism that christianity presents is an attempt to find a set of axioms in the bible that aren't too self-contradictory and that agree with the era's social mores, derive theorems from there, and explain the obvious contradictions as mysteries of faith (which can't subsequently be used to prove anything you want, like in standard logic).

      Most importantly, Christianity offers no discernible evidence that it is the correct choice versus any other religion. Judaism is older, Islam is newer, but Christians claim that the Jewish religion was essentially ended by Jesus (despite Jewish denial of such a thing) and that Islam is false.

      You can see evidence of how silly the whole situation is when you consider that the Christians disbelieve "The God Delusion", the "Koran", and "The Talmud (traditional Jewish interpretation)", the Muslims disbelieve "The God Delusion", the "Bible", and "The Talmud (traditional Jewish interpretation)", and the Jews disbelieve "The God Delusion", the "Bible", and the "Koran." The only thing the major religions have in common is fending off a single book that can simultaneously discredit all of them, while disagreeing about exactly why the book is wrong. "It's wrong because it denies Jesus!" "No, it's wrong because it denies Muhammad!" "No, it's wrong because it denies YHWH, n00bs!"

    151. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      even the religion of atheism

      Atheism is not a religion, it's the absence of religion.

    152. Re:Oklahoma? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      An IQ of less than 70 is considered mentally retarded. The mean IQ is 100. So clearly, half of all Americans are most certainly NOT drooling morons. Most are average, which makes them more normal than the average slashdotter, who has an IQ higher than the mean.

      The idiots stand out, makiing it seem that there are far more of them.

    153. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      the resolution specifically states THAT the Oklahoma House of Representatives encourages the University of Oklahoma to engage in an open, dignified, and fair discussion of the Darwinian theory of evolution and all other scientific theories

      Which is likely just a polite way of pushing creationism and intelligent design. I assume that next they will push the discussion of the existence of Santa Claus and the Invisible Pink Unicorn.

    154. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When does Dawkins claim science can prove the non-existence of God? Reference?

    155. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disprove my theorem that the universe is just one gigantic soap bubble. Get the point?

      It's not about disproving sh.., it is about proving things. As long as you can't proof the existance of god...

      I can dismiss the notion of the existance of a god from a purely scientific point of view.

      Thelogy, well thats a different game, and quite frankly I wouldn't care if religious people wouldn't try to impose their sh*t upon me (us)!

    156. Re:Oklahoma? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      The existence of a supernatural entity is not inherently a nonscientific problem. In essence it is very simple to find evidence for the existence of such a being. Just look for supernatural events. Since no-one has ever been able to find any, that is fairly strong evidence that supernatural beings don't exist. This is a reasonable and valid argument.

      The argument that you also cannot prove that supernatural beings do not exist is a standard rebuttal to this, but does not stand up to scrutiny. You must provide evidence for such claims, not against them. Otherwise we will have to accept lack of disproof as evidence for everything. UFOs, 9/11 conspiracies, astrology, etc, etc, etc.

      Theologists may have made academic careers out of following their beliefs, but this does not make their arguments valid. Any way you spin it Trinitarianism does not really make any sense. Theologists' job is to legitimize such arguments, and others like them, which are riddled with inconsistency and contradiction. It is no surprise then that they would assert that lack of contrary proof constitutes evidence or other such logical contortions.

      The scientific methods can be applied to supernatural beings, and Dawkins is right to do so. Religion does not get a free pass in a world where everything around us can and should be studied and understood. The scientific methods has gotten humanity to where it is today and if we put artificial barriers on it then we'll only end up stuck in a developmental hole which we'll never escape from.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    157. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      That definition isn't scientific. Scientifically you can't prove anything absolutely true or false so definitions that depend on such things are pretty much useless.

      A better definition, and the one that I usually hear the psychologists use, is that a delusion is a persistent belief maintained in spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

      Dawkins' title is entirely consistent with that definition. "God" as described by at least the vast majority of religions has zero reliable evidence in favor and mounds against. Dawkins presents a convincing logical argument that "God", even in the general sense, is highly unlikely.

    158. Re:Oklahoma? by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity.

      Clearly you've never watched anything that Dawkins has done, or read anything that he's written.

      Dawkins explicitly admits that he can't disprove the existence of God. He's said so many, many times.

      He also admits that he can't disprove the existence of a teapot in orbit around the sun.

      You have the same problem that many theists have - you seem believe that your theology is above criticism. Dawkins may not be able to prove the non-existence of your God(s), but he can certainly criticize your religion in the context of the actions it promotes.

      I'm sure you're one of the reasonable theists who would never try to repress science, harm public health, or oppress the rights of a minority. But the fact is that there are people who want to do those things in the name of their religion. And many of those people are in the highest levels of the US and other governments.

      That's what Dawkins is criticizing. If you want to argue that Dawkins is wrong, that's valid. But Dawkins' arguments don't hinge on the belief that science can disprove religion.

    159. Re:Oklahoma? by Tom · · Score: 1

      That article you link to is one of the worst pieces of journalism I've seen in a long time. Just check this:

      Over the 20th century, atheist political regimes racked up an appalling (and unmatched) record for violence.

      Yeah, right. Evidence? Names? Numbers? Oh, none. Wonder why that is. The rest isn't much better.

      The God Delusion certainly is to the point with no holds barred. But "hate speech"? Define what you mean by that. If you do, check your linked article, because I'd be very surprised if you managed to come up with a definition that includes Dawkin without att the same time including Bunting.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    160. Re:Oklahoma? by mcgrew · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And hopefully someday people will realize they are Just Plain Wrong about the existence of God

      Once you've actually experienced an elephant, you can no longer disbelieve in the existance of elephants.

    161. Re:Oklahoma? by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      These are pretty poor examples. Try to be more specific.

      5. The Non Sequitar â" âComments or information that do not logically follow from a premise or the conclusion.â(TM) [24]

      Stephen M. Barrâ(TM)s review of Dawkinsâ(TM) Unweaving the Rainbow is spot on:

      It is not often that one can find exactly the point where an author goes off track, but here one can. It is in the fifth sentence of the preface of the book, which begins, âSimilar accusations of barren desolation, of promoting an arid and joyless message, are frequently flung at science in general.â(TM) However, what people object to in Dawkins is not the science but the atheism. Because he cannot see the difference, he writes a book that is a 300-page non sequitur.

      It's not clear from this excerpt what Dawkins' premise is, and what his conclusion is. In fact, there's only one statement. So there's not enough information here to tell whether it's a non sequitur or not.

      3. The False Dilemma - Two choices are given when in actuality there are more choices possible.

      When it comes to explaining biological reality, Dawkins asserts: âThe only thing [William Paley] got wrong â" admittedly quite a big thing â" was the explanation itself. He gave the traditional religious answer [that life was created by God]. . . The true explanation is utterly different, and it had to wait for one of the most revolutionary thinkers of all time, Charles Darwin.â(TM) [14] Dawkins fails to point out that belief in the doctrine of creation and the scientific theory of evolution by natural selection are in fact compatible. Michael Poole explains why the choice between creation and evolution is a false dilemma:

      The fact that simultaneous belief in the doctrine of creation and the scientific theory of evolution is possible, does not prove that the ideas are in fact compatible. All it shows is that humans are capable of entertaining incompatible beliefs simultaneously. Here it is you who are making conclusions that do not derive from your premises.

      7. Wishful Thinking - âa fallacy that posits a belief because it or its consequence is desired to be true.â(TM) [28]

      Discussing the theory of âchemical evolutionâ(TM) or abiogenesis [29] (the supposed naturalistic appearance of life from non-life), Dawkins says: âNobody knows how it happened but, somehow, without violating the laws of physics and chemistry, a molecule arose that just happened to have the property of self-copying â" a replicator.â(TM) [30] Dawkinsâ(TM) belief in abiogenesis is wishful thinking in that he wants it to be true because it is necessary for an atheistic account of origins, despite there being a large body of scientific evidence against the theory. [31]

      Man, a theist accusing an atheist of "wishful thinking" is pretty rich with irony, don't you think? If Dawkins had taken the opposite position, would you be making this complaint? But you have a small point, he should qualify that with an "Our best explanation is..."

      P.S. What evidence is there against abiogenesis?

      9. Straw Man Argument - âa type of Red Herring that attacks a misrepresentation of an opponentâ(TM)s position. That is called to burn a straw man. It is a surprisingly common fallacy, because it is easy to misunderstand another person's position.â(TM) [36]

      According to Dawkins: âScience shares with religion the claim that it answers deep questions about origins, the nature of life and the cosmos. But there the resemblance ends. Scientific beliefs are supported by evidence, and they get results. Myths and faiths are not and do not.â(TM) [37] But as McGrath responds:

      Dawkinsâ(TM)s caricature of Christianity may well carry weight with his increasingly religiously illiterate or religiously alienated audiences, who find in his writing

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    162. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      you want to write off a huge swath of real estate because of the actions of one state legislature.

      Well, don't forget the Kansas State Board of Education, which decided that schools should teach Intelligent Design as an "alternative theory" to the Theory of Evolution. I'm sure there are other examples.

    163. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I think you and the grandparent are in agreement. His point was that the first amendment intends not that there should be no discussion of religion (he is in favour of Dawkins talking about religion) but that it requires that there be no preference for, or bias against, any particular set of beliefs (or disbeliefs). So it is wrong to pass legislation discouraging Dawkins from speaking, just as it would be wrong to pass legislation discouraging a Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, whatever from speaking.

    164. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If me and Joe are standing in front of a barn, and I say to Joe, "Hey Joe, check out that barn," I'm going to think he's a deluded and unintelligent individual if he says, "What barn?" I'll think it even more so if his eyes are shut tight and he refuses to open them.
      Sure, it's possible that I'm hallucinating a barn and that Joe really has his eyes open and can see no barn, but what's wrong with considering the facts, as I've seen and tested them, to be true? Similarly, what's wrong with thinking others are unintelligent for not only failing to see what's in front of them, but for failing to do so simply because they were told to?
      My cousin is a youth minister at my old church, and I used to love talking and debating with him as he was one of the few people living near me who would enjoy what I considered to be intellectual conversations (though the bar for 'intellectual' is awfully low around here...). The saddest moment in my life came when I tried discussing evolution with him for the first time. We each had good points for our sides of the debate, but I was making points he simply couldn't argue against successfully and he knew it. So what did he do? He responded: "No. Call me close-minded if you want, but I don't think that's how it happened and I don't want to discuss it further." It actually, physically hurt me a bit. He's an intelligent person. He's an excellent problem solver and able to use logic and reason without difficulty, but when it comes to anything that might possibly send him to the Hell that his parents have warned him about since birth his brain just shuts down. How can you NOT view someone as deluded and unintelligent when the only way they can stay firm in their beliefs is by choosing not to explore the other possibilities?
      Also, how is his understanding of reality the narrow one? I'd call people like you and my cousin the ones with a narrow understanding, but I guess you COULD be right and it IS possible that your 2000 year old book contains more information than all modern texts and observable phenomena in the world today.

    165. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Haven't read the book, have you?

    166. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > the religious also honestly believed based on biblical evidence that the Sun revolved around the Earth

      And nowadays they unquestioningly believe that the Earth revolves around the Sun. The concept of a "center" depends on the concept of some fixed point (i.e. a point that is special and different from all others), which by our current understanding does not exist in the physical sense.
      The sun is (approximately) the center if we choose our solar system as reference (well, duh). But certainly not of we choose e.g. the whole galaxy as reference.
      And the religious back then chose the Earth as reference. If you call them stupid just because their arbitrarily chosen reference point is different from your arbitrarily chosen one, you are the idiot.
      What was rather "stupid" of them though was trying to do calculations involving the whole solar system with the Earth as a reference, which is mightily more difficult (as long as you want estimates - if you want maximum precision it actually matters no longer).

    167. Re:Oklahoma? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Once you've actually experienced an elephant, you can no longer disbelieve in the existance of elephants.

      On this point, all atheists agree completely.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    168. Re:Oklahoma? by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who's to say that there isn't a god, and he/she/it didn't design evolution?

      Nietzsche, and very brilliantly.

      The argument goes roughly like this (though he puts it a lot better than I can):

      Existence is defined by the effects something has on the rest of the world. If we take a hypothetical something, call it "thing an sich" or "god" or whatever else you like, which has no effect on anything else, then due to it not affecting anything, we can not verify its existence. Also, its existence makes no difference whatsoever. Therefore, it does not exist in any meaningful sense of the word.

      Now you might have noticed that "god" is on the retreat. Vast areas that were clearly "gods domain" a thousand years ago are now the domain of science. Science does not only prove "how", it also proves "who" in the sense that there is no "who". Evolution works perfectly well without any guiding hand. It rains due to atmospherics, not because god is angry. Kids are made by biological events, not given by a supreme being. Whenever science is sufficiently "done" with any of its research areas, there is no "effect" of a hypothetical god left. In the end, we will end up with a "god" that has no effect whatsoever, and therefore does not exist.

      QED.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    169. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Whereas the God hypothesis posits an intelligence with great but unspecified (or logically inconsistent) powers for absolutely no reason.

      Dawkins' biggest argument is that positing a god gets you absolutely nowhere because you then have to ask the question "where did God come from?"

    170. Re:Oklahoma? by mcnellis · · Score: 1

      http://xkcd.com/373/ That's where he's coming from.

    171. Re:Oklahoma? by Tom · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is by far not that easy.

      Science does not answer "who" - its answers show that there is no "who". They also show that there is no need for a "why".

      That's why religious nuts hate science so much - they can deal with people having other answers to those questions. You can assimilate them, burn them, drive them out of your lands or use any of the other time-tested methods. Science doesn't come with a different answer and doesn't join the chorus of different variations of the theme - it tells them that they're all crazies.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    172. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I believe Dawkins has advanced the hypothesis that religious education during development is detrimental to intelligence. There are scientific studies that support that hypothesis.

    173. Re:Oklahoma? by amilo100 · · Score: 1, Troll

      Full disclosure: I am an ex-Christian now agnostic.

      In my recent experience atheists have gone a lot further than religious people. Take for example this: every evangelical religious person that came up to me was friendly and sincere (usually from the USA or S. Korea funny enough). With most of those people you could have a nice civilized chat. I get the idea no matter how misguided their beliefs were that they at least that they care deeply about people and do so out of love. The one group actually just made a quick stop at the university â" they were helping out at a state hospital over the holidays.

      Now switch back to the atheists (most of which study with me). When they speak about religion they have an inexplicable hate for Christians. They go so far as to say that religious people are less intelligent than atheists. It is a level of bigotry that is worse than the classic white-black racism. They will nag you to watch stupid films such as Zeitgeist or read Dawkins' books â" and when you point out the inaccuracies they will get angry without any reason. Every angry atheist I met thinks he is smarter than everyone and that he is special in some way. I sincerely don't know who or what made them so angry and full of hate.
      They have this aura of superiority â" yet not one of the atheists I met spend his holiday slaving away in a state hospital.

    174. Re:Oklahoma? by Draconix · · Score: 1

      Uh... if someone starts hallucinating magic pink slugs that sing Beatles songs, and claims only they can see them, you can't disprove that, but you wouldn't have to disprove it to call them delusional.

      --
      By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
    175. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! Because everyone has the financial freedom to leave their job, house, and move to another state!

    176. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      They have no problem reconciling their imagining of God with science.

      In other words, scrambling to fit their square religion into the round hole provided by every step of scientific progress.

      This is likely why religious people are getting more aggressive by the day. Religion demands ignorance, and science is taking bites out of their ignorance all the time. They are getting cornered, and fighting furiously to keep the ignorance because of it.

    177. Re:Oklahoma? by amilo100 · · Score: 1

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori

      I always thought that an intelligent scientific thinker must have no preconceptions and be critical of everything.

    178. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      Evolution also relies on Abiogenesis and whatever happened before that (big bang)

      Absolutely not, it does no such thing. Evolution concerns the development of life after it came to be, and explicitly does not cover the origin of life. Stating anything else only proves your own ignorance.

    179. Re:Oklahoma? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Can you provide some quotes from the Bible regarding this? I've never heard of such a thing. I know Catholic tradition had something to that effect, but I don't believe it's in the Bible itself.

      From the pretty good Wikipedia article on the subject:

      Psalm 93:1, Psalm 96:10, and I Chronicles 16:30 state that "the world is firmly established, it cannot be moved." Psalm 104:5 says, "[the Lord] set the earth on its foundations; it can never be moved." Ecclesiastes 1:5 states that "the sun rises and the sun sets, and hurries back to where it rises."

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    180. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're trying to compare their belief in God with the beliefs of a nutjob who watched too many X-Files. The point is that this guy is coming in and insulting their beliefs, and basically deifying some other guy who helped reduce the wonder and beauty of life to a series of chemical reactions. Why do you people glorify those who want to take all that's interesting out of life?

    181. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      It has been shown that one can either prove nor disprove the existence of god.

      Which, by the way, proves that a babel fish cannot possibly exist.

    182. Re:Oklahoma? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However, I'm not so sure about your take on the 1st Amendment. It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

      I think what a lot of religious people forget is that religion can be a very oppressive force for those that don't accept the majority view. I have personally found religion to be a very hostile force against me in my life.

      The Catholic church still runs 90% of the schools in Ireland, and I, like virtually everyone else in the country, had no choice but to attend a Catholic primary and secondary school. It is not a happy experience to be marched down to mass when you don't believe in any of it, and don't practice any religion at home. The situation was in no way restricted to schools. Up to the 1980's it was common for non-Catholics in the workplace to stand up and make motions of prayer during the Angelus at noon so as not to stand out.

      It is a very difficult thing to be a non-believer amid believers. I can tell you that dissension in these matters will evoke severe hostility. The situation that I and many others else in Ireland found ourselves in is the exact situation that the American first amendment was designed to avoid.

      When religious people argue for prayers in schools, or courts, or legislature, they rarely consider the effect on non-believers. Religion does create a hostile work environment for just about anyone except the devout, and that's not something that any Government office should promote or enforce. If you want to go and pray or need time to do so, absolutely. But don't force a hostile environment on the people that don't want it.

      Your first amendment is as much about freedom from religion as it is about freedom of religion.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    183. Re:Oklahoma? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      The point is, calling it delusional is just as not-scientific and irrational as calling it absolute truth, unless you can find proof that there is no god.

      No, it isn't.

      Sorry.

      The philosophical question of whether or not there could be or is some sort of deity, sure, that's debatable and unprovable. Making a judgement one way or another on any sort of god, particularly a non-manifesting non-interfering god, is not possible.

      BUT, making the decision that one exists, that you know what it's like and what it wants, and basing your behaviour on these, all without a shred of evidence is tantamount to delusional behaviour.

    184. Re:Oklahoma? by Draconix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "God" is nebulous, and inherently impossible to disprove. So is anything else anyone could make up that is untestable! That was kind of the whole point of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

      It's perfectly fair for Dawkins to use the term "delusion", because theists have made an outlandish claim with no evidence to back it up. You can't assert something, provide no evidence for it, then claim you're right until someone proves you wrong. That's literally the logic of an insane person. The sane person observes a phenomenon, comes up with a testable hypothesis, and tests it, and doesn't claim their hypothesis is true unless it holds up to repeated and rigorous testing, and even then, there's no 100% "proven."

      --
      By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
    185. Re:Oklahoma? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      "thank you for proving his point."

      And thank you for missing mine. He's wrong.

    186. Re:Oklahoma? by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      If you call them stupid just because their arbitrarily chosen reference point is different from your arbitrarily chosen one, you are the idiot.

      Actually, if you consider the two-body situation and work out the relevant equations, the Sun and the Earth revolve around a common centre of mass. Because the Sun vastly outweighs the Earth, that centre of mass is inside the Sun; so it's more correct to say that the Earth revolves around the Sun than vice-versa. There's nothing arbitrary about picking that particular point; the centre of mass is a physically meaningful concept inherent in the mechanical system.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    187. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...Celebrating cultural diversity? You've got to be fucking kidding me...."

      Nope. It's true. They have a mixed culture there - Okies and Humans...

    188. Re:Oklahoma? by Alt_Cognito · · Score: 1

      You cannot investigate at the level of detail that is being discussed here. And even when a way is invented, another level of detail can be suggested. A God could influence anything from the spin of photons on a massive scale, to the thoughts that are running through the pilots head (or the mechanics). The question is the Universe completely knowable.

      Once you're past that you cannot know the universe, then you can get into the philosophy of whether an all powerful God thinks as man does.

    189. Re:Oklahoma? by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

      Full disclosure: I'm not an atheist.

      The term "religious people" is much too broad for comparison to one man. If you were to show me someone who was as vehemently, outspokenly, and disrespectfully religious as Richard Dawkins is atheist, I would call them out on it as quickly as I call out Richard Dawkins for the ass-hattery that he pulls.

      To be fair, he's not representative of the majority of atheists that I've met, nor are the asshats the majority of religious people that I've met either (although sometimes it feels that way). It's the same as the difference between inviting a republican to speak in San Francisco and inviting Rush Limbaugh to speak there: the uproar isn't so much about his beliefs as the ridiculous way that he presents them.

    190. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.

      Fuck all Arabs. After all, just look at the shit that's been going on in Gaza, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Egypt, and Syria.

      Also, all black people suck too. Just look at Africa. Or Watts. Or the South Side of Chicago.

    191. Re:Oklahoma? by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      For Christ's sake, we have *cooking directions* on POPTARTS.

      Something wrong with that? You may think it's obvious that you just put them in the toaster - not under the grill, then? And for how long should they be toasted, on what temperature? Toast a Pop-Tart too long and too hot and the icing - which is pretty much neat sugar - can melt and begin to caramelise. Then the toast pops up and you pick up your tasty snack - OWWWWWWWWWWWWW HORRIBLY BURNED HAND!

      When they were first introduced to the UK, people got the message that these things were to be toasted. But not the message that they were to be toasted on the very lowest setting. Several people did indeed burn themselves quite badly. I remember it well, for I was right livid at the ensuing media panic because it meant I couldn't have Pop-Tarts any more.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    192. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Dawkins' message and tone would positively mild compared to partisans like Rush Limbaugh

      I completely agree, especially after reading quotations from the American Taliban.

    193. Re:Oklahoma? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Actually, quite the opposite in this case, Ockham in discussing entities wasn't talking about not assuming God, he based his thought on the fact that there was a God, (he was a cleric after all) but that other superfluous entities would be pointless unless necessary. This was a reaction to the whole trying to "count angels on a head of a pin" phenomenon that Thomas Aquinas touched off.

      Ockham's argument is that you cannot discover certain things except through revelation, which does not discount asking the question "Well why couldn't God have done it?". He would merely consider the question pointless as the question cannot be answered though science or any form of rational thought, only by revelation if there is a God, or perhaps not at all if there is not.

      Science cannot disprove the supernatural, almost by definition. There is no way you cannot say that something that happened for a natural reason did not come about because the very laws of the universe were not defined in such a way as to make that so.

      The problem with Intelligent Design is not that it is a bad theory to challenge evolution, its that it is does not actually imply anything at all about evolution. Evolution is a process, Intelligent design is a postulated cause. ID could happen, and evolution could be a natural result... or not. Or ID could be entirely false, and it would say absolutely nothing about Evolution.

      So yes, these legislatures and school boards who are pushing ID are full of shit. ID belongs in a philosophy class, not the science class.

      Having said that, Dawkins should probably not be trying to use his scientific high-priestdom to say anything about God, other than to state that according to science, if there is a God he appears to be using an evolutionary method. Other than that, as one poster put it, he's just as dumb as the rest of us.

    194. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori

      Unless you've come up with a way to test hypotheses about the supernatual, you're pretty much stuck with limiting your scientific enquiry to the natural, regardless of what you believe.

      And you don't have to believe in evolution a priori. No one is born knowing about it. However, those who denounce it from behind a veil of willful ignorance, or make up ludicrous arguments against it in order to preserve their mythical beliefs, are by definition not scientific thinkers, intelligent or otherwise.

    195. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you mean shout all the non-nonsense he likes.

    196. Re:Oklahoma? by Frigga's+Ring · · Score: 1

      What happens if they hadn't scheduled him in the first place for fear of losing state funding? What happens if a vocal minority on campus objects and the University revokes the offer?

      I believe I read somewhere that the power of an oppressive government is that it gets your to censor yourself. If the university should censor itself or its guests, then shame on it. However, the article isn't about the university or a minority of students. It's about the state.

      (Oh, wait, it's OK for that to happen when the speaker is a conservative. I guess there's no problem with it happening to Dawkins.)

      You're opinion. Not mine.

      Do you really believe that a state legislature is going to refuse to fund the state university over this? Do you understand how many people, meaning voters, have students going to that university? Do you think they'll be happy to hear that the tuition for the university is going to triple because the state stopped funding it?

      I don't know enough about the state, the university, or its people to tell you what will happen in the next few years. I presented my concerns based on what I know of people specifically people in public office.

      No, that ain't gonna happen. This measure says what it says -- strongly oppose. If they had wanted to say "prohibit", they could have. If they intended to tell the university that they were going to stop funding them over this, they'd be doing so informally so that nothing could be tied back to anyone.

      I don't believe they could directly prevent someone from speaking as that would be a violation of the first amendment.

      The resolution is only an ass covering for the legislature to make those who oppose Dawkins (not oppose Evolution, but Dawkins' particular lack of perspective on the subject) happy. I mean, someone who writes a book "The God Delusion" has clearly stepped outside the bounds of science and is practicing religion. Science has no means to either prove or disprove God. By calling it a "delusion", he's making a claim under the pretense of science, and he's wrong for doing that. (I don't particularly care what his personal view is, when he pretends that he's being a scientist while making such claims he's overstepped his rights, and as a scientist I object to that.)

      I will not respond to criticism against a person's character, views, or ideals nor will I criticize someone's character, views or ideals unless they infringe on the freedoms of another.

    197. Re:Oklahoma? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Are you implying that using the results of studies is not scientific?

      Cherry-picking them in favor of a personal agenda based on deep-seated dislike for people who disagree with you isn't. Dawkins suffers from the same kind of confirmation bias against religious people that fundamentalists have against people like him.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    198. Re:Oklahoma? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2, Informative
      I found the following interesting:

      Dawkinsâ(TM)s caricature of Christianity may well carry weight with his increasingly religiously illiterate or religiously alienated audiences, who find in his writings ample confirmation of their prejudices, but merely persuades those familiar with religious traditions to conclude that Dawkins has no interest in understanding what he critiques. . . The classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality and does not hold that faith involves the abandonment of reason or the absence of evidence. Indeed, the Christian tradition is so strong on this matter that it is often difficult to understand where Dawkins got these ideas

      What I see in Christianity is a fully divided set of beliefs, ranging from deranged lunatic (young earth) to invitingly spiritual. There is however not a general consensus about anything. Due to its basis on the belief of a God, people are free to subscribe any belief to this God, and come to any conclusion whatsoever. The Christian tradition is also riddled with questionable assumptions, outright power struggles, and irrevocable dogma (that later got revoked). Where in the Christian tradition can we find this intellectual honesty that the author is talking about, and, more importantly, what are the Christian methods to distinguish between the frauds and the intellectual leaders?

    199. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori, which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      You've never seen a Bell curve, have you?

      Or are you taking the position that the average US citizen is an intelligent scientific thinker?

    200. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      OTOH, if I remember correctly, the exact wording was "Congress shall make no law...". This isn't exactly congress.

      So it's not an open & shut case. Personally I despise them for this action, but that doesn't make it unconstitutional. And I don't know anything about the Oklahoma state constitution.

      Remember that the US constitution itself doesn't put very many limits on what the states can do. A lot of constraints have been read into it, but most of those I still see as power grabs by the federal government. And without valid constitutional basis. (I'm not saying anything about motives here. Sometimes the motive for a particular power grab seems valid, reasonable, and moral. That doesn't make the action itself any of those.)

      Were I a lawyer I could be arguing that the University of Oklahoma gets federal money and therefore it has to obey federal rules. In this case I think the proximal result of arguing thus would be reasonable, but the argument is, itself, fallacious. I believe that it's also a traditionally supported argument. A more nuanced argument would be "If the University of Oklahoma doesn't accept federal restrictions, then it's ineligible for federal money, and one of those restrictions is that it cannot discriminate on the basis of a religious doctrine." That one is probably reasonable. Note that it's still a blatant power play, and has the same effect as the first version. (Consider the speed limits on freeways in Utah and Nevada when the feds mandated a 50 mph speed limit. In those states in most places the speed limit made no sense. But they adopted it anyway to continue to get federal highway money.)

      P.S.; I think it was 50 mph. It was years ago, so it could have been some other number. Anyway, after the adoption there was so much public discontent that the speed limit requirement was lifted for those states.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    201. Re:Oklahoma? by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Although an absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence, the persistent absence of any evidence of existence over the many millennia that God and Santa Claus have existed does provide some uneasy in otherwise rational people.

    202. Re:Oklahoma? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      the religion of atheism

      I can't believe anything that comes out of the mouth of someone that uses such language. Unless you state that people that don't believe in Santa Claus are also memebers of a religion, then you are intellectually inconsistent in what people who don't believe constitutes a coherent religion. Athiesm is a religion like aToothFairieism is a religion.

    203. Re:Oklahoma? by yoshi_mon · · Score: 1

      That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity. ("Supernatural" being, by definition, outside of the purview of science.)

      The problem with that logic is that you can then 'prove' anything by saying you have to prove that it does not exist. I could rattle off a list of very very stupid things that can't be proven and by your logic they must exist since nobody could not 'prove' that they don't.

      Dawkins is an impressive scientist, but when he ventures into theology, he reminds me of a Feynman quote: "I believe that a scientist looking at nonscientific problems is just as dumb as the next guy."

      What dumb here is the idea that proving a negative should be the qualification for the existence of a god. Sorry, your just as full of fail as that quote.

      --

      Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
    204. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Deism was a quite useful religion. It allowed science to be created. If people who wanted to be scientists had been forced to be either atheists or agnostics, then there would have been so much public opprobrium heaped upon them that they could never have either published, spoken in public, or earned a living.

      Whether it's useful in present day society may depend on where you live.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    205. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Atheist, fucktard. E I

    206. Re:Oklahoma? by AkkarAnadyr · · Score: 1

      Is there a middle ground to be had here? Can atheists and theists both be right?

      Only if both sides argue in good faith.

      The Creationists have never done that. From mushy, constantly morphing claims, to malicious character smears, to outright self-contradiction, their goal has always been to tear critical thinking down, not to advance the state of knowledge.

      Look up "Howard Ahmanson" and decide whether he has a truth-seeking agenda or not. And find out whether the Templeton group ever got any creationists to take their research money.

      --

      I bought this house and you know I'm boss
      Ain't no h'aint gonna run me off

    207. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      "That's not a fallacy at all. Science can most certainly investigate questions about the existence of supernatural entities."

      I suppose they could, but the answers they find are going to be inconclusive.

      "Just as soon as you claim that this supernatural entity does stuff for you, affects the universe, changes reality, prevents a dude from dying in a plane crash, or any number of other things that religious people attribute to gods, then those things can be investigated and experimented with."

      Really? I don't think there's anything to investigate or experiment with at all in that. You could show statistical data that demonstrates people who are religious and would theoretically benefit from divine intervention more than non-believers are not collectively "luckier" than others, but that's not much of an investigation or experiment. Unless you mean to imply that an all powerful and omniscient being possessed of absolute immortality could not possibly intervene in reality without overtly breaking the normal order of things, or that such an entity would be incapable of covering up such indiscretions such that they were undetectable by humans. That also does not account for "erratic" deities that might not behave in predictable or consistent ways, or at least unpredictable and inconsistent to a human understanding. Nor does it address the idea of a deity performing acts so fundamental to existence that investigating them simply doesn't work.

      "If you want to claim that your god doesn't touch any part of the world that science can investigate, then that makes you a Deist. And that's a useless sort of god to invent."

      Why do you think that is? Is it not possible that a temporally inactive deity can still have psychological and spiritual relevance? The is no rule that I am aware of that requires a deity act as a cosmic strong man in order to be considered such; would you care to correct me?

      "So, go ahead and try again to find a Dawkins fallacy."

      He actually thinks it matters. Not specifically a Dawkins fallacy, but one that he shares with an awful lot of people. It makes no difference at all what one person believes to another, what actually matters is how the other is moved to act by what they believe, and to the extent that those actions are good or evil it is apparent that whatever they believe is good or evil, but the details remain irrelevant. If Dawkins believing that there is no god leads him act like a jerk, then the problem is that he is acting like a jerk, not what he believes.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    208. Re:Oklahoma? by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      The cover of the album could be been outsourced. The quality of the products used to print the album cover low.
      When heated by a desk lamp in a small poorly ventilated room over hours of listening?

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    209. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Arithmetic isn't always true!

      I know. When I was studying arithmetic, I rarely got more than 80% correct.

      That that's just talking about formal symbol manipulation. When you get to story problems...whew!! One can disagree even about what is being asked.

      Don't expect ANY approach to yield certainly true results. Nothing in this world does.

      It's true that induction, except mathematical induction, fails more often than many methods. It's also more powerful at deriving conclusions.

      P.S.: Although I generally agree with Dawkins, especially when he's talking about evolution, I tend to think he takes a rather reductionist interpretation even of scientific facts. It's a very powerful approach, and it yields, when properly interpreted, facts that are guaranteed true. The problem is that it tends to cause you to understand words in a different way that the same words commonly used. E.g. I am a believer in gods... it's just that I don't think that Dawkins would recognize the entities that I believe in as having any reality. Just as he ascribes all evolution to molecular evolution. Yes, what he's talking about is a valid way to speak of reality. But it's not the normal way. (Neither is mine. When I speak of gods I'm talking about something similar to what C.G.Jung would have called archetypes, but they are partially physical...and have a distributed physical presence as genetic/protein/structural entites and a localized presence as electro-mechanical neural processes. They are unconscious processes that occasionally have partial conscious manifestations. Etc.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    210. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to America where you have freedom of religion but not freedom from religion.

    211. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That science . . . can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity.

      If you were to actually read what Dawkins has written, you'll find that he explicitly makes the opposite claim.

    212. Re:Oklahoma? by sshore · · Score: 1

      Suppose you believed that Snow White and the Seven Dwarves are real. Is me calling you an idiot fair or bigotry?

      Non-sequiter. An erronous belief does not necessarily reflect on the believer's intelligence. Calling him an idiot would just create an adversarial atmosphere, and make it less likely that he'd seriously consider your point of view.

      I think that Dawkins runs into that same problem. However, he wouldn't be as popular as he is without being adversarial. Conflict sells.

    213. Re:Oklahoma? by huckamania · · Score: 1

      Science is not as round as you think nor religion as square. History is full of examples of scientists who believed in God who had no problem reconciling the two. Ever hear of Newton? Ever hear of Darwin? Even Galileo and Copernicus were card carrying Catholics.

      It's ridiculous to try to argue with someone who has no grasp of history. Religious people, at least in the US, have been ceding power to the secularists since the Salem Witch Trials. If anything, it is the atheists in the US who have become more aggressive, suing to have christmas and easter displays removed from public grounds (public for everyone but christians), suing to remove moments of silence (cause someone might use the time to pray, ooohh).

      Being an atheist is not even scientific. A true scientist would be agnostic, like Darwin became later in his life. Most self-defined atheists in the US are really just anti-christian. They don't bring up Islam whenever there is a discussion about science, just the evil Christ followers.

      BTW, I am not a Christian, except for the part about making water from wine and hanging out with hookers, cause I do those things all the time.

    214. Re:Oklahoma? by de+Selby · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure about your take on the 1st Amendment. It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion. It is just that there cannot be a national religion that is forced upon the populace.

      [...]

      I think it really was going for not forcing a religion no anyone...but, not that any religion could never be spoken about. The mere presence of a mention or investigation into religion is not forcing anything upon anyone else..it isn't like you won't pass a course if you don't convert.

      I think there's been some miscommunication.

      A common slogan on this topic is "freedom of religion implies freedom from religion". That's because "freedom from" means exactly what you're offering as an alternative--we are not legally required to have a religion and we are protected from religion being imposed against our will.

    215. Re:Oklahoma? by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      One could point out that there are still a lot of random variables and perhaps god is in those. They could say their god has influence on the mutations in evolutionary processes, or the unknown variables in weather systems, etc. I'm not saying that is the case. I'm just pointing out that just because it rains "due to atmospherics" doesn't rule out that it wasn't "because god is angry".

      I realize that the above sounds incredibly like moving goal posts. Then again, I don't think any religious person who claims that god caused it to rain also claimed that it was done in ways incompatible with the physical universe they claim he created. Except for a few of the (loud) fundamentalists, most would claim god caused it to rain and be done. They don't try to explain specifics. Whether their god popped a water balloon over their heads or caused a butterfly to flap its wings is irrelevant to them.

      As another example, evolution works by itself. But the god believers could say that at one point god decided to throw in a random mutation that eventually caused multi-cellular organisms. Then after watching that for a few million years, added a mutation that eventually caused mammals to appear. Suppose we knew all possible factors that caused mutations. Suppose we could see every single instance of mutations that occurred. Suppose that none of those observed mutations strayed from explanations. That doesn't rule out that perhaps god just wasn't interested in making mutations during the observations. He made the last mutations 50 million years ago and the next one isn't scheduled for another 50 million years, perhaps.

      Again, I'm not saying it is that way or not. I am saying that you would have to be able to observe all things at all times in order to prove that there isn't a "god" that has no effect whatsoever, and therefore does not exist. Of course, you could get by with much less in order to disprove a specific god or claim of god, or even all known claimed gods, but not any god.

      And all of that ignores a god who maybe caused the big bang to happen in such a way that it caused everything to happen how it has (including me writing this post and pointing that out). But that gets into the whole no free will thing which I don't want to get into right now.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    216. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Luckily for me, and unluckily for your bullshit semantic argument, "freedom of religion" is not the normative legal phrase used in the Constitution.

    217. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      OK. Now prove that solipsism isn't the true answer.

      Nothing can be proved definitely true. Or false. The best you can do is "Most reasonable choice." And "reasonable" isn't a well-defined term.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    218. Re:Oklahoma? by Zencyde · · Score: 1

      Atheism is merely a classification of religion that is on par with "N/A". Because our society puts so much emphasis on religion, it's necessary to make it known that some people don't believe in it. Otherwise we have uncounted votes. :o

      Let's follow the philosophy of the Japanese elements for a second. There are 5. Earth (chi), fire (kai), water (sui), wind (kaze), and void (kuu). Let's take that idea for just a second and realize that some might also consider nothing to be something, especially when a classification is necessary or wanted. And in many cases, a religious classification is highly desired. But I blame our overzealous society for that. :)

      --
      What day is it? Could you please tell me?
    219. Re:Oklahoma? by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      *Any* supernatural entity is by definition outside the sphere of human understanding entirely.

        Which also means that any belief in any supernatural entity is entirely in the mind of the believer ;)

        One can only split hairs so far.

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    220. Re:Oklahoma? by mmkhd · · Score: 1

      The truth is no insult!

    221. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure. Was Pot Pol an atheist? Stalin probably was.

      OTOH, Ghengis Khan et seq. were not atheists. Neither was Torquemada. It's a classic piece of irony that the Franciscans were in charge of much of the inquisition (because it's so much against their current public image).

      In most cases, however, if you investigate, the religion was just a convenient cover for some people to become extremely wealthy at the expense of people who were already of moderate means or better. The power grab at the wealth of the Knights Templar is a bit of a classic along that line. (Note in most of my examples it was either clergy or officially Catholic kings doing the grabbing. This is probably because that's what ended up in the histories that I studied.)

      OTOH, I have a friend who analyzed communism as a Catholic heresy. I didn't find it convincing, but the parallels were quite intriguing. Many of the most rabid atheists have had a strong religious upbringing. (As my friend did. Catholic in his case.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    222. Re:Oklahoma? by Zencyde · · Score: 1

      Yes; but, if your argument FOR God lacks substantial scientific evidence, you have no reason to be in this forum. And as far as I'm concerned, there is a huge lack of actual scientific evidence that promotes the idea of a God. The issue here is that evolution is incompatible with a specific facet of Christianity. That's not Richard Dawkin's fault, that's the fault of the Creationists who take an old book of stories and fairy tales too literally.

      Feel free to mod me down for this. :) I know I'm asking for it.

      --
      What day is it? Could you please tell me?
    223. Re:Oklahoma? by Mean+Variance · · Score: 1

      Immanuel Kant proved that you cannot prove God exists or does not exist by Science long ago. Anything else is pure logical fallacies like inductive logic, which Dawkins uses as well as circular references and wishful thinking.

      Immanuel Kant was a real pissant who was very rarely stable.

    224. Re:Oklahoma? by wclacy · · Score: 1

      In this case the the process was not in place for the State Government to be able to override the University's decision.

        If the State Government really wants to put a process in place to override University decisions that can be done.

      Denying this speaker would in no way set any legal precedence for who can and who cannot speak at the University. If Joe crazy decides to sue for the opportunity to speak at the University, he is going to lose.

    225. Re:Oklahoma? by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure it was only 15% that flat out believed in evolution with no godly influence. Pretty shocking, really.

    226. Re:Oklahoma? by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      If it was some other Atheist who doesn't have a track record of bashing religion and religious people, I think they would not object to him or her speaking about Evolution.

      Good luck finding an Atheist - or even a non-Atheist for that matter who knows more about Darwinian Evolution than Richard Dawkins does.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    227. Re:Oklahoma? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up.

      The stridency of the new atheism is at odds with its claim of being the calm, rational, and enlightened worldview.

    228. Re:Oklahoma? by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      Mod parent down for lying. Dawkins said no such thing!! Dawkins is very clear in TGD that Science can never entirely dis-prove the existence of a god. That is at the core of why Intelligent Design can never be accepted as a scientific theory: god is not falsifiable.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    229. Re:Oklahoma? by mmaniaci · · Score: 1

      I'm an atheist and it seems as though the Bible tells me to go to Hell all the time. I haven't been to church since I was a child, so I am unsure of this, but wouldn't preachers be "hating" on atheists for their non-beliefs on a consistent basis? This could depend on the particular church, preacher, etc. and is not meant to be offensive--just food for thought.

      Also, I'm not defending Dawkin's alleged "hate speach," but a little zealotry is sometimes needed to get people's attention...

    230. Re:Oklahoma? by analyticaldude · · Score: 1

      I am a born again, Bible believing Christian. This means that I am not religious. I have a relationship with God. That is what real Christianity is all about. I love science and have studied evolutionary theory. However, I feel no need to prove that creationism is correct and evolution is wrong. I also feel no need to belittle someone for their strongly held beliefs. Proving I'm right and you are wrong is not what Christianity is all about. Anyone familiar with the Bible would know this. In fact, belittling another for their belief or opinion is usually a sign of insecurity regarding ones own beliefs and opinions. As you can probably guess, I am opposed to this bill from the Oklahoma State Legislature. What a waste of taxpayer resources.

    231. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Remember, this is the guy who decided that evolution didn't happen at the level of the organism, but at the level of the gene.

      With the forms of evidence that he accepts as valid, and the forms of argument that he accepts as valid (i.e., extreme reductionist), he's right. This isn't the form most people accept. So when he writes he tends to use words in a different way and with different meanings that most people are comfortable with. He isn't vague, he just doesn't accept any vagueness as valid. Evolution happens at the gene! The organism is only the carrier to that gene. (Note the reductionism.)

      If you attend to him carefully, he makes quite a lot of sense. That doesn't mean that his conclusions will translate into the way that you use the words. I feel that to Dawkins "God" is either a meaningless noise or an entity that produces particular effects. The particular effects are not detectable, therefore the entity is a meaningless noise. This isn't what most people mean, but then what most people mean is half-way between totally rediculous and so vague as to be meaningless. I rather think that what most people really mean is what Bob Wilson once called the "big baboon". I.e., the huge alpha primate of the pack that will strike you down if you offend him. I.e., a set of inherited reflexes that once served our ancestors well. (Bob Wilson thought it was software rather than hardware. I tend to think of it as hardware that can have it's significance adjusted via manipulation of neural weights.) Note that I'm not sure that Dawkins would understand any explanation of what I believe. And if he understood it, I expect he'd say "Very interesting, but what's really going on is..." and talk about a reductionist reinterpretation which would be true, but not directly perceptible by consciousness.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    232. Re:Oklahoma? by Monchanger · · Score: 1

      I suspect belief in Snow White is a poor analogy for Dawkins' work, but I'd argue your action was both.

      If you are acceptive of common sense (which translates into social acceptance) it would be completely reasonable for you to claim that believing in fictional characters is an act of idiocy.
      Looking at the situation from a purely logical perspective, you can't provide proof that the tale isn't based on a true story. Thus your accusation isn't based on anything but your belief to the contrary, which is no good for discounting someone else's belief.

    233. Re:Oklahoma? by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      When it comes to explaining biological reality, Dawkins asserts: "The only thing [William Paley] got wrong, admittedly quite a big thing, was the explanation itself. He gave the traditional religious answer [that life was created by God]. . . The true explanation is utterly different, and it had to wait for one of the most revolutionary thinkers of all time, Charles Darwin. Dawkins fails to point out that belief in the doctrine of creation and the scientific theory of evolution by natural selection are in fact compatible.

      This statement is really the crux of the whole problem. Creationism and the theory of evolution are not "compatible" or "incompatible". They have absolutely nothing to do with each other. They are attempting to answer two entirely different questions.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    234. Re:Oklahoma? by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      If you read the friggin book, you'd see for yourself. Hell, just browse the Table of Contents. Chapter 4: "Why there almost certainly is no God. While he cannot produce proof, he does cite strong evidence. And what he can disprove, he does. Fallacies like "god is the origin of all morality, and god's morality is absolute", the Watchmaker fallacy, and the 747 built in a tornado fallacy are all easily proven false.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    235. Re:Oklahoma? by Garabito · · Score: 1

      Dawkins freely admits you can't disprove the existance of a God or any other supnernatural being, no more than you can disprove the existance of pink unicorns, FSM or Santa Claus.

      IMO, that's his fallacy. That argument is valid if you use it against a person that claims that you should believe in God because you can't disprove his existance; but it's sometimes used as a means to convey the idea that belief in a supernatural being is as delusional or childish, as believing in Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy.

    236. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now switch back to the atheists (most of which study with me). When they speak about religion they have an inexplicable hate for Christians

      Cause and effect, homes. I can understand your perspective, but you should realize that it's a backlash against hate from people who aren't merely outliers like Fred Phelps; it's hardly inexplicable. Although, as with anything else, people—especially the unthoughtful—will turn it into a binary atheists vs. religious folk and shout down the other side at the hint of its presence in the way you describe. So I find your generalization unfair.

      One generalization that does hold true is this: a large part of the populace are just fucking stupid in many regards. So it doesn't matter whether they are subscribing to pseudo-biblical intolerance, or dogmatic atheism, whatever they're spewing will be loud, knee-jerk, and grating. That idiot you knew in high school, or maybe his coarse father/aunt/cousin/grandpa? They're likely going to be that way whether or not they're on your side this time around. Just because they've entertained themselves with a new thought, it doesn't mean it's really going to do much to change anything at all. It's just the clothes they've decided to wear.

      As an atheist, do I think it would be great if 75% of the country identified themselves the same way? Ideally... yes, to be truthful. Practically? No. Like I said, it's just the clothes you happen to be wearing when you're throwing garbage at the homeless. Regardless, people are going to find a way to be dicks to other people.

    237. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't prove *a* god of the non-interactive sort does not exist. By that definition of "god" you are correct.

      You can most certainly disprove the God of the Bible, Allah of the Quran, or Yahweh of the Tanakh. Reason: multiple claims are made in each instance that remove gods from simply floating harmlessly in the realm of the supernatural and interacting directly with the natural. That creates a way to prove or disprove such a god.

      The reason it pisses religions off when people treat it that way is that each book tells you not to test their god's existence for one very simple reason: you'll see the man behind the curtain. You'll see that the whole thing is a statistically invalid hoax.

      No, you can't disprove anything outside this universe that has no daily effect on us. You are correct if you assume Kant was speaking of that kind of god. However you can CERTAINLY disprove any being that, according to doctrine AND anecdotes, intervenes in our lives on a daily basis. You can test for it indirectly through statistical analysis, and directly through prayer of attempting to make a certain event happen or not happen.

      Saying otherwise is a desperate attempt to preserve one's own beliefs by not allowing others to compel you to look logically and objectively at those beliefs.

    238. Re:Oklahoma? by Mean+Variance · · Score: 1

      I'm an atheist. I hate (maybe a poor choice of words) when it's globally said atheists hate Christians or are militant about religious opposition. Those are simply atheists that choose to have that tact. The world's assholes are a diverse melting pot of race, religion and culture from my empirical observations.

      I know a few atheists, probably more than I realize, but that's the point: it's not an everyday topic like the economic crisis or the weather.

      Usually when religion comes up (rarely), I just nod my head and listen, probably because that person is just telling me something about him/herself. I don't have my defenses up worried about being indoctrinated.

      I live in a community, country, and world of religious people. Don't ram it down my throat, and I'm cool with it. I sometimes even find people's religious beliefs and followings interesting. I just don't buy and cannot grok things like Jesus rising from the dead.

      On a side note, I just rolled my eyes when Katie Couric asked Sully The Wonder Pilot, "Did you pray?" His answer was so cool. Something to the effect of "I assume the passengers were doing that for me." In other words, "Katie, no, I wasn't praying. I was a little busy and under pressure to stop an pray."

    239. Re:Oklahoma? by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      The classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality and does not hold that faith involves the abandonment of reason or the absence of evidence.

      Yes, because we all know how rational it is to believe in a 10,000 year old earth, a magic fruit tree, and a talking snake...

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    240. Re:Oklahoma? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Though I agree that atheism is not a religion, I take exception to your (apparent) definition of religion. People who believe in Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy are not necessarily members of a religion. A religion is not a belief. A religion is:

      a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, esp. when considered as the creation of a superhuman agency or agencies, usually involving devotional and ritual observances, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs.

      Source

      So a religion is not simply a belief in a deity or deities.

      Though it's a stretch, you might be able to actually make an argument for Santa Clausism and ToothFairieism:

      Santa Claus

      • Santa Claus is this dude who delivers toys to all the children of the world in one night. (superhuman agency)
      • Santa Claus lives at the North Pole (a statement about the nature of the universe)
      • Kids put out milk and cookies for Santa, decorate a Christmas tree, etc. (devotional and ritual observance)
      • Kids know they have to be "good" because Santa is "making his list and checking it twice" (moral code governing the conduct of human affairs)

      But what's missing? Well, no one believes that Santa Claus created the universe. There is no discussion concerning the cause or purpose of the Universe either.

      OTOH, you could argue that polytheists do not necessarily believe that their superhuman agencies created the universe either. Neither do pantheists or animists.

      Tooth Fairy

      • The Tooth Fairy is a fairy who magically turns your discarded baby teeth into cash. (superhuman agency)
      • Kids put their teeth under their pillow (devotional and ritual observance)

      But there's nothing concerning the universe or a moral code at all.

      Like I said: you could make the argument, but it's a stretch at best.

    241. Re:Oklahoma? by Melipone · · Score: 1

      If you read the god delusion, and listen to Dawkins' speeches, he does not say that science can be used to disprove god. Rather that in can be used to guide our analysis of the situation - specifically that when examined probabilistically the likelihood to god existing is rather slim, to the point of being equivalent of the probability of there existing a teapot orbiting Mars. That's an important distinction, and one which means he is not in conflict with Kant's argument. I'm a bit late on this one but I thought I'd chime in anyway...

    242. Re:Oklahoma? by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      dawkins was IMO a piss-poor choice for someone to talk about evolution

      The University of Oxford might disagree with you on that one...

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    243. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Logical? Faith has practically nothing to do with logic.

      The fact that many religions are as self consistent or are presented as self consistent as possible portrays religions as being very logical constructions (or contraptions). In the (European) medieval times monks and nuns where of the few keepers and developers of knowledge, including the basis of logic. Think of science and religion as set of theories of different models and they both can be perfectly logical constructions. One of them explains and models the physical word, the other works as a behavior, and therefore the brain, altering mind game. Both can produce interesting results in a society.

    244. Re:Oklahoma? by RajivSLK · · Score: 1

      An erronous belief does not necessarily reflect on the believer's intelligence.

      Really? Belief in Snow white isn't reflective of one's intelligence?

      I'm glad you said this. It really helped me realize that there is NO POINT even talking with you. Cuckoo, Cuckoo, Cuckoo ...

    245. Re:Oklahoma? by steveshaw · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment, along with most of the rest of the Bil of Rights, are applicable to state and local governments, and indeed, any "state actor" through legislation such as 42 USC s1983. This includes state-sponsored universities. Please feel free to look up the Incorporation Doctrine.

    246. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How come "god hates fags" isn't hate speech?

      What about the always present "you are going to hell if you don't believe in my god" Sure hell isn't really a credible threat against an atheist, but the people preaching that believe in hell, and crime is about intent right?

      How come when religions get strident and start spewing out vile things and pure propaganda they are exercising their freedom of belief, but if non-religious people criticize the extremes of a religion its hate speech?

    247. Re:Oklahoma? by jaypifer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "god" is not an answer, it's the avoidance of an answer.

      Science asks "how" and accepts "I don't know" as a legitimate answer.

      --
      Never go to sea with two chronometers; take one or three.
    248. Re:Oklahoma? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      I read that article, and I have to say the irony is pretty thick when a theist accuses an atheist of being intellectually lazy.

      Um, what? Do you seriously believe that theists are, as a general rule, intellectually lazy, and atheists are not?

    249. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      The point is that this guy is coming in and insulting their beliefs

      He is not.

      basically deifying some other guy who helped reduce the wonder and beauty of life to a series of chemical reactions

      Now YOU are insulting someone else's beliefs, you fucking hypocrite.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    250. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      You are a typical religions fundie idiot who hasn't even bothered to read his fucking book. Sigh.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    251. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure. Was Pot Pol an atheist? Stalin probably was.

      That's irrelevant. They did not kill in the name of atheism. They did not kill because they were atheists. They killed because they subscribed to evil ideologies that compelled them to kill. Atheism is not an ideology.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    252. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I believe he was pointing out the idiocy of the article author, not necessarily theists in general. But we're still waiting for examples of Dawkins bashing someone.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    253. Re:Oklahoma? by Grishnakh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This argument sounds a lot like the idea that a tree falling in a forest doesn't make any noise if there isn't anyone there to hear it.

      How about another question: Are there aliens? Disregarding all the people claiming to be abducted or see UFOs, there's very little evidence for alien visitation on earth. But that doesn't answer whether they exist at all. Given that an average galaxy such as our own has literally billions of stars, each of which might have planets which could harbor life (and we've now discovered hundreds of exoplanets), and there are millions of galaxies which we've already witnessed with our primitive telescopes, the odds are that intelligent alien life probably does exist, somewhere out there. Does it have affect on our world? No, probably not. Some civilization of aliens in the Andromeda galaxy somewhere isn't going to affect us unless they've developed FTL travel and come here to kill our cows and make crop circles. But that doesn't mean they don't exist.

      Here's another question: how was the Universe created? There's the Big Bang theory, and all its attendant parts about expansion and whatever, but what came before that? Was that directed by something of intelligence, or not? Is our Universe's existence just a big experiment in some being's laboratory, to see what happens when you create a specific set of laws of Physics and start it in motion with a lot of energy and mass? As a civilization that hasn't even figured out how to send its inhabitants further than its own Moon yet, and has only confirmed the existence of planets in other star systems within the last 10 years I think, it's pretty ridiculous IMO to suggest that we have the answer to that question.

      Lastly, as far as the effects of a god, can you prove that people who miraculously have their cancer disappear don't owe their healing to a god? How would you scientifically test that? You can't, since one anecdote is simply a historical data point, and can't be retested in a controlled environment. You're not talking about a physical effect, which can be replicated. If the god doesn't want to heal other people of cancer, it won't, and there's no way for you to determine that your cancerous test subjects were simply ignored by the god, rather than that there is no god.

      How about we set up an experiment where a bunch of rats are given a poison, and then we wait to see how many die. However, we put them in a closed room, with no surveillance or witnesses, and the door is unlocked. During the night, a lab technician wanting to screw with your test results decides to go in the room and give 2 of the rats the antidote. So you do the experiment again, and that day he doesn't do anything. What have you proven with your experiment? Nothing. When an intelligent being is involved in the experiment, you can't prove anything either way, because you don't have repeatability. The whole idea of humans debating the existence of god(s) is like ants debating the existence of humans.

      The only sane answer to the existence of god(s), higher beings, etc. is "I don't know".

    254. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      That's not a fallacy. That's what he sets out to argue for in his book. You are seriously confused, just like all other fundies who haven't actually bothered to listen to what Dawkins is actually saying.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    255. Re:Oklahoma? by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      But to not believe, don't you have to acknowledge or believe in something first?

      You're confusing atheism (disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings) with nihilism (an extreme form of skepticism: the denial of all real existence or the possibility of an objective basis for truth).

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    256. Re:Oklahoma? by cheebie · · Score: 1

      Full disclosure: I'm a Christian who 100% believes in evolution and science. The existence of quill pens does not mean Thomas Jefferson did not write the Declaration of Independence.

      What the hell do you think religious people have been doing? They've gone a hell of a lot further than 'bashing atheism and nonreligious people'.

      Building hospitals, feeding the poor, protesting injustice, treating atheists with respect.

      They've also been inciting war, promoting bigotry, and treating anyone outside their sect like pariahs.

      Much like atheists, we are not a monolithic block and have VERY diverse opinions. And much like atheists, some of us are dicks.

      But from my experience there are a lot more people in the 'building hospitals' camp. It's just that the other camp is really loud.

    257. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 3, Informative

      I suppose they could, but the answers they find are going to be inconclusive.

      Which is why he says "Why There Almost Certainly Is No God". But like all other fundies, you didn't even bother to read his books before spewing out nonsense.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    258. Re:Oklahoma? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I take exception to your (apparent) definition of religion.

      I admit that I was playing a little loose with the definition for purposes of making a point. We'll call Santa Claus a near-religion. And with that designation, there isn't any near-religion of people just because they don't believe in him. Even the kids that are rabidly anti-Santa don't get the aSantaism decision, and those that don't really believe but pretend like they do to get presents and not piss off everyone are not agSantaists. But with religion, if someone says "I opt out from that belief, and I'll believe whatever I see evidence for" meaning they have beliefs in line with athiesm, they are considered to have a religion, and that it's science, or math, or the cult of Atheism or whatever. To assign the lack of belief in an imaginary friend as the abnormal behavior seems absurd to me. And doubly so if that rational belief is associated with some fictitious belief in a religion of non-belief.

    259. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people have no problem with evolution it is when you say evolution proves there is no God that you have a problem. The leg most intelligent designers stand on is if there is no God then how did life begin. Atheist best answer is we evolved from crystals, yet we don't see crystals replicating in nature, or were seeded by aliens.

    260. Re:Oklahoma? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I believe he was pointing out the idiocy of the article author, not necessarily theists in general.

      I believe my reading of the remark was more reasonable than yours. The remark says that it is ironic if a theist accuses an atheist of being intellectually lazy. It doesn't in any way single out the article author, nor provide any particular reason for us to conclude that the remark must have been meant to single out the article author.

      But we're still waiting for examples of Dawkins bashing someone.

      Well, the problem here is that the participants in this discussion are being quite unspecific about what they mean by "bashing someone." I certainly know for sure that Dawkins regularly labels theists as being, as a general rule, superstitious, ignorant, unintelligent, unsubtle, simpletons, archaic, unprogressive, etc. And what's more, he seems to be in a crusade to go all over the world giving talks where he does so.

      My problem with that is very simple: while I very much agreed with him when I was around 18, over the past 12 years or so I've gradually come to see that Dawkins, while quite intelligent, isn't really very knowledgeable outside a very narrow field, but goes around acting as if he is, and won't listen to reason when people try to enlighten him about his errors and misunderstandings. He doesn't know enough about, for example, philosophy or the social sciences to understand that the scientistic, atheistic worldview he's crusading for is not nearly as solid as he thinks it is. It's like he lives in a time-warp where none of the philosophy of the second half of the 20th century happened. No Wittengstein; no Quine-Duhem hypothesis; no anti-foundationalism; no Kuhn, Lakatos nor Feyerabend.

      Once you realize how many problems Dawkins' whole worldview has, you start to think that perhaps he is a bit intellectually lazy. Basically, he picks on the theistic crowd very loudly while pretending that there are no serious secular objections to what he wants us to believe.

    261. Re:Oklahoma? by digitig · · Score: 1

      If the majority of the citizens of Oklahoma believed in a vast government conspiracy to cover up the existence of extraterrestrials as a result of watching one too many episodes of The X-Files, would be it okay for them to pass legislation to squash the free speech rights of someone proving that no such conspiracy exists? C'mon, this is just completely ridiculous.

      It's actually a trickier question than it seems. In a democracy, who's got the authority to say no to the majority? Well, in the case of Oklahoma, the rest of the USA has, because free speech is in the constitution. But if the majority of the USA wanted it? Yes, there are safeguards to stop the constitution being flip-flopped, but the principle remains -- who has the authority to say no to the majority?

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    262. Re:Oklahoma? by db32 · · Score: 1

      I have a real hard time with some of this. I think Dawkins is a flaming asshole and he intentionally ties evolution to atheism as part of being a flaming asshole. In fact, as of late, his real "accomplishments" seem to be more centered around him being a flaming asshole than actually providing any intellectual discourse on the subjects of biology and evolution. Go look at Francis Collins or Ken Miller for real support that evolution isn't an atheist thing. Collins, with that whole human genome mapping busines, and Ken Miller for his incredible speaches (and courtroom appearances in Dover) tearing Intelligent Design into tiny little ribbons, have done more to positively advance the field of biology than Dawkins asshat rants. Collins and Miller both are Christians and I know Miller actually made it a point to show how religion and evolution have nothing to do with eachother.

      That said...I think it is pretty horrific that these legislative clowns are even doing this at all. Part of it is that I believe Dawkins has a perfect right to be a flaming asshole as much as I have a right to think he is a flaming asshole. There are two major dangers of government action, the first and greatest is the suppression of freedom of speech (they don't have to ban it to silence it), the second is that it will only encourage him to be a bigger flaming asshole about the whole thing and make sure that we cannot ever discuss evolution without him and his antics being brought up.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
    263. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cute, but "mathematical induction" is actually a form of logical deduction.

    264. Re:Oklahoma? by Torvaun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You kidding me? I've never seen a blurry photograph of God running through the woods.

      --
      I see your informative link, and raise you a pithy comment.
    265. Re:Oklahoma? by Full+Metal+Jackass · · Score: 1

      That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity. ("Supernatural" being, by definition, outside of the purview of science.)

      He said that did he?

      If you're looking for quotes to back up your claim, you might find something in Dawkin's book "The God Delusion" in chapter 4 "Why there Almost Certainly is no God".

    266. Re:Oklahoma? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      So how much tax money did this bill that doesn't actually do anything cost?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    267. Re:Oklahoma? by cathyy · · Score: 1

      It doesn't need to squash his free speech rights to be effective. Who votes for the funding the University receives annually from the state? The veiled threat here is that allowing Dawkins to speak will lead to reduced funding.

    268. Re:Oklahoma? by salle_from_sweden · · Score: 1

      His evidence, if I recall correctly, is as follows:

      If there is a personal god, who can interfere with life, toughts etc directly, who created the universe, created the laws of physics etc, then the creation or apearance of this entity which must be more complex than the universe, because he created it, is more unlikely than the apearance of the universe on it's own without any divine creator.

    269. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is. There is just as much evidence for the existence of Thor, Apollo, the Tooth Fairy, and vampires as there is for God --- which is to say, none whatsoever.

    270. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      The stridency of the new atheism is at odds with its claim of being the calm, rational, and enlightened worldview.

      Atheism is not a "worldview". Atheism is not believing in God. That's it. You may be referring to atheists who dare to argue against superstition. Arguing against something is not "stridency".

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    271. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The funny thing is that we have about the same level of evidence for sasquatch as God.

      Not true! I saw the sasquatch movie. It was definitely real! On the other hand, I am pretty sure that JC, Superstar was just a clever hoax.

    272. Re:Oklahoma? by johanatan · · Score: 0

      First, how can you say the first amendment does not work in precisely one given way? There must be infinitely many ways that the first amendment does not work--so none of those are very 'precise' are they?

      Second, neutral != a-theistic. Neutral means no particular preference for any given religion or denomination within said religion (which secular humanism and atheism qualify as).

    273. Re:Oklahoma? by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      It depends on the translation. The meanings given by Strongs are:

      1) to totter, shake, slip

      a) (Qal) to totter, shake, slip

      b) (Niphal) to be shaken, be moved, be overthrown

      c) (Hiphil) to dislodge, let fall, drop

      d) (Hithpael) to be greatly shaken

      So, basically, not going to be destroyed. Actually argues against Christendom's theology, but not mine.

      How would you say sunrise sunset and tomorrow's going to be the same? What phrase do you use in casual use for the rotation of earth causing the Sun to become visible? I would like an answer...

    274. Re:Oklahoma? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I agree that's how the legal system has interpreted the constitution. I don't believe that was the original intent, and it certain requires a lot of very creative arguing to assert that it's a reasonable interpretation.

      OTOH, I'm also certain that SOME of the federalists would have been quite happy with that interpretation.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    275. Re:Oklahoma? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      False. Induction is different from deduction, because it is a meta-theoretical method of proof. Given a system of logic, deductions follow as single statements from other statements, but to prove that an infinite number of statements follow from another statement would require an infinite number of deductions, so induction is introduced to allow proofs of categorical statements. If you reject the theorem of induction within a system of logic, you can prove any specific statement, but you will not be able to prove a general theorem about all statements of a given form. e.g. you may prove that 1+2 = 2+1 and 5+20 = 20+5 in basic arithmetic, but you cannot prove that a+b = b+a without induction.

    276. Re:Oklahoma? by rts008 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I sincerely don't know who or what made them so angry and full of hate.

      Here in the USA, I think that the attitude you are describing is a result of atheists feeling like they have been backed into a corner lately.
      Think about the likes of:
      Jack Thompson, Tipper Gore, the whole teaching ID/Creationism in science classes in Kansas(that was fortuneatly derailed), the 'think of the children' war on well, everything, the 'Moral Majority' sponsored legislation, 'Family Values' legislation, etc. being constantly hurled at us in a country that is supposedly run by a 'seperation of church and state', secular philosophy that has broken down and headed the opposite direction.(attempted theism by the Moral Majority/Family Values camp)

      It's a defensive backlash, and IMO, justifiable.

      The 'other side' seems to not realize that 'freedom of religion' also implies the right of 'freedom from religion...'My way, or the highway' gets old after a while!

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    277. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Which is a stereotype of what Christianity really is, and is a big strawman argument.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    278. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Sorry but you are wrong and here is why thank you for playing. But that is yet another fallacy in the debate.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    279. Re:Oklahoma? by Mean+Variance · · Score: 1

      There are two kinds of athiests like there are two kinds of Christians. There are the majority of Christians who aren't going to shove their religion in anyone's faces and most likely won't mention their religion at all unless the subject comes up in normal conversation, and then there are Jehova's Witnesses.

      Look, I had a lovely supper and all said was that piece of halibut was good enough for Jehovah. Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah!

    280. Re:Oklahoma? by soundguy · · Score: 1

      which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      About half of the population is below average. 3%-4% is a reasonable margin of error.

      --
      Nothing worthwhile ever happens before noon
    281. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      In all honesty Dawkins himself does not understand these things he is talking about. He has no PHD in theology yet claims to be an expert in it. Many of these points he makes is unclear, and can easily be argued one way or another.

      One thing for certain is that he has a bias in them, and does not completely think out his arguments.

      Evolution could support Atheism, Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc, why should it be either Atheism or Christianity as Dawkins states it should be? This makes no sense as there could be more than one answer, and why should we accept Dawkin's answer when he can offer no valid proof or evidence to support it? If I said it supported Christianity, I would be just as fallacious as Dawkins saying it favored Atheism, when we both could be incorrect and it favors nothing or Buddhism or Hinduism instead.

      I honestly don't think you understand what a fallacy is, I could be wrong here. You've argued why they couldn't be fallacies, but you used faulty or unclear logic yourself to do so.

      Thanks for taking the time to try and rebuttle some of Dawkins' fallacies. I'm sorry you didn't do better.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    282. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Is me calling you an idiot fair or bigotry?

      Bigotry. I am one of the dwarves.

    283. Re:Oklahoma? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      Yes!

      'nuff said.

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    284. Re:Oklahoma? by himi · · Score: 1

      Don't be stupid. Ethics and philosophy exist - there wouldn't be ethicists and philosophers if that wasn't the case.

      What you /meant/ to say was that there are no provably universal foundations for ethical debate. And the correct response to that is "So what?" The whole point of ethics is to develop practical foundations for making moral decisions - the foundations you choose may not be absolute, but the key questions of ethics aren't about absolutes, they're about effects, costs and benefits. Like mathematics, ethics (and philosophy in general) is about asking "what if?", and assessing the logical and practical results.

      There are many things in the realm of human knowledge that have no absolute existence - they exist only because we've made them up. That makes them fundamentally different from (say) the physical phenomena that evolutionary biologists study, but it doesn't mean they don't exist.

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    285. Re:Oklahoma? by nu1x · · Score: 1

      > If we take a hypothetical something, call it "thing an sich" or "god" or whatever else you like, which has no effect on anything else, then due to it not affecting anything, we can not verify its existence. Also, its existence makes no difference whatsoever.

      Ooh, so Nietzsche was on to virtual particles before mainstream science. Dammit, that guy was pretty badass.

      God is Quantum Foam.

      No, scratch that. Quantum Foam has way more influence on reality.

      --
      I have nothing to lose but my bindings.
    286. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      One word: bullshit. The theory of evolution gives a scientific model on the observed changes within species, the observed extinction of species and the observed appearance of new species.

      In no way is this model 'dependent' on how life started; it just models what happens after that. You are actively misstating the truth, which could easily be seen a mortal sin if you are a christian. (Thou shallt not bear false witness.)

      Lol.. Idiot. Where do you think the life came from, without it, there is no evolution at all. Evolution is very dependent on life being present in order to evolve.

      Nice one there throwing the bible reference in. While I like to play devils advocate on the subject (only because so many self proclaimed atheist don't have a damn clue to what they are disowning and speaking again) I am not a religious person so waste your bible verses, however incorrectly configured they are, and apply them somewhere where someone already gives a damn.

      There is also a complete practical lack of testability whether or not the theory of gravitivity will still be a valid model in exactly 100 years. That does NOT mean anyone expects apples to suddenly fall upward in 100 years.

      We are talking about testing in the future now are we? We can't even get speciation to occur without changing the definitions to match observed habits but then the definition of speciation doesn't match species and when applied outside those specifically observed habits, it doesn't make any sense. Apply it to border hound collies (dogs of the same breed) separated by an ocean. Place one in New York City and one in London, oh wait, now their pups are separate species even though they can still all be pure breed border hound collies. That's really something that makes sense right?

    287. Re:Oklahoma? by nu1x · · Score: 1

      > Kids are made by biological events, not given by a supreme being.

      Kids are made BY momma and poppa. And lotsa love.

      --
      I have nothing to lose but my bindings.
    288. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Don't take it the wrong way here but you are essentially saying that if it exists in your mind, it must be true. That's no different then religion outside of not having a deity (deities) to worship. SO because you think it is true, despite the lack of observed evidence, you can criticize someone for something that never happened only because it makes sense to you. Do I have that right?

      What's the difference between you and what you think they are?

    289. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      And the funny thing is, you still have to ask where life came from, and before that, where did the elements come from, and before that where did the universe come from, and before that, where did the materials come from that allowed the big bang to happen and before that, where did the energy for those materials come from. Currently, we only ask back to the beginning of the universe and stop there with "it was just there".

      I have not seen an explanation that doesn't stop at some point and says something was just there or energy came from nothing and so on. All he is doing is replacing some people's god with his own. And with light not being conceived until the 3rd day, it is in no way in conflict with some other people's gods because a day as we understand it never existed before the light.

    290. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Absolutely not, it does no such thing. Evolution concerns the development of life after it came to be, and explicitly does not cover the origin of life. Stating anything else only proves your own ignorance.

      It relies on life to be present. If that doesn't happen, evolution could never exist. There is a symbiotic relationship whether you want to accept it or not. In the statement I thought the concept was pretty clear that we were going back in time from before evolution to the beginning.

    291. Re:Oklahoma? by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      Then tell that to the millions of American Christians who accept this as a literal truth.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    292. Re:Oklahoma? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      There's one big difference: at every step back in that chain you moved to assuming something simpler. Where did the complexity that is life today come from? It evolved from simpler forms, through processes we can observe. Where did those first, very simple organisms come from? We hypothesize that they were created from non-living molecules through abiogenesis, which we've made steps towards recreating in the lab. Where did those molecules and elements come from? They're created from even simpler elements through fusion, which we can observe. Etc.

      Positing a god is the opposite. Where did we come from? This intelligent, aware, omnipotent, necessarily extremely complex God created us. Not only is that explanation horribly complex and fraught with contradictions but there isn't a shred of evidence for it.

    293. Re:Oklahoma? by lazy_nihilist · · Score: 1

      God is Dead.

    294. Re:Oklahoma? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      ...which is not so subtly implying that all of the other 53-ish percent of humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons.

      Unfortuneately, that seems to be correct..if not understated.

      *disclaimer-I'm stuck in the middle of this in Oklahoma....and it is true.*

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    295. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Inductive logic is not a fallacy, however any claim that Dawkins considers inductive logic to be a proof in a mathematical sense rather than a scientific sense IS a fallacy. As you noted, it's a strawman. Now stop claiming that Dawkins is using proof in a mathematical sense when he is quite clear in his writing not to.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    296. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Can't? We investigate the spin of electrons and particles on a daily basis. And if you're going to argue that God does a bunch of incoherent random shit that can't be replicated, then there's two problems with that. First, YOU don't have any basis to know random looking "God effects" better than science. So much for your proof. Second, there's another apologetic argument that God is the reason for all the order in the universe, that without God the universe would not be comprehensible. A God that randomly breaks rules and randomly acts completely destroys that apology.

      A God that does what you claim he does would render the universe a random place to live. And I haven't seen any pots of petunias turn into sperm whales recently.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    297. Re:Oklahoma? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      First, how can you say the first amendment does not work in precisely one given way? There must be infinitely many ways that the first amendment does not work--so none of those are very 'precise' are they?

      The Founding Fathers hardly made a secret of their intent. As Jefferson put it, it is a "wall of separation". If a state legislature banned or even tried in some way limit religious freedoms, that would be a very clear and obvious violation of the First Amendment's intentions.

      Second, neutral != a-theistic.

      There's a hyphen in there for a reason. I did not say "atheistic", I said "a-theistic", as in non-theistic.

      Neutral means no particular preference for any given religion or denomination within said religion (which secular humanism and atheism qualify as).

      And how precisely would atheism qualify as a religion? Does it have a creed? Does it have some framework of beliefs, some systematic or even random theology or dogma? If atheism is a religion, is two-column accounting or being a Dodgers fan?

      This is what happens when you redefine words in trying to make a point. The words often become meaningless. The statement, which, by the way, is the only statement that you can guarantee any two atheists will agree upon, is simply "lack of belief in God" or more generally "lack of belief in gods".

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    298. Re:Oklahoma? by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

      Although, it sure didn't get in the way of the crazy guy yelling "You're going to hell!" over and over again to Dawkins at the end of today's talk. I yelled at him to wait in line for the microphone like everyone else, but I doubt he heard me.

      He was sitting right by me. He was muttering under his breath the whole time. And when he starting yelling at him, he reached for his pocket and pulled out a camera. I'm just glad it wasn't a gun. Freakin' Oklahoma.

      --
      Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
    299. Re:Oklahoma? by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      no more than you can disprove the existance of ... Santa Claus.

      Nonsense. Of course you can disprove the existence of Santa Clause.

      1. Obtain one .50 BMG
      2. Wait up on Christmas eve.
      3. ???
      4. Produce Santa's body. Now you can prove that Santa doesn't exist (anymore).
    300. Re:Oklahoma? by Tycho · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court had held multiple times that the Constitution DOES apply to the states as well. This is why you don't see books banned in a city because of their "indecent" or "immoral" content any more. However, some parts of the US still try (with varying degrees of success) to enforce prohibitions on adult pornography. Possession of kiddie porn breaks the law, and is an entirely different issue, however.

      --
      Impersonating Tycho from Penny Arcade since before there was a PA.
    301. Re:Oklahoma? by Tycho · · Score: 1

      I don't believe that was the original intent, and it certain requires a lot of very creative arguing to assert that it's a reasonable interpretation.

      The original intent is really no longer really a valid consideration at this point. The Constitution and what it says/means only matters at the Federal Appeals Courts and Federal Supreme Court level. At least try to learn a bit about how the American Court system works in 2009. The current way the legal system functions works is more important than any intent derived from a half a dozen guys who wrote lots of letters and books from 1750 to 1830 that have been preserved until today. There are probably more men from that time who had totally different opinions and their contributions have not been preserved or have not been scrutinized to such a degree.

      --
      Impersonating Tycho from Penny Arcade since before there was a PA.
    302. Re:Oklahoma? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Read any of Dawkin's books? He does not claim god doesn't exist, he claims there is no evidence for god.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    303. Re:Oklahoma? by nuclear_zealot · · Score: 1

      Greatest post... Ever. Thank you.

    304. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Sasquatch would be, while remarkable, a relatively simple extrapolation of already observed and documented species; something like finding a living specimen of Flores Man. It could probably fit easily into our understanding of the evolution of life - providing of course we can also later find fossils for its divergence from an already known about ancestor.

      A god, a fairy or an elf is something we have no precedent for in our current scientific thinking. As such I think unicorns (its just a horse with a horn!) and the Sasquatch shouldn't be in this list.

    305. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      There's one big difference: at every step back in that chain you moved to assuming something simpler.

      Well, no. Not simpler, just supporting of the theories that build off of it. It could be more complex but it still needs to provide the enviroment that iltimately leads to the accepted theory which builds from it.

      Where did the complexity that is life today come from? It evolved from simpler forms, through processes we can observe.

      Well, that's what we currently believe anyways. But it doesn't have to be that way. Imagine walking a straight line and ending in the same place you started. It has everything to do with the perspective of the observer, for the person walking this straight line, they have no idea they are walking around a cylinder and it is straight to the whereas the people observing the action may know more then that. So far, we only know what we can perceive and assume the pieces that are missing. It's sort of like the Neanderthal man which is now thought to have interbred away with modern humans making it little more then a breed or race of humans then a species of it's own.

      We hypothesize that they were created from non-living molecules through abiogenesis, which we've made steps towards recreating in the lab. Where did those molecules and elements come from? They're created from even simpler elements through fusion, which we can observe. Etc.

      As you noted, we have attempted to test but having been able to prove the possibility. Yet it is often cited as fact when it is little more then a best guess hypothisized based around what we know and what we think we know. A lot of the entire process is little more then educated guesses built off of other guesses. This doesn't make it wrong, but it leaves lots of room for improvements and perhaps an entirely different understanding.

      Positing a god is the opposite. Where did we come from? This intelligent, aware, omnipotent, necessarily extremely complex God created us. Not only is that explanation horribly complex and fraught with contradictions but there isn't a shred of evidence for it.

      There isn't a shred of evidence outside of If this is true, this should be also in the entire evolutionary/everything before it argument. In fact, the biggest reasons why evolution, abiogenesis, and the bug bang is separates is because improvements in the theories started causing other portions of theories to have problems. It's pointless to think they aren't interconnected at least on a superficial level but the relationships are not ancillary to each other either. Saying a god did it is not stopping people from understanding how he did it. I find it rather pretentious to simple say, you god is wrong because we have to stop looking somewhere when the opposite of that does the exact same thing. But for some reason it is touted as fact and the truth while claiming the opposite is the wrong because it starts in the same position, something was there, always had been, and poof, something happened.

      Now, here is the big point. Science doesn't even speak to a god. There is no reason for science to concern itself with a god at all. God isn't scientific, it can't be falsified and the only test for the truth requires an action that hadn't happened in modern times. Clearly there are defined rules in physics that seem to be different then in quantum physics. How did those rules come about and how did they grow from chaotic principle into an orderly function that we can understand at more apparent levels but not so much on a subatomic one. The presence of a god does nothing to understanding what is going on there.

      This reminds me of a joke that sort of fits. One day some scientists said we know how to create life, we can make it evolve and we can make it intelligent. So one of the scientists went to god and said, we can do all this, we don't need you ever

    306. Re:Oklahoma? by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      You call me an idiot while you cannot even grasp the basics of what we are discussing here. Try to understand this:

      The scientific theory and model of evolution does not give a rats ass on how life started, it is concerned only how life changes, evolves.

      Because of this, almost all atheist and most smart religious people can agree with this piece of science. Whether you think that a magician came by and waved his want to start life, or whether some god snipped his fingers, or whether it was a matter of change and probability has nothing to do whatsoever with the theory of evolution. The pope believes the christian god bootstrapped the process, science is still trying to find out how it started. Both think equal about evolution. Now do you get it?

      Place one in New York City and one in London, oh wait, now their pups are separate species even though they can still all be pure breed border hound collies. That's really something that makes sense right?

      No, it does not make sense, but that is because you use a strawman argument (which I think reveals the weakness of your position). No evolutionary scientist ever claimed that speciation will occur in one specific generation of your choosing. It happens gradually, over time, where it is often difficult to exactly pinpoint a discrete point in time where you suddenly have 2 different species. To stick with your dogs, try to make a male saint bernard dog to mate with a female maltese. It is physically impossible, while they belong to the same species. This is possibly a case of speciation in progress.

      And speciation has been observed, google for it. Quite recently there was a repeatable case of speciation with e-coli bacteria, so please stop spreading misinformation.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    307. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity. ("Supernatural" being, by definition, outside of the purview of science.)

      Bullshit. Point to a quote if you want to put words in his mouth - Dawkins has always been explicitly clear that science can't disprove religion, it can just say that the specific (oftentimes physical or historical) claims are extraordinarily unlikely to be true.

    308. Re:Oklahoma? by ClassMyAss · · Score: 1

      Bah. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof, and most conceptions of God are severely extraordinary yet come with absolutely no proof.

      The idea that the burden of proof lies on Dawkins is flat out wrong, and the other side of the argument has not offered any evidence to start a reasonable debate, so frankly, Dawkins battle has nothing to do with logic and everything to do with PR. Hence I don't really care if his tactics are underhanded or not.

    309. Re:Oklahoma? by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      You kidding me? I've never seen a blurry photograph of God running through the woods.

      " ... and that's when it struck me ... sasquatch IS GOD! "

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    310. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I think he is the atheistic equivalent of the guy on the university corner with a bugle calling passing girls "sluts" and telling them if they don't believe in God, they're going to hell.

      Of course you do. You just can't handle the fact that he rationally and factually demolishes your religion. Anyone who criticizes your beliefs is obviously very mean. So Dawkins isn't mean because he isults people. He's mean because he criticizes your religion.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    311. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      In my recent experience atheists have gone a lot further than religious people.

      Nice story. Unfortunately, you are extremely biased, and your stories only show that you yourself hold a deep hatred of atheists, not because they are assholes, but because they dare to question your superstition.

      Zeitgeist is trash, by the way.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    312. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      It is a fallacy because it is inductive logic, which is not always true.

      It is not a fallacy. Dawkins specifically says "why there almost certainly is no god", and his book, The God Delusion lays out the case for that position.

      Dawkins also uses "Strawmen" to describe religous people and religion, and does personal attacks on them as well.

      What straw men, specifically? If you personally don't ho0ld some of the beliefs Dawkins is arguing against, it doesn't mean that no one does.

      What personal attacks? Please give me a couple of specific examples.

      Immanuel Kant proved that you cannot prove God exists or does not exist by Science long ago. Anything else is pure logical fallacies like inductive logic, which Dawkins uses as well as circular references and wishful thinking.

      This is nonsense. Again, you obviously haven't even bothered to listen to what he's actually saying.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    313. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      If you were to show me someone who was as vehemently, outspokenly, and disrespectfully religious as Richard Dawkins is atheist, I would call them out on it as quickly as I call out Richard Dawkins for the ass-hattery that he pulls.

      What "ass-hattery", specifically? I suspect that you call it "ass-hattery" because he dares to question your superstitious beliefs. So you don't hate him because he attacks anyone (he doesn't). You hate him because you have no idea what his arguments really are, but you do now that you think he's an asshole for questioning yor beliefs.

      It's the same as the difference between inviting a republican to speak in San Francisco and inviting Rush Limbaugh to speak there

      This proves just how completely lost you are. Comparing Dawkins to Limbaugh? That's just insane.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    314. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      You are a hypocritical liar. That Guardian link in itself is actually just a bunch of attacks against Dawkins and atheists.

      Please give me a single example of "hate speech" from Dawkins.

      If it was some other Atheist who doesn't have a track record of bashing religion and religious people

      Please give me a single example of Dawkins bashing religious people.

      You clearly haven't even bothered to listen to what Dawkins has to say. Your is just a knee-jerk reaction based on your own piss-poor understanding of the arguments. Why are you making claims about a man you have never even bothered to actually listen to in the first place?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    315. Re:Oklahoma? by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      The problem with this approach is that people substitute "God" as an answer to questions:
      * to which we simply do not know the answers, nor any way to know them (yet, if ever) -- example: beginnings of the universe.
      OR
      * for which there are far better answers available that are based in reality, not mythology -- example: an evolved basis for human morality.

      If religious people acknowledged "we don't know X & Y, but I like the idea of explanation Z, so I'm going with that for now"... everyone would get along.

      They don't. The vast majority say "Z is true, and it's outside the realm of science so don't try to tell me it's not true."

    316. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      his evangelical hatred of anyone who believes in God

      How does this hatred show, specifically?

      and then there are athiests who are fanatical about making sure that NOBODY believes in God

      So anyone who dares to make an argument against the existence of God is "fanatical"?

      dawkins acts as if evolution is proof of God's nonexistance

      No he doesn't. He says that Evolution is just another things which makes "God did it" an unnecessary explanation. The point is, there's no need for God to explain these things.

      an offensively obnoxious blowhard like Dawkins

      How is he offensive and obnoxious, exactly? Please give me a couple of examples. Your ignorant post leads me to believe that you haven't actually bothered to look up with Dawkins real arguments are!

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    317. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Actually in many of his lectures he implies that religious people are less intelligent.

      Source?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    318. Re:Oklahoma? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Once you've actually experienced an out of body experience, you can no longer disbelieve in the existence of hallucination, false memories and esoteric myths.

      Out of body experiences exist but are not demonstrably a result of someone 'leaving' their body.

      Similarly people can believe they've experienced something they're calling God and be merely unable to rationally describe and explain the event.

      That the rational explanation is not at hand does not mean it should not be sought. Making up fictional characters is a surprising attempt at such an explanation and lacks credibility in the absence of verifiable evidence.

      People that believe they are Napolean get treated for mental illness. Why do people that believe some imaginary friend is talking to them get treated any differently?

    319. Re:Oklahoma? by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      Who's to say that there isn't a god, and he/she/it didn't design evolution? The whole concept of "god" is outside the realm of science, since it's something that can't be proven or falsified, unless a real god makes itself known

      It's not "outside" the realm of science. Logic and reality (i.e., science) provide no support whatsoever for belief in a god or gods. That doesn't mean "it/they don't exist". But that also doesn't mean the Flying Spaghetti Monster doesn't exist... that's an incredibly weak foundation for any strong belief.

      I have ideas that I find emotionally appealing -- a concept that the universe is an enormous machine or organism, and I am a tiny but essential cog or cell within it -- vague ideas of predestination and so on.

      But when I talk about "reality", I put those ideas aside.

      This is the problem with religion -- people have no idea what it's "truth-value" actually is. They actually pray NOT because it helps them think & evaluate by whispering to an imagined benevolent deity... but because they seriously think a magic being is listening, might help them out, and that praying is a better use of their time than trying to solve the problem themselves.

    320. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Dawkins' comments in the God delusion are widely considered to be hateful in nature

      Why and how, exactly? Examples, please.

      Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori

      This is a blatant lie which shows that you haven't even bothered to find out what Dawkins is actually saying. Truly pathetic.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    321. Re:Oklahoma? by eiapoce · · Score: 1

      "Intolerance" So long it has only be abused only by zealots, red fascists and terrorists.

      Whoever utters this word nowadays deserves to be shot on the spot.

    322. Re:Oklahoma? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>Arguing against something is not "stridency".

      No. Arguing stridently is stridency.

      >>Atheism is not a "worldview". Atheism is not believing in God. That's it.

      You know as well as I do the atheist worldview espoused so often here on Slashdot that all that matters is science, and anything that can't be scientifically proven is meaningless.

      It's also called logical positivism combined with scientism, but most people don't know what those terms are.

    323. Re:Oklahoma? by DrXym · · Score: 1
      That science, which is the systematic and empirical study of the natural world, can prove the non-existence of a supernatural entity. ("Supernatural" being, by definition, outside of the purview of science.)

      And you will point out exactly where Dawkins said any such thing. Please.

      You can no more prove that a god doesn't exist than that a magical space bicycle that farts planet size strawberries doesn't exist.

      So please highlight exactly where Dawkins makes this fundamental mistake in logic that you seem to think he has made.

    324. Re:Oklahoma? by rprins · · Score: 1

      If natural is taken to mean the common sense of anything that exists in this world, a supernatural thing acting/observing in a natural world, must be natural by definition. And this is more than trick with definitions: On what does God base his decisions? It's on a what he sees, which means he is as limited by cause and effect just as everything else.

    325. Re:Oklahoma? by Tom · · Score: 1

      This argument sounds a lot like the idea that a tree falling in a forest doesn't make any noise if there isn't anyone there to hear it.

      There's a subtle but important difference: The tree argument relies entirely on simplification to be interesting, and does not survive a look at the involved complexity. The Nietzsche argument does. (think sound = sound waves and their effects which go beyond hearing, then extend "anyone" likewise)

      How about another question: Are there aliens?

      By sheer numbers, it is likely that there are. However, if they can not ever affect us (e.g. their and our light cones never meet) then they do not "exist" in any meaningful sense for us, nor we for them.

      Here's another question: how was the Universe created? There's the Big Bang theory, and all its attendant parts about expansion and whatever, but what came before that? Was that directed by something of intelligence, or not?

      That's the standard strawman argument of the creationists that have retreated so far that they're trying to stage a final fight at the creation of the universe.
      The argument is great, because it shows that the thinker has not improved much beyond his scriptures 2000 year old model of thinking. The Big Bang was a four dimensional explosion, meaning that there is a singularity in time as well as in space there. The question "what came before that?" is entirely meaningless, and thus can not be answered. Creationists abuse that rhetorically, saying things like "see, you don't know either! I win!" But that's a pure linguistic shortcoming of english. In chinese, for example, there would be a very precise answer ("mu" - untranslatable as a word, roughly "the question can not be answered" or "the question makes no sense").

      Time began at the Big Bang. There is no "before". There is no "direction". There is not even a need for direction.

      I think, it's pretty ridiculous IMO to suggest that we have the answer to that question.

      We do not have "the answer". What we do have is a shortlist of theories that "check out". The god theory, on the other hand, has failed so many tests that anyone still defending it is crazy.

      Lastly, as far as the effects of a god, can you prove that people who miraculously have their cancer disappear don't owe their healing to a god?

      Why should I be the one responsible for the proof? He who makes the claim is the one who needs to provide the proof.

      What have you proven with your experiment? Nothing.

      Please? What has that got to do with anything? This is why we have peer-review, why experiments are repeated, and why everyone within the scientific community readily agrees that results of experiments need to be checked carefully, especially if the results are unexpected. Are you so desperate that you have to hide your little god in lab experiment errors?

      The only sane answer to the existence of god(s), higher beings, etc. is "I don't know".

      That is strict agnosticism. The answer is, however, incomplete. The full, correct answer is "I do not know for sure, but it doesn't seem very likely."

      The simple "I don't know" answer is celebrated by desperate believers as if it meant there's a 50:50 chance. But it doesn't. I also don't know if there's a giant polar bear in my bedroom right now, because I can't look and it could be gone when I get up. But - like god - it just isn't very likely.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    326. Re:Oklahoma? by IrquiM · · Score: 1

      What? We have what is supposed to be gods footprint and a blurry picture of him? That I did not know!

      --
      This is blinging
    327. Re:Oklahoma? by Tom · · Score: 1

      One could point out that there are still a lot of random variables and perhaps god is in those. They could say their god has influence on the mutations in evolutionary processes, or the unknown variables in weather systems, etc. I'm not saying that is the case. I'm just pointing out that just because it rains "due to atmospherics" doesn't rule out that it wasn't "because god is angry".

      Again, check the Nietzsche argument. If god is indescernable from pure randomness, then you can remove him without changing anything. If you can remove him and it makes no difference, then he's not "there" in any meaningful sense.

      It's a bit like those parties where if nobody saw you there, you weren't there. :-)

      But the god believers could say that at one point god decided to throw in a random mutation that eventually caused multi-cellular organisms.

      He who makes extraordinary claims must provide extraordinary proof.

      I claim it was me, going back in time one lazy sunday afternoon, and I lost a hair back in 5 billion BC and that served as the starting point of intelligent life here on earth.

      Now prove me wrong or worship me as your god. :-)

      And all of that ignores a god who maybe caused the big bang to happen in such a way that it caused everything to happen how it has (including me writing this post and pointing that out). But that gets into the whole no free will thing which I don't want to get into right now.

      I thought Lamarcks demon had been killed a hundred times by now. Don't they teach this shit at school anymore?

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    328. Re:Oklahoma? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Oh, that's not true. Most of my friends are atheists, and most of my roommates in college and grad school were atheists. I couldn't give two craps if you criticize my religion. Trust me. My last roommate couldn't stop speaking ill of it.

      Only an extreme minority of my friends are Christian.

      As I repeatedly said, I'm taking the portrayal of Dawkins on /. as how he argues, because I've got better things to do with my time (study for school and read all the literature I missed out on by majoring in abstract math) to read more science (or philosophy) books.

      So, if his portrayal is accurate, then my aforementioned logical criticism (re-read my post, please) is a demonstration of "religious people are morons." That is not logical. That is an insult.

      And "there is no proof, therefore God does not exist" does not a logical argument make. That's like an 11th century scientist saying "there is no proof of gravity off of the Earth, so there is no gravity off of the Earth."

      I have thick skin. I live in a liberal, non-Christian-majority town (my temporary church's pastor talks about how far less than a majority of Austinites believe), and almost all my friends and roommates are non-Christians, with many being atheists. They are not muzzled; they speak up about my religion. I couldn't give two shits.

      But I do not stand for people mischaracterizing what I say.

    329. Re:Oklahoma? by Tom · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure. Was Pot Pol an atheist? Stalin probably was.

      So?
      What hair colour did Pol Pot have? Or Stalin, Hitler, whoever? Would you call anyone who writes an article about "brown-headed fanatic regimes have an unrivaled kill count" a nutjob? Or maybe we should go by the colour of their underwear, or their shoe-size?

      If you want to claim that atheism kills (as the article author does), then you have to show causation, or at the very least demonstrate a strong correlation.

      Causation as well as correlation is easily shown for religious nutjobs and their crimes. For atheism, I've yet to see one. Even if you substract the cases where the religion was used as a cover. (*)

      (*) strictly speaking, you can not exclude them, you must ask yourself why religion provided such a good cover that it could be used as an excuse for murder. If you go out killing people because they wear brown shoes, size 5, you'll be called an insane murderer. If you kill people because they pray to a slightly different version of your god, there will be debates whether that's taking the faith a little too far. The difference is striking.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    330. Re:Oklahoma? by sqldr · · Score: 1

      It's hardly surprising really. Oklahoma is one of those states that the USA is embarassed about. As a British man, it's a bit like talking about Hull. We try not to mention the place to tourists, in case they find us out and it makes it back into a travel guide.

      --
      I wrote my first program at the age of six, and I still can't work out how this website works.
    331. Re:Oklahoma? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Evolution doesnt support anything, it just is.

      Dawkins does not argue "Evolution happened therefore there is no god".

      He argues evolution happened and also god is a pretty ridiculous proposition.

      Big difference.

      Why does the GP not understand what a fallacy is? I think it's you. A fallacy is an invalid argument. You said Dawkins makes many of these and therefore his arguments are invalid. The GP showed you that they were not false arguments and therefore you don't get to dismiss them so easily.

      Problem with that?

    332. Re:Oklahoma? by u38cg · · Score: 1

      So if you're saying that religion is restricted only to things that science can't currently measure and explain, all you've got is a god in the gaps in our knowledge. I hope he can breath in, because we're closing in on him ;)

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    333. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the real difference between /why/ and /how/, though? The more I think about it, the more I come to conclude that /why/ is just a /how/ with some (possibly imaginary) person's will attached to it.

    334. Re:Oklahoma? by edward2020 · · Score: 1

      I hope everyone realizes that this is a resolution - not a real piece of legislation. Thus, no one's speech is being limited. Really all this bill will do, if passed, is call for sending letters to university officials telling them about the resolution. And, since it doesn't call for any particular body, institution, or member to send such letters, I doubt that it would get posted anyway.

      --
      Don't worry about the mule, just load the wagon.
    335. Re:Oklahoma? by edward2020 · · Score: 1

      Well, the legislators will claim that they are the ones who are protecting free speech. And there certainly is no "establishing of religion" in this bill. I'd suggest that people turn their attention away from stupid resolutions which have no power in law and look instead to the way legislators and the courts have eroded our protection against real government threats to our rights, such as the increasingly ludicrous "reasonable" searches and seizures carried out by our nation's law enforcement.

      --
      Don't worry about the mule, just load the wagon.
    336. Re:Oklahoma? by edward2020 · · Score: 1

      Don't you guys realize that this resolution has NO legal effects? It's just dudes' blowing hot air.

      --
      Don't worry about the mule, just load the wagon.
    337. Re:Oklahoma? by AGMW · · Score: 1
      ... freedom from religion ...

      Now I'd vote for that! Yes Please! Where do I sign?

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    338. Re:Oklahoma? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'It is just that there cannot be a national religion that is forced upon the populace. At least that's what the framers we going for I believe.'

      I would disagree. Many of the colonists who inspired that (including the 'pilgrams' and 'puritans') freedom of religion clause had a religion that was actually too extreme and thus illegal where they came from. They wanted to whip, stock, burn, and maim in the name of god because their beliefs called for that. The founders were actually protecting their rights to do exactly that, saying that religion and religious practices are not merely above the law but outside of it. In the modern day we have chosen to largely ignore the amendment and actually have numerous laws and court precedents with respect to religion.

      'The mere presence of a mention or investigation into religion is not forcing anything upon anyone else..'

      Actually yes, that is how indoctrination works. Just like standing up and pledging allegiance every morning it has a psychological impact on a child.

      However, I agree that the amendment doesn't require all mention of religion be stricken from schools but it is an all or none thing. In my experience those who want religious views in school tend to only want their own religious view expressed and would quite upset if there were an honest and candid class on Satanism that lacked an anti slant.

      Ultimately, if Dawkins is there to speak of atheism he should be allowed to speak anymore than a proponent of any other religious stand. If he is there to speak agnostically about evolution then that is science and not religion at all.

    339. Re:Oklahoma? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'The statement, which, by the way, is the only statement that you can guarantee any two atheists will agree upon, is simply "lack of belief in God" or more generally "lack of belief in gods".'

      Atheism is the belief that there is no god/gods and that isn't a religion but IS a religious stance. Fortunately most atheists aren't atheists at all but agnostic and actually simply aren't reaching a conclusion until the evidence is in.

    340. Re:Oklahoma? by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

      You believe that pink unicorns don't exists

      Isn't that "Invisible pink unicorns"?

      --
      If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
    341. Re:Oklahoma? by guygo · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah! They even got both kinds of music, Country and Western.

    342. Re:Oklahoma? by AGMW · · Score: 1
      I think Dawkins is a prick ...

      Because you dislike his message or the way he, er, evangelises?

      [colours nail to post]
      I'm with Dawkins...
      [\colours nailed to post]
      ... and actually support his message and his method. For too long the religious have had carte blanch on aggressive marketing (eg "do this or you will go to hell", etc) and the atheists have pussyfooted around quietly shaking their heads in, er, disbelief!

      Honestly, I'm more than happy for people to believe whatever they want (some of my friends are religious!) but I seriously don't think it's right to, for example, use religious grooming to brainwash children from an early age. Case in point, to some people the Moonies is a religion, but even most other religions think it would be bad to bring children up as moonies and would indeed call it brainwashing! So please explain the difference? How is preaching your brand of religion different from someone else preaching theirs? (Obviously, not your as in you personally ;-) )

      The big religions seem to operate some sort of cartel where they don't seem to fight each other so much anymore, rather they band together to obtain spurious taxation rights and other legal shenanigans. Leaders of (almost) opposing religions get wheeled out for TV chat shows and the like and are never seen actually debating the relative merits of their particular brand of religion for if religion 'A' started to point out the apparent idiocy of religion 'B', and vica versa, both would (OK, maybe could) be shown to be smoke and mirrors! They tend to band together to show how magnanimous they are to share a stage/platform with the 'other' religions (see, we're not all nutters!) as they try desperately to keep the stopper in the religion genie's bottle!

      Why don't the big religions debate amongst themselves? They appear to not mind (so much!) what religion you are, so long as you adhere to some religion! Surely it would be better for someone to not believe in any god than to believe in the wrong god - at least you'd think so from god's point of view!

      Religion should be added to tobacco and alcohol and there should be a minimum age limit before legal exposure. That wouldn't stop parents from allowing their kids a small glass of wine with their lunch, but excessive liberalism in the household concerning any of them ought to bring the social services 'round for a quiet checkup!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    343. Re:Oklahoma? by 1jpablo1 · · Score: 1
      Dawkins does not claim that science can "prove" de non-existence of god (as in a mathematical proof).

      That would be silly. What science can do is consider the idea of god as an hipothesis with physical consecuences and investigate about it. As in, "gather evidence for or against it".

      And for the record, the fact that dawkins does "science" for a living has nothing to do with the fact that he can discuss and analyze religion rationally.

      He could sell cars or write poetry or develop video games and still could use his intellect to think critically and cuestion dogmas and arrive to rational answers.

      He would still arrive to the conclusion that there is zero evidence of a supranatural entity resembling "god".

    344. Re:Oklahoma? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Faith is intellectually lazy.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    345. Re:Oklahoma? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      In all honesty Dawkins himself does not understand these things he is talking about. He has no PHD in theology yet claims to be an expert in it.

      So you have to be indoctrinated as a theist before you can criticize theism? How convenient.

      Many of these points he makes is unclear, and can easily be argued one way or another.

      I've never heard Dawkins be anything other than clear and convincing. (Ok, sometimes a little arrogant too) If you want to present some ambiguous arguments I'd be happy to walk you through them.

      One thing for certain is that he has a bias in them, and does not completely think out his arguments.

      The only bias I'm aware of is against belief without proof. Is the desire for evidence a bad thing?

      Evolution could support Atheism, Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc, why should it be either Atheism or Christianity as Dawkins states it should be?

      Does he say that? I'm pretty sure he argues that evolution makes any supernatural explanation unnecessary. That includes Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism etc.

      This makes no sense as there could be more than one answer, and why should we accept Dawkin's answer when he can offer no valid proof or evidence to support it?

      Because there's no reason to assume the supernatural without evidence. When you're constructing a theory, you want to use as few assumptions as possible. You only make more assumptions when they increase they predictive power, i.e when it's necessary to make the model fit our observations. Unless you have some observations (data) that require the assumption of a supernatural entity to explain, there's no reason to even consider the possibility.

      If I said it supported Christianity, I would be just as fallacious as Dawkins saying it favored Atheism, when we both could be incorrect and it favors nothing or Buddhism or Hinduism instead.

      Evolution does not "support" atheism. It is consistent with atheism, and powerful enough to explain our observations. It eliminates the need to make supernatural assumptions to explain speciation. If you have other reasons to believe in God, evolution does not weaken those in any way.

      I honestly don't think you understand what a fallacy is, I could be wrong here. You've argued why they couldn't be fallacies, but you used faulty or unclear logic yourself to do so.

      Really? Where?

      Thanks for taking the time to try and rebuttle some of Dawkins' fallacies. I'm sorry you didn't do better.

      Care to point out any mistakes I made? I pretty clearly explained why those weren't fallacies. If you think I'm wrong, at least show me where.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    346. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You call me an idiot while you cannot even grasp the basics of what we are discussing here. Try to understand this:

      The scientific theory and model of evolution does not give a rats ass on how life started, it is concerned only how life changes, evolves.

      Yes, I call you an idiot and I think now, all doubts about it are gone. I wasn't talking about the scientific theory, I was talking about the model itself being dependent on life being present with is dependent on a universe being here. I stated that not once now, not twice now, but this will be the third time and you still probably won't get it. Lets see if I can't put this in other terms that you might be able to understand Z=evolution. Z is dependent on A and B happening before Z can happen. Z can be it's own formula but without events that make up A and B, Z cannot exist.

      Because of this, almost all atheist and most smart religious people can agree with this piece of science. Whether you think that a magician came by and waved his want to start life, or whether some god snipped his fingers, or whether it was a matter of change and probability has nothing to do whatsoever with the theory of evolution. The pope believes the christian god bootstrapped the process, science is still trying to find out how it started. Both think equal about evolution. Now do you get it?

      This has nothing to do with what I said. Please get off your kneejerk ass and pay attention. And BTW, science can't claim a god because it's untestable so it would have to be abiogenesis.

      No, it does not make sense, but that is because you use a strawman argument (which I think reveals the weakness of your position). No evolutionary scientist ever claimed that speciation will occur in one specific generation of your choosing. It happens gradually, over time, where it is often difficult to exactly pinpoint a discrete point in time where you suddenly have 2 different species. To stick with your dogs, try to make a male saint bernard dog to mate with a female maltese. It is physically impossible, while they belong to the same species. This is possibly a case of speciation in progress.

      And yet if you goto talk origins which claims to report all the relevant science, you see exactly that. They did it with the claim of the salamanders in California to claim they are a new species, they changed the capable of interbreeding to not willingly and even put the separated by geographical structure there. Yet while the border collies presented are still the same species, and while dogs are perhaps on of the most manipulated species in the world, we have never seen a dog "evolve" into another species. Same goes for cattle and farm animals, the cow and pig can be bread for completely extreme opposite effects and yet they don't jump the species. So changing a definition to fit specific observances fail when applies outside that box, regardless of if a scientist says so or not, it probably means that those definitions are being manipulated to create something that just isn't there.

      And speciation has been observed, google for it. Quite recently there was a repeatable case of speciation with e-coli bacteria, so please stop spreading misinformation.

      Actually, no. The E-coli bacteria evolved a trait that it's not supposed to have through normal observances. This doesn't mean it speciated, it means that our understanding of it was wrong. It was still E-coli bacteria and no one connected with the experiment that I know of has claimed it to be a new species outside of a variant of the existing species. I know this creates a problem for you because you obviously like to add to what was said. I noticed that with you other two replies. This of course goes back to the above where definitions are being changed because some want this to be something it isn't. We have a new strain of e-coli, not a new species in and of itself.

    347. Re:Oklahoma? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Atheism is not a positive statement, it is a statement of a lack of belief. Is disbelieving in the existence of Leprechauns actually a belief in and of itself? See how absurd you're statements are becoming in attempting to tar atheism as a religious stance?

      And agnosticism is something else entirely. I doubt most atheists are the retards you are trying to make them out to be, though I suspect most you've encountered (like me, for instance), have a pretty low appraisal of your abilities and honesty.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    348. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Inconclusive? Bullshit. Here's an experiment that's pretty easy to do.

      They say that God heals the sick. OK then, let's find some amputees that have had their bodies healed. Documented new arms and legs.

      There are some outcomes of this experiment that we can expect. We will either find healed amputees, or we won't. If we find them, it means that we still have to rule out other possibilities before we decide that it's God doing it. If we don't find healed amputees, it means that either God doesn't heal the sick, or it means that God is a cocksucking prick who hates amputees enough to make an exception for them in his sick-healing program.

      Either way, we've learned something and narrowed down the possibilities here, and further study is warranted.

      And if we continue testing, hundreds, thousands, millions of times, and still there is no god detected, that means something too. It means that god's existence is more and more unlikely based on the evidence.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    349. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      That's nothing. No examples, just assertions. Fail.

      So, go ahead, give me ONE place where Dawkins uses a fallacy. Be specific.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    350. Re:Oklahoma? by syousef · · Score: 1

      You kidding me? I've never seen a blurry photograph of God running through the woods.

      You need to go watch "Life of Brian" again.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    351. Re:Oklahoma? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      Science itself uses induction, so what?

      Also, if you're talking about straw men, that's what this characterization of his argument is. Dawkins says that either the observable world without God would be very different from the world with God, or the question of God's existence is completely irrelevant. This puts it within the purview of science, since it deals with exploring the observable.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    352. Re:Oklahoma? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      He can't answer, because that's a straw man and Dawkins knows full well and has stated repeatedly that you can't disprove a negative. However, you can make a valid argument from ignorance: if God's existence makes any difference to the observable reality at all, you'd expect science to be the best way to detect it, and since it hasn't, it's an argument against the existence of a detectable God. It doesn't mean that there can't be an undetectable one, but in that case the question is completely meaningless, and you might as well consern yourself with invisible pink unicorns.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    353. Re:Oklahoma? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      I think it's reasonable to assume that scientists are allowed to use colloquial meanings too. Also, look between the covers, will you? That way you'll be able to have a discussion about his actual views, rather than trying to extract them from the title of a book.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    354. Re:Oklahoma? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      Surprise: if you're not a theist, you're an atheist.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    355. Re:Oklahoma? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      There are studies about this, and theism doesn't corellate positively with education.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    356. Re:Oklahoma? by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      What you described as "your problem" with Dawkins is a pure ad hominem argument, and a rather ridiculous one at that, since philosophy of science doesn't support theistic arguments. If you took the time to drop all these names and terms to look impressive, you might as well have said at least something specific.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    357. Re:Oklahoma? by salle_from_sweden · · Score: 1

      Nope it's not reflective on your intelligence. It is however reflective on your general knowledge...

    358. Re:Oklahoma? by amilo100 · · Score: 1

      Nice story. Unfortunately, you are extremely biased, and your stories only show that you yourself hold a deep hatred of atheists, not because they are assholes, but because they dare to question your superstition.

      Unfortunately not. I swing between atheism and agnosticism. I can however say that I do not have a hate for anybody.

      These are just some anecdotal experiences from mine. Most of those far out bigoted responses were from my friends or people I know fairly well - I was just extremely surprised at the level of the hate.

    359. Re:Oklahoma? by doshell · · Score: 1

      However, I'm not so sure about your take on the 1st Amendment. It is for freedom of religion, not freedom from religion. It is just that there cannot be a national religion that is forced upon the populace. At least that's what the framers we going for I believe.

      Saying "freedom of religion" does not allow one not to have a religion is the same as saying "freedom of speech" does not allow one to remain shut up.

      --
      Score: i, Imaginary
    360. Re:Oklahoma? by doshell · · Score: 1

      A "god" answer is an answer to /who/ and maybe /why/. Science is about asking /how/.

      Also keep in mind that asking "who" is responsible for something does not automatically imply anyone at all is.

      --
      Score: i, Imaginary
    361. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I swing between atheism and agnosticism.

      Atheism and agnosticism are not related. Atheism means that you don't believe in God. Agnosticism says nothing about whether you belief in God or not, but whether you believe it's possible to actually know.

      I was just extremely surprised at the level of the hate.

      I call BS.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    362. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why even attampt to pit science against religion? They are two different things... They were meant to coincide and to strenthen the other, they were never intended to kill one or the other through debunking either. There are a lot of things that science can answer with enough research, but science can only go so far before it starts becoming beliefs and is then tapping into religion and theology.

      I say, believe what you will, science has it's place. what is the point in arguing about our beliefs with someone who believes differently? Seriously, we need to coexist in this World despite what our beliefs are. This World would be a lot better place if we did that, and didnt start holy wars and attack people based on what they believe. Step back and look at the whole picture.

      I dont care about what you believe, and you dont care what I believe. Tomorrow, our lives will go on, and we will have no other influence on each other. Religion is right for some, but not for others, does it even really matter if you dont happen to convince someone else of your point of view other than to yourself? Either way, your life will go on, and so will everyone elses.

      Supernatural is something that is unknown and unexplainable. Scientists have tried, and they end up grasping at straws. I used to rely on science entirely until science ran out of answers it could give me. But that's answers pertaining to what I am looking for and for my life.

      If science answers every question in your life, then that is great, get on with your life, and coexist with those who dont find all the answers in science, or those who would rather rely on faith.

      Sincerely,
      -Anonymous Coward too lazy to make an account
      for follow up: nvdabb@gmail.com

    363. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, you are missing the point. It is not up to Dawkins to prove that God doesn't exist; it is up to the Deists to prove that God DOES exist.

    364. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "humans living in the United states are basically drooling morons."

      Yes, it does appear to be the case.

    365. Re:Oklahoma? by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      I wasn't talking about the scientific theory, I was talking about the model itself being dependent on life being present (...)

      Yes, it is very hard to model something that does not exist. Do you always claim such obvious facts?

      But let's go back to your original statement:

      Not to mention that a lot of the evolution(1) theory is unprovable itself because of lack of evidence and the constrained testing. Evolution(2) also relies on Abiogenesis (...) [numbers mine]

      So you talk about evolution as a scientific theory on point (1), and then bring up evolution at point 2, but it is not the evolution theory? As evolution can be interpreted as observable evolution as well as the scientific theory and model of evolution, it is ambiguous to not explicitly specify which of the two you are referring to. Calling me an idiot because of this miscommunication is unnecessarily rude in my book.

      It was still E-coli bacteria and no one connected with the experiment that I know of has claimed it to be a new species outside of a variant of the existing species (...)

      What you say could be right in that you may not know anyone who has made such claim. However, please re-read my original post: it says 'speciation'. Now look at the title of the quoted article: "Mechanisms of diversification and speciation (...). It is right there. This is a scientific paper stating facts. Do you still want to go against this article? Please write a scientific rebuttal.

      You can participate in science. If you have different findings that contradict this scientific report, do your own experiments and put the results up for peer review. That is how science works. Don't bring up strawman arguments abouts dogs and 1 generation. Put up or shut up is an appropriate US expression, I believe.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    366. Re:Oklahoma? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'Is disbelieving in the existence of Leprechauns actually a belief in and of itself?'

      Yes it is the belief that there are leprechauns. You can believe in leprechauns or not believe in leprechauns, some of us choose not to believe we know whether or not there are leprechauns.

      Of course you choose leprechauns as your as yet not evidenced belief because leprechauns are generally thought to be ridiculous but certain squids and liquid water on mars were equally evidenced and likely/unlikely two years ago.

      Really, there is absolutely no evidence or reason to believe either way on the religion issue (and I'm referring to creation not christianity, we aren't talking about the liklihood of any particular fairytale being true) beyond the fact that its simpler to believe in the Universe by itself than the universe + an intelligence that could create it. The simplest answer is USUALLY correct but the world is plagued with countless examples of exceptions.

    367. Re:Oklahoma? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'And agnosticism is something else entirely. I doubt most atheists are the retards you are trying to make them out to be'

      I've encountered no shortage of people claiming to be atheists who actually merely believed that the most likely answer based on current evidence is that there is no god (creator, etc). These are actually agnostics and include most intelligent people and scientists. This is quite different from actual atheists who have reached the firm conclusion that there is no god without keeping an open mind to evidence to the contrary.

      Actual atheists and religious believers can all be safely grouped together as the small and closed minded. Apparently you are in this group so you can save comments about your subjective appraisal of my 'abilities' and 'honesty'.

    368. Re:Oklahoma? by shaitand · · Score: 1

      minor correction

      'Yes it is the belief that there are leprechauns.'

      should of course be

      'Yes it is the belief that there are no leprechauns.'

    369. Re:Oklahoma? by mog007 · · Score: 1

      I'm not aware of Dawkins actually claiming to have evidence of the non-existence of a deity. He's a fucking biologist, he's got training in the scientific method. Science doesn't prove anything, positive or otherwise. Science disproves ideas. Evolution isn't "proven" it's just the theory that's held sway the longest, and it's dramatically different from the evolution that Darwin thought about.

      As far as non-belief, Richard Dawkins has himself said, including the book he's probably going to lecture on, that he's not a 100% strong atheist. He knows that it's generally a bad idea to subscribe to absolutes with knowledge. As a scientist, he's happy to both say "I don't know" and "Ok, I'll change my mind on that subject"

    370. Re:Oklahoma? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Is there a middle ground to be had here? Can atheists and theists both be right?

      Depends what part you are talking about. Both sides can be polite.

      People on both sides sometimes become impolite - sometimes extremely impolite. It tends to be a vicious circle. You can't really assign the blame either side. There has been enough rude words from both sides to reasonably explain someone from either side becoming rather ill tempered in return.

      As far as faith goes, the very essence of faith is that that it cannot be proven or disproven.

      When it comes to science, there is definite right and wrong. And in fact the majority of atheists and the majority of Christians are in fact both right. Both right.

      Atheists are in general perfectly content in going along with whatever mainstream science says. If virtually the entire scientific community says the earth is X year old, atheists don't much care what number X is. It has no special meaning for them. Knowing X is just an interesting factoid. If virtually all physicists say Relativity is how stuff works, atheists are perfectly happy to accept Relativity. If virtually all biologists say Evolution stuff works, atheists are perfectly happy to accept Evolution in exactly the same way and for the exact same reason they accept Chemistry.

      The majority of Christians are also right about the science. Most Christians accept God creating the earth, and accept science as the study of how God's Creation works. Most Christians either never really thought much about it, or they look to something like Psalm 19:
      The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork.
      Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night sheweth knowledge.
      There is no speech nor language, where their voice is not heard.
      Their line is gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the world....

      If I may humbly submit my interpretation, I believe that is saying (at least in part) that God's own Testimony and God's Own Truth is written throughout the heavens and throughout the earth. That if Galileo says the earth moves around the sun, then the Faithful and Reasoning mind can look to the heavens through science and find God's testimony in His handiwork. The heavens an the earth utter speech and show knowledge. And if the heavens proclaim the earth moves, then that is God's Own Truth. If the Bible seems to say the earth does not move, that is either figurative/symbolic, or it is due to our limited and imperfect human understanding of the Bible, or due to the limited and imperfect human grasp of the human scribes attempting to record God's revelation into the Bible. If the heavens and the earth testify to a billions-years Old earth, then that is God's Testimony written in God's handiwork. If the Bible seems to say the earth is only a few thousand years old, that is either figurative/symbolic, or it is due to our limited and imperfect human understanding of the Bible, or due to the limited and imperfect human grasp of the human scribes attempting to record God's revelation into the Bible. If the Bible's description of creation seems to conflict with evolution, that is because the Genesis account was either figurative/symbolic, or it is due to our limited and imperfect human understanding of the Bible, or due to the limited and imperfect human grasp of the human scribes attempting to record God's revelation into the Bible. And seriously, what human main can truly comprehend even the smallest glimmer of the Act of Creation? What scribe thousands of years ago could have comprehended even a fragment of the modern scientific understanding of events? Scribes could only record the Bible through their small limited and imperfect understanding. Through the eyes and limited grasp of ancient goat herders and desert nomads, the Genesis account in the Bible is physically or symbolically to not unreasonably far off from the modern scientific description of events.

      There are however a minority of Christians who have unfor

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    371. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Hey now, you can't talk shit about Oklahoma when you're British. They may be Okies, but the are OUR Okies.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    372. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      You say that each thing has its own place. I say that you're completely wrong about that.

      I don't respect your ideas at all. I respect people because they are human beings. People's ideas are for arguing and debating.

      There is no reason I should respect your idea just because you are fond of it.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    373. Re:Oklahoma? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      at least 1 in 2 Americans are drooling morons.

      That's a ridiculous claim.
      Not many people drool.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    374. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, he criticises myth without addressing the metaphor for the spiritual. He's not dishonest, just intellectually lazy or ignorant which makes him a hypocrite.

    375. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which does not mean that prayer isn't a good or valuable thing. Self reflection, asking yourself for guidance with the things that trouble you seems to be a good idea. Praying for gods to intervene miraculously may not result in any physical change, but it would likely result in positive behaviour towards the goal for those that did so. Thinking that life itself is a miracle, that all of creation is a miracle is a good metaphor for the spiritual world. Just because some take the metaphor too literally doesn't make it invalid.

    376. Re:Oklahoma? by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      Did you mean to link to an article within that site? Or were you using the existence of the site itself as your argument?

      If your point was that some people believe in creationism AND understand the theory of evolution, you've entirely missed my point.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    377. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      So because I don't buy the BS argument that science can actually investigate claims of a SUPERNATURAL being despite the fact that "supernatural" is defined as being outside of nature and science I'm a fundie? Short answer: no, I'm not. Hell, I don't even know what I would be a fundamentalist OF... I'm not a Christian/Muslim/Jew/Buddhist/Hindu/Odinist/Zoroastrian/Scientologist/member of any other religion and I don't even believe in any traditional Western style omniscient/omnipotent deity.

      You are also, apparently, under the impression that I was arguing against Dawkins directly, which I wasn't (although many of my points still stand against him... I've read some of his stuff and his attempts at theology and philosophy are mediocre at best, ignorant and childish at worst). I was arguing against another post, which contained none of the weasel words you mention.

      By the way, the only reason to include the words "almost certainly" in an assertion is to save face while conceding that, on some level, you can never actually prove what you claim. Dawkins is smart enough to see this, and inserts such language... apparently you are not smart enough to understand why.

      Thanks for playing.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    378. Re:Oklahoma? by Alsee · · Score: 3, Informative

      Religious people, at least in the US, have been ceding power to the secularists since the Salem Witch Trials.

      The rest of your post is clearly anti-secularist, and I find it hysterical that somehow didn't notice that the above comment is incredibly pro-secularist. Unless of course you are of the view that returning to the Salem Witch Trials would be a GOOD thing.

      suing to have christmas and easter displays removed from public grounds

      Part of defending our Constitutional right of religious freedom.

      The Constitution protects our individual freedoms against the force and powers of government. The government cannot oppress any disfavored religion. Nor can the government establish favoritism for any particular religion.

      The First Amendment required that the FORCE and POWER of government remain neutral on religion. The force and powers of government cannot be used to infringe our individual religious freedoms, cannot be used to establish any religion as governmentally favored above any other.

      The Government shouldn't be meddling in religious displays at all, and to the extent it is permissible at all it is only permissible if the government does not establish any religion above any other, like in Washington state had a display equally and non-nondiscriminatorily open to submissions representing any and all religions and religious viewpoints. You might remember some news stories about it - everything was peaceful and quiet until someone submitted an atheist sign for the display. And then of course there was a shitfit over it - a shitfit by Christians.

      public for everyone but christians

      The Constitution requires EQUAL treatment.

      It only takes about 25 IQ points to see why Christianity is almost exclusively the religion involved in such cases - Christianity is the overwhelming majority religion. As such, in our Democratic system, it is generally the only religion in a position to attempt to hijack and abuse the force and powers of government to establish favoritism for itself. Christianity is the only religion in a position to commit constitutional violations, so obviously it is going to be the only religion involved in lawsuits for committing constitutional violations.

      suing to remove moments of silence (cause someone might use the time to pray, ooohh)

      The ACLU wins virtually every School Prayer case because they are defending the "reasonable middle ground" position, defending our Constitutional protection of freedom of religion against the force government.

      The ACLU position is virtually identical to the Supreme Court position. The ACLU explicitly supports the right of students to pray in school. The ACLU position is that government officials cannot abuse their governmental powers to infringe upon students' protected freedom of religion. The government cannot favor nor oppress any religion, cannot promote nor suppress any particular religious beliefs or practice. Each and every case the ACLU has brought strictly targeted government officials attempting to use the force of government for the purpose of meddling in students' religion.

      Students have the right to (non-disruptively) pray in school.
      The force of government cannot be used for the purpose of promoting student prayer,
      nor can force of government cannot be used for the purpose of suppressing student prayer.

      Again again again, there is no problem no problem no problem with students praying in school. The problem is the use of government powers attempting to promote or suppress student prayer.

      Being an atheist is not even scientific. A true scientist would be agnostic

      Only if you apply a ludicrously extreme definition.
      Are you "agnostic" about the existence of unicorns?
      Are you "agnostic" about the existence of faeries?
      You can't prove unicorns and faeries don't exist. If you were being truly rational you have to admit you are "agnostic" about Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny.

      Most self-defined atheists in the US are

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    379. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      You seem to be forgetting that a being capable of shaping reality in whatever way it wants is more than capable of reshaping reality so that nobody would know the difference. You also seem to think that just because a deity fails to behave in some arbitrary way you think it should behave that it clearly does not exist.

      To use your example of amputees... you cannot rule out that an all-powerful and all-knowing being could heal an amputee by preventing the amputation in the first place, eliminating the potential of finding healed amputees. Such a being could also, presumably, enter the thoughts and minds of all involved and simply remove all memory of the amputation, which would have the same effect.

      The point here is that given the ramifications of an omnipotent deity, any test you can envision to prove OR disprove the existence of such a being is going to be inherently flawed and therefore inconclusive.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    380. Re:Oklahoma? by iamacat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Atheism is merely a classification of religion that is on par with "N/A"

      Actually classic Atheism goes much further than "N/A". It is an unquestionable belief that no intelligent powers were involved in our creation, our life has no higher purpose than whatever an individual (or at least a society) feels like doing and our consciousness disappears with death of our brain cells. Many atheists rely on Occam's razor principle to support their belief that anything not covered by today's science doesn't exist. In reality, although, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the simplest explanation of the facts is usually true, there are plenty of examples where the actual explanation is more complex than anyone could have imagined beforehand. One needs to look no further than the theory of relativity or quantum physics.

      "N/A" would be more of a person who doesn't give much thought to religious questions. There are more non-religious people than atheists and most people who would identify themselves as Christians are actually non-religious and basically view church as a Sunday cultural event.

      As for myself, I believe that, based on what we observe in the rest of the universe, it's extremely unlikely that we are NOT part of some kind of bigger picture - like electrons in an atom, a single cell in a human body or an individual animal in an ecosystem. However I also can not see how any particular person can claim to have the complete answer on what that big picture is.

       

    381. Re:Oklahoma? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      But science isn't exactly conclusive in everything either. Like the big bang theory...what was there before the big bang? I hear no answers to that that sound any more plausible than God being there and starting things out....maybe he was the big bang, etc? Until science can rule out God, or can come to conclusive answers...why should all possibilities not be considered?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    382. Re:Oklahoma? by monkeybutter · · Score: 1

      It has been a while since I read "The God Delusion", and in all honesty I stopped reading because I found it too preachy...

      HOWEVER, I do recall him making it quite clear that he had no PROOF for the non-existence of God, only that he chooses to not believe based on evidence he has seen. In much the same way that there is no PROOF that evolution is correct, but lacking any more credible theory it makes sense to treat it as such.

    383. Re:Oklahoma? by Rosy+At+Random · · Score: 1

      They are facets of human behaviour. Is that then all that god might be?

      --
      Would you like a slice of toast?
    384. Re:Oklahoma? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      In general, I don't disagree with you but you are very wrong about Buddhism. In fact, other Indian* religions are also differently different from western religions so that westerners are frequently mistaken.

      Buddhism and God: Buddha never said there was any God. In *core* Buddhist philosophy, where the laws of nature as per Buddhist view are described, God doesn't appear at all. You don't have to worship/pacify any God like creature to be "successful" in Buddhist philosophy. The core Buddhist philosophy is quite atheist. The branches of Buddhism that are now popular (Sri Lankan, Thai, Japanese etc) might have introduced God like entities, I am not conversant with the intricacies of these branches of Buddhism.

      Other general points about Buddhism that may surprise westerners:
      1. Buddha didn't perform miracles. No miracle cures of mystery diseases, natural calamities etc.
      2. Historicity of Buddha is not necessary for Buddhism to work. Though there is not much doubt that Buddha was a historical person (as opposed to a mythological/imaginary one). Buddha was not someone special i.e. he himself said that the "path" he found could be found by anyone if he tries. Following his theory is just a short cut as compared to the first principles way of inquiry. For details: http://rajivmalhotra.sulekha.com/blog/post/2004/11/myth-of-hindu-sameness.htm

      * less than .1% Indians are Buddhists but I call it an Indian religion because of its Indian origins. Not only because Buddha happened to live geographically in India, but the whole philosophy can be considered a branch of Indian philosophies.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    385. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny that you should end this with QED.

      Note: I am not at all a theist.

      However, at the level of very small spatial and temporal scales, measurable reality is purely statistical. We are adapted not to see things that way -- literally, since our senses filter out a lot of real statistical noise that we can measure with instruments. It's energy efficient to seek to interact with only the most probable macrostates and not to worry about the microstates that are behind them. There may be all manner of really weird transient macrostates that are perfectly acceptable in statistical thermodynamics, and even fully consistent with the Standard Model in the limit where it is accurate. In fact, given what we know of QED in the limit of the slice of spacetime we occupy, the slices we have visited, and the slices of spacetime we can infer the flatness of at a distance, it would be unusual if these macrostates did not happen from time to time.

      If we have a box of room temperature gas sitting on the floor at sea level, it would be very improbable for all of it to condense into one of the upper corners, but would not be unnatural in the sense of violating statistical or quantum mechanics (or GR, for that matter).

      Likewise, "miraculous" things that do not violate statmech/QM/GR in the limits of their useful accuracy might simply be unexpected (due to errors or limitations in prediction or measurement) or merely very improbable.

      There is a lot of room there to hide an active, interventionist, non-human intelligence, and it will be very hard to close it off.

      This is not what theists tend to believe, however, unless they're into something like a Quantum Loki. Which would be sorta cool, and might be an attractive scapegoat for some frustrated would-be users of the LHC.

      It may be that we figure out how to probe Planck scales and beyond, and get a nasty shock in finding out that mechanics aren't probabilistic at those lengths/timescales/energies. In the other direction we might have a more complete and more deterministic model for a variety of low energy slow-rolling fields that permeate all space. However, until then, there's still *lots* of room for people to imagine some sort of god(s) without conflicting with current physical theory.

    386. Re:Oklahoma? by amilo100 · · Score: 1

      Nowhere did I claim that it is the same. Here is a definition of agnosticism:

      âoeagnostic - a person who claims that they cannot have true knowledge about the existence of God (but does not deny that God might exist) âoe

      I do not know whatever the reason is that things (universe,etc...) popped into existence. I do not claim special knowledge about the matter. Some days I feel that there may be an underlying reason in all this (call that reason what you want) and some days not.

      I call BS

      I like how you like to deny everything. It is like a christian saying that there are not fundamentalist christians. I am not the only one claiming to have seen this âoeangry atheistâ phenomenon. If you doubt the level of angry atheists, I would like you to look around www.reddit.com/r/atheism for a while. Or maybe use google (search: angry atheist)

      I suspect that you yourself may probably a fairly committed atheist and therefore will dismiss anything based on your belief (and not reason).

    387. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I haven't forgotten anything. If you read other articles I've written, and what others have pointed out as well, you'll see that a God who can do whatever the fuck he wants blows a rational universe right out of the water. It makes the universe completely unpredictable, and I haven't seen any pots of petunias turn into sperm whales lately.

      you cannot rule out that an all-powerful and all-knowing being could heal an amputee by preventing the amputation in the first place

      You've got to be joking.

      The point here is that given the ramifications of an omnipotent deity, any test you can envision to prove OR disprove the existence of such a being is going to be inherently flawed and therefore inconclusive.

      You're arguing that the universe is random and that nothing at all can be known. You're arguing that you don't know if 2+2 is 4, or if it is something else.

      If you want to argue that, then I'm safe in calling you an idiot.

      Idiot.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    388. Re:Oklahoma? by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link. I've been thinking about that and wondering where it was. The e-coli thing. I am waiting with bated breath for more info.

    389. Re:Oklahoma? by huckamania · · Score: 1

      At least you admit you are anti-Christian. The rest of your rantings are pathetic. Somehow you've turned freedom of religion into freedom from religion. As you readily, but carelessly admit several times, if Native American religious practice were more common, you would be against that as well.

      I'll reiterate, I am not a Christian. I did go to Catholic school, but it was a good school and they never force their beliefs on anyone. To the contrary, the religion class studied all the major religions. And, and, and not once were those religions portrayed in a negative light.

    390. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a load of bullcrap.

      I agree about power of prayer and other things that just plain don't work, just like Uri Geller didn't bend no spoons, thank you very much.

      The science has not only exactly defined $Deity, but also did it in a way where no interference is scientifically testable.

      How would you prove or disprove that $Deity has control over everything we call random (usually at the quantum level)?

      Everything "random" is pretty much up for grabs, with no way of proving/disproving. You take any atom that can radioactively decay, how the heck do you tell if $Deity had "meddled" with the particular time at which it had decayed?! Impossible.

      That's as good a definition as any. Measurable phenomena where we can't really tell if any meddling had happened. Not at all.

    391. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      He does address that. Did you even bother to read his books?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    392. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I certainly know for sure that Dawkins regularly labels theists as being, as a general rule, superstitious, ignorant, unintelligent, unsubtle, simpletons, archaic, unprogressive, etc.

      That's great, but I didn't ask for "general rule" (as in your subjective and biased opinion). I asked for specific examples.

      And what's more, he seems to be in a crusade to go all over the world giving talks where he does so.

      This is just silly. Comparing giving talks across the world to slaughering people? Yeah, it takes a theist to come up with something like that I guess :)

      I've gradually come to see that Dawkins, while quite intelligent, isn't really very knowledgeable outside a very narrow field, but goes around acting as if he is, and won't listen to reason when people try to enlighten him about his errors and misunderstandings.

      Once again, an example? You people never seem to be able to come up with a single example!

      He doesn't know enough about, for example, philosophy or the social sciences to understand that the scientistic, atheistic worldview he's crusading for is not nearly as solid as he thinks it is.

      Yawn. More pointless personal attacks rather than addressing the issue. That's theism for you right there. You are merely asserting that he doesn't know enough. You have not managed to show that assertion to be true.

      Once you realize how many problems Dawkins' whole worldview has, you start to think that perhaps he is a bit intellectually lazy.

      What do you mean by "Dawkins' whole worldview", specifically? What are these problems?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    393. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Arguing stridently is stridency.

      And you think anyone who doesn't believe in your god is arguing stridently.

      You know as well as I do the atheist worldview espoused so often here on Slashdot that all that matters is science, and anything that can't be scientifically proven is meaningless.

      That science is held in high regard here at Slashdot is irrelevant. Atheism still isn't a worldview. It's about as much of a worldview as not believing in Santa.

      It's also called logical positivism combined with scientism, but most people don't know what those terms are.

      Atheism still isn't a worldview. This has got nothing to do with atheism as such.

      By the way, "Scientism" is usually used by religious fundamentalists who feel threatened by the progress of science. Before you whine about "stridency", maybe you should look at yourself. You could find that you get certain responses from people because of your own... stridency.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    394. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      So, if his portrayal is accurate, then my aforementioned logical criticism (re-read my post, please) is a demonstration of "religious people are morons."

      No it isn't. You are just trying to make it look like that because you can't argue rationally against his real position. It's called a straw man. Someone else even responded to you right here in this thread and called you on your claim.

      And "there is no proof, therefore God does not exist" does not a logical argument make

      No one is making that argument. Especially Dawkins. Which is why he argues for the position "why there almost certainly is no god".

      They are not muzzled; they speak up about my religion.

      We're finally in an era where criticizing religion most likely won't get you slaughtered. There's no wonder why people speak up about your religion when they get it forced upon them everywhere.

      But I do not stand for people mischaracterizing what I say.

      And yet you mischaracterize others (especially Dawkins)?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    395. Re:Oklahoma? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>"Scientism" is usually used by religious fundamentalists who feel threatened by the progress of science.

      Actually, it's used by philosophers. But, apparently, not by philistines.

      >>And you think anyone who doesn't believe in your god is arguing stridently.

      Oh, bullshit. But to give a counterexample so you understand: Dan Dennett is an example of an atheist that isn't strident (most of the time, at least). Hitchens, Dawkins and Sam Harris, however, are. For example, they go out of their way to make statements not in order to make some logical point, but in order to piss people off. Books entitled by these guys include God is Not Great, The God Delusion and The End of Faith.

      If you think it's okay to be a total jackass to Xians just because you think they're wrong, well, then you've rather proved my point.

    396. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right. They don't want to stifle discussion... all the state of Oklahoma wants to do is prevent Dawkins from delivering his hate speech.

      Dawkins does more harm to atheism than good. He attracts undesired attention, makes too much of a fuss and behaves like a fanatic.

      He should just let us atheists live on with our lives without inciting hate against us. He should stop behaving like a spoiled child that just want his annoying moaning to be heard no matter what and in total disregard to other people's feelings.

      See if I care if my husband is a Christian. I really don't, because it's simply not offensive against my godless belief. Now Dawkins speech is certainly offensive to so many people in so many levels and does soooooo little to improve an atheist welfare that one must ask if it's worth it.

    397. Re:Oklahoma? by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      That doesn't test God, but rather one of peoples perceptions or opinions of God. You can believe in God, and not necessarily believe in the power of prayer to bring about divine intervention.

      That isn't a disproof of God, just the power of prayer to affect outcomes.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    398. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      No, I'm not arguing that, you don't make sense.

      I'm saying that you cannot scientifically test for the existence of something that is, by definition, not scientifically testable. Maybe in your world, that means that petunias turn into whales, but in mine it just means you're a douchebag.

      Congratulations, you've effectively pointed out that there is no deity doing random shit... what's your fucking point?

      By the way, I'd like to point out that deities are always posited to pre-exist humans... if they were causing random shit to happen, we'd just think of it "the way things have always been" AKA an obvious statement of reality.

      Why are you so dead set on the idea that you can do something with science that you simply cannot? Is it really such a blow to your ego that, perhaps in this case, you are as helpless and ignorant as everyone else?

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    399. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      I'd also like to state, for the record, that if all the "articles" you've ever written are as "deep" as what you've been posting, that I have absolutely no interest in reading any of them. Seriously, who the fuck are you that I should have read any other "articles" you've written?

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    400. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wrote;

      Nobody likes an asshole.

      How appropriate that you McGrew dont like JW's, the likes of yourself would not like being made to stick to rules you claim to live by but frequently ignore.

      Personally I think a belief in a god is a mental illness, brought about by a total disbelief in how unimportant any idividual is.

      Given you have documented yourself commititng nearly every sin in the book, your statements are unreal.

      Dawkins is a wise man who makes good points.

      Give your christian hypocrasy a break will youz?

    401. Re:Oklahoma? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      Um, you seem to be under two serious misconceptions: (a) that I claim that Dawkins goes around directly insulting specific people; (b) that I am a theist. I'm an atheist who thinks that Dawkins is an arrogant, pompous, and more importantly, ignorant ass.

    402. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The premise is that God was not invented. If he was, he wouldn't exist, unless you take the relativist stance or somesuch. In any case you are a fool. Applying natural science to theology is like trying to use superglue as a sexual lubricant. Yes it does lubricate, but in a few seconds you're stuck.

    403. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is very hard to model something that does not exist. Do you always claim such obvious facts?

      When it is relevant, yes. Too often people seem to forget those "facts".

      So you talk about evolution as a scientific theory on point (1), and then bring up evolution at point 2, but it is not the evolution theory? As evolution can be interpreted as observable evolution as well as the scientific theory and model of evolution, it is ambiguous to not explicitly specify which of the two you are referring to. Calling me an idiot because of this miscommunication is unnecessarily rude in my book.

      IS either statement I made false? I didn't think so. I also think the distinction between the two was obvious because the definition of Abiogenesis and the fact that it is clear that evolution as observable fact as well as a theory is dependent on life existing. I'm not sure how you didn't get it, but the idiot comment was an inflamed response to your "One word: bullshit." comment so if rudeness is the issue, I rose to your occasion.

      What you say could be right in that you may not know anyone who has made such claim. However, please re-read my original post: it says 'speciation'. Now look at the title of the quoted article: "Mechanisms of diversification and speciation (...). It is right there. This is a scientific paper stating facts. Do you still want to go against this article? Please write a scientific rebuttal.

      Like I previously stated, they observed evolutionary changed but they did not observe speciaction. The E-coli bacteria was still e-coli and no one has claimed different. Perhaps it is one of those communication things you keep running into. I'm not sure, but in the context of what I said, the paper you linked to does not rebuke me nor does it say what you think it does. Changes within a species would be a breed not a new species.

      You can participate in science. If you have different findings that contradict this scientific report, do your own experiments and put the results up for peer review. That is how science works. Don't bring up strawman arguments abouts dogs and 1 generation. Put up or shut up is an appropriate US expression, I believe.

      Or I can read the report, I can read the reporting on the report, and I can read the statements made by the scientist responsible for it and take it for what it says instead of what people imagine it says. In the paper you presented, which is identical to others I have seen on the subject, it doesn't claim speciation occurred, just that evolutionary changes did. No one I know of claims evolutionary changes can't occur, That's a simple matter of observation, what we can't produce or reproduce is speciation- a new species from an existing one. We can create new breads, strains, and chains, but not new species. When we can, let me know.

    404. Re:Oklahoma? by init100 · · Score: 1

      It relies on life to be present. If that doesn't happen, evolution could never exist.

      Of course, but still, the Theory of Evolution does not say anything about the Origin of Life, at least not anything else than stating the obvious fact that it obviously happened.

      There is a symbiotic relationship whether you want to accept it or not.

      That depends on your definition of the word symbiotic. If you take it to mean mutualistic, which is the layman definition, I'd like to ask how the Origin of Life benefits from the Theory of Evolution. If your definition includes commensalism or parasitism, the questions become even stranger.

    405. Re:Oklahoma? by trmcdougle · · Score: 1

      "Evolution is very dependent on life being present in order to evolve"

      Where is the divide between chemistry and a lifeform?
      As I understand it life is generally considered to have probably started from complex chemistry. This site http://www.nrao.edu/index.php/learn/science/chemistryoflife even talks about evidence of "chemical evolution"!

    406. Re:Oklahoma? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Of course, but still, the Theory of Evolution does not say anything about the Origin of Life, at least not anything else than stating the obvious fact that it obviously happened.

      Well, of course the theory doesn't speak to it in itself. But it is still important because what if life doesn't exist. Or what if it was created or was created/happened naturally in ways that make Evolution impossible in completeness of our current understanding or interpretations of it today. What if instead of being carbon based life, we started out as nitrogen or helium based life introduced by meteorites (panspermia) and whatnot from other planets that adapted to a carbon rich environment and instead of one tree of life (which actually has some ancient religion meanings) there are several dozen or millions and the relations between animals genus' and possibly up to domains or even the LUA are completely off. But how do you test against something like that? There is the importance, the one doesn't concern itself with the other but couldn't be drastically effected by it.

      I apologize for using Wikipedia as a source. I don't think the accuracy of the article is as important as you understanding what was meant by the concept of LUA so we should be fine with it.

      hat depends on your definition of the word symbiotic. If you take it to mean mutualistic, which is the layman definition, I'd like to ask how the Origin of Life benefits from the Theory of Evolution. If your definition includes commensalism or parasitism, the questions become even stranger.

      Well, I would include Commensalism simply because it leads to lateral sharing of genetic material or the possibility of it. This could be especially dependent in a panspermia event which could throw our understanding of things completely out of whack.

      How the origin of life benefits from the theory of evolution is that it can be a possible source of falsification. Now, let me explain before I screw this up and confuse myself. If we accept that evolution is the most accurate representation we can have given the facts availible, we may find a source of Abiogenesis (well, actually creationism because we would be causing it but attempting to lend it to abiogenesis) that can't fit within the current model. At that point, we would have to examine which is most likely to have happened and figure a way to test it.

      I'm not sure if your familiar with the Bubble theory of evolution but it basically says that when the conditions for life was present, the different chemicals collected in differing concentrations like foam on the sea ripe with different chemicals bouncing against the shore and it is possible that all the differences in life stem from that. Everything else we see as similarities between life is either un-evolved versions of the same species or close relatives that were in the same pool of primordial soup but separated enough that the chemical differences resulted in different species. And this process could have happened multiple times at multiple places producing the same life because of the same chemicals and chemical concentration existing.

      Now I bring that up because depending on the geneses of the life, we could be forced to reevaluate our interpretations of the "facts". There are already different theories out there too which have fallen into or out of or even skipped favor from the scientific community throughout the years. If we created a life that can reproduce and we can find genetic drift enough to validate the current evolutionary theory, we can justify the principles behind it more so then before. But if we cannot, we can either conclude that we were wrong on the creation or the theory of evolution. So at least as a validation or test, it's mutual beyond needing life to be present for life to exist. Now imagine a panspermia event over several million years of similar life but because of t

    407. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Are you a fucking idiot? I'm just trying to tell you to read what I've already written in this thread so we can both avoid wasting our time.

      What are you going on about "deep"? Are you a mental case?

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    408. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Are you an infant? I stopped believing in invisible friends when I was 5. Grow up.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    409. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assigning "God" to a position we have no proof even exists is lazy.

      Why does there 'have' to be a god? Simply because so many assume there to be? Reality doesn't mold itself around belief. If we were to vote tomorrow to repeal gravity, would reality comply?

      Wishful thinking is not science. Believe what you chose to believe, but those rights of belief end at the start of the next persons rights.

    410. Re:Oklahoma? by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      The falling of a tree in a forest concept is technically incorrect, but translates well down to the quantum level (Schrödinger's cat, anyone?).

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    411. Re:Oklahoma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, so let me get this straight. When the government takes away the freedom of the private market to decide what ideas should be communicated to people by legislation over the educational system and the creation of "public" colleges, it's actually good, because it means your tax dollars won't be going to people who disagree with massive systems of social control!

      Either that or you're an idiot!

    412. Re:Oklahoma? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      At least you admit you are anti-Christian.

      No I didn't.
      I am no more "anti-Christian" than I am "anti-Jew".

      Somehow you've turned freedom of religion into freedom from religion.

      No I didn't.

      You may not USE FORCE OR VIOLENCE to violate someone else's rights.
      You may not USE FORCE OR VIOLENCE to violate someone else's religious freedom.
      Freedom mean freedom from force and violence.

      Go ahead, lets hear you be psychotic enough to disagree.

      The only way that my my position can be read as "freedom from religion" is if your "religion" is to point guns at people trying to forcibly impose your religion upon them. And in that case you're a talibanabe. A Taliban-wannabe. Yes, I do claim "freedom from" violent asshats.

      As you readily, but carelessly admit several times, if Native American religious practice were more common, you would be against that as well.

      No I didn't.

      I said *IF* Native Americans were to do something stupid like undermine public school class and attempt to insert Animal Spirit Guides in its place, that I would be against that.

      I cannot say with certainty what Native Americans would or wouldn't do if they were the overwhelming majority of the population, but I would hope they would not try to use violence or force to impose their religion upon others, I would hope they would not want to undermine science. And if they don't do those things, then I don't really have a problem with them. I think animal spirit guides are *silly*, just as I expect you consider animal spirit guides silly, but in general people's odd hobbies are their own business. I don't have a problem with other people's odd personal beliefs and odd hobbies so long as those personal beliefs and odd hobbies do not involve the use of force against me.

      I'll reiterate, I am not a Christian.

      I didn't dispute it.
      Are you brain damaged?

      Why are you repeating it? Why do you think it is even relevant?
      It doesn't matter whether you are Christian or Wiccan or anything else.

      "Christian" has absolutely no special relevance to this entire subject, other than my point that in the US Christians happen to be the only ones in a democratic position to vote for the use of GOVERNMENT FORCE in ways that might violate the Constitutionally protected rights of others. If atheists were the overwhelming majority, they would be the ones in a position to vote for the use of government force in ways that might violate the Constitutionally protected rights of others. And if they did attempt it, I would expect the courts to smack it down just as the courts currently smack down governmental attempts to establish prayer in public schools.

      Separation of Church and State means that a Christian public school principal cannot use his governmental power to promote prayer by students.

      Separation of Church and State means that an atheist public school principal cannot use his governmental power to suppress prayer by students.

      And of course it also means a Muslim public school principal cannot attempt to establish 5-times-a-day Islamic prayer schedule.

      All of the above is true, no matter what religion you are.
      Are you seriously going to argue that the force of government CAN be wielded as a weapon for religious oppression, that the force of government can be wielded respecting establishment of a favored religion or favored religious beliefs or favored religious practice? Are you seriously going to argue some position other than the school prayer position above?

      I did go to Catholic school, but it was a good school and they never force their beliefs on anyone. To the contrary, the religion class studied all the major religions. And, and, and not once were those religions portrayed in a negative light.

      I don't understand what your point is in any of that.

      The issue is when government officials violate people's rights. The issue is when people abuse the FORCE and powers of government for the pu

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    413. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      "Are you a fucking idiot? I'm just trying to tell you to read what I've already written in this thread so we can both avoid wasting our time."

      So you mean your other posts in the thread... yeah, I read them, you proved nothing.

      "What are you going on about "deep"? Are you a mental case?"

      No, I'm implying that your logic and philosophy are flawed and trite. And by "imply" I mean saying outright. Are you not familiar with the colloquial usage of the word "deep" with regard to thought?

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    414. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Ah, so you ARE a fucking idiot. thanks.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    415. Re:Oklahoma? by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      No I won't mod you down but I don't understand why I "shouldn't be allowed" on a tech forum because I think people should be allowed to believe in God as much as they should be allowed not too. The fact that you don't see the abject oppressive arrogance in that comment is staggering.

    416. Re:Oklahoma? by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      I think Dawkins is a prick ...

      Because you dislike his message or the way he, er, evangelises?

      No, because he belittles people he disagrees with and speaks of them as if they're idiots. He's a prick not because of what he believes but because he's callous, bitter, and bigoted. I could care less what he believes and I'm sure there are plenty of atheists who aren't pricks. He just happens to be both.

    417. Re:Oklahoma? by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      If god is indescernable from pure randomness, then you can remove him without changing anything. If you can remove him and it makes no difference, then he's not "there" in any meaningful sense.

      The situations I proposed would beg to differ. Assume god(s) intervention really was the only way to jump from single-celled life to multi-cellular life. If that was the case, we might call it indistinguishable from randomness, but to claim it as making no difference is absurd, and to claim removing that intervention would not change anything is even more ridiculous.

      Also, in religions whose god(s) require certain acts or behaviors for the purpose of blessings in the after-life (somewhere between most and all to my knowledge) then just because you can't discern the god(s) actions from randomness again doesn't mean you can ignore him/her/it/them. In fact, in those scenarios, their god(s) could really be totally uninvolved in the natural world, only operating in a completely separate "spirit world" and it would still make a difference if you were to ignore him/her/it/them.

      He who makes extraordinary claims must provide extraordinary proof.

      Can't diasgree with you there.

      Now prove me wrong or worship me as your god. :-)

      Methinks you are contradicting yourself there. You're making the claim, you need to provide the proof to the positive, not me to the negative.

      I thought Lamarcks demon had been killed a hundred times by now.

      I couldn't find anything about Lamarck's demon, so I'm assuming you're referring to Lamarckian Evolution. If so, I cannot figure out why, unless you misunderstood what I was saying by no free will. Lamarck suggested that the choices we make can affect the genetic traits we pass on to our offspring. The scenario I presented was totally different; choice is an illusion and there is no such thing as free will.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    418. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      "Why does the GP not understand what a fallacy is? I think it's you. A fallacy is an invalid argument. You said Dawkins makes many of these and therefore his arguments are invalid. The GP showed you that they were not false arguments and therefore you don't get to dismiss them so easily."

      The GP did not show that they were not false arguments and made his own false arguments to do so.

      All I did was call the GP on his/her own false arguments.

      "Evolution doesnt support anything, it just is.

      Dawkins does not argue 'Evolution happened therefore there is no god'.

      He argues evolution happened and also god is a pretty ridiculous proposition."

      While I have no beef with the evolution happened, I do have a beef with the also god is a pretty ridiculous proposition, as he hasn't proven that.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    419. Re:Oklahoma? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      There are also others such as Confucianism and Taoism from China, but no doubt he'll mix them in with Christianity and Judaism, as a fallacy on his own part.

      He did do a fallacy when he said if Christianity is proven false so too is Buddhism because it does not talk about a God or divine being. He makes many fallacies, too many to get into.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    420. Re:Oklahoma? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      Fucking idiot- n. - one who refuses to accept Profane MuthFucka's random half-assed theories based on his innate trustworthiness and obvious intellectual superiority

      Thanks for adding that new definition to the Slashdot dictionary.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    421. Re:Oklahoma? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I am trustworthy and intellectually superior. That is true, thanks for noticing.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    422. Re:Oklahoma? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      So because I don't buy the BS argument that science can actually investigate claims of a SUPERNATURAL being despite the fact that "supernatural" is defined as being outside of nature and science I'm a fundie?

      The Christian god is supposedly interacting with reality, which means that those occurrences should be detectable. Furthermore, there are many specific claims about God's nature which we can make a case against. There are even many self-contradictory claims.

      I've read some of his stuff and his attempts at theology and philosophy are mediocre at best, ignorant and childish at worst).

      Spoken like a true fundie. You don't like what he has to say, so you resort to these pathetic attacks.

      By the way, the only reason to include the words "almost certainly" in an assertion is to save face while conceding that, on some level, you can never actually prove what you claim. Dawkins is smart enough to see this, and inserts such language... apparently you are not smart enough to understand why.

      Are you some kind of idiot? It's called "intellectual honesty". Dawkins has always been very clear that you can never be 100% certain. In fact, on his scale from 1 to 7 where 1 is absolute faith in God and 7 is absolute denial of God, Dawkins places himself at 6. Dawkins never claimed that he can prove anything.

      Your pathetic attacks against intellectual honest are not unexpeected, though.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  2. Can of worms... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3, 2, 1, commence comments.

    1. Re:Can of worms... by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 5, Funny

      Can of worms? With the Vatican, we get a Diet of Worms!

    2. Re:Can of worms... by Anonymous+Codger · · Score: 1

      Damn, no mod points. +1 Hilarious.

      --
      No sig? Sigh...
  3. Dumb Summary by Liselle · · Score: 4, Informative

    Summary is stupid. The reading of this resolution just looks like it "condemns" Dawkins, it's not going to "silence" him or boot him out of the state or any other such nonsense.

    --
    Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
    1. Re:Dumb Summary by jonnythan · · Score: 5, Informative

      "NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE 1ST SESSION OF THE 52ND OKLAHOMA LEGISLATURE:

      THAT the Oklahoma House of Representative strongly opposes the invitation to speak on the campus of the University of Oklahoma to Richard Dawkins of Oxford University, whose published statements on the theory of evolution and opinion about those who do not believe in the theory are contrary and offensive to the views and opinions of most citizens of Oklahoma.
      THAT the Oklahoma House of Representatives encourages the University of Oklahoma to engage in an open, dignified, and fair discussion of the Darwinian theory of evolution and all other scientific theories which is the approach that a public institution should be engaged in and which represents the desire and interest of the citizens of Oklahoma."

      The OK House is clearly encouraging the University not to allow him to speak. Quite strongly.

    2. Re:Dumb Summary by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Still stupid. Not like they don't have real problems they could be trying to solve, rather than trying to condemn a guy for saying mean things about their imaginary friend.

      When you're more conservative than the Vatican, there is a problem.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    3. Re:Dumb Summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah, like passing a state bill condemning a guy for the Theory of Evolution instead of the correct thing (Flying Spaghetti Monster) is some "such nonsense". Do you even think before you post?

      I'm only posting as AC because of your marvelous sig.

    4. Re:Dumb Summary by skeeto · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, the bill is simply to send a nasty letter to the university president, nothing more. There is no "legal action".

    5. Re:Dumb Summary by JoshuaZ · · Score: 5, Informative

      The full resolution asked for Dawkins invitation be rescinded. Moreover, Note that they are unhappy because Dawkins views are "offensive". Furthermore, this is the watered down resolution. The original draft included language attacking the the university's "one-sided indoctrination of an unproven and unpopular theory" among other fun statements. See http://scienceblogs.com/erv/2009/03/the_first_draft_of_ok_legislat.php To me the most disturbing thing is the repeated emphasis in both the original draft and the passed version on the lack of popular support for evolution. These people really don't understand how either science or government should work.

    6. Re:Dumb Summary by DrLang21 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Strongly encouraging does not equate to legislating. I highly doubt that the Oklahoma State government would hold back funding from the university next year if they went ignored.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    7. Re:Dumb Summary by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not to mention that it probably won't stop there.

      If they can intimidate and/or legislate pro-evolution and/or anti-religion out of the state then you can expect OK to plunge into the dark ages and other states will try and follow suit.

    8. Re:Dumb Summary by Teun · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Forcing students out of this state looks like a definite plus for their education.

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    9. Re:Dumb Summary by mjeffers · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Include the next 2 paragraphs though and you can see what this actually has them doing.

      NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE 1ST SESSION OF THE 52ND OKLAHOMA LEGISLATURE:

      THAT the Oklahoma House of Representative strongly opposes the invitation to speak on the campus of the University of Oklahoma to Richard Dawkins of Oxford University, whose published statements on the theory of evolution and opinion about those who do not believe in the theory are contrary and offensive to the views and opinions of most citizens of Oklahoma.

      THAT the Oklahoma House of Representatives encourages the University of Oklahoma to engage in an open, dignified, and fair discussion of the Darwinian theory of evolution and all other scientific theories which is the approach that a public institution should be engaged in and which represents the desire and interest of the citizens of Oklahoma.

      THAT a copy of this resolution be transmitted to the President of the University of Oklahoma, the Dean of the College of Arts and Science at the University of Oklahoma, and the Chair of the Department of Zoology at the University of Oklahoma.

      (bolding is mine)
      They're sending a strongly worded letter. That's it. This is a complete non-story and the sort of symbolic political crap that pols do so they can send out fund raising letters to the fundies saying how they fought the darwinists without actually having to do anything. If they're preventing him from speaking that's an issue but there's nothing here that at all suggests that.

    10. Re:Dumb Summary by moosesocks · · Score: 3, Informative

      We had something vaguely similar happen over in Virginia last year. The college president refused to censor a controversial event, and also refused to allow religious icons to be displayed in public rooms that weren't being used for religious services.

      The budget didn't get cut*, though a few administrators lost their jobs shortly afterward for "undisclosed reasons."

      (*Actually, the budget did get cut, and by a substantial amount. However, this was because the state's currently broke)

      Hasn't sopped them from floating ass-backward legislation again. There's a bill currently before the senate to cap out-of-state enrollment at 20%, which would either drive most of the state's universities into insolvency, or raise tuition to absurd ($60k+) levels.

      Fun times all around! I can't wait to graduate, and move the hell away from here.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    11. Re:Dumb Summary by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      Darwinian theory of evolution and all other scientific theories

      Ok, now I'm curious. what scientific theory is there

      a) that explains evolution
      b) the majority of the population of Oklahoma believe in
      c) that Dawkins disses?

      given that creationism, ID and 'His Noodliness did it' aren't scientific theories?

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    12. Re:Dumb Summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, since some religious little faggot already modded that troll, I might as well go on to say that most Southern states and their inhabitants are fucking morons(though there are some pockets of sanity, and these should be relocated).

      Pontificating morons, talking of man and god and law while they suck up the most tax dollars and have the highest rates of divorce and general ass-backwardness in the entire nation. I've been to Texas, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and North and South Carolina; and I was NOT impressed with what I saw.

      Of the handful of public access channels on broadcast TV there were no less than 3 of them devoted to Christianity. It's even worse on the radio.

      Fucking religious morons have no respect for the seperation of church and state. Every state from Texas on east(except Florida) and Kentucky should be turned into a giant penal colony.

      "Fuck the creationists." -- Stephen "M.C." Hawking

    13. Re:Dumb Summary by reddburn · · Score: 1

      The William & Mary mess? They've also got an extensive (and wealthy) enough alumni donor base that remains fairly generous. He knew it was a safe choice (as such decisions go).

      --
      "Those who believe in telekinetics, raise my hand" - Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
    14. Re:Dumb Summary by moosesocks · · Score: 1

      In what universe? W&M's endowment is fairly small, especially compared to similarly-ranked schools (even publics).

      It's not hard to see why. We tend to graduate a lot of teachers and peace corps volunteers.

      Also, it was that "extensive" alumni base that banded together with the help of Fox News (no joke), withdrew their money, demanded the removal of the president, and..... never returned the money when he was fired.

      It was particularly irritating, given that it was literally a manufactured controversy. Most actual students and faculty either liked the guy, or didn't care either way.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    15. Re:Dumb Summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod parent flamebait.

    16. Re:Dumb Summary by rezalas · · Score: 1

      That is quite funny, someone bitching about equality and calling everyone who doesn't agree with him a "faggot". Hypocritical assholes who don't have the ability to realize that they just invalidated their own point in the FIRST FUCKING SENTENCE deserve to be modded troll. That is, perhaps, why it happened hmm?

    17. Re:Dumb Summary by rezalas · · Score: 1

      They don't want him to speak because he is a bigot. Saying that a person is insane/delusional/stupid for believing in god is no worse than calling someone can't fly a plane because hes black. Now, these days you can't go around writing books called "Math skills for toddlers and highly educated niggers" and just hide behind free speech. So, when you call the population of THE MAJORITY OF A WHOLE FUCKING PLANET "delusional" you can probably expect shit like this to happen.

    18. Re:Dumb Summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose the bigger issue (in my mind) is that any state legislature would waste its time (taxpayer dollars) with this kind of stupidity. If I were an oklahoman, I'd be pissed, irregardless of my beliefs.

    19. Re:Dumb Summary by Draconix · · Score: 1

      It's not bigotry to call someone who believes in something there's no evidence for the existence of "insane/delusional/stupid." Just because millions of people believe it doesn't make it not a delusion.

      --
      By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
    20. Re:Dumb Summary by init100 · · Score: 1

      To me the most disturbing thing is the repeated emphasis in both the original draft and the passed version on the lack of popular support for evolution. These people really don't understand how either science or government should work.

      I agree. What scientific theories would remain to be teached if they had to have support from the great unwashed masses to be accepted? Not many, to say the least.

    21. Re:Dumb Summary by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "This is a complete non-story and the sort of symbolic political crap...."

      I do not think this is a non-story at all. Far from it.

      When people elected to public office make contradictory statements, hold views that are illogical, and display a huge lack of scientific understanding (caused either by a personal lack of understanding or a lack of qualified advisors in said subject), then it should be deemed very newsworthy.

      The citizens of Oklahoma are now more informed about their public officials' shortcomings.

    22. Re:Dumb Summary by ahodgson · · Score: 1

      People can't choose to not be black. People can choose not to believe in fairy tales.

      Just because the majority of people are actually stupid doesn't make calling them out a bad thing.

    23. Re:Dumb Summary by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Pontificating morons, talking of man and god and law while they suck up the most tax dollars and have the highest rates of divorce and general ass-backwardness in the entire nation.

      I will point out that Oklahoma, at least, is probably the *only* state that consistently sends representatives to Congress who vote against sending more tax dollars to worthless morons in Oklahoma and elsewhere. So what's your excuse?

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    24. Re:Dumb Summary by syousef · · Score: 1

      They're sending a strongly worded letter. That's it. This is a complete non-story

      So the guy paying your bills sends a "strongly worded letter" advising you not to do something and you're saying it's no big deal? There's an implicit threat there.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  4. OU Student Here by knapper_tech · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OMFG! This is after we had to put up with giant anti-abortion posters on campus during the presidential election week that just happened to have horrid pictures of late-term abortions that are already illegal everywhere as far as I know anyway. WTF. It's been a given for a long time that I'm leaving after graduating, but OK continues to find ways to make me worry less about what I leave behind.

    --
    "There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell them." ~ Louis Armstrong
    1. Re:OU Student Here by cpotoso · · Score: 0, Troll

      Indeed! It seems that OK goes out of its way to become more backwards, more stupid, and more poor (by "inviting" smart people out) every time you look at it. What can I tell you... they seem to deserve their condition.

    2. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really, really hope parent was satire.

    3. Re:OU Student Here by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      horrid pictures of late-term abortions that are already illegal everywhere as far as I know anyway

      By what reasoning? Child snuff porn?

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    4. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reading comprehension. Obtaining some may help in not looking quite utterly retarded.

    5. Re:OU Student Here by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

      I don't think he is, and I'm having trouble working out where you got that idea from.

      Unless US English has some _very_ different meanings for some of those words to English English?

    6. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can't be that hard to read and comprehend the OPs post, can it?

    7. Re:OU Student Here by knapper_tech · · Score: 1

      I'm against wasting people's appetite for engaging important issues by disgusting them with something that's irrelevant, especially in the context of Oklahoma law, where such abortions are undoubtedly illegal. When people go on being angry about something after it's already addressed, it's like their only purpose from the beginning was to be angry and they just needed something to latch onto.

      --
      "There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell them." ~ Louis Armstrong
    8. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you in favor of medical surgery? If so, are you comfortable being unpredictably confronted in public with graphic images of it?

    9. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and no.

    10. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congrats on trivialising such a big debate into "agree or disagree". That's no different to calling war protesters unpatriotic because they "dont support" troops.

      We live in shades of grey, not black or white.

      Consider where your tolerance (luma?) level hits your personal threshold. I hedge that it differs greatly between people who are easy to emotionally charge and those who think things through and come to their own conclusions.

      I fear for those who have their own opinions hijacked and forcefully molded into black and white - whether by a family or religious system alike. ... but hey, I'm not American. In Europe we teach awareness of pretty everything. Even... *gasp*... religion: practice, principles and beliefs.

    11. Re:OU Student Here by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Unless you were being sarcastic, I'm pretty sure he was talking about the late term abortion procedure being illegal, not the photos of the results being illegal . . .

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    12. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all of us are right wing redneck morons but sadly, most are. I cringe every time I see Tom Coburn on CNN. Oh, and OSU rules! We'll let Dawkins give his speech here. :)

    13. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's saying that using pictures of late term abortions to outlaw short term abortions is disingenuous.
          Stop trying to speculate on his beliefs in order to discredit him. Just because he finds it dishonest to use those posters against a different degree of abortion doesn't mean he's for what's happening in those posters.
          Some people do believe in truth you know.

    14. Re:OU Student Here by PenguinX · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      First the facts insofar as I am able to find, then my opinion.

      Although 36 of 50 states have bans on late-term abortions they are still performed routinely. We must concede that any such attempt to put a number on this is fraught with statistical peril due to the fact that abortions are covered under privacy laws. However, just to get a general feel - Wikipedia cites that the CDC believes that some 1.4% of all abortions are performed late term or after 20 weeks. If this is accurate then the best estimates would indicate that some 700,000 late-term abortions have been performed in the US since roe v. wade.

      Now my opinion: The 700,000 figure is based on nearly 50 million abortions performed since Roe v. Wade. Although this exact figure is disputed heavily by both left and right wing sides of the argument they both generally agree that some 25 - 33 percent of all pregnancies end in abortion. If you consider that 11 million people died in the Holocaust the math necessitates ought give even the coldest of individuals pause to consider at what point an embryo is a baby - i.e. a human being. Such inquiry is the same sort of foolishness that slave traders were guilty of, namely, marginalizing the humanity of a people group they don't understand.

      So, my opinion, put bluntly. It's murder - it is always murder. Concerning the posters: be offended by the pictures, that's the point. It may seem tasteless but it is done for the reason that we remember the Holocaust. The difference in this case is that the conflict is not obscured by history or geography, but imminent.

    15. Re:OU Student Here by xutopia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Anti-abortionist take an unreasonable approach to limit abortion. They feel as though a bunch of cells that cannot possibly have a consciousness yet have the same human value as a late term fetus. I'm pro-choice up until the point where the fetus develops a conscious brain. When anti-abortionists put up pictures of late term abortions they build a straw man and misrepresent me. It's disingenuous and offends me.

    16. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      late term abortion is only legal if the mother's life is in danger. which do you like better, dead fetuses or dead mothers?

    17. Re:OU Student Here by edittard · · Score: 1

      I like sausages, but I don't want to look at pictures of them being made. It's ruins my appetite.

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    18. Re:OU Student Here by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 0

      I'm pro-choice up until the point where the fetus develops a conscious brain.

      Animals almost certainly have "conscious brains" and yet it's okay to kill them for their scrumptious meat. If you accept that a fetus doesn't have "magic pixie dust" at or before the moment of conception and if you think it's okay to eat meat (or exterminate vermin), then you also accept there needs to be a certain minimum level of intellectual capacity before killing is wrong. What is your earliest memory? Mine is around three years old. This tends to indicate that a human's brain is not coherent enough to be considered to pass this minimum level of intellectual capacity until it is a couple of years old. The other, other white meat.

    19. Re:OU Student Here by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      If you consider that 11 million people died in the Holocaust

      Ah, I see your confusion, here. See, those were people. You know, people who could think, talk, love, hate, etc. By constrast, your average abortion involves mindless masses of parasitic, self-replicating cells, no more alive than a brain-dead car accident victim on life support.

      Then again, maybe you oppose taking said brain-dead car accident victim off life support because, in your mind, that, too, is murder. If so, kudos! At least you're consistent. I somehow doubt it, though...

    20. Re:OU Student Here by Butterforge · · Score: 4, Insightful

      anti-abortion posters on campus

      The word is "anti-choice." No one is really "pro abortion," except maybe a few inconsequential lunatics. What anti-abortionists are fighting against is the right to choose, not the right to have recreational abortions - I don't think those exist. So those of us who believe in a woman's right to have control of the insides of her body call it an anti-choice stance. Anyway, Oklahoma sounds like a terrible place for the progressive and diverse. I hope Dawkins gets to speak there. The QA session would be great to see.

    21. Re:OU Student Here by LUH+3418 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >> That would be like saying you are offended by goatse but are A-O.K. with gay marriage.

      First of all, goatse has nothing to do with gay marriage. The goatse guy could very well, in fact, not be gay, and you'd be foolish to assume all gay people practice anal sex, or portray their masturbatory acts on the internet. As for gay marriage, it's just like straight marriage, but with two same-sex individuals.

      As for being A-OK... I'm A-OK with *both* gay marriage and the goatse guy. Why? Because both involve other people doing things that don't impact my life in any way, and I'm not a bigot who runs around telling people how to live their life. You also have to realize that encouraging gay people to have stable relationships and safe sex is probably better than trying to deny their existence and force them into some underground subculture full of prostitution and unsafe sex.

    22. Re:OU Student Here by Hatta · · Score: 1

      While I agree with you, you're not going to win any converts by advocating infanticide.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    23. Re:OU Student Here by limekiller4 · · Score: 2, Funny

      knapper_tech writes:
      "This is after we had to put up with giant anti-abortion posters on campus during the presidential election week that just happened to have horrid pictures of late-term abortions that are already illegal everywhere as far as I know anyway. WTF."

      A fetus is a child, not a choice, or so the anti-abortion folks tell me.

      If so, the people who put up the fliers were plastering your university with pre-term necrophilia pornography.

      Nice.

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    24. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before approximately the age of 6 months, a human needs near constant stimulation to continually remind itself that it is alive and in the world. It has no sense of object permanence. IE, it is not conscious as an adult human is, it is more conscious as a dog or bacteria is; it responds to stimuli but that is it.

    25. Re:OU Student Here by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Humans, like all other animals, are unabashedly species-ist. Different standards apply for animals and humans regarding right to life.

      As far as your comments on "earliest memory", you've clearly treaded into the realm of Making Shit Up. Parent clearly indicated "consciousness", and you indicated "intellectual capacity", yet make a point based on "earliest memory". They're different things, and it's well known that memory formation only starts later in life -- much later than both consciousness and intellectual capacity. (You didn't learn any language before you were three? I mean, really. You clearly didn't think this through at all.)

    26. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the fact that current administration has already voted to uphold the no-medical-treatment law to babies that survive abortions. I would also like to remind you that, according to wikipedia.

      Also, 13 states prohibit abortion after a certain number of weeks' gestation (usually 24 weeks).

      24 weeks is about 6 months, correct? At 8 weeks, according to wikipedia.

      At this point, all major structures, including hands, feet, head, brain, and other organs are present, but they will continue to grow, develop, and become more functional

      And, between 16 and 25 weeks,

      Eyebrows, eyelashes, fingernails, and toenails appear. The fetus has increased muscle development. Alveoli (air sacs) are forming in lungs. The nervous system develops enough to control some body functions. The cochlea are now developed, though the myelin sheaths in the neural portion of the auditory system will continue to develop until 18 months after birth.

      "bunch of cells" is not quite an adequate description.

    27. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I like sausages, but I don't want to look at pictures of them being made. It's ruins my appetite."
      I really, really hope that the connection between your comment and the current topic (pictures of late-term abortions) is not the first one that popped in to my head. It was a metaphor... right?

    28. Re:OU Student Here by Notquitecajun · · Score: 1

      It's a paradigm view. For many of us on the pro-life side of the equation, choice is, in a sense, a secondary right to the right of an unborn child to live. Yes, a woman has a right to "choose" what she does (more or less) with her own body...until it involves the life of another.

      Of course, that means we have to define an unborn child as technically alive. If we do (as I do), then the pro-life position makes perfect sense (something that I have hardly ever heard from the "pro-choice" side of things, an honest consideration of the pro-life mindset). If not, then who cares?

    29. Re:OU Student Here by DigitalReverend · · Score: 0

      Wrong, we aren't against choice, we are only against the specific option of death to the unborn. There is still choice, but it comes after the baby is born. Keep it or let it be adopted.

      --
      I read Slashdot for the headlines, because the headlines, unlike the articles, are usually original and never duplicated
    30. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May you never reproduce. I can't imagine how you might raise a mass of parasitic, self-replicating cells. Get sterilized now (for the benefit of the rest of us)!

    31. Re:OU Student Here by knapper_tech · · Score: 1

      Yes. There were huge billboard posters guarded by rails and taken down every night to prevent vandalism. (I seriously considered making a run with some paint until I found this out.) Why anyone wants to continue protesting late-term abortions in Oklahoma is beyond me...except that it was obviously a rallying of conservative knee-jerk to ensure that every single county in Oklahoma would vote GOP. I don't want to think about it anymore. I was all excited about the idea that we were going to have a new president and that the issues in focus were war and economy instead of abortions and stem-cell crap. Seeing those posters was like a reminder that I'm at ground zero of the remaining stronghold of idiocy.

      What's really disappointing is that the articles in the student paper are just as unbelievable. People writing up crap columns about how they believe that ID is relevant and that we should all go have a giant campus debate. It goes on and on. To make matters worse, there is a complete deficit of breakdancers in Oklahoma, indicating the general lack of creativity and cultural vacuum.

      I have advice for anyone of any degree of intellect who has just been offered a lot of money to come to Oklahoma: don't. You'll be happier somewhere else, and that happiness will translate to academic success that will more than make up for the puny tuition wavers, especially when you see how small the tuition is and that they make up for it by having fees in excess of the cost of tuition.

      Boomer Sooner.....(-_-)

      --
      "There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell them." ~ Louis Armstrong
    32. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I think it's possible to convincingly argue that some primates have conscious brains, there are very few other animals that seem to display self-conscious behaviour (most of those are mammalians, with some rare exceptions such as certain breeds of parrots). The lives of those relatively more conscious animal species are generally protected by law in western democracies with a few exceptions (medical research).

      I have a one year old. He can speak some very basic words and has been interacting nonverbally with us for months now. Babies' brains continue to develop until two years old, making it hard for long-term memories to develop, but that doesn't mean that their lives aren't worth anything. There are adults who for various medical reasons can no longer make new long term memories and yet still would be quite capable of participating in society and commenting on the ludicrousness of your post's thesis. Heck, based on your post, it would seem likely that my one-year old already has as much intellectual capacity as you did at three years old.

      P.S. I was born in a land with a history of cannibalism. I'm much more in favour of treating slashdot trolls like you and similar wastes of oxygen as long pig than I am for any infant. Odds are that the infant will learn through interaction.

    33. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm offended by goatse but I am AOK with gay marriage...I don't get your point...

    34. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you tell me the exact time when a person has a conscious brain? Heck, based on responses in this thread many seem to believe that over 50% of Americans don't have conscious brains. So there should be nothing wrong with killing all these people too according to your argument.

      Also, do you really think all pro-life people are trying to represent YOUR view? That seems to be the implication of your comment.

    35. Re:OU Student Here by mjeffers · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I am wrong, but are you saying that you were offended by posters of late term abortions, but are actually for the act itself? If the poster offends you, how can the act NOT offend you. That would be like saying you are offended by goatse but are A-O.K. with gay marriage.

      I'd be offended by a poster showing a guy taking a dump, but it doesn't mean I think we should ban shitting. I'm OK with gay marriage but I don't really want to see gay porn. Is this really that hard to grasp?

    36. Re:OU Student Here by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Parent clearly indicated "consciousness", and you indicated "intellectual capacity", yet make a point based on "earliest memory".

      I pointed out that animals have "consciousness" and it's okay for us to kill them, so some other, higher standard is required. Some animals are rather clever, also. The key question becomes at what point does a child's "intellectual capacity" exceed that of a clever animal? I merely suggest that perhaps the inability to form specific permanent memories indicates that their brains are not coherent enough to be considered more than animals. I'm well aware that ordinary people are terrible hypocrites. Indeed, this is what I am pointing out.

    37. Re:OU Student Here by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      Who else should die that that child should live ?

      Population has got to be controlled one way or another, or we will starve ourselves. So if there is only food for so many people, and too many get pregnant, who should volunteer to make room ? The mother, the father or a complete stranger ? The natural choice is to lose the child because a) it will take up more resources while it's growing, and b) it doesn't have the already spent investment. The mother can always have another child (usually), but if an adult has to be removed to pay for a child, then it's not good for the society. Animals spontaneously abort when they're forced to, and while we're not animals (completely) it still makes good survival sense.

      What makes me mad is when infertile couples get IVF treatment instead of adopting - that stinks. I would be happy to review abortion rules if couples were forced to adopt an available child, and got IVF only if no child were available.

      To be clear, I only support bringing a child into the world if it is going to be properly supported. If not, then don't burden the world and the child with a difficult existence, just to satisfy a principle.

    38. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know that goatse was not the result of pegging, or merely self inflicted?

    39. Re:OU Student Here by DigitalReverend · · Score: 1

      How about just not having sex. Or, and I don't believe in it, use contraception. Why does anyone have to die just because a couple of people got their rocks off?

      --
      I read Slashdot for the headlines, because the headlines, unlike the articles, are usually original and never duplicated
    40. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pro-choice up until the point where the fetus develops a conscious brain.

      Age 5?

    41. Re:OU Student Here by gotem · · Score: 1

      a bunch of living cells forming a unit, with the DNA of a human being. Doesn't it sound arbitrary to wait until a brain is formed to call it human? how do you meassure consciousness?

    42. Re:OU Student Here by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Of course, that means we have to define an unborn child as technically alive.

      Way to use loaded words. "Unborn child"... you must be a life-begins-at-conception type, right?

      Look, if it doesn't have a functioning brain, sorry buddy, it ain't an "unborn child". It's a mass of cells using the woman as a host body. I mean, if I ended up in a car accident and my brain was smashed, I wouldn't expect my wife to keep my body functioning. That'd be lunacy. We don't call it brain *dead* for nothing.

      Similarly, defining a cluster of unthinking cells as "alive" speaks to me of nothing more than faith-based reasoning (the only reason to use this definition is if you believe said cluster of cells has a soul, 'cuz it certainly doesn't have a mind or a personality), and that most definitely should *not* be the underpinnings of US law.

      Incidentally, if it wasn't clear, I'm perfectly fine limiting abortion to only pregnancies which haven't demonstrated brain activity, or cases where the woman's life is at risk. That is, I think, the only sensible compromise... unfortunately, in a debate like this, no one is interested in either sense or compromise.

      OOC, and this isn't a troll, I'm honestly curious: how do you feel about the large numbers of embryos destroyed every year as part of IVF treatments?

    43. Re:OU Student Here by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Doesn't it sound arbitrary to wait until a brain is formed to call it human?

      Given we use the same metric to determine when to pull the plug on someone (I'm sure you've heard the term "brain dead" thrown about), I'd say, no, it's not arbitrary at all. It's exceedingly logical, in fact, not to mention morally consistent.

    44. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dont worry, there will be plenty of soylent green for everyone, seriously, still people buy that 'OMG we will starve!' shit?

    45. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll bite.

      Look, if it doesn't have a functioning brain, sorry buddy, it ain't an "unborn child"

      By whose definition? Yours? Why do you get to make that definition.

      Your example about someone brain-dead does not hold either. They do not have any life potential. You could not keep them living and hope that in 10 years they will get better. On the other hand, someone in a coma is treated in hopes they might recover. A child has potential and is alive (not brain dead). This is a completely different situation.

      How do you know that you are anything more than just a cluster of cells?

      To the last question, yes the consistent position is that IVF is wrong and I am opposed to it as well. It creates embryos that are often destroyed.

    46. Re:OU Student Here by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      Unless you were being sarcastic, I'm pretty sure he was talking about the late term abortion procedure being illegal, not the photos of the results being illegal . . .

      Not sarcastic toward knapper_tech, no, but rather toward those who display such images for whom it is by their own convictions the exploited nude remains of a dead child.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    47. Re:OU Student Here by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      You could not keep them living and hope that in 10 years they will get better.

      Says who? Maybe the magic of science will let you put a new brain in that skull, and then voila, the body will be alive again.

      But they're not the same person, you say? So did the person die with the brain? If so, then the person *is* the brain, are they not? And therefore, a cluster of cells without a functioning brain isn't yet an individual, and therefore does not have the rights of an individual, any more than that body, without a brain, has any right to potential life.

      A child has potential and is alive (not brain dead).

      No, it's precisely brain dead. Worse, it doesn't have a brain *at all*. At least not until a few weeks into the pregnancy.

      How do you know that you are anything more than just a cluster of cells?

      Because I have a brain that can consider the question. Unlike a zygote.

    48. Re:OU Student Here by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Is the bible/God ok with you having genitalia? Is it therefore ok to post pictures of genitals across town? If no, you should get to chopping off your junk. If yes feel free to start posting, see how it works out.

    49. Re:OU Student Here by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Although this exact figure is disputed heavily by both left and right wing sides of the argument they both generally agree that some 25 - 33 percent of all pregnancies end in abortion.....So, my opinion, put bluntly. It's murder - it is always murder.

      Some 50% of pregnancies end in miscarriage. In your opinion should we hold a funeral for each and every miscarried fetus? Should there be a police investigation? Death certificate?

      This is a very serious matter, because if fetuses are really full citizens, then all these things should happen. If they are, then women should submit themselves to monthly checkups, as happened in Romania under Ceauescu, so as to ensure a proper record of deaths is maintained. You cannot have one standard for some citizens and one for others.

      You should realize where your logic will lead us.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    50. Re:OU Student Here by init100 · · Score: 1

      Humans, like all other animals, are unabashedly species-ist.

      I'm not so certain that this applies to all animals. There are species where cannibalism is more of the rule than the exception. I wouldn't call such a species species-ist.

    51. Re:OU Student Here by init100 · · Score: 1

      By constrast, your average abortion involves mindless masses of parasitic, self-replicating cells, no more alive than a brain-dead car accident victim on life support.

      A parasitic, self-replicating mass of cells, that sounds like a tumor. What's next from the religious crowd, ban all tumor-removal surgery?

    52. Re:OU Student Here by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      For many of us on the pro-life side of the equation, choice is, in a sense, a secondary right to the right of an unborn child to live. Yes, a woman has a right to "choose" what she does (more or less) with her own body...until it involves the life of another.

      To enforce such a view would be to intrude on the most basic and fundamental rights a person can have; the right to their own selves. If someone can not have that, then I do not see how they can have anything.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    53. Re:OU Student Here by sdguero · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry dude. That sucks.

      Food for thought... Imagine living there 15 years ago sans internet. Now that would REALLY suck.

    54. Re:OU Student Here by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      They do not have any life potential.

      So now it isn't about life, but "life potential"?

    55. Re:OU Student Here by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Wrong, we aren't against choice, we are only against the specific option of death to the unborn.

      That's the public statement, but the actions of people with such beliefs are usually more like they want to punish whores for having sex. They against conterception, against "morning after" pills and other methods to prevent pregnancy if you have sex. Then, if you get pregnant, then the little tumor has more rights than the woman. If she didn't want it, then she shouldn't have had sex, right? And don't talk about family values. A woman who recognizes they made a mistake and would rather raise a child in a health family doesn't get that choice if they can't abort a pregnancy and make a better effort to get into a marriage before any further attempts.

      And the other thing I find interesting is that those most likely to be calling for no choice for women are also the ones that punish the children after birth by trying to cut off assistance. They think of the children until birth, then after that the children are to be harmed because of who they were born to, rather than supporting abortions for people on welfare in order to keep the number on support down, they'd rather starve the children by decreasing support.

    56. Re:OU Student Here by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If the poster offends you, how can the act NOT offend you.

      What act? Pictures of lung cancer offend me. I hate the commercials on TV that have those. Pictures of colonoscopies offend me. That doesn't mean I'm offended by such diseases or medical proceedures. I'm offended that someone decided to show them to me with some agenda. Take your pcitures and shove them up goatse's ass.

      That would be like saying you are offended by goatse but are A-O.K. with gay marriage.

      And if you are offended by a naked picture of Rosanne Barr licking her nipples, then you are against heterosexual marriage.

    57. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that anyone will ever read this, but there is actually a logical anti-abortion argument, albeit rarely made.

      First, defining human life: adults, children, babies, fetuses, embryos, and zygotes are all human life. They are alive in that they consist of living cells, and those cells are human cells. They are not rocks or turnips, they are human. They are also all discrete entities (although not independent)--some would argue that sperm and eggs are also human life, but I'd say they are specialized cells that form a part of an adult human life, and are no more human life than a freckle or a tooth. Some would argue that an embryo isn't human life because it can't live independently of its mother, but there are thousands of adults on life-support who would disagree with you there. It's a distinct human life, just a fragile one.

      So okay, that's the life part. Now there's the abortion part:

      If you believe that ending human life is a bad thing that should be avoided whenever possible (this is ultimately a subjective moral call, but it's widely believed), then you would want to reduce the number of abortions. So you'd support all policies that reduce the number of abortions: birth control, sex education, improved access to childcare and children's health care, employment protections for maternity/paternity leave, date-rape awareness campaigns, strong penalties for sex offenses and domestic violence, and various other "women's initiatives".

      However, I think it remains to be demonstrated that making abortions illegal would actually reduce the number of human lives lost (instead of just pushing the activity underground and putting additional human lives at risk), so someone who is against abortions would not advocate making abortions illegal. But there are a lot of policies that they could logically advocate that would indeed reduce abortions.

      So there you go. A logical and consistent anti-abortion argument.

    58. Re:OU Student Here by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Something always has to die. Lots of things have died to keep you alive. You eat biological matter, I presume?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    59. Re:OU Student Here by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh, for mod points...

      Is the cannibalism of your opponent an ad-hominem attack?

    60. Re:OU Student Here by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      How about just not having sex.

      Yeah.. Let me know how that one works out, mmmkay?

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    61. Re:OU Student Here by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      I think the abortion issue will evaporate as NICUs can save younger and younger premature infants. At some point, it's going to be medically possible to just yank the intact fetus out and grow it for adoptive parents (or perhaps reimplant in a host womb, whatever) and either the people who hate abortions will be lining up at the adoption clinics to adopt the little saved fetuses, or they're going to decide they don't like paying taxes to support the millions of unwanted children on welfare and that abortion is okay.

    62. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      and the other direction: pregnant woman gets to smoke drink use cocaine and generally do whatsoever she wants with her body.

      And If I punch her in the gut, it's simple assault...

    63. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your for abortion up to about 20+ years post-womb too?

    64. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some 50% of pregnancies end in miscarriage.

      Otherwise known as a God-induced abortion. Of course, it's okay when God does it, because, umm..., err..., I'll get back to you on that. >_>

    65. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't it sound arbitrary to wait until a brain is formed to call it human?

      Given we use the same metric to determine when to pull the plug on someone (I'm sure you've heard the term "brain dead" thrown about), I'd say, no, it's not arbitrary at all. It's exceedingly logical, in fact, not to mention morally consistent.

      Hmm.... I'm pretty sure that if there's a non-trivial chance the patient will have a functioning brain given a reasonable amount of time, we don't pull the plug. Most fetuses will develop a functioning brain given a reasonable amount of time. Thus, moral consistency dictates that we not abort fetuses until a reasonable amount of time has been given for them to develop brains. Therefore, being morally consistent with ourselves, most fetuses will not be aborted.

    66. Re:OU Student Here by faboo · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Richard Dawkins, but I personally don't think it is right or reasonable to kill _anything_ that has a brain. A brain allows a creature motivation, preference, and desire beyond the simple organization and replication of their DNA.

      Is that still arbitrary? I suppose, but I can't bring myself to feel bad about it.

    67. Re:OU Student Here by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      They feel as though a bunch of cells that cannot possibly have a consciousness yet have the same human value as a late term fetus.

      Before I say anything else, I should say that I'm an atheist and pro-choice. How do you know that a bunch of cells can have no form of consciousness whatsoever? We don't have enough of an understanding of consciousness or life to say that. Assuming that you are right, can you please tell me exactly when consciousness does start? What is the threshold here?

    68. Re:OU Student Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, we allow for the patient to recover the capacities of a previously existing brain/consciousness. In the case of aborting a fetus (up to some point nobody can agree upon), there was no previously existing brain/consciousness (ignoring the soul myth), so nothing other than a set of cells is being killed yet.

      - T

    69. Re:OU Student Here by Wildclaw · · Score: 1

      "They do not have any life potential"

      So, what? It isn't like we don't have enough people on the planet already. Life potential is an incredibly bad excuse with 6 billion humans, unless you again are talking on religious grounds.

    70. Re:OU Student Here by Ifandbut · · Score: 1

      Anyway, Oklahoma sounds like a terrible place for the progressive and diverse.

      There is only one place worst: Utah.

    71. Re:OU Student Here by Notquitecajun · · Score: 1

      Here's the rub - what about the "self" of the unborn?

  5. The University versus the legislature by Doublejaay · · Score: 1

    The University is a bit more liberal than most of the state. But the legislature is simply the largest collection of morons outside of the District of Columbia.

    1. Re:The University versus the legislature by kenj0418 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Really, what do you expect from the Oklahoma legislature anyway -- they're all descended from a bunch of apes anyway.

    2. Re:The University versus the legislature by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      With the way they act all high and mighty, it seems a few of them still haven't descended.

  6. Creationism was created as a childish response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Muslim creationist Harun Yahya, most famous for his Atlas of Creation, also complained about not being invited.

    The only reason creationism came about was as a knee-jerk reaction to the origin of species anyway. The difference of course is there's no science behind it whatsoever, instead trying to apply scientific fact from stories a thousand years old.

    1. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saying it as "there's no science behind it whatsoever" is an insult to science. There's not a single brain cell behind it.

    2. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dawkins supports the idea of creationism, so long as lifeforms myseriously grew on the back of a fucking crystal, or an intergalactic bukkake fertilized the planet.

      Um... no.

      Toward the end of his interview with me, Stein asked whether I could think of any circumstances whatsoever under which intelligent design might have occurred. It's the kind of challenge I relish, and I set myself the task of imagining the most plausible scenario I could. I wanted to give ID its best shot, however poor that best shot might be. I must have been feeling magnanimous that day, because I was aware that the leading advocates of Intelligent Design are very fond of protesting that they are not talking about God as the designer, but about some unnamed and unspecified intelligence, which might even be an alien from another planet. Indeed, this is the only way they differentiate themselves from fundamentalist creationists, and they do it only when they need to, in order to weasel their way around church/state separation laws. So, bending over backwards to accommodate the IDiots ("oh NOOOOO, of course we aren't talking about God, this is SCIENCE") and bending over backwards to make the best case I could for intelligent design, I constructed a science fiction scenario. Like Michael Ruse (as I surmise) I still hadn't rumbled Stein, and I was charitable enough to think he was an honestly stupid man, sincerely seeking enlightenment from a scientist. I patiently explained to him that life could conceivably have been seeded on Earth by an alien intelligence from another planet (Francis Crick and Leslie Orgel suggested something similar -- semi tongue-in-cheek). The conclusion I was heading towards was that, even in the highly unlikely event that some such 'Directed Panspermia' was responsible for designing life on this planet, the alien beings would THEMSELVES have to have evolved, if not by Darwinian selection, by some equivalent 'crane' (to quote Dan Dennett). My point here was that design can never be an ULTIMATE explanation for organized complexity. Even if life on Earth was seeded by intelligent designers on another planet, and even if the alien life form was itself seeded four billion years earlier, the regress must ultimately be terminated (and we have only some 13 billion years to play with because of the finite age of the universe). Organized complexity cannot just spontaneously happen. That, for goodness sake, is the creationists' whole point, when they bang on about eyes and bacterial flagella! Evolution by natural selection is the only known process whereby organized complexity can ultimately come into being. Organized complexity -- and that includes everything capable of designing anything intelligently -- comes LATE into the universe. It cannot exist at the beginning, as I have explained again and again in my writings.

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    3. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      I wish i had mod points today so I could rate your post up, and the one you were responding to down...

    4. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by DaFallus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not posting to argue for or against your point but to simply ask why you felt it was necessary to make your entire paragraph a hyperlink. Is it 1994 again?

      --
      No one cares what your captcha was

      Houston TX, USA
    5. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by TheoMurpse · · Score: 4, Funny

      <blink>Yes, as a matter of fact, it is!!!!!!!</blink>

    6. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by PrescriptionWarning · · Score: 1

      Its not offensive to be both a scientific and religious person, its offensive to use beliefs to drive facts. Facts are discovered, not preached.

    7. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Americano · · Score: 1

      [...] entire paragraph a hyperlink. Is it 1994 again?

      Maybe I'm not using a compatible browser... was it blinking too?

    8. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is it when ID is brought up the immediate, knee jerk reaction is, "they are an idiot, mod them down, don't want to hear it".

      Because it's always brought up with the supposition that it's scientific, which it isn't.

      So you don't agree with ID, big fucking deal.

      It's not that we don't agree with it, it's that it is not science, by any definition.

      I don't agree with evolution.

      What other scientific theory do you "agree with"?

      The problem is that you are trying to shoehorn faith into a scientific mould, and when you do, you end up looking like an idiot. If you actually understood science, this wouldn't be an issue.

      BTW, I am not an atheist, but evolution still exists.

    9. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not posting to argue for or against your point but to simply ask why you felt it was necessary to make your entire paragraph a hyperlink.

      So the guy I was responding to couldn't miss the fact that it was a hyperlink. He's apparently missed obvious things before.

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    10. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an atheist myself, but all this name-calling and general snobbishness is just disgusting to see coming from a renown scientist.

      "...I was charitable enough to think he was an honestly stupid man..." WTF? What are you, an all-knowing entity that was never wrong?..

      I wouldn't keep Dawkins among my friends...

    11. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      Dawkins supports the idea of creationism, so long as lifeforms myseriously grew on the back of a fucking crystal, or an intergalactic bukkake fertilized the planet.

      Um... no.

      Quick answer: we're farm animals. An alien race created us for their dinner tables. Their book "how to serve man" is a cookbook.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    12. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      He probably forgot to close the tag... I've done it before

    13. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Parent probably forgot to close the sentence... I've done it before.

    14. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    15. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      He didn't mean "stupid" as an insult. He meant it as a description of Stein's ignorance. And Stein clearly IS ignorant. Well, ignorant or extremely dishonest, in which case insulting him shouldn't be a problem. But Dawkin thought that he was honestly ignorant.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    16. Re:Creationism was created as a childish response by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Why is it when ID is brought up the immediate, knee jerk reaction is, "they are an idiot, mod them down, don't want to hear it".

      Because IDiots lie. They have nothing what so ever of value to contribute with, as they have proven time and time again. Remember rule #1: Creationists lie.

      The simple fact that you pig fuckers call yourself scientists

      Who does? Everyone on Slashdot? Far from it.

      So you don't agree with ID, big fucking deal. I don't agree with evolution. Likewise, BIG FUCKING DEAL.

      It is a big deal because IDiots are actively trying to undermine the scientific method and scientific progress.

      Neither side of the debate will prove to be correct so long as one wants to silence the other.

      No one wants to silence anyone, you fucking moron. Just because IDiots are unable to get their unscientific, religious crap forced into science doesn't mean that they are being silenced.

      Many great scientists have come and gone that were religious people. Why now is it offensive to be both a scientist, and a religious person?

      It isn't. Well known Evolution supporters like Ken Miller are religious. The problem is when religious people start lying and deceiving in order to undermine science, which is what IDiots always do.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  7. Wow. Just wow. by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Has anyone in the Oklahoma heard of the First Amendment? Cultural diversity? WTF does cultural diversity have to to do with science, anyway? Free speech was intended to protect offensive speech. This should apply especially when said offensive speech is based on solid scientific evidence.

  8. Uhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do believe the popular opinion has been proven wrong many times before. Why are we so adamant on enforcing it when in of itself it provides no proof except the idea existing. While other ideas provide ample proof of at least partial validity.
    "demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking and are views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma" couldn't this be considered intolerance as well? You are stopping a person from at least I'd think freedom of speech.
    But hell I'm just being reasonable.

  9. The forces of darkness by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 0, Troll

    The forces of darkness are conspiring to bring about a new dark age for the Humanity. Those people shall never be allowed to succeed; they shall be opposed by the mot vehement means possible. If religious people are so fond of discriminating against the non-religious, we, the enlightened atheists shall have no remorse in discriminating against the religious, and making it known publicly.

    1. Re:The forces of darkness by cowscows · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Please don't forget that it is a subset of "religious people" who are fighting to discredit science and impose their beliefs via government and laws. There are plenty of religious people who don't support those more extreme views. Belief in God and a respect and enthusiasm for science are not mutually exclusive. Maybe you should try to be more careful about making that distinction when using your vehement means.

      I guess the question is, are you fighting against anyone who believes in God, or are you fighting against people who use their beliefs to justify controlling other people? If it's the latter, then myself and many other people who believe in God will support you. If it's the former, then you're turning us into enemies.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    2. Re:The forces of darkness by Beyond_GoodandEvil · · Score: 3, Insightful

      enlightened atheists shall have no remorse in discriminating against the religious, and making it known
      That word, I don't think it means what you think it means. And if you were so truly enlightened you recognize how two wrongs do not make a right, or the irony of your dogmatic discrimination against those who disagree with you.

      --
      I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
    3. Re:The forces of darkness by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 0, Troll

      And if you were so truly enlightened you recognize how two wrongs do not make a right

      Indeed, it usually takes three or four.

      More seriously, the "two wrongs do not make a right" sounds like religious or ideological (pretending that there is a distinction) dogma. Where is your proof?

    4. Re:The forces of darkness by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      Uhhh.. what?

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    5. Re:The forces of darkness by sbayless · · Score: 1

      Please don't forget that it is a subset of "religious people" who are fighting to discredit science and impose their beliefs via government and laws.

      While I agree it is important to stress that it is just a subset, when the elected representatives of a state work towards the interests of that subset, then we have a problem. http://xkcd.com/154/

    6. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also smacks of the idea that we can experimentally test for divinity in higher order dimensions, which we simply cannot.

      It is simple physics to show that God cannot exist in OUR universe, since God by definition is an omnipotent being-- this means he has unlimited energy, and thus, infinite mass. He would crush our universe under intense gravity if he existed here.

      Thus, if there indeed IS a god, this being would have to exist outside of our universe in some manner of speaking. This would explain his causality violating paradoxical rhetoric, as well as his omnipresence (about things in our universe), because he would be able to observe all of our 3+1 spacetime dimensions statically, from a higher order dimension.

      Higher order dimensions of this kind are postulated in many derivations of string and M-theory, but like M-theory and string theory, this also precludes direct observation and information collection on which to formulate a prediction for the model to make. If indeed M-theory and string theory are correct, it is only our hypothesis that these extra dimensions are "small and curled up", since we are unable to accurately test that assertion.

      I wont say that God exists definitively, just that he cannot exist inside our 3+1 spacetime dimension (because of the infinite energy density he has.) Likewise, I wont say that such a being does not exist (in the most definite manner of speaking), since it is at least concievable that something at least 'like' god could exist in higher order dimensions where other (untestable by us) rules apply.

      If God exists, it is not as a friendly man who sits on a cloud with a halo over his head, but as some unfathomable being using alien physics.

    7. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is an 'enlightened atheist', ergo you are an 'unenlightened ignoramus'. Of course you are the enemy.

    8. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Superstition is still the enemy of rational thinking, no matter what spin you put on it.

    9. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no no. I'm sure he means enlightened not as in "showing a ridicolous amount of false respect to any opinion because thats what we have been thought to do", but as in knowing whats actaully true.

      These aren't opinions on.. how you should raise your kids, or treat your neighbours a question about abortion or gay marriage. This is either TRUE or FALSE, and no touchy feelings can change that.

      enlightenment:education that results in understanding and the spread of knowledge

      Maybe YOU were thinking of the word "respectful"?
      But even then I'm sick and tired of having to show the slightest respect to a bunch of absolute nonsense just because it happens to be part of a popular religion.

      I'll show just as much respect to christianity as I would the belief that the earth is flat.
      You are doing the world and humanity a favour if you help put an end to all these destructive sects.

    10. Re:The forces of darkness by ciderVisor · · Score: 1

      Two wrongs do not make a right

      True, but sometimes three lefts do.

      --
      Squirrel!
    11. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      some scientists can be dogmatic, yes, but scientific process weeds out repeat offenders. therefore, if a scientist is correct, he cannot be dogmatic when he disses belief which IS dogmatic, like religion.

    12. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's the former, then you're turning us into enemies.

      You already are the enemy. By being religious, you are a part of the forces of darkness. Religion is a psychological virus, and I'm just sad that we cannot inoculate babies against it.

      Religion is a disease, a cancer of this planet. It is a plague, and we are the cure.

    13. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you fulfill Revelation Ch 18. Me personally, the sooner the better.

    14. Re:The forces of darkness by Msdose · · Score: 1

      When Jesus said man doesn't live by bread alone... I was thinking maybe Satan had turned all the bread to stones and he was just offering Christ the opportunity to change them back, sort of a professional courtesy, one magician to another. I know that sounds unlikely, but bear with me. Science at best considers all mythologies to be allegories, if they have any meaning at all. The allegory-makers would have included some device in the allegories to dissuade people from taking them literally. Thus, Satan would be the cautionary figure who's inclusion is meant to warn you away from that mistake. Satan then, is the character who changes words into icons, bread into stones. And Jesus, of course rejects this, and so should you. Nothing personal, just that science is not subject to belief.

    15. Re:The forces of darkness by renoX · · Score: 1

      >>Belief in God and a respect and enthusiasm for science are not mutually exclusive.

      But they are: if you really respect the scientific method, explain me how you applied it to choose the God you're believing in?

    16. Re:The forces of darkness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Belief in God and a respect and enthusiasm for science are not mutually exclusive" - merely hypocritical and nonsensical.

      Your belief in a god will be seen as support by the religious nutters in one way or another.

      Your belief in a god distorts your perspective on reality... if enough people subscribe to your unproven delusion it will ultimately have an effect on me...

      Therefore unfortunately you will be on the other side in this particular argument. That doesn't mean you have to be my enemy... it just means that we will not be in agreement from a scientific perspective.

      What else do you believe in with absolutely no proof? Would you believe I own a bridge?

  10. Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by russotto · · Score: 5, Funny

    Evolution or no evolution, I think Dawkins is unlikely to speak at the Vatican any time soon. His being an atheist and an advocate for atheism is the main reason. They'd sooner invite Lucifer; at least he believes in God.

    1. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by robot_love · · Score: 5, Funny

      Unfortunately, however, Lucifer's social calendar is jammed solid, and he is unlikely to respond to any speaking engagement requests.

      --
      .there is enough of everything for everyone.
    2. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Deag · · Score: 1

      Is belief in God still a requirement of Catholicism?

    3. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 1

      Is belief in God still a requirement of Catholicism?

      Yes, but not Church of England.

      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    4. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      Yes. The Catholic creed (Latin from I Believe) starts "We believe in One God" and is said at ever Sunday or Holy Day of Obligation service. Unfortunately, as you imply, plenty of people don't seem to understand what that belief implies.

      As for the GP post, Dawkins acts more like an atheist fundamentalist, who likes to use evolution as his preferred weapon, than a scientist who is defending himself from misguided Fundamentalist Creationists. There was a pretty revealing cover story about him in Discover Magazine in 2005, and he chooses to try to destroy Christian evolutionists over religion instead of siding with them on evolution.

    5. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Lucifer will be free to attend the Vatican when Hell freezes over. Because, hey, it's still warm in Italy.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    6. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by corbettw · · Score: 1

      The Catholic creed (Latin from I Believe) starts "We believe in One God" and is said at ever Sunday or Holy Day of Obligation service.

      My local parish priest uses air quotes around that part.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    7. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      They'd sooner invite Lucifer; at least he believes in God.

      Yes, but he defines it as "me".

      --

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

    8. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Yes, Dawkins can be a prick. At the same time, he's also been the object of considerable venom by the Creationist crowd, and has all too often seen these ignorant nuts treated more like the village idiot by their more rational co-religionists than be publicly outed.

      Hey, he's got free time these days (what with being for much of his career one of the most important and revolutionary researchers into evolution), and he doesn't think much of religions. It's a free country (well maybe not Oklahoma), and if he wants to mock religious people, whether they believe in evolution or not, is his own business. I find his anti-theistic arguments infantile and pointless, but he's got his schtick. The Selfish Gene still remains one of the great works of popular science, and I still recommend it to anyone trying to get a grasp on how complex systems can evolve.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    9. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is patently untrue. I just heard from my ex that she is giving a lecture next week, and she said she wished she got more of these invites.

    10. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by kentrel · · Score: 1

      Dawkins is as likely to speak at the Vatican as Christopher Hitchens is

    11. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      As a non-resident non-citizen, does Dawkins have the same rights on American soil. I don't know, I'm just asking?

      Unfortunately for him, he'd probably be better of taking a less vitriolic tactic. His type of act has a tendency to energize the opposition and encourage them to dig in and fight, where as a less controversial style might actually get his opposition to think a little more critically about what he says and compare that to their experience and consider some of their core beliefs to be out of line of common sense, instead of forcing them to reject everything he says out of hand.

      I guess it's the difference between knocking over the whole wall of their belief instead of just eroding it a little at a time until it's so unstable that gravity finishes the job.

    12. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Tenek · · Score: 1

      Depending on whose head this went *whoosh*ing over, Hitchens did speak at the Vatican as an advocate against the beatification of Mother Teresa.

    13. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Mansing · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, however, Lucifer's social calendar is jammed solid ...

      Too many appearances scheduled with the banking and finance industries ....

    14. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He's much more likely to speak at the Vatican than most religious institutions. Catholics are much more accepting of evolution than other Christian sects.

    15. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Tenek · · Score: 1

      Depending on whose head that went *whoosh*ing over, Hitchens did speak at the Vatican when they were considering the beatification of Mother Teresa.

    16. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by russotto · · Score: 1

      Depending on whose head this went *whoosh*ing over, Hitchens did speak at the Vatican as an advocate against the beatification of Mother Teresa.

      Appropriately, a position known as the advocatus diaboli -- Devil's Advocate.

    17. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      really? ... I wouldn't have thought that Cheney is that busy nowadays..

    18. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who knows. Christopher Hitchens (author of "God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything") actually assumed the role of advocatus diaboli for a canonization once, IIRC. (Yes, that actually exists - basically, the advocatus diaboli is supposed to argue against canonization and come up with arguments that will then be refuted so they cannot be brought up later on after the fact.)

    19. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by wfstanle · · Score: 1

      Obviously you haven't heard of Dantes version of Hell. In his version, Hell IS frozen over!

    20. Re:Evolution isn't the issue with Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, however, Lucifer's social calendar is jammed solid, and he is unlikely to respond to any speaking engagement requests.

      Yup, he's busy preparing accommodation for Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rove, Limbaugh, Milton Friedman and the rest...

  11. Funny misreading by digitalgiblet · · Score: 0

    I read that as "Oklahoma, Vulcan Take Opposite Tacks On Evolution".

    1. Re:Funny misreading by overzero · · Score: 1

      I read it without the comma, as in "Oklahoma Vatican..."

      The Vatican: now with a convenient location near you!

  12. Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is how it ideally should be in society. Scientists shouldn't be afraid of exploring faith, Theologians shouldn't be afraid of science. Banning Dawkins is horrible, but I understand why people don't like him.

    His science has become his religion, which ticks off people who's religion has become their science.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    1. Re:Awesome by geekoid · · Score: 4, Informative

      "His science has become his religion, ..."
      That makes no damn sense.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Awesome by aurispector · · Score: 1

      The Catholic Church currently has a pretty open minded view of science. It's interesting to see them hosting a conference like this because on the surface it flies in the face of religious belief. Too often it's cast as an either/or scenario when there's no real reason for science and faith to conflict - if you look at it the right way. I've heard of scientists taking the view that science is merely a way to explore God's creation. The method still works regardless of how you ground it.

      All too often people cite science to trump religion which seems just as intolerant as hard-core creationism. How long after they found out that Santa Claus wasn't really just a guy in a red suit did they realize that God wasn't just a bearded dude in a robe?

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
    3. Re:Awesome by digibud · · Score: 1

      It's always irritating to hear people say things like "his science has become his religion". That's absurd on the face of it. Dawkins is a scientist. Period. If one could find a scientific (measurable and reproducible) experiment that would conclusively demonstrate the existence of god, I'm sure he would be happy to study the results of it. Because of the overwhelming (total) lack of scientific lack of evidence for the existence of god and because of utter stupidity of the claimed evidence (talking snakes, virgin births, raising from the dead, divine intervention) Dawkins (and other clear thinking people) refuse to accept the basic tenets of monotheistic religions. THAT is a far cry from him turning his science into a religion. The fundamental tenets of science are diametrically opposed to the inherent belief systems of the religions in question and no reputable scientist (which Dawkins clearly is) makes science into a religion, if by that you mean his beliefs are based on faith and a total lack of evidence or scientific inquiry and are seen to be infallible as is the case with religious belief. Dawkins certainly does NOT do that so lets lay to rest the tired old criticism that scientists turn their understanding of scientific discoveries into religious beliefs. Whatever I may believe today as a scientist, based on the most recent experimental data, may be overturned tomorrow by new and better data and I (as well as Dawkins) will be happy to throw my old beliefs out the window when science finds new information that better conforms with newly documented data. The second part, "people who's religion has become their science" doesn't even make any sense. That's like saying "for people who's backward, ignorant belief in fairly tales becomes a highly disciplined belief system based on published, reproducible data and conclusions". Huh? Scientists can't explore faith. Faith is faith. By definition it's belief without evidence. Scientists can choose to not act scientifically and adopt and irrational belief system of they wish to (and some do), but the should indeed be afraid of doing it because it can lead to confusion as to what is real and whether one's perception and belief system concerning reality should be based on fact or fantasy. Some scientists can keep the two concepts separated reasonably well but many others fail to do so and lose all credibility as scientists as do all (and I mean ALL) young-earth believers who continue to pretend they are scientists instead of admitting they are people of religious faith with scientific training who choose to ignore the science and instead base their belief system on religious underpinnings. At least you got it right when you said "theologians shouldn't be afraid of science.". I think that is true because they should not be afraid the people of the world coming to grips with the understanding that most of today's religions are based on false superstitions. They should not fear the truth.

    4. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      That's a long rant, that I won't dissect completely. The English language has these funny things called metaphors, similes, as well as Irony, sarcasm and poetry. Every/any combination of words can make sense. Ever read Finnegan's wake?

      But basically when I say "science has become someone's religion". It means that they are going beyond the limits of science to try and argue for science. Some have said that Religion is an unprovable hypothesis. Which, I would agree to. That also means that it can not be disproved. Those that try to disprove an unprovable hypothesis are just as silly as those that do.

      Above all, regardless of profession we are humans. Our career should not be the only thing to define us. So when I mean "Scientists should explore faith" I did not mean to imply that they should or needed to bring their scientific arsenal to bear on the problem of religion, but that they as humans should be open to all of the experiences humans can experience. Just as they are open to falling in love, despite a lack of concrete exacting scientific understanding of emotion.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    5. Re:Awesome by Americano · · Score: 1

      Wall of text is magnificent. I want one for my very own.

    6. Re:Awesome by osgeek · · Score: 1

      I think you're equivocating on the use of "religion". Religion requires "faith". Trust in evidence and theories built on them is not faith.

      It's more appropriate to say that "Science is his passion."

    7. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Well, of those to criticize my usage of that phrase, you come the closest to discussing it in a rational manner. I would say that there are some people, Dawkins included, whose defense of scientific theories goes beyond what science actually says. And when you do that, go beyond the tested and verified theories, you are in the same grey area as religions.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    8. Re:Awesome by canuck08 · · Score: 0

      It's always irritating to hear people say things like "his science has become his religion". That's absurd on the face of it.

      Ah, but it is only absurd if you consider logic and reason to be paramount.

      If you don't require your ideas to be logically correct then you can call science a religion.

    9. Re:Awesome by jstott · · Score: 1

      "His science has become his religion, ..."
      That makes no damn sense.

      It makes perfect sense. Science has become Dawkins' "Higher Power," and he has become a religious fundamentalist in the worship of his own deity. Just because it's not the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob doesn't make it any less a religion.

      -JS

      --
      Vanity of vanities, all is vanity...
    10. Re:Awesome by skydyr · · Score: 1

      That's a long rant, that I won't dissect completely. The English language has these funny things called metaphors, similes, as well as Irony, sarcasm and poetry. Every/any combination of words can make sense. Ever read Finnegan's wake?

      Finnegan's Wake is a modern-day sword in the stone. Many have tried to read it, but none have succeeded.

    11. Re:Awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's always irritating to watch idiots post a bunch of long winded tripe in one solid block of constipated text. In the future, please use some bloody paragraphs.

    12. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I would say that there are some people, Dawkins included, whose defense of scientific theories goes beyond what science actually says.

      But he does not.

      And when you do that, go beyond the tested and verified theories

      Again, he does not.

      You are nothing but a pathetic liar who is attacking Dawkins because you cannot argue factually and rationally against his arguments.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    13. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think its a just a really good CAPTCHA. Its like the Waking life of its time. A book version of Pulp fiction that wasn't glitzed up with violence.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    14. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1
      I would argue that he does go beyond what science can prove. He tries to disprove the unprovable. The rational approach to such a situation is not to try and disprove the unprovable statement, but to simply stand back and say its not provable.

      you cannot argue ... against his arguments.

      Bingo! That's what they are arguments. Not theories or even hypotheses : arguments. Arguments occasionally presented as hypotheses. And that's why I don't have much respect for him. There is no scientific theory called "the God Delusion", its an argument. He might be right, he might be wrong. Hes wrong for the same freaking reason why intelligent design is wrong. Which is just about the most ironic thing imaginable.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    15. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      It makes perfect sense. Science has become Dawkins' "Higher Power," and he has become a religious fundamentalist in the worship of his own deity.

      No, you idiot. Science is a method, not an authority. Scientific knowledge is ever-changing, and is not infallible.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    16. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      However The Scientific Method is Infallible!!!

    17. Re:Awesome by himi · · Score: 1

      It hasn't failed yet.

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    18. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Yes, exactly! Dawkins treats Science as an Authority! That is part of what I meant any ways.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    19. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      If you mean the *minor* bad theories or hypotheses have been eventually weeded out...All well and good, but then you have to admit that Scientific Method still hasn't succeeded in being infallible, b/c we're still on the road. By that I mean, if we stopped the clock now, there would almost assuredly be some wrong widely held views.

      Succinctly, If it hasn't failed yet, then it hasn't succeeded either, yet.

      Scientists are as genetically defective as the rest of the human family, studies strongly suggest that scientists can be as hardheaded about their pet projects as the rest of us, and more creative and articulate about defending them and attacking others.

      For example, there are two main theories of the origin of life, basically replication first or Metabolism first. Two scientists were quoted in a science mag (I forget which) and they both called the other's theory "Out of the realm of science."

    20. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      But basically when I say "science has become someone's religion". It means that they are going beyond the limits of science to try and argue for science.

      They are not. It is you who don't understand their arguments.

      That also means that it can not be disproved. Those that try to disprove an unprovable hypothesis are just as silly as those that do.

      Religion cannot be falsified, but that doesn't mean that one can't deal with specific claims within the religion.

      they as humans should be open to all of the experiences humans can experience

      They are extremely open. And, in fact, they are so open that they have explained many or most of the "supernatural" experiences by natural means.

      Just as they are open to falling in love, despite a lack of concrete exacting scientific understanding of emotion.

      That comparison sucks. We know that love is chemicals and electical impulses. We also know where love came from.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    21. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      His science has become his religion

      Pure and utter nonsense. You don't even know what Dawkin's arguments are, so why are you making these retarded claims about him?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    22. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      I've responded to everyone who made a similar claim so you can look at those as well. And I mean them all. But also, I find it interesting that everyone has paid attention to that part of the statement rather than the other.

      Religion becoming science makes just as much sense or nonsense as science becoming religion. Obviously no one can run experiments on the Bible, use it as a manual to build an engine. It can't actually replace science. The opposite is also true in a strict understanding of the word religion. You can't take a logical system and turn it into one that does not run on pure logic ( which is what all of you geniuses have said). The phrase is talking about an overeaching of each, not a complete overtaking.

      PS: I do know what Dawkins arguments are, and that's the whole point: they are arguments ... not science. I don't know why everyone is freaking out about that simple statement. Such virulent responses must mean that I've hit a nerve of some kind that I didn't know was there. Care to explain in a calm, rational manner? Or at least explain the scientific value of "the God Delusion"?

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    23. Re:Awesome by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      You cannot disprove the existence of God, anymore than the existence of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. That, is what I'm referring to. While we might have some vagaries of a physical understanding of the symptoms of Love, its really a subset of free will. You have no idea what will happen in Love between two people. That uncertainty about it, shouldn't prevent it from being experienced.

      Aside to self: Wow, trying to explain an analogy using Love .... on Slashdot ... maybe use cars or section

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    24. Re:Awesome by himi · · Score: 1

      If you mean the *minor* bad theories or hypotheses have been eventually weeded out...All well and good, but then you have to admit that Scientific Method still hasn't succeeded in being infallible, b/c we're still on the road. By that I mean, if we stopped the clock now, there would almost assuredly be some wrong widely held views.

      Succinctly, If it hasn't failed yet, then it hasn't succeeded either, yet.

      What the fuck are you talking about? The scientific method is a process - it's /never/ finished, unless no one is practising it any more, at which point the failings of any particular theories aren't a reflection on the scientific method, they're a reflection on the theories themselves.

      The scientific method has not failed yet at refining our understanding of the universe. You need to introduce completely artificial constraints ("stopping the clock") to postulate its failure.

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    25. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      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)

      #3 coupled with #6 is entirely subject to what doctors call the placebo effect. Should it happen? No. Will it happen? Yes. Will it all work out in the end? Probably. My point is that when you introduce humans with egos into prediction, you never can completely weed out *subjective* POV. And when you introduce #8, making it a process, usually what you get is a bunch of scientists fighting.

      Or how about this, Religious people claim God is infallible, you claim they are false and point to people claiming to be believers in God while generally being hypocrites. I postulate you can find the same in followers of "infallible" scientific method. If you are allowed to divorce Hwang Woo-suk from science, Can I not divorce all "Christian" Hypocrites from Christianity?

      I do not defend any "Christian" dabbling in politics. (John 18:36) I do not try to coerce anyone. I will engage in respectful conversation of opposing POVs. If I offend, I will stop. Let me know.

    26. Re:Awesome by himi · · Score: 1

      See, you're not making the correct distinction. Science as it is practised in reality is, of course, fallible and flawed. But the scientific method is (in a sense) the platonic ideal that the practical reality of science is based on. The scientific method /works/, despite all the failings of the people practising it.

      How does that compare with religion?

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    27. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      Thank you for the response. I agree that the ideal of the scientific method, if/when followed, will eventually find out the facts. I personally love science, especially math, genetics, and astronomy.

      I only ask that you allow me to also say:

      Christianity as it is practised in reality is, of course, fallible and flawed. But Christianity is (in a sense) the Christian ideal that Jesus set as a life pattern. The Christian method /works/, despite all the failings of the people claiming to 'practise' it.

      In other words, If all or most "Christians" acted like Christ, I think people would enjoy them. He never *forced* his ideas on others and the only ones he upbraided were religious hypocrites. He set up some pretty good principles too. "More Happiness in Giving than Receiving" "Do unto others..." And they work. I don't want to sound preachy, but I'm sure you've heard of this: Why Money Doesnt Buy Happiness and Key to Happiness, Give Away Money.

      As to why Christendom doesn't act Christian, well that is not for /. ...

    28. Re:Awesome by himi · · Score: 1

      Christianity as it is practised in reality is, of course, fallible and flawed. But Christianity is (in a sense) the Christian ideal that Jesus set as a life pattern. The Christian method /works/, despite all the failings of the people claiming to 'practise' it.

      In other words, If all or most "Christians" acted like Christ, I think people would enjoy them. He never *forced* his ideas on others and the only ones he upbraided were religious hypocrites. He set up some pretty good principles too. "More Happiness in Giving than Receiving" "Do unto others..." And they work. I don't want to sound preachy, but I'm sure you've heard of this: Why Money Doesnt Buy Happiness and Key to Happiness, Give Away Money.

      That line of argument is /not/ analogous to the scientific method, though - christianity doesn't have any particular goal, and thus you can't judge its success or failure.

      As a set of ethical guidelines, a selected subset of what christianity preaches may be reasonably workable, but you need to pick the subset based on something outside the bible (be it some kind of in-built ethical preference, outside cultural influences, or whatever). That means that even by /that/ measure, it's hard to make an objective judgement as to christianity's 'success'.

      I may not be understanding your argument, of course, but I just don't see how you can draw useful analogies between the success of the scientific method and any rational measure of the success of christianity or any other religion. Nor do I see how that would have any bearing on my initial argument.

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    29. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      That line of argument is /not/ analogous to the scientific method, though - christianity doesn't have any particular goal, and thus you can't judge its success or failure.

      I could argue that, but this forum is /. and not theology.org, so I will not.

      Nor do I see how that would have any bearing on my initial argument.

      Ok, You originally said, "It hasn't failed yet." Thus time was brought into the equation. To explore the "clock stopping" statement more, We live in the present and therefore if today we searched all peer-reviewed science we could find opposing theories and bad science. Or explanations that do not best fit the facts.

      Applying this to real life, big pharma engages in scientific method. FDA checks and others retest according to scientific method. (as best I understand it)

      So my point originally is that the Scientific Method will not always produce correct outcome. This is b/c humans are involved and limits of equipment/methodology. But not all bad drugs that have been pulled from the shelves are because of big Pharma cover-up. Sometimes time and wider use was needed to uncover the dangers.

      To put it simply, would you say that every scientific study following the Scientific Method will produce true/correct facts? I was saying with sarcasm, NO, even faithful use of Scientific Method will sometimes produce bad science.

      Or put another way, Are you convinced of /all/ published, peer-reviewed science?

      I am not. I am convinced of /most/ of it. That is my point. I don't think my view is dogmatic.

    30. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      It has worked very nicely so far, wouldn't you agree? And considering its excellent track record, does it not make sense to keep relying on it in the future as well?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    31. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      #3 coupled with #6 is entirely subject to what doctors call the placebo effect.

      Which is why it's a good thing that scientists have to show other scientists that they are correct.

      And when you introduce #8, making it a process, usually what you get is a bunch of scientists fighting.

      Sigh. You are really grasping for straws now.

      I postulate you can find the same in followers of "infallible" scientific method.

      No, because science is not claimed to be an all-powerful being which tells us how to live our lives.

      If you are allowed to divorce Hwang Woo-suk from science, Can I not divorce all "Christian" Hypocrites from Christianity?

      Woo-suk was *shock* exposed by OTHER SCIENTISTS.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    32. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Dawkins treats Science as an Authority!

      In what way?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    33. Re:Awesome by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Succinctly, If it hasn't failed yet, then it hasn't succeeded either, yet.

      Your computer works, does it not? Your computer is a product of the scientific method.

      Scientists are as genetically defective as the rest of the human family, studies strongly suggest that scientists can be as hardheaded about their pet projects as the rest of us, and more creative and articulate about defending them and attacking others.

      So what? That's why there's peer review, and why others have to be able to repeat your findings.

      For example, there are two main theories of the origin of life, basically replication first or Metabolism first. Two scientists were quoted in a science mag (I forget which) and they both called the other's theory "Out of the realm of science."

      Sounds like quote mining to me. Creationists do this a lot.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    34. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      I agree it works *nicely* I'm not arguing for change. My main point is that it doesn't work perfectly.

      Here's wikipedia def for Infallible:

      When a statement, teaching, or book is called 'infallible', this can mean any of the following: 1. It is something that cannot be proved false 2. It is something that can be safely relied on 3. It is something completely trustworthy and sure

      Like I said earlier, are you convinced that the Scientific Method is completely trustworthy and sure? If so, then all output (that faithfully follows The method) would fit 1 and 2.

      I love science and tech. I do not base all decisions in life on them. I doubt you do either. It just seemed funny that one can say, "my way is infallible, and you're stupid to claim such about your way."

      About Christianity, and exposing hypocrisy, I try to expose truth every day I am alive. But I never shove it down other's throats. Or disrespect them to their face. You don't want to hear it, I shut up.

    35. Re:Awesome by himi · · Score: 1

      To put it simply, would you say that every scientific study following the Scientific Method will produce true/correct facts? I was saying with sarcasm, NO, even faithful use of Scientific Method will sometimes produce bad science.

      How do you judge the success or failure of the scientific method? Given it's an iterative optimisation method, it seems to me that the only valid measure of success or failure is the long term trend - the scientific method is successful if, over time, the trend is towards increasingly successful explanations for observed reality. I don't think it even has to be a monotonic improvement to justify being called a success - the biggest gains often come when particular theories 'fail', suggesting that both the immediate successes /and/ the immediate failures contribute to the success of the scientific method.

      That measure of success suggests two things: firstly, that the success of individual theories is /not/ ultimately relevant to the success of the scientific method, and secondly, that 'stopping the clock' is /not/ a valid way to argue about the its success.

      The scientific method is /not/ about 'outcomes', it's a process of continual improvement, and one that is astonishingly successful. The closest thing I can think of to a failure of the scientific method is the screwed up biological sciences that pertained in the early USSR, driven by political forces. Even there it did eventually correct itself when given the chance, and that localised failure did not affect the rest of the world. There are probably other examples of localised failure, but as with individual theories, that sort of failure doesn't indicate a failure of the scientific method.

      It probably seems like I'm wiggling the goalposts around to make my argument easier, but I'm not really - the issue at hand is the success or failure of the /scientific method/, not 'science', or some particular set of theories or ideas. The state of the process at any instant in time does not reflect on the success of failure of the process - only the long term behaviour does. The process is as close to infallible as I can imagine, given enough time and diversity of practitioners.

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    36. Re:Awesome by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      OK, I give. I agree with you 98%. Especially with the ideal of SM will get it right eventually.

      My only point is that a statement like "SM /will/ (100.000% chance) never fail" sounds like a type of prediction that religion calls prophecy. But you didn't say that.

      I think we have beaten this thing to death, but I have enjoyed discussion. It has refined my thoughts on some things. Thank you for keeping it civil.

      What we really need are some extremely awesome mirrors about 2.3 billion light-years away, pointed our way, and some equally awesome telescopes to point at them... /pipe dream

      DAS

  13. Re:Wow. Just wow. by xenolion · · Score: 0

    ok let me tell you one thing, these people that are putting this threw are politicians if they can stop one man from speaking then they can slowly tweak it to shut up anyone that's not a part of the government. It doesnt matter what the item is, its just the start of a landslide.

  14. Re:They Have A Point by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

    And why is Rush Limbaugh (or any other controversial figure) allowed to have a radio show? Because of a little thing called 'The First Amendment', which protects his right to speak his own views, no matter whether you agree with them or not.

  15. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Jawn98685 · · Score: 1

    To answer your question, yes, there probably are a few folks in the Bible Belt states who embrace intellectual thought, diversity, etc. The noisy, white, fundamentalist faction, however, does not want to even think about those things. Alas, they have the ear of enough elected officials to make a mess of things, miring government with stupid, dogma-driven debate and laws.

  16. Re:They Have A Point by Shakrai · · Score: 0

    And why is Rush Limbaugh (or any other controversial figure) allowed to have a radio show? Because of a little thing called 'The First Amendment', which protects his right to speak his own views, no matter whether you agree with them or not.

    Tell that to the Democratic Congressman who are trying to bring back the so-called "Fairness Doctrine"

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  17. I wonder... by HCLogo · · Score: 0

    What are the odds that these various religions representatives will invite Mr. Dawkins to speak at their events? Not a chance? Well, doesn't that "demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking"?

  18. Re:They Have A Point by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

    I don't recall Dawkins ever being out-and-out insulting to theists in general.

    Maybe he was and he did it with such class that I missed it.

  19. Re:They Have A Point by MozeeToby · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Agreed, being a militant atheist (one who aggressively attacks people's beliefs as well as the people themselves) is no better than being a militant creationist (one who aggressively attacks people's beliefs as well as the people themselves).

  20. Re:They Have A Point by flaming+error · · Score: 5, Funny

    Indeed. Such intolerance for "diversity in thinking" could quickly lead us down the slippery slope to fact-based reasoning. This would be devastating to many a philosophy, religion, stereotype, and political stance. Must. Stop. Use. of. Scientific. Method. Yesterday.

  21. Conceptual domains by Brain-Fu · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The theory of evolution is the natural product of the application of the scientific method. That doesn't make it true. It just makes it the product of the scientific method. When you want to talk about products of the scientific method, evolution is on the menu.

    The theory of creation is the natural product of theological studies of specific scriptures. That doesn't make it true. It just makes it the product of theological studies of specific scriptures. When you want to talk about products of theological studies of specific scriptures, the theory of creation is on the menu.

    So what's the big deal? Someone holds that the products of the scientific method are facts whereas the products of theological studies of specific scriptures are myths? Well that opinion precedes any discussion of the products of these methods. We can intelligently discuss both of them while reserving any statements about our more foundational metaphysical assumptions.

    But, sadly, most people just aren't broad-minded enough to recognize the relationship between metaphysical assumptions, belief systems, and truth. So they get all intimidated whenever they talk to anyone who has a different metaphysical assumption, and to stupid stuff like this.

    Maybe someday the majority will grow out of this habit. But I doubt it will be any day soon.

    1. Re:Conceptual domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is indeed a fact the both evolutionary theory and creationism are the products of their own schools of thought. And although we can say that this fact does not automatically make either one true, there is one crucial difference between these two ideas.

      When both ideas are subjected to a reality test, creationism falls flat on its face. Evolution by natural selection does not.

      Sadly, some people are not broad-minded enough to know that while keeping an open mind is an admirable trait, one should not keep it so open that one's brain falls out.

    2. Re:Conceptual domains by BSAtHome · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking, science is about /how/ things work. Science does not answer the why (in the sense how it relates to us on a concious or social plane).

      Religion answers /why/ things work. This is normally modelled by a "god" figure.

    3. Re:Conceptual domains by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The theory of creation is the natural product of theological studies of specific scriptures.

      That makes it the product of the study of fairy tales with no basis in reality. Attempting to put science and fairy tales on the same level is ridiculous and is the same as passing laws banning kryptonite because it is harmful to Superman or allowing people to shoot at one another because in the cartoons it just makes one's face dirty.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    4. Re:Conceptual domains by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 1

      It is indeed a fact the both evolutionary theory and creationism are the products of their own schools of thought.
      ..When both ideas are subjected to a reality test, creationism falls flat on its face.

      But that's not so much a quality of creationism, than a quality of its whole "school of thought." Subjecting ideas to reality, is a biased way of looking at things. The basis of supernaturalism is that reality and truth aren't the same thing. If you reject that premise (because it seems absurd) then you're naturally going to be against all of supernaturalism's products.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    5. Re:Conceptual domains by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Religion answers /why/ things work.

      More accurately, Religion makes up ludicrous, self-contradictory stories about /why/ things work.

    6. Re:Conceptual domains by AeroIllini · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The computer you're typing on, the principles behind the electricity and the circuit boards and the plastics and the manufacturing... are all products of the scientific method. Every single human advance that allows you to spend your days doing something other than sitting in the jungle naked waiting to be eaten by a big cat are the result of the scientific method.

      The scientific method produces theories that make correct predictions about the world around us. Theology does not. Simplistic philosophical talking points like "Truth" have nothing to do with it, and maintaining that robust scientific theories that make such correct predictions are just "opinions" is hand-waving at best and intellectually dishonest at worst.

      The fact that you and I are even able to converse about this subject over an electronic network is a direct result of the discoveries of science. Theology may give emotional comfort, but it is not, and never will be, in the same realm as science. Don't drag rational thinking people into the navel-gazing fairly tale world of theology.

      --
      For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
    7. Re:Conceptual domains by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      theological studies of specific scriptures are myths?

      Yes, quite literally.

      Main Entry: myth
      Pronunciation: \Ëmith\
      Function: noun
      Etymology: Greek mythos
      Date: 1830

      1 a: a usually traditional story of ostensibly historical events that serves to unfold part of the world view of a people or explain a practice, belief, or natural phenomenon

      --

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

    8. Re:Conceptual domains by Microlith · · Score: 2

      The theory of evolution is the natural product of the application of the scientific method.

      Correct.

      That doesn't make it true.

      It is true, in as far as it can explain what has happened and provides a framework for extremely accurate predictions of what will happen given certain inputs.

      The theory of creation is the natural product of theological studies of specific scriptures.

      And then read them literally, as if they actually happened.

      That doesn't make it true.

      There is zero evidence for most of what is written in scripture, especially the parts that creationists/ID believers subscribe to.

      When you want to talk about products of theological studies of specific scriptures, the theory of creation is on the menu.

      There would be no problem with this except that morons like the ones highlighted in the article put their unsubstantiated beliefs and faith into direct conflict with science. Evidenceless fantasy being put up as somehow equal with scientific reality and evidence.

      most people just aren't broad-minded enough to recognize the relationship between metaphysical assumptions, belief systems, and truth.

      No, most people are capable of recognizing the boundary between reality and fantasy. I mean faith. The people who run the government of Oklahoma are apparently not. And I'm guessing that neither are you.

      Your wishy washy attitude towards their belief in, I assume, an attempt to not offend gives them an opening in which they can try and shove their religious fantasies into science classes, and weaken scientific discovery and critical thinking. Their fantaies have NO PLACE in science classes, and their ill-informed suggestion that evolutionary theory is somehow unfouned and unpopular is proof enough that they are deluded and isolated in their almost purely religiously motivated attempts to get Dawkins' invitation revoked.

    9. Re:Conceptual domains by Brain-Fu · · Score: 1

      I have read the various responses to my post, and it appears that I did not make myself at all clear.

      So, for those that care, I am not a theologian. I regard the religious teachings in question as pure myth (made-up stories that may have some sociological or metaphorical significance, but do not recount historical events). I further think that the scientific method is the single best method we have for the production of facts, and that the banking on said facts is the most rational decision a person can make.

      I believe in the theory of evolution because it was produced by the scientific method. When I said "that doesn't make it true" I was not trying to espouse the worn-out "but it is JUST a theory" tripe, but rather demonstrating that being the product of an investigative method doesn't automatically make something true or false...one must evaluate the method itself to determine its aptitude for truth-production (and, in my opinion, the scientific method wins).

      I do not think that religious beliefs deserve equal consideration in a scientific discourse. As I was trying to make clear, they deserve attention when (and only when) one is discussing the products of theological investigation. In a science class, one typically does not discuss theology. Instead, one discusses (and should discuss) science. When receiving a lecture from a famous scientist, one would expect a scientific, rather than theological discussion. For that reason it makes *no sense* to be upset at the speaker for only talking about the products of the scientific method (as in, evolution).

      If he wanted to come in to a church and preach evolution, there could be reason for upset. Similarly, if a theologian wanted to come to a science class and talk about theology, there is equal reason for upset.

      If you still think that attitude is wishy-washy, then I accuse you of being a bigot.

      Where does one attempt to convince someone that their metaphysical assumptions are wrong? In a philosophy class maybe. Or at lunch. But in a science class the time is better spent just teaching, learning, and doing science than in trying to justify that it is worth doing. Just as in a theology class (or church or whatever) the time is better spent doing theology than in arguing the need to do theology. That is why I think it is silly that people get so upset at what people from the other camp are saying...if you disagree then just don't go to their class.

    10. Re:Conceptual domains by osgeek · · Score: 1

      I see what you're saying... I see what Brain-Fu is saying. You're talking about facts and data, Brain-Fu is talking about perspective and philosophy. Both approaches have their merit, no need to attack him for his/hers.

    11. Re:Conceptual domains by Tenek · · Score: 1

      Religion makes up stories that explain the unknown, and then complains when Science comes along and does a better job.

    12. Re:Conceptual domains by Microlith · · Score: 1

      You miss the point. You claim that science is equally "not true" and a "metaphysical assumption" as religion.

      If you still think that attitude is wishy-washy, then I accuse you of being a bigot.

      No, I accuse you of being wishy washy because of your suggestion that science is somehow a "metaphysical assumption" along the lines of religion. It is faulty and suggesting that it is gives idiots a means to undermine science by forcibly injecting their faith where it doesn't belong.

    13. Re:Conceptual domains by gilroy · · Score: 1

      There is zero evidence for most of what is written in scripture, especially the parts that creationists/ID believers subscribe to.

      I guess that depends on what you mean by "evidence". The divergence between those espousing science and those railing against it is, more often than not, a disagreement on what is the ultimate arbiter of truth. To a scientist, the ultimate arbiter of truth is the physical world. The Universe cannot be wrong. To a fundamentalist, the ultimate arbiter of truth is the Bible (or Koran or other source). The Bible cannot be wrong. In any conflict between your ultimate arbiter of truth and some interpretation of the world, the interpretation has to lose.

      But if you and someone else disagree on the ultimate arbiter of truth, it's unlikely you can ever "resolve" any differences at all. You're not speaking the same language.

    14. Re:Conceptual domains by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      I"m not sure that's a good way to put it. I'd put it:

      Religion makes up stories that explain the unknown, and then complains when Science comes along and makes them known.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    15. Re:Conceptual domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How well I remember that seminal paper 'Method of Delivering Sharp Projectile to An Object at a Distance'. I'd probably be dead if I hadn't read it.

      F.F.

    16. Re:Conceptual domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You miss the point. You claim that science is equally "not true" and a "metaphysical assumption" as religion.

      But the parent clearly stated

      I regard the religious teachings in question as pure myth (made-up stories that may have some sociological or metaphorical significance, but do not recount historical events). I further think that the scientific method is the single best method we have for the production of facts, and that the banking on said facts is the most rational decision a person can make.

      It seems pretty clear that the parent did not say "science is equally "not true" and a "metaphysical assumption" as religion."

      Did you even read the post?

      Do you even know what a metaphysical assumption is? It seems obvious to me that the parent has studied philosophy, whereas you have not, so I will explain by example:

      Here are some metaphysical assumptions that underly science as we know it:

      1) The real world is directly accessible and available for study (not an illusion, like some sects of Hindu or Buddhism believe).

      2) The real world consists of tiny entities that behave according to a set of rules (as opposed to say, idealists, who believe that the real world consists of ideas created by conscious minds....or (i forgot who proposed this) that the real world consists of tiny entities that do not follow rules but only have behaviorial dispositions, and are grouped together only by the statistical liklihood of similar behavior).

      3) The real kicker: something that happens a certian way in the past, several times, is likely to happen that same way in the future (read up on Hume to learn all about the dubiousness of this one).

      There are others but those are the main ones. Though the reasonableness of these asumptions was never called into question by the parent. The parent never said that these metaphysical assumptions are equally as "true" as those made by theologians...which do sound pretty ridiculous when stated:

      1) There exists a conscious all-knowing all-powerful being that created the universe as we know it.
      2) An ancient book written by humans contains facts about this being's interaction with humans, and his desires vis-a-vis human behavior.
      3) The being ensures that human error does not erode the truth-value of the statements in this book.

      Etc.

      I don't see anything in the parent's post that suggests he thinks the second set of metaphysical assumptions are near as reasonable or true as the first set. He just harped on people insisting that one set should be dominant in forums already determined by the other set.

    17. Re:Conceptual domains by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Parent is NOT a troll.

      Science is built up of axioms from there we use observation and the scientific method with logical rules to create all the scientific information we have.

      If instead you took the bible to be a list of axioms. And then used less rigid proofs and popular consensus to build up all of religious information. The pope is also allowed to write in new axioms.

      While you may not see the religious as a valid construct in scientific terms it is valid from a philosophical POV. Clearly most of us on /. follow the science but if people want to follow religion that is an acceptable lifestyle choice. They are not restricted to following traditional logic as science has put out. Think of it more as a thought experiment than anything serious.

    18. Re:Conceptual domains by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Subjecting ideas to reality, is a biased way of looking at things.

      No, it's a rational way of looking at things.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  22. Re:They Have A Point by lordandmaker · · Score: 1

    The small exposure I've had to him (a documentary he did supposedly on Darwinism) portrayed him as a fundamentalist nutbar intent on dismissing and arguing with people who are trying to have a reasonable conversation.

    Were I an impartial viewer, I'd have come away seeing the Church as the more reasonable and rational movement, and this fervent 'darwinism' as quite worrying and deluded.

    So I've not seen him being particularly insulting to theists, I suppose, but he's hardly doing anything for atheism.

  23. Mars by ezwip · · Score: 2, Funny

    Everyone knows we came here after we destroyed Mars.

    --
    "I guess I'm gonna fade into Bolivian."
  24. Vatican. by LaminatorX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not surprised by the latter one. Catholic teaching has leaned hard towards "Science is 'what' and 'how.' God is 'why.'" for a long time now.

    1. Re:Vatican. by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      There is quite a bit of "what" and "how" in the Bible.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    2. Re:Vatican. by Ann+O'Nymous-Coward · · Score: 1

      Pity so much of it is wrong.

    3. Re:Vatican. by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 1

      What are you trying to say?

      The Catholic Church doesn't take entire Bible literally. Compared to American Christianity as a whole, the Church is pretty centrist for the most part.

    4. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, but the modern Catholic church does not interpret the bible literally, unlike many evangelical churches that are the ones making the noise about it.

    5. Re:Vatican. by cowscows · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are many religious people who value the bible yet don't consider it to be a literal encyclopedia of how the universe works. We are willing and able to reason enough to understand that it was written in a time and primarily for an audience with a significantly different understanding of the world from what science has provided for us today.

      I've had many discussions with atheists where I am consistently asked to defend literal interpretations of the bible, when in fact I don't consider literal interpretations correct or useful.

      There are many people out there who have decided to take much of the bible word for word as absolute truth, and I find that foolish. Please take care to not condemn all religious people just because some of them can't be bothered to think for themselves.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    6. Re:Vatican. by vshade · · Score: 1

      But the catholic takes a less literal aproach to the bible. this way thay don't need the followers to be total idiots

    7. Re:Vatican. by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      And as the GP parent posted, the Catholic Church does not treat the Bible as a science text, because the Church is not literal about the Bible on scientific issues, such as how the Earth was created, or its shape, etc.

      The Church is literal in it's regard to most events concerning people, except where it contradicts itself, such as during the carrying of the cross, one Gospel says he carried it without exception while the others say he was helped by a man named Simon.

      The Catholic Church is different from the Protestants in this way. Until the 4th century, there was no official Bible. The Church had sacred writings, but it's true authority rests with the hierarchy and the Bible is a source of information about the faith history of Christianity. Even after the informal settling of what was in the Bible, it was never formally put in Church law until the Protestants rejected 6 books on different criteria (linguistic origin instead of historical use in Christian Churches), then the Church finally added list of books to Church Law.

      In rejecting the historical Church, the Protestant reformers placed all authority in the bible, although some said you couldn't believe anything not found printed in the text, and some said you could believe anything not contradicted by the text. Then, in the late 19th century, a new movement started focused on the first of the two styles, with 15 tenants that also had to be adhered to, one of which was the 6 days of creation is a literal truth that must be believed. These fundamentalists can't separate their belief in God from that tenant, because they haven't been taught how to think properly, so they think that they must believe in the creation myth or all of Christianity, as they believe, is wrong. These fundamentalist are very powerful in the areas that made up the South in the Civil War, with a lesser degree of influence in other areas that are Christian without being predominantly Fundamentalists, such as the Great Plains and Rocky Mountain areas.

    8. Re:Vatican. by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      Right, so God lied to the Israelites about the "what" and "how" because they wouldn't understand the truth. Just omitting comment on such topics wouldn't have been enough; he had to mislead them. Sounds reasonable.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    9. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, though it's not quite as clear sometimes.

      Myself, I'm an atheist, but was raised a catholic. Went to a catholic school for 14 years.

      There I was taught evolution as fact, big bang as probable fact, and most miracles from the bible as allegories or, at best, plays on probability ("the hebrews probably crossed the red sea during one of its droughts... and what are the odds of a drought allowing them to cross while stopping the egyptians, if not a miracle?"... you get the idea).

      This being the final pre-internet days, and since I don't live in the USA, it was quite the shock to learn about Creationism. In fact, I learnd about both Creationism and Flat Earth believers at about the same time, and for a while I thought both were restricted to small groups of loons.

      I'm completely serious, it took me a while to realize that Creationists were for real and that they were so prevalent in the USA :|

    10. Re:Vatican. by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

      But its a nice guide, it requires a bit of historical context and common sense to get the most out of it.

    11. Re:Vatican. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      There are many people out there who have decided to take much of the bible word for word as absolute truth, and I find that foolish. Please take care to not condemn all religious people just because some of them can't be bothered to think for themselves.

      Yep, this is the problem with generalizing people: you also condemn the 5% of those who are different from the vast majority.

      If you're non-American, I apologize, as I understand that Christians outside the USA tend to be pretty reasonable, but around here, 5% probably isn't too far off the mark for Christians who don't take the bible literally.

    12. Re:Vatican. by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1

      There are many religious people who value the bible yet don't consider it to be a literal encyclopedia of how the universe works.

      And there are others who are willing to kill you for believing that it's not meant to be taken literally.

      Personally, I have to wonder what value you see in the bible as a religious document if you don't believe that what it says is the truth. That statement truly is not meant as a flame or an attack - as a lifelong student of religion, I simply do not understand the new line that's being take by those who seek to create this new, happier Christianity. The idea seems to be to believe in the idea of the god defined in the bible, while not believing stories that define that god's dogma and motivations, and which seek to explain its actions.

      What truth do you glean from a document that is not the truth? And why believe in the (apparently arbitrary) values that you've decided that the bible REALLY means, rather than those that are explicitly stated?

      Again - not a flame, though I expect many will take it as such. I simply do not understand the mindset.

    13. Re:Vatican. by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Not surprised by the latter one. Catholic teaching has leaned hard towards "Science is 'what' and 'how.' God is 'why.'" for a long time now.

      A lot of people don't know that and lump '[Roman] Catholic' in with 'Christian Fundie'. Which is *very* amusing since the Fundies are generally Protestant in origin. (Few people seem to remember that within living memory being Catholic in America was as discriminated against as blacks or Jews - by precisely these Fundamentalists.)

    14. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you "thinking" Christians should be actively educating all the retarded Christians about it ... I've never heard from any of you except for idiots who try to explain "Then there was light" as being the equivalent of the Big Bang or innocuous statements about sesame seeds changing colour or similar as representing genetic mutation.

      The vast majority of you bible-thumpers are deluded idiots. The rest are only deluded.

    15. Re:Vatican. by cowscows · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think it's fair to say that there are "truths" that don't boil down to just facts. Simple things like you should treat other people with respect, you shouldn't steal from people, you should try to help the less fortunate, etc. In many ways, large portions of the bible are similar to the sorts of stories that you read to kids, where there's a lesson that you hope they walk away with at the end. Rather than just saying THIS IS HOW YOU SHOULD ACT, you're given an example of someone acting a particular way, and the result teaches you whether their choices/actions were good or not. In the new testament, Jesus often spoke in parables, which is basically the same thing. Rather than just plainly dictating a rule, a story was used to illustrate a point.

      Unfortunately, the parables that Jesus told, as well as other stories in the bible were written to help people who lived at those times understand them. Because today we live in a much different world, most of us have a hard time relating to the stories, they describe a world that's very different than what we experience day to day now. That being the case, those parables take some extra effort in order to parse, and unfortunately many people are unwilling/unable to make that effort. That makes it that much easier for people who claim to understand the bible to impose their interpretation on others.

      I consider myself very fortunate that my family had the resources to send me to a jesuit high school where the time was taken to go through the bulk of the bible in a very analytical and critical way. My experiences there turned the bible from a strangely written book that occasionally seemed to be crammed down my throat by various people into a very interesting and well written bunch of suggestions about how to live a better life. Once you stop looking at it for answers, and more for suggestions and direction, it becomes very useful.

      I could write lots more about this, but I need to get back to work for now. Feel free to ask any follow up questions.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    16. Re:Vatican. by cowscows · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to claim to know why God did or didn't do anything. I have a hard time seeing the value in taking any part of the bible as literal fact, so I'm not going to argue any specifics with you right now. Whether pushed along by divine inspiration or not, the bible was written by people, shared by people, and copied by people. People are often biased, confused, and sometimes even malicious. It's pretty darn hard to know why certain parts of the bible say what they say, or whether there's any truth or value in them at all.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    17. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole christianity versus science mostly seems to be an American thing.

      Here in Europe we even have so called "catholic" universities doing stem cell research (including embryonic) On those universities they teach evolutionary biology, not "intelligent design".

    18. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't take the bible literally than why follow it at all. If you follow a book you need to defend what it says, literal or not. It still says what it says. And I'm a secular academic biblical scholar saying this.

    19. Re:Vatican. by cowscows · · Score: 1

      I've got better things to do then round up all the christian idiots and try to cram my beliefs down their throats. If someone comes to me with a genuine desire to study, analyze, and learn then I'll try to help them. Although my help would likely be to point them towards people who do that sort of thing for a living.

      I'm hardly a bible-thumper. You dismissing me as such does little to advance your argument.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    20. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Catholicism has its fair share of crazies, but it also has a lot of more reasonable people. In fact, more Catholics voted for Obama than McCain.

      The problem is that Catholic leaders lean sharply toward the crazy end of the spectrum. They sometimes say really nutty things about (for example) homosexuality and abortion. The current Pope has gone out of his way to piss off Jewish and Muslim communities. Priests have denied (and have threatened to deny) communion to people who publicly support Democrats. These people have earned their place among the fundamentalist crazies.

    21. Re:Vatican. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Or, perhaps, the cost of papyrus was just too high: http://www.sumware.com/creation.html

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    22. Re:Vatican. by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry, but your answer is simply too... simplistic. These stories have been presented as _fact_ for thousands of years. Long before they were bound together in a book, they were told to children and adults alike - yes, as a moral lesson, but as if they really, truly happened. That's the ongoing battle today; many, many, many people are being taught that those stories are the true, unadulterated word of a god. Suddenly, the new Christians are realizing that there's actually no way to pack 2 (or 7) of every type of creature into a boat? I'm sorry (truly), but I'm not buying it. The genocide of the Caananites isn't a parable, or an example of how you should act. The torture of Job is a very bad life lesson (remain loyal to your god even if he tortures you on a bet? That's messed up.) Most of the stories in the old testament were about showing what happens when you disobey god, or examples of those who obeyed god even under extreme circumstances. For that to have relevance, you have to know who that god is, and that is defined in the same tome. Which parts are true, and which are parables? Which parts should show us the right path for modern times, and which are examples of the horrors that were considered normal in that age (killing your child for disobeying?).

      No, this viewpoint doesn't work for me. If the book is a work of truth, and I should be living my life by its words, I'm going to have to do things and think things that are repugnant to me as a human being. I don't hate the gays, I don't think people who belong to other religions should be killed, I don't want to beat my wife, regardless of the size of the rod. It seems to me that you're picking the truths that fit your view of modern humanity, when it seems to me that the laws created by a god who is omnipotent and omniscient should not change with the whims of human culture. I do not believe that you get to have it both ways.

      "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" and "Judge not, lest ye be not judged" are the only two things I've ever found in that book that seem relevant to reality; I already believed those before I opened the pages.

    23. Re:Vatican. by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      As a semi-religious Jew with a keen interest in science, that's how I view the bible. I see it as a series of moral guides. Yes, there might be sections with some shred of historical value (i.e. there might have been an actual Abraham), but these "historical truths" are secondary to the moral truths that are taught. And before someone takes issue with some law here or there, I don't believe that all of the laws are applicable in modern society. The Torah goes to great lengths describing which animal sacrifices are to be made when and how and yet Jews today don't perform sacrifices at all. Which laws are applicable and which aren't is a personal issue, I believe.

      Back to my point, though. To give an example of how you could interpret the creation story in a non-literal, moralistic manner, I'd turn to a story that a former rabbi of mine once told. He pointed out that there are actually two stories of man's creation. In one, God forms man in His own image as the culmination of creation. In the second, he forms man out of mud. So what does that mean? My rabbi explained that one should always conduct themselves with two statements in mind. The first is: "The entire world was created just for me." The second is: "I am nothing but dirt." If you can balance these two statements in your head, you'll conduct your affairs in a balanced manner, neither letting yourself get too full of pride nor letting yourself get so humble as to downplay your own accomplishments.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    24. Re:Vatican. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      There are lots of people who value fairy tales yet don't consider them to be literal truth.

      Arguments for the existence of god pretty much all reduce to logical fallacy or "because the says so."

      So the only avenue for logical discussion surrounds the veracity of the holy book. If you want to believe in a god just because, go ahead. But if you want to logically discuss that belief then you are necessarily relying on the absolute truth of your holy book.

    25. Re:Vatican. by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Sorry to jump in but I can't help myself. :)

      "The genocide of the Canaanites isn't a parable, or an example of how you should act."

      The Canaanites slaughtered their own children for sexual gratification during ceremonies designed to inspire ecstatic communion with their deity. Pederasty was a practice of their religion as well. They held human sacrifice of innocents as a sacred part of their worship orgies. They practiced a policy of genocide against other tribes weaker than themselves and practiced cultural subversion against those stronger to bring them down. Violence, debauchery, and lasciviousness were the norm for their culture and those that practiced them abundantly were rewarded. Furthermore, the destruction of that culture was a military action between states, not a religious jihad. The example from this lesson is if you allow your culture to become compromised by evil you will be destroyed. There are numerous examples of this throughout history.

      "The torture of Job is a very bad life lesson (remain loyal to your god even if he tortures you on a bet? That's messed up.)"

      There are many lessons from this, but the simplest is this: There are forces in the world that can cause you hardship and are completely beyond your control. Your attitude toward life (and as a believer, God) will help determine your results.

      The bible does not advocate hating gays. Homosexuality is the same as any other sexual sin in the bible, like adultery. The bible does not advocate killing people of other religions. Beating your wife is not recommended either.

      From your statements I can only assume you have had some experience with the bible, but have not had a sufficiently researched and broad experience to reveal the meaning behind many of the things you find objectionable within its pages. Please take no offense from this statement, but currently you are holding up your misunderstandings and lack of knowledge as an example of how bad the bible is. Unfortunately, this is not a book that lends itself to transparent understanding the first time through. The meaning behind the words is obscured by thousands of years of translations, cultural changes, and more often than not, sensational misapplication by many who purport to be believers.

      Picking and choosing happens frequently with believers. It also happens with people who find objectionable material in the bible. I think both can benefit from better understanding. However, this is a formidable task and requires time and discipline. For instance, to understand the meaning therein you need to read the bible from the original languages (or translate it from them), in the context of the time and culture in which it was written, and know the underlying categories of doctrine that the bible is built on. Without that framework, misunderstanding and misinterpreting the bible will happen more often than not and it will be impossible to extrapolate the meaning to today's society. Moreover, with that knowledge you will find that many things you though were basic tenants of the Bible are irrelevancies or nonexistent. You will also see the hypocrisy of many believers in the realms of power brokering and politics today. You might even begin to see how people throughout the ages have usurped the bible and its believers, twisted and perverted the true meaning of the document, and used it as a tool to affect their own human agendas on the world.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    26. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an atheist: As long as your religion doesn't impair (hurt) me, especialy as long as "you" are not trying to impose your religion upon me, I couldn't care less.

    27. Re:Vatican. by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      I've had many discussions with atheists where I am consistently asked to defend literal interpretations of the bible, when in fact I don't consider literal interpretations correct or useful.

      I think the problem is that people tend to use "religion" in place of "Christianity" or even a specific Christian religion in a lot of there arguments. I know I'm guilty of that sometimes myself. There are certainly arguments to be made against religion itself and many of those I subscribe to, but my specific beefs tend to be with Christianity in general and Catholicism specifically. (This is, undoubtedly, because my family was Catholic; I ended up going to Sunday school for eight years and doing the confirmation nonsense despite realizing I don't believe in sixth grade or so.)

      I don't personally believe in a god, because I don't feel I have any reason to believe in a god and feel that simply not knowing everything (how did the universe begin?) is not reason enough to believe. That said, I'd be infinitely more likely to believe in A god than I would to believe in the Christian god. There's just too many contradictions, too many things in the Bible that don't make sense for me. To paraphrase Gene Roddenberry, there's something wrong with the story logic.

      Taking the bible non-literally is a step in the right direction I think, but it just seems like it's too selective. Are you saying you don't take it literally, except for all the parts of the Bible that "prove" (please admit it's not actually proof!) the Bible is in fact the word of god? If we're taking it as life lessons, cool -- I'm on board with some of it. I've always been interested in religion the same way I'm interested in what we now call mythology. Picking and choosing what we think is god and what we think is Mad Roman Emperors With Axes To Grind feels like devaluing it into nothingness though.

      In other words, I guess, it's a separation of religion and belief. I hate most religions for various reasons not worth getting into in this context; I don't necessarily have a problem with somebody having a belief in a god/higher power/what have you. In my mind, the more generic the belief the better. Specifics are where I start to see contradictions and get frustrated that others don't seem to see them too.

    28. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "OK, here's a book which contains 10 basic rules we want you to follow on this page. Do this, and you'll get to heaven, because the book tells us it is so.

      However, you mustn't follow any of the rules from this entire chapter, such as forcing any woman you want to be your wife, or murdering rape victims/disobedient children/those who work on sunday, because those parts don't actually mean what they say."

      Yeah, you're right, that doesn't sound idiotic in the slightest.

    29. Re:Vatican. by rick1027 · · Score: 1

      it sounds reasonable if you understand that the truth Genesis is trying to communicate isn't about what or how, but why. Ironically, the Israelites of 3,000 years ago probably understood that better than most people do today.

    30. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How do you decide which interpretations are correct, if it's not literal ones? How do you decide which parts should be literally interpeted and which aren't? How do you decide which parts (if any) of the bible are ok to set aside?

      I can understand making such choices with a self-help book or someone's philosophy, but this is supposed to be the word of god isn't it?

      And if it's not the literal word of god, why the bible over any other text? Why has god not communicated something that doesn't require so much picking and choosing and which hasn't caused so many problems from people taking parts of it literally that you don't consider correct?

    31. Re:Vatican. by syousef · · Score: 1

      There are many religious people who value the bible yet don't consider it to be a literal encyclopedia of how the universe works.

      There are lots of people who value comic books yet don't consider them to be a literal encyclopedia of how the universe works. The difference is that anyone who did consider a comic book to be literally true would be committed, whereas it is accepted that some people believe in the literal truth of the Bible.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    32. Re:Vatican. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EVERY religious text, in exception to None, was inscribed by a man, through a Man's interpretations and filters. The way that Man interpreted that idea and inscribed it is based on his own views, filters, and interpretations. Religious texts are not 100% the way things are because they were written by a Man. This is why we have so many variations in religion today because religious texts are an interpretation of the Word of the Supernatural on a respectable way to exist and to coexist.

      -Anonamous coward too lazy to make an account
      for follow up: nvdabb@gmail.com

    33. Re:Vatican. by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      There's a lot of all kinds of things in the Bible (including long strings of genealogy, which is pretty useless particularly nowadays) but yes, there are some treatments of morality.

      Many religious texts include some kind of attempt at codification of a system of morality.

      Unfortunately, while studying a source like the Bible might lead you to think more on moral questions (always a good thing!), it isn't much good at *teaching* you morality or even in providing a good framework for thorny moral questions. In general, the bible seems to actively oppose a deep & considered morality in favor of a very parental kind of approach, "obey me and don't ask questions".

      Also: moral philosophy, psychology, sociology, etc. have continued to develop rather a lot over the last couple of thousand years (though certainly not to the extent that many other fields of knowledge have... moral questions are more limited & recurring). We also have a much better understanding now of where our basic moral impulses come from and how they function (and how they fail to function when reasonably they ought to...) -- I feel like studying *that* will give you a much better moral base, with a pragmatic approach to actually guiding your own and others' behavior to make society safer, kinder, more just, healthier, etc., then you could ever get studying the Bible.

      I mean, think about it -- on the one hand, you have a invented parables delivered by people who actually doesn't *know* how this particular action will turn out in most cases... they invent a pat result based on their (hopefully relatively extensive) personal observations to teach you a simple moral. Some of them are relatively sensible, but some are designed to show the power of "our" deity as opposed to competitors, some are designed to more-or-less record law as it was a few thousand years ago (long before current concepts of human rights and so on), and some are just plain weird, maybe due to poor transmission somewhere along the line. At least Aesop's Fables are relatively consistent in quality, by comparison.

      On the other hand, you have long-term, large-scale studies with sometimes surprising & counter-intuitive (or counter-to-common-wisdom) results. Which actually show what methods of impulse control are most successful, how different child-rearing strategies affect development, how different approaches to incarceration & rehabilitation affect recidivism, etc. etc..

      Which is more valuable? How much time should we spend studying each, if we want a solid & useful moral foundation?

      I actually do think the bible (as well as Qur'an & other major religious scriptures) is worth some study -- it's a fascinating collection of documents, and a strange little window into people's minds thousands of years ago -- but I have never understood the people who argue that it's an important source for learning morality.

    34. Re:Vatican. by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      >>"The Canaanites slaughtered their own children for sexual gratification during ceremonies designed to inspire ecstatic communion with their deity. Pederasty was a practice of their religion as well. They held human sacrifice of innocents as a sacred part of their worship orgies. They practiced a policy of genocide against other tribes weaker than themselves and practiced cultural subversion against those stronger to bring them down. Violence, debauchery, and lasciviousness were the norm for their culture and those that practiced them abundantly were rewarded."

      Could you please provide history evidence for these statements?

    35. Re:Vatican. by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      >>"Homosexuality is the same as any other sexual sin in the bible, like adultery."

      I'm not supposed to hate those who sin? By the way, here's the King James version of an appropriate passage - "If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death. Their blood shall be upon them." That doesn't sound like hate to you?

      >>"The bible does not advocate killing people of other religions."

      "Suffer ye not..." Also, read Deuteronomy 13. True, this is more focused towards killing anyone (and their families, and the people around them) who tried to seduce you away from that god, but the point is still pretty clear.

      Your last two paragraphs actually speak clearly to my point - the bible, as it exists today, is almost impossible to be taken literally, or as a godly truth. The problem is that many still do, and are willing to enact violence on those who do not. And you haven't spoken to my underlying point: If parts of the bible are not true, which are and which are not? And more to the point, why do you put any credence in this tome at all if you're convinced that it is at least partially inaccurate?

      >>"Beating your wife is not recommended either." Okay, I'll give you that one. Sometimes, it's tough to remember which of the many violences that occurred in the name of god came directly from this bible, or were merely inspired by it.

    36. Re:Vatican. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      as I understand that Christians outside the USA tend to be pretty reasonable, but around here, 5% probably isn't too far off the mark for Christians who don't take the bible literally.

      I'd like to say that you "around here, 5% [literalists]" needs to be clarified as certain areas within the US. I live in New York state, and that religious view is virtually nonexistent around here. There might be some fundie communities in remote rural areas upstate, but I haven't run into them.

      It largely goes according to the Red-State Blue-State thing, and it extremely closely follows the urban-suburban vs rural divide. People in large well connected communities rarely get sucked into religious fundamentalism. They come face-to-face with the fact that there are people of other Faiths, and they face the fact that even within their own religion different people believe different things and different individual Churches of the same religion teach somewhat different things. They learn to deal differences in Faith - mostly by making religion a non-issue in routine social life.

      People in small isolated communities - especially towns were everyone goes to the same single Church - tends to lead to monoculture and intense conformity pressure. If you aren't seen attending the singe town Church, if you don't toe the party line, you are a social outcast, you're unGodly and evil. It fosters the inerrancy mindset. They are following the unchallenged unquestionable One True religion of the One True God in their Church. God is inerrant -> the Bible is inerrant -> their religion is inerrant -> their faith is inerrant, which ultimately leads to the implicit attitude -> THEY are inerrant.

      Across the US as a whole, people are split roughly 40% for evolution, 40% against evolution, and roughly 20% respond don't-care/no-clue. Many of the 40% "against" evolution are merely doubters, they heard the anti-evolution propaganda from the literalists and mistakenly bought it. The really nutty literalists are probably somewhere around 15% to 20% overall. The big problem is that they are nearly all Republican and they vote at a higher rate than average, making them nearly half the powerbase of one party, giving them almost total power over half of our politicians.

      Oops. I just meant to make a small comment that you just happened to be in a particularly area part of the country, and I wandered off into analyze and rant mode. Heehee.

      -

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

      Could you please provide history evidence for these statements?

      He who wins the war gets to write the history books.
      They also get to make God in their own image. ;)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    38. Re:Vatican. by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "I'm not supposed to hate those who sin?"

      Absolutely not. Hate itself is a sin. By example, does a police officer hate you when he writes you a ticket for speeding or for a parking violation? The exchange is similar, as the prohibitions you reference are like government laws.

      The nation of Israel in old testament times was a theocratic governemnt ruled by God. As such there were laws for this government, just like our country has laws. The prohibitions against homosexuality and other religions are similar to many laws we see today, though the punishments in ancient times were more harsh. For instance, homosexuality is illegal in many middle eastern nations, and was illegal in the US not too many years ago. Additionally, since this was a theocracy, worshipping other dieties was tantamount to sedetion or treason, though the transgression was probably much deeper as the religion was ingrained not only in the social structure but also in the bloodlines and tribal inheritance of the people. I believe we can still execute people for treason to this day in the US, and many other nations currently execute traitors without hesitation.

      "And more to the point, why do you put any credence in this tome at all if you're convinced that it is at least partially inaccurate? "

      My intention was not to cast aspersions on the accuracy of the bible, but to point out how what the bible actually says is quite diffeent in many cases from what is reported about it by both believers and detractors alike. If you took that meaning from what I wrote I should have been more clear. What I explicitly meant to say is that the Bible is a difficult book to understand and requires a scholarly approach to parse appropriately. Understanding the book is made even more difficult by the innumerable misinterpretations flouted as truth by the uninformed. However, just because people have used the bible in a way that it was never intended to be, or have ascribed meaning to its passages that was never there does not change the actual document or its content.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    39. Re:Vatican. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I've had many discussions with atheists where I am consistently asked to defend literal interpretations of the bible

      For what it's worth, I think you'll find things often go much better if you make some early and clear comment separating yourself from the loony fundies. If an atheist is arguing with a "bible-thumping" "christian idiot" (as you called them in another post), and you just jump in apparently on their side, you are likely to get tarred with the same brush, even if you were only supporting a reasonable and more limited version of one of the Thumper's points, or even if you were reasonably and correctly focusing on a particular problem with the atheist's argument. Fundies can be irrational in the extreme, unreasonable in the extreme, and infuriating in the extreme. At times it can be had to keep hostility from bleeding over onto anyone who even appears to stand with them.

      If you mention one of "fundie" "bible-thumper" "christian idiot" or anything of the sort early on, I think you'll find atheists at times eagerly taking you as an ally on many issues. When arguing evolution I often do so from an actively Christianity+evolution perspective. On school prayer I try get people to understand that the ACLU position and all of these court cases are in fact the fair and reasonable "compromise" position - that students do in fact have a Constitutionally protected right to pray in school. The ACLU position and all of the court cases come down that the force and powers of government cannot be used to infringe upon the students' protected religious freedom - that the legislature and school principals and teachers cannot abuse their government power to favor nor oppress any religion. That they cannot abuse their powers to promote nor suppress prayer by students. The theocrat-wannabe wing tries to cast these cases as attacking prayer and attacking religion, ad it's just untrue. Separation of Church and state, and the school prayer court cases are about protecting religious freedom. Protecting individual liberty against the force of government. The theocrat wing wants to forcibly impose their religion on others, they think it *is* the government's business to establish official prayer by students in school, and they go on an insane lying rant that they are being attacked and they are being oppressed if someone sues to deny them the ability to use the force of government against other people's children.

      I view all religions and supernatural ideas roughly equally silly, probably about the same way you likely view Native American animal spirit guides. But I don't much care about your personal beliefs and odd hobbies so long as your personal belief and odd hobby isn't to use physical-force/legal-force to attack me or my odd hobbies :) As long as you're a good, reasonable, rational person when it comes to material matters like science and schools and government, I am more than happy to consider you an ally against the hateful/theocratic/anti-science Taliban-wanna-be-s trying to take control of American government and elsewhere.

      Please take care to not condemn all religious people

      True, but also take care in interpretation.

      I participate in many many internet discussions on evolution and the like, and I think I've seen quite a few miscommunications of that sort. Ambiguities can particularly creep into angry speech. A group of idiots-who-happen-to-be-Christian do something like tring to cram their Biblical Literalist Creationist crap into a public highschool science class, and someone will write harsh words directed at that sub-group engaging in that bad behavior. They may use a phrase like "idiot Christians" with the intent that "idiot" be a specifier rather than a describer - that "idiot Christians" is intended to say which Christians he's talking about rather than a smear on all Christians. The interpretation of much of the speech can be seriously colored by the mindset of the reader - it can be strongly colored by the "who" you think the writer is refe

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    40. Re:Vatican. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I actually have to disagree about this one. While there are certainly many issues that are definitely divided along urban vs. rural lines in this country, evangelicalism isn't one of them. The "megachurches" that are so popular these days are all evangelical, and they're mostly located in urban areas, not rural. You're probably not seeing it because you're in NY, which probably just isn't a part of the country that has that many of them (along with the northeast in general). Here in the West, they're all over. Here in the Phoenix area (a city of 4 million), there's lots of megachurches and other evangelical/fundamentalist churches, and they're growing. Colorado Springs, by most accounts a pretty nice city with a lot of tech industry, is home to the infamous Ted Haggard's megachurch. Rick Warren I believe comes from southern California, certainly not a rural place.

      If anything, I'd expect to see less fundamentalism in rural places, because people there tend to be older and more traditional, as the younger people have moved to the cities. Evangelicalism isn't an old, traditional thing; 50 years ago they were an extreme minority, and most American Christians were one of the mainstream Protestant denominations like Methodist, Lutheran, Episcopalian, etc., or Roman Catholic. These days, the mainstream protestants have fallen out of favor, and people (mainly younger people) are flocking to the "non-demoninational Christian" evangelical fundamentalist "bible-based" churches.

      Now for geography, if I were to take a guess, I'd guess that it's actually more of a north vs. south thing (and I don't mean along civil-war lines): if you go up to Seattle, there's probably not that much of this thing up there, but down in Texas, there's probably tons of fundie churches.

    41. Re:Vatican. by Kineticabstract · · Score: 1
      >>"What I explicitly meant to say is that the Bible is a difficult book to understand and requires a scholarly approach to parse appropriately."

      Respectfully, I disagree. I've read it, cover to cover, several times, and it's very straightforward. To me, it seems that those who tell me that it's more complex are simply trying to build a reason for it to be something more than it is.

      Still, we're speaking around the original question. The bible was presented, by those who started the various churches, as being the true, unadulterated word of god. That includes Genesis, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy. I've been told by new Christians that this is not so, that the stories told in those books are merely parables, fables, fictions told to represent a greater truth. It can't be both ways - and why is your opinion more correct than the men who created the tome? You both can't be right, and you're re-interpreting the work long after it was originally put together.

    42. Re:Vatican. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      There are exceptions of course, but yeah, statistics show that rural-urban is by far the single physical trait most correlated with views. Whether you call it Red vs Blue, or Republican vs Democrat, or deeply-religious-worldview vs secular-worldview, it is very highly correlated with rural vs urban life. Even in the Bluest of states, the far rural areas "vote Red". Even in the Reddest of states, the biggest urban centers "vote Blue".

      You can see the effect in this map for example. Population density is scaled as hight, and the 2004 presidential vote percentages are represented in red-purple-blue. Population-dense areas are consistently blue, population-sparse areas are consistently red. The biggest problem with the map is that the statistics are gathered at the county level. A dense city dominating a large sparse county will have the appearance of being sparse & blue.

      I don't know much about the megachurches, but looking nationally the rural-urban factor is strong and fairly consistent.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    43. Re:Vatican. by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "I've read it, cover to cover, several times, and it's very straightforward...and you're re-interpreting the work long after it was originally put together."

      In my time studying the Bible I have learned that the English translation is not as straightforward as you might think. It is an irrefutable fact that the text from the oldest and most accurate manuscripts available contain details and content the current English translation does not. Saying that the obvious differences between the two should just be swept under the rug because the English version is so "straightforward" is illogical. Doubly so considering the huge volume of easily accessed scholarly research into this subject.

      Deciphering the Bible is not meant to be a "reinterpretation," but a careful consideration of the text to see what was originally meant by the writers. This includes (but is not limited to) applying textual criticism to ancient texts to determine which is closest to the autograph, understanding the connotation and denotation of each individual word, how those words were used at the time the text was written, deciphering idioms, understanding the sometimes tricky and alien structure of ancient languages (for instance first, second, and third class conditions in the Greek), exploring the historical and cultural frame of reference of the writer and the recipient audience, and categorically organizing the doctrines and subjects discussed in the Bible so unspoken or topically referenced complex subjects are clear and not a stumbling block to the reader.

      Without this careful reconstruction of the original intent and meaning of the document, a truthful and coherent reading is impossible. This also means that any conclusion or criticism reached about the veracity of the book without first referencing the original languages will be incomplete and inaccurate.

      I once stood in the same shoes you are in. The contradictions I saw made me curious. In response, I discarded those contradicting opinions and statements and formed my own based on the source material itself. I would recommend the same for anyone. Don't take the word of someone else without doing some checking of your own. How deep you want to go is up to you.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
  25. My only problem with Dawkins is.. by n1hilist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I admire his works and his point of view, but I find a lot of the time he can be callously disrespectful and religiously athiest. I'm an athiest myself but I find his pushy nature to be a bit much soemtimes.

    I feel the way he handles some questions and situations doesn't help his cause.

    1. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I find a lot of the time he can be callously disrespectful and religiously atheist.

      Having seen him many times, the only offense he may have committed is *not* entertaining the rediculous notion that a god exists without any proof.

      It is very hard for people to accept atheists simply because we DON'T believe. That is not being religious at all.

      I don't have to be tolerant of the belief in Zeus. I can see flat out, it is bunk. There is no god Zeus, and no one will be offended.

      If I say, there is no god and I will not entertain any such nonsense, people are irrational. They will say I am intolerant. I submet it is they who are intolerant as they don't have any credible evidence to even support their nonsense. I'm just calling it as I see it, and they are expecting special treatment for their own neurosis.

    2. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I think his 'pushy' nature is much needed to get the truth about what an atheist is. i.e. a regular person with ethics.

      Atheists need to stop letting other people force their beliefs on us, all the time. I can't see how to do that and not be perceived as 'pushy'.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by xutopia · · Score: 1

      What's disrespectful about his point of view? Does he make fun of religious people? Pointing out that their beliefs are ludicrous is one thing. He's not calling them stupid or retarded when doing so. I offend smokers when I tell them they are smoking in a spot they aren't allowed to. Is it my intention to offend them? No. It's their fault for smoking there in the first place.

    4. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by n1hilist · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, I just find that when people push their ideas onto me I reject them even more, so I think some of his methods would be ignored by religious folk just because of his method.

    5. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Well yes, but that wasn't mentioned in the resolution. It was purely an attempt to regulate what science is discussed openly.

      Now consider that the two leading Republicans in contention for the next presidential election support teaching of ID or Creationism.

    6. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by n1hilist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Even though I find the existence of any god completely bunk, I can understand why people believe in . Perhaps I'm too diplomatic, I just feel when debating something, one should strive to win the argument by facts and logic in a calm, rational manner than with force.

      And yes, I know what I just said opens up a lot of retorts about religious people not having/using logic/real proof to prove anything. :)

      I think a good summary of my feelings is the old forum-ettiquette of "don't attack the poster, attack his point of view", Dawkins sometimes steps over that line.

    7. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Kerkyon · · Score: 1

      I don't have to be tolerant of the belief in Zeus. I can see flat out, it is bunk. There is no god Zeus, and no one will be offended.

      Except the Hellenic reconstructionists.

    8. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by leathered · · Score: 1

      While I disagree with your view of him being 'callous and disrespectful' he is very forthright but I don't see how he could be any other way. While Dawkins is known in recent years for his atheism it should not be forgotten that he is also a brilliant scientist. It is his scientific mind and his rational thinking that has brought himself to conclude that the existance of a God is highly unlikely and that religion does not deserve the kid-glove treatment it's enjoyed for centuries.

      My view is that tolerance is a virtue, but it's very hard to be tolerant of something you find utterly preposterous.

      --
      For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    9. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SirWillae · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I don't have to be tolerant of the belief in Zeus. I can see flat out, it is bunk.

      I'm curious how you can "see" that Zeus is bunk. You may not believe he exists (personally, I don't, either), but that's no proof. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. To claim otherwise is unscientific.

      If I say, there is no god and I will not entertain any such nonsense, people are irrational. They will say I am intolerant.

      If I say there IS a god and I will not entertain any atheist nonsense, people are irrational. They will say I am intolerant. Your point?

      they are expecting special treatment for their own neurosis.

      Exactly what special treatment do theists expect? And what neurosis are you speaking of? I think it's pretty callous to call a belief which you do not share "neurosis". You and I may disagree on a lot of things. Does that make both of us neurotic?

    10. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

      I would agree with this. As an atheist I'm inclined to agree with most of the God Delusion, but thought that as he seemed to want to convince non-atheists, he is totally without a clue as to what would simply drive them away. The first page of Chapter 2 I think is probably so offensive to many that they won't make it past that page. And it's irrelevant if his points can be justified, as they are made on that page they are especially acerbic and insensitive. He even states "It is unfair to attack such an easy target" immediately after doing so (referring to God as an unpleasant s#!t).

    11. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by n1hilist · · Score: 1

      You make a valid point (as well as the others who replied to my comment above). Even though my religious upbringing did a lat of harm to me as a child and teenager, I still tend to feel that things should be discussed objectively.

      My parents were a bit pushy with their religious teachings, when I grew up I realised (to me) it was all nonsense, so I guess when people that are religious or ahtiest talk with a fanatical or pushy tone of voice I immediately shy away from listening.

      I admire Dawkins contribution to the world, as an atheist I feel what one believes or considers as truth should be logical and provable.

    12. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 2, Informative

      If I say there IS a god and I will not entertain any atheist nonsense, people are irrational. They will say I am intolerant. Your point?

      If you can prove that in which you believe exists, I'll look at the evidence and if it is credible I will accept it. If, however, you offer no evidence or if you do it is not credible, then I won't.

      My position of "not believing" sits with common sense. I will not believe in the easter bunny, santa claus, or other myth without proof and you probably wouldn't either.

      Exactly what special treatment do theists expect?

      That we silently accept the absurd beliefs as something other than delusions.

    13. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      That was my first reaction to him too, but I heard a second interview with him that softened me up to the fairness of his stern argument.

      His saving grace is that his disrespect is directed at ideas and not people, except in so far as people are obligated to defend their ideas. His claims are a call to action for theists to respond with a rational counter argument.

      That's a war they most often can't win, for Dawkins, like any well-spoken intellectual, is very good at rationally arguing a point, while his challengers are normally motivated by raw emotion and belief. Their only chance is to change the terms of debate away from Dawkins' centerpiece.

      That said, I agree that his confrontational style may be ineffective at getting people to like him. In fact, I dislike the word atheism as a description for my own beliefs in part because it conjures up images of people like Dawkins. But nonbelievers need strong proponents of rationalism to counter religious evangelicalism.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    14. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by pagaboy · · Score: 1

      Quite agree. As a "religious" person myself, I'm always interested in different points of view, but it's a bit discouraging when faced with someone who can't take the difference seriously, whether that person's beliefs are christian, muslim, atheist or whatever.

      Give us the arguments, great, and let's discuss. Start by assuming others are morons, and you can't be taken as seriously. In Dawkins case it's particularly surprising as there's no shortage of professors with religious beliefs at Oxford University.

    15. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      I think a good summary of my feelings is the old forum-ettiquette of "don't attack the poster, attack his point of view", Dawkins sometimes steps over that line.

      I have watched a number of debates involving Dawkins, and I have to disagree. He is very polite. They only time in which he directly addresses the opponent in the debate is when the discussion involves personal experiences.

    16. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      And yes, I know what I just said opens up a lot of retorts about religious people not having/using logic/real proof to prove anything

      Actually, you missed a much more obvious, and much less inflammatory reason this doesn't work: The existance of (a) God would defy logic, as our interpretation of deities tend to be able to defy the rules of physics - especially the omnipotent ones.

      Since our logical way of proving the existance of something is observation and ability to reproduce it. An omnipotent god would be able to stay hidden (wouldn't need to be in our universe), and since they're omnipotent, they'd be able to do anything even if it breaks the laws of physics.

      In other words, the logical answer to "how did the god do it" would be "God can do anything".

    17. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are mixing the definitions of atheist and agnostic here. The difference between them is belief - what they accept as true without universally convincing proof.

      An atheist believes there is no God.

      A theist believes there is a god.

      An agnostic is unwilling to believe in any creed - neither that there is a god or that there is not.

      It is the agnostic that will not entertain (without proof) the notion that god exists, while an atheist actually does entertain (without proof) the notion that no god does exist; while a theist entertains (without proof) the motion that god does exist. (The term "without proof" here means proof that is string enough to convince the vast majority of all people regardless of their upbringing and preconceptions.)

      Some atheists would be willing to change their mind that there is no god if shown sufficient compelling proof; similarly some theists would be willing to change their mind that there is a god if shown sufficiently compelling proof.

      So, there is a continuum of beliefs:

      strong theist - there is a god and you cannot change my mind about that

      theist - there is a god, but you might be able to convince me otherwise with strong enough proof

      agnostic - there is neither strong enough proof to convince me that there is, nor that there is not, a god

      atheist - there is no god, but you might be able to convince me otherwise with strong enough proof

      strong atheist - there is no god, and you cannot change my mind about that

    18. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      an atheist is . . . a regular person with ethics.

      So you have to have ethics to be an atheist? Atheism rejects people who are unethical? That sounds like religious talk to me! ;)

    19. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      faced with someone who can't take the difference seriously, whether that person's beliefs are christian, muslim, atheist or whatever.

      What "theists" do not get is that atheism is not a belief, it is a glorious lack of belief.

      I do not believe that there is a god. This is quite different than believing in a different god or believing there is no god.

      There may or may not be a god, but lacking any proof or validating logical argument, it doesn't matter and makes no difference and for all practical purposes, it is safe to operate on the assumption that there is no god until proof is provided.

    20. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by snspdaarf · · Score: 1

      I think you mean "agnostic." Theists believe in God, atheists believe there is no God, and agnostics reserve judgment, IIRC.

      --
      Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
    21. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think you mean "agnostic." Theists believe in God, atheists believe there is no God, and agnostics reserve judgment, IIRC.

      Any connection with the term "atheist" and "belief" is incorrect, however, there are lots of people who like to muddy the waters for benefit.

    22. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      I find a lot of the time he can be callously disrespectful and religiously atheist.

      Having seen him many times, the only offense he may have committed is *not* entertaining the rediculous notion that a god exists without any proof.

      He's said that people who teach their kids religion are child abusers.

      He ends one of his lectures by saying how religious fundamentalists crashed into the twin towers, and therefore it's time to stop being so respectful of religion.

      Those are pretty offensive comments to me...

    23. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He's said that people who teach their kids religion are child abusers.

      From a logical perspective, that is not unreasonable or unheard of. We remove children from "christian scientists" when they refuse critical care.

      He ends one of his lectures by saying how religious fundamentalists crashed into the twin towers, and therefore it's time to stop being so respectful of religion.

      Religious fundamentalists *DID* crash into the twin towers.

      Those are pretty offensive comments to me...

      Truth is often offensive to those who refuse to accept it.

    24. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Like Richard Dawkins?

      He does not merely not believe in a God. He BELIEVES there is no God.

      Define atheism as you will. The point is that Dawkins certainly advances a religious belief - one which cannot in any way be proven one way or another.

      Merely not holding an opinion on the subject of God is not a belief - that is an attitude and not an intellectual position.

      As an analogy. I am convinced a company will go up in value - I buy the stock. I am convinced a company will go down in value - I short the stock. I don't care about the company - I go to the beach and buy ice cream instead. Dawkins clearly is shorting the stock. I'm not criticising that decision - however clearly he isn't just eating ice cream...

    25. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      The problem is that atheism is not in fact the position of someone who is completely rational or scientifically motivated. The rational position is "You haven't proven the existence of God. God may exist in the same way extraterrestrials may exist, but there's absolutely no evidence for it right now." The difference here is that if incontrovertible evidence for God suddenly turned up, an atheist would reject that evidence, whereas a rational user of the scientific method would look for more ways to test the hypothesis.

      I don't have to be tolerant of the belief in Zeus. I can see flat out, it is bunk. There is no god Zeus, and no one will be offended.

      And FYI, there are people who will be offended about your intolerance of people who believe in Zeus, you insensitive clod. They're far from the majority, but they definitely exist.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    26. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 3, Informative

      He does not merely not believe in a God. He BELIEVES there is no God.

      Direct citation required.

      he point is that Dawkins certainly advances a religious belief - one which cannot in any way be proven one way or another.

      He certainly does not. Also, one need no disprove religion as it lacks any credible proof in the first place.

      Merely not holding an opinion on the subject of God is not a belief - that is an attitude and not an intellectual position.

      Wrong. I (and most atheists) hold the same position about god that most people hold for other gods and myths.

    27. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Hillgiant · · Score: 1

      I don't have to be tolerant of the belief in Zeus. I can see flat out, it is bunk. There is no god Zeus, and no one will be offended.

      Except the Hellenic reconstructionists.

      *storms into the room wearing a toga*
      NO ONE expects the hellenic reconstructionists! ... wait... err... I'm in the wrong skit, aren't I?
      *meekly exits stage right*

      --
      -
    28. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 1

      If you claim Dawkins has ever been disrespectful of people you are either lying, or have never heard/read much of what he has said. He is very clear not to disrespect people, but disrespect the beliefs themselves. If he does criticize people, it is due to their actions based on religious. Now we can't criticize people's actions? He handles situations the most respectful ways possible. Those who see otherwise are having reality distorted through their religious bias. It is only the anti-atheist bigots who claim he is disrespectful, because they see disrespect everywhere, whether it exists or not.

    29. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 1

      Strawman strawman strawman. He never starts by assuming others are morons. Again, if you had ever read or heard anything Dawkins says, he has never ever said such. He attacks the beliefs and people whose horrible actions have been allowed by such beliefs. He NEVER attacks people who simply believe. People against Dawkins don't make themselves look very good when they lie or simply don't even attempt to know his actual views, arguing against views he has never expressed.

    30. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SirWillae · · Score: 0

      That we silently accept the absurd beliefs as something other than delusions.

      Oh what a terrible burden that must be for you. I'm so sorry that the theists have imposed this horrible punishment on you for nothing more than exhibiting "common sense" (which, if the statistics are to be believed, are far from common).

      People hold all sorts of absurd beliefs. A fairly large majority of Americans believe it's a good idea to take a significant portion of workers' compensation and give it the wealthiest generation in the history of the world. *sigh* To each their own.

      You're essentially claiming that you (and people like you) are empowered to decide which absurd beliefs are delusional and which ones aren't. How'd you earn that right? Did Gaea, herself, come down and ordain you Decider of Delusions? I hate to think what will happen when your Priesthood of Phantasy starts to decide that each other is delusional...

      In any case, I don't envy you that responsibility. If only there were some way you could get out of it... some way you could just live and let live... Maybe some day we'll finally reach a point where people are free to believe what they want to believe and you'll finally be relieved of your duty.

    31. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Let's look at the etymology of the word: 'a' â" without, 'theism' â" belief in a deity. Atheists simply lack belief in a god, there is no reason why they must actively deny such existence. One who has never heard of the idea of a God is just as much an atheist. By it's basic etymology, atheism has no specific ideas or beliefs, it's simply a lack of. In that way agnostics ARE atheists, just atheists that make a specific claim about why they lack belief.

    32. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 1
      Must you lie about what he says to make your point?

      Every single time Dawkins is asked, he specifically says that he DOES NOT believe there is no God. He understands that there is no good reason or scientific evidence that gives you a reason to have belief, so he lacks it, but as a scientist he understands you can never definitively disprove anything. He says this is practically every interview he has ever done. He never, ever says that there is absolutely 100% no god. In fact, he usually puts the possibility that there is no god somewhere within 90-98%. Extremely likely, but nothing is every definite.

      You make yourself look foolish criticizing a man for something he has never said.

    33. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      The problem is that atheism is not in fact the position of someone who is completely rational or scientifically motivated.

      It is impossible to ever be sure of someone's motivation or rationality, but atheism at its core is a rational and intellectually justifiable position.

      The rational position is "You haven't proven the existence of God. God may exist in the same way extraterrestrials may exist, but there's absolutely no evidence for it right now."

      You are being too easy on religion.

      The difference here is that if incontrovertible evidence for God suddenly turned up, an atheist would reject that evidence,

      Then they are not being intellectually honest.

      whereas a rational user of the scientific method would look for more ways to test the hypothesis.

      Leaving the door open to god is a scientifically rational position, however, the opening should be equivalent to the probability of the hypothesis. In my eyes, any particular "god" is as likely as the easter bunny. So, yea, if you have proof, i'll listen, but for all intent and purposes I accept the conclusion that there is no god. I'm happy with that.

    34. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by cowscows · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What does that mean that "you will not entertain any such nonsense"? If I'm having a discussion about my beliefs with someone, will you insert yourself into the conversation and try to convince me that I'm wrong? Will you yell insults from across the room? Will you run over to us and start yelling jibberish so that we can't continue our discussion? Or will you just put your headphones on and mind your own business?

      Why shouldn't you be tolerant of the belief in Zeus. If someone wants to believe in Zeus, that's their business, and I don't see that as a reason to treat them differently from anyone else. Now if their belief in Zeus requires them to be an asshole to me, then I'll be an asshole back. But other than that, I couldn't care less.

      I'll certainly agree that there are way too many people in this world who worry about the religious beliefs of people who don't want their concern. What I'm seeing as increasingly common (and which Dawkins is one of the most public examples of) are atheists who seem just as concerned and vocal about everyone's beliefs.

      To be honest, I'm not particularly offended. I'm entirely indifferent towards your beliefs. Even if you want to go on broadcast TV and talk for hours about how everyone who has religious beliefs is a fool, I won't be particularly upset. The most disappointing part of all of this, to me at least, is that there are some very valid complaints about people with more extremist beliefs holding an undue amount of political influence, and using it to force aspects of their religion onto everyone. And the far too common response to this is that instead of attacking the blurring of that line between church and state, people like you choose to bash religion in general, call people names, and tell us that we're stupid.

      All that does is alienate the moderate religious folk, many of which are just as uneasy about fundamental Christianity as you are. Like it or not, atheists are way out-numbered in this country, and if you want to avoid being marginalized, then insulting everyone else is not the smartest way to go about it. But you know, that's just my opinion, and I wear a cross around my neck so my opinion is worthless.

       

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    35. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I love that the atheist proposes that lack of evidence of God is proof of his non-existence.

      Perhaps if there was some way to provide evidence against God's existence that might turn some heads, but simply saying that there isn't evidence proves nothing. 200 years ago there was no evidence for relativity, does that mean that it didn't exist back then?

      If science required that one not entertain a thought until it was proven, then science couldn't ever expand (hypothesis would be against science). It thus stands that a scientific mind should be able to entertain a thought without belief or evidence.

    36. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by jstott · · Score: 1

      I do not believe that there is a god. This is quite different than believing in a different god or believing there is no god.

      1. "I do not believe that there is not a god."
      2. I believe that there is not a god.

      These are the same thing as far as I can see. Atheism is not a lack of belief, it's just a belief in a lack.

      -JS

      --
      Vanity of vanities, all is vanity...
    37. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      will you insert yourself into the conversation and try to convince me that I'm wrong?

      I don't need to convince you. You are wrong.

      Why shouldn't you be tolerant of the belief in Zeus.If someone wants to believe in Zeus, that's their business, and I don't see that as a reason to treat them differently from anyone else.

      One need not look past 9/11/2001 to see the dangers of entertaing those who believe without fact and are willing to die without reason. When does a "harmless" nonsense like a belief in god, become a dangerous sickness in society?

    38. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by cowscows · · Score: 2, Insightful

      *shrug* I'm not willing to die for my religion. I'm not willing to kill for my religion either. But hey, thanks for judging me based on the actions of a handful of nutjobs (with vastly different beliefs than mine) who did a terrible thing.

      People hurt other people over all sorts of random stuff. Maybe we should outlaw love, people get killed over that all the damn time.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    39. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      These are the same thing as far as I can see. Atheism is not a lack of belief, it's just a belief in a lack.

      I don't "BELIEVE" there is no god, I don't believe there is a god. No one has proved that any such thing exists or is even likely to exist. If there is ever proof, it won't change any of beliefs.

      To me, believing that there is no god is like believing there is no easter bunny. There is no proof or rational argument that supports the notion of an easter bunny in the first place, so actively believing that there is no easter bunny is silly.
       

    40. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      I love that the atheist proposes that lack of evidence of God is proof of his non-existence.

      Lack of evidence of the existence of god is a lack of reason to even be bothered with it. The only reason I even have an opinion about the fantastic nonsense that calls itself religion are the people who fly planes into buildings, strap explosives to themselves, and create laws in government that directly affect me.

      When you can provide *any* credible evidence that god exists, then we'll listen. Until then it does not matter because if there is no proof, then it has no effect on the world.

    41. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      I think that you missed his point. I love Dawkin's writings. They are clear and amusing, even when I don't agree with him.

      But, I hate listening to his talks. His voice is annoying, he's prissy, he's rude. He is, in the words of the GP "callously disrespectful" of questioners.

      He is, unfortunately, a poor spokesman for atheists. I think when he gives talks he is counterproductive to his own mission.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    42. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      Oh what a terrible burden that must be for you. I'm so sorry that the theists have imposed this horrible punishment on you for nothing more than exhibiting "common sense"

      Make no mistake, EVERYONE in civilized society pays the price for religion. The 9/11/2001 hijackers were fundamentalists in their religion. How about the idiots who strap bombs to themselves. Or law makers who create laws on their beliefs or presidents to perform their jobs listening to a "higher father."

      People hold all sorts of absurd beliefs. A fairly large majority of Americans believe it's a good idea to take a significant portion of workers' compensation and give it the wealthiest generation in the history of the world. *sigh* To each their own.

      yes, funny that, the president that believed this was a "born again christian."

      You're essentially claiming that you (and people like you) are empowered to decide which absurd beliefs are delusional and which ones aren't

      No not at all. *Any* belief that is not supported by reasonable evidence is absurd.

      How'd you earn that right?

      *I* didn't, society has adopted this benchmark.

    43. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You have no tolerance for what they believe. You said it yourself - "I don't have to be tolerant.." - you are intolerant by definition.

      Tolerance isn't about seeing their point of view, or agreeing with them because you respect them or any of that shit - its about being respectful to them as a person despite the crazy crap they choose to believe in.

      You aren't expected to be tolerant of violent people, or abusive people, or even self-righteous pushy gits who chase you down the streets with clipboards. However, your everyday 'only religious on Sunday mornings', generally non-intrusive church/mosque/temple goers (*deep breath*) really should be afforded the appropriate level of respect for a fellow member of the human race.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm nowhere near tolerant. I have a soft spot in my heart for Englishman/Irishman/Scotsman jokes and I wouldn't piss on a Tory if i found one on fire - but I know I'm meant to be better than that. Whether your religious, agnostic or militant atheist it should be fairly obvious that things work better when we mostly get along, and if you've got no better reason than being an arrogant prick, to insult and abuse people then you're a fucking idiot as well.

    44. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      It's all terminology, but you sound like weak atheist, meaning without belief in god. Agnostic means that you can't know. Strong atheist is believing there is no god.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    45. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Tom · · Score: 1

      I'm an athiest myself but I find his pushy nature to be a bit much soemtimes.

      You want to watch Dawkins on Militant Atheism where he explains very well why he has that attitude.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    46. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by HikingStick · · Score: 1

      There may or may not be a god...

      If there "may or may not be", doesn't that actually mean that you are agnostic (that you do not know) rather than being atheist (not believing that there is a god)?

      --
      I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
    47. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by pnuema · · Score: 1

      Not true. Speaking as an agnostic, I can tell you the real definition: An agnostic believes that it is impossible to talk about divinity in terms comprehensible to humans. The argument goes like this: if there is a God (generally defined as an infinite being/force), then the existence of such is so far beyond our understanding that it is pointless to try to say anything about it, as anything we could possibly say is provably false. Describing the infinite limits the infinite, because it is, you know, infinite, so therefore you can't say anything about it. An ant has nothing intelligent to say about the stock market. I personally believe that this is the only truly rational position to have.

    48. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      If there "may or may not be", doesn't that actually mean that you are agnostic (that you do not know) rather than being atheist (not believing that there is a god)?

      Well, the terms "atheist" and "agnostic" have had some revision in the last decade, back in my day, an agnostic was one who was basically accepting of the generalities of religion but questioned the various aspects of it.

      An atheist was one who does not believe in god.

    49. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      You've identified the problem precisely: there are no logical, evidence based arguments for the existence of God.

      If someone came up with something reasonable in support of God, Dawkins would undoubtedly address the argument logically. He extends that treatment to the ridiculous logical fallacies that are traditionally advanced as "proofs" of God's existence.

      However, if someone demands that he respect their belief in God, he might reply that the belief is a delusion. It does, after all, match the definition of that word.

    50. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you go around telling people who believe in a god that there is no such god, you're being a dick. If you say it in the course of defending yourself from one of the believers, you're being reasonable. The issue many people have with atheists is their tendency to preach their views to those who don't believe them. I find it entertaining that atheists find it so difficult as a whole to understand that simple fact when they are so offended by believers who preach to them.

      Just learn to respect people as people and don't talk shit about them like claiming their belief system is "neurosis." That's akin to them calling you a heathen.

    51. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      Just learn to respect people as people and don't talk shit about them like claiming their belief system is "neurosis." That's akin to them calling you a heathen.

      I take no offense to the term heathen, although it has more or less been confused with pagan.

      ok, I'll say it, people who BELIEVE in god, are ridiculous and silly and in their folly embolden the worst of their creed to perpetrate intolerable violence.

      It wouldn't be so bad if the religious kept it to themselves, but the middle eastern religions seem bent on destroying and subjugating those with whom they have theological differences, no matter how minor.

    52. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by init100 · · Score: 1

      but I find a lot of the time he can be callously disrespectful

      Given that quite a few religious people threaten to kill people who don't respect their religions, I feel that disrespect is the only fitting response to religion. I'll never respect something because its adherents demand respect, quite the opposite.

    53. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by init100 · · Score: 1

      I submet it is they who are intolerant as they don't have any credible evidence to even support their nonsense. I'm just calling it as I see it, and they are expecting special treatment for their own neurosis.

      Reminds me of this quote:

      When one human being is neurotic, he is diagnosed with a psychiatric disease and locked up in a mental hospital. When a million people are neurotic, it is called a religion, and must be respected.

    54. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      I would most likely support him even if he were 10x more callous and pushy.

      Science needs a few more pushy folks shouting at least as loud as the literal-religious/ultra-conservative-religious/whatever you want to label them...

      Some religious person might say "You'll burn in hell if you don't believe in X".

      Dawkins (I assume) might say "You'll make bad choices and are being a bit dumb for believing in X".

      As far as I'm concerned, being threatened with an eternity in agony and torment is mild compared with what I've heard about Dawkins approach:)

    55. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Atheism is a belief because you don't know the answer and you have no way of getting the answer, but you assert it anyway.

      You may be denying the supernatural, but you are making a assertion about the lack thereof, which in itself requires proof. The positive assertion that you are making is entirely independent of the actual existence or not of a deity or supernatural phenomenon.

      Without proof of your positive assertion (which neither you nor the believer can provide), you are exercising belief.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to trap you into being just another religionist with his own agenda worshiping a little tin (non-)god of your own. You can hold your belief in good faith, confident that it explains the world to your satisfaction. You can believe that Christians, Buddhists, animists and any other believer in the supernatural are wrong, and you are 100% entitled to that. What you cannot do is claim to be separate from the fray, as long as you are making an assertion like that.

      If you wish to step out of that little pit, I suggest that you take up being an agnostic.

    56. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Start by assuming others are morons, and you can't be taken as seriously.

      Start talking about how you are feeling god, or hearing the voice of god, and I will call for an ambulance to take you to a mental institution. A straitjacket would probably be the most appropriate.

    57. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      Atheism is a belief because you don't know the answer and you have no way of getting the answer, but you assert it anyway.

      This is a primary example of the twisted logic required to maintain the delusion of religion.

    58. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by init100 · · Score: 1

      Exactly what special treatment do theists expect?

      How about respect for their silly religion, while laughing their asses off if someone would claim to believe in Santa Claus, The Flying Spaghetti Monster, or any other fairy tale that is not part of their personal favorite fairy tale?

    59. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by init100 · · Score: 1

      The first page of Chapter 2 I think is probably so offensive to many that they won't make it past that page.

      And the only reason why they would find it offensive is because they know that it's the truth.

      If they took the bible for what it really is, just another book of fairy tales that is, nobody would care. But for many, religion is a part of their fundamental being, and simply stating the obvious truth about how preposterous that religion really is, is taken as a physical attack on their person, with a similarly aggressive defense.

      I recently read The God Delusion, and I really wonder if many adherents of the Abrahamitic religions have really read what the scriptures say. It is certifiably appalling. I had to look up the passages cited in Dawkins' book in the real bible to actually believe him, but there they were, word for word. And this is what Christians, Jews and Muslims use for moral guidance. That is really horrific.

    60. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      It is the agnostic that will not entertain (without proof) the notion that god exists, while an atheist actually does entertain (without proof) the notion that no god does exist;

      What about those that believe that something doesn't exist unless there is some (any) evidence that it exists. Aside from some old books, there is nothing that even hints at a god. As such, it is irrational to think that it *could* exist even with a complete absense of evidence that it does. I don't believe that there's a pink elephant that lives in my house, but hides whenever I look for him. If I had such a belief, I'd be considered crazy. If I honestly believed it was possible and supported people on both sides until we could prove it one way or another (and the dead body of the elepant would be great, but even a clear photo would be sufficient), I'd still be considered nuts, but tolerably so. It's only the people that firmly believe, without any actual evidence at all, that there exists no invisible pink elephant living in my house that are considered sane. Yet, if you apply that to religion, the answers are reversed. Why? Because logic reverses itself if more people believe in the pink elephand than don't. And that in itself is illogical.

    61. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      That said, I agree that his confrontational style may be ineffective at getting people to like him.

      Confrontational? Arguing calmly, rationally, factually and logically is "confrontational"? BS. Dawkins is in fact very effective at getting to the people there's still hope for: The fence sitters. I used to be one of them myself, until I started listening to Dawkins. He sure convinced me.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    62. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      No, you idiot. He's saying that atheists are just normal people, and that they have ethics.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    63. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      If you go around telling people who believe in a god that there is no such god, you're being a dick.

      Then they should stop trying to force their beliefs down my throat first.

      The issue many people have with atheists is their tendency to preach their views to those who don't believe them.

      Because religious people constantly try to force their superstition down everyone else's throats. If the religious morons just shut the fuck up, there wouldn't be a problem.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    64. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      He's said that people who teach their kids religion are child abusers.

      No, he said that labeling children is close to child abuse.

      He ends one of his lectures by saying how religious fundamentalists crashed into the twin towers, and therefore it's time to stop being so respectful of religion.

      No he doesn't. You are lying about what he's saying, just like with the child abuse argument he made.

      Those are pretty offensive comments to me...

      And I find it offensive that you are actively lying about what Dawkins is saying. Pathetic.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    65. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SirWillae · · Score: 1

      Make no mistake, EVERYONE in civilized society pays the price for religion. The 9/11/2001 hijackers were fundamentalists in their religion.

      I can't argue that. Religion has been at the core of MANY conflicts throughout the history of mankind. However, at the risk of demonstrating Godwin's Law, I would also point out that Darwinism was, at least nominally, at the core of the Holocaust. And social Darwinism played a big part in the Cultural Revolution in China and Stalin's purges in the Soviet Union. So it's not as if scientific extremism doesn't exist, either.

      yes, funny that, the president that believed this was a "born again christian."

      FDR and LBJ were born again Christians? I was referring to the wholesale transfer of wealth from workers to seniors known as Social Security and Medicare (aka vote purchasing).

      No not at all. *Any* belief that is not supported by reasonable evidence is absurd.

      I believe that chocolate is superior to vanilla but I have absolutely no evidence to support that belief. So I guess it's absurd. Furthermore, who gets to judge what's reasonable? You, again?

      *I* didn't, society has adopted this benchmark.

      Obviously not, at least not in the United States. The vast majority of Americans are theists. Why would you cling to such an absurd belief in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary?

    66. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      He's said that people who teach their kids religion are child abusers.

      From a logical perspective, that is not unreasonable or unheard of. We remove children from "christian scientists" when they refuse critical care.

      He ends one of his lectures by saying how religious fundamentalists crashed into the twin towers, and therefore it's time to stop being so respectful of religion.

      Religious fundamentalists *DID* crash into the twin towers.

      Those are pretty offensive comments to me...

      Truth is often offensive to those who refuse to accept it.

      You honestly believe that religious people are all abusing their children? You think that concept is 'reasonable'? It's staggering that you got modded up.

      I'm not saying that fundamentalists weren't responsible for the twin towers. I'm saying that painting them as representatives for all religion is offensive. But that is his intent after all...

    67. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      He's said that people who teach their kids religion are child abusers.

      No, he said that labeling children is close to child abuse.

      He ends one of his lectures by saying how religious fundamentalists crashed into the twin towers, and therefore it's time to stop being so respectful of religion.

      No he doesn't. You are lying about what he's saying, just like with the child abuse argument he made.

      Those are pretty offensive comments to me...

      And I find it offensive that you are actively lying about what Dawkins is saying. Pathetic.

      And I quote,

      "How did September the 11th change you? Well here's how it changed me. Let's all stopped being so damned respectful."

      This is from the atheist's call to arms from Tedtalks 2002.

      Now who's lying to promote their own agenda?

    68. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by et764 · · Score: 1

      I'm probably very much a minority in my view, but I'm a creationist who actually has a lot of respect for Dawkins. I respect him because he's very straightforward about what he beliefs. He doesn't make any attempt to sugar-coat them to make them more palatable to religious people. For example, comparing him to the lady from (IIRC) the National Science Educators Association in the movie Expelled. The NSEA lady was being very accommodating and explain how there's no conflict between "science" and "religion" and how most Evangelicals in the US secretly believe in evolution anyway. Dawkins, on the other hand, was very blunt about his view that with a purely naturalistic worldview there was absolutely no need to consider any sort of god at all. I found Dawkin's approach much more honest, and even though I disagree with his views on our origins, I respect him for his honesty.

    69. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't disagree, I merely think that an overly aggressive approach polarizes the discussion and consequently, any contribution his ideas might make are completely undermined by his manner.

    70. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      You honestly believe that religious people are all abusing their children?

      I think a religious environment is potentially abusive, and instilling superstitious beliefs as truth in children is not a good thing.

      You think that concept is 'reasonable'? It's staggering that you got modded up.

      What about "christian scientists" that deny critical care to their children? What about muslims who teach terrorism. What about "abstenence only" education?

      I'm not saying that fundamentalists weren't responsible for the twin towers. I'm saying that painting them as representatives for all religion is offensive. But that is his intent after all...

      It is the seeming rational moderate "enablers" that give comfort to the extremists. Religion is nonsense. If you can believe absurdities you can perpetrate atrocities.

    71. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I might add-- that with the God Delusion, Dawkins has become the current incarnation of the position formerly held by Madalyn Murray O'Hair, who frankly, I was perfectly glad was no longer the de-facto spokesperson for atheism.

    72. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      You honestly believe that religious people are all abusing their children?

      I think a religious environment is potentially abusive, and instilling superstitious beliefs as truth in children is not a good thing.

      You think that concept is 'reasonable'? It's staggering that you got modded up.

      What about "christian scientists" that deny critical care to their children? What about muslims who teach terrorism. What about "abstenence only" education?

      I'm not saying that fundamentalists weren't responsible for the twin towers. I'm saying that painting them as representatives for all religion is offensive. But that is his intent after all...

      It is the seeming rational moderate "enablers" that give comfort to the extremists. Religion is nonsense. If you can believe absurdities you can perpetrate atrocities.

      It's fine to look at a *specific* act or ideology and debate its merits. He is not. He is not saying 'potentially abusive', or 'more likely to be abusive'. He is saying that teaching a religious doctrine is child abuse. That is just not reasonable.

      Saying that some religious teachings or philosophies are bad is no different than saying that some non religious philosophies are bad

      I think a non religious environment can be potentially abusive too. So what?

      There are plenty of non religious people who perpetrate atrocities. Would it be reasonable to paint Pol Pot or Stalin as model atheists?

    73. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      He is saying that teaching a religious doctrine is child abuse. That is just not reasonable.

      You may not think it is reasonable, but we have pulled children out of homes before.

      Saying that some religious teachings or philosophies are bad is no different than saying that some non religious philosophies are bad

      True.

      I think a non religious environment can be potentially abusive too. So what?
      OK, why? At least Dawkins has a rational.

    74. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by neoshmengi · · Score: 1

      He is saying that teaching a religious doctrine is child abuse. That is just not reasonable.

      You may not think it is reasonable, but we have pulled children out of homes before.

      Saying that some religious teachings or philosophies are bad is no different than saying that some non religious philosophies are bad

      True.

      I think a non religious environment can be potentially abusive too. So what?
      OK, why? At least Dawkins has a rational.

      You're misunderstanding me.

      The reason children 'get pulled out of homes' in your example is not because the parents are religious, but because the state believes that harm is being done. The focus is on the act (or lack of action) by the parents, not on the fact that the parents are teaching religion to their child.

      Dawkins is not advocating against the specific things that can lead to harm, but rather that religion itself is harmful and tantamount to abuse in and of itself. That is unreasonable.

      I think a non religious environment can be potentially abusive too. So what?
      OK, why?

      I suspect you think I am saying that a non religious environment is conducive to abuse (compared to a religious one). I am not. I think any environment has a potential for abuse and the religion aspect is a non issue.

    75. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      You give god too much credit to suppose that denial of his existence is a fundamental belief rather than a mere consequence of a belief in logical positivism.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    76. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      I find it funny that my Dawkins apologist tone was apparently harsh enough to warrant a second Dawkins apologist to step in.

      Dawkins refers to the beliefs that many people base their entire lives on as "infantile", and their God as an "imaginary friend". I defend his right to use those terms to express the clarity with which an objective viewer might see Christains' beliefs revealed as glorified superstition. But insulting someone's faith, even if it's justified, isn't the best way to convert them.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    77. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by himi · · Score: 1

      Actually, both you and the original poster are mixing orthogonal concepts up in your arguments.

      Atheism is about gods - belief or lack of belief in gods. Agnosticism is about /knowledge/ - knowledge or lack of knowledge. You can be a gnostic atheist (someone who doesn't believe in gods, and believes that you can /know/ that), an agnostic atheist (no belief, but believing that you /cannot/ know), and the analogous theistic positions.

      Agnosticism is also a spectrum: degrees of certainty. Dawkins is pretty far down the certain end of the spectrum, whereas the original poster sounds like he's closer to the uncertain end.

      So, your argument that an atheist believes there is no god is a non sequitur - an atheist doesn't believe in god, but the question of believing there /is/ no god is on the gnostic/agnostic spectrum.

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    78. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      But they were also terrorists, and fellow humans with family and friends. Does that mean no one deserves any respect? Or perhaps we should grow up and stop pretending that people are inherently related to the labels we put on them. There are bad scientists out there, should we stop respecting all of science?

    79. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      There are bad scientists out there, should we stop respecting all of science?

      This is an interesting point and I'm glad I get to address it.

      The problem with the "evil" practitioners of religion isn't that they are subverting the teachings of their religion, quite the contrary, the problem is that they are taking their teachings literally. This means the religion is culpable in their acts. It also means that less extreme practitioners contribute by creating an environment that fosters the extremists among them.

      Science isn't a belief system and it does not have a set moral teachings, so it really isn't the same thing as religion. so a "bad" scientists is merely poor at his profession.

    80. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      He never, ever says that there is absolutely 100% no god. In fact, he usually puts the possibility that there is no god somewhere within 90-98%.

      Uh, how can you estimate the possibility of a completely untestable assertion being true as having ANY value at all short of simply holding a belief? How does he know the true probability isn't in fact 99.99% and that he is being needlessly uncertain of his convictins? Perhaps the true probability is 84.5%. Then again, there is no such thing as probability in the absence of data. Probability is a mathematical concept, and all it does it allows one to formally state the level of certainty in an outcome given a well-defined scenario. Unless you can come up with a mathematical model for the existance of a hypothetical God, how can you begin to calculate probabilities.

    81. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      You give god too much credit to suppose that denial of his existence is a fundamental belief rather than a mere consequence of a belief in logical positivism.

      Any belief can stand on its own, and also can be a consequence of another belief. Belief isn't logical, and no laws of logic need apply.

      For example, one can deny the existance of God, and hold a belief in the Tooth Fairy. Such a person is clearly not a logical positivist.

      And a belief in logical positivism is also a belief - so the point isn't really any different. Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence. One can choose to regard it as such nonetheless, but that is a matter of philosophy. Actually, science itself is a philosophy - a very successful one, but it is as fallible as anything else made by men. It just has the virtue of not being falsifiable - falsifying a theory as an attack upon science is really just a reinforcement of the scientific method. :)

      Look, I'm not knocking Dawkins, or athiests, or anything like that. All I'm saying is that philisophically the denial of God is no more a privileged position than the belief in God. The two positions are more fashionable among various culture groups, but the only way one position or the other can be privileged except by convention is if some source of omnscience exists, and somehow I don't think that such a source would be an athiest unless the source also holds to its own non-existence.

    82. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      But hey, thanks for judging me based on the actions of a handful of nutjobs (with vastly different beliefs than mine) who did a terrible thing.

      As the argument goes, your moderate religion is the foundation of extremist religion. By creating an atmosphere where it's acceptable to belive blindly, and to live your life according to rules based on blind beliefs, you are building the foundation of the evil actions performed when your beliefs are taken to the extreme.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    83. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I'm too diplomatic, I just feel when debating something, one should strive to win the argument by facts and logic in a calm, rational manner

      Which is exactly what Dawkins is doing.

      I think a good summary of my feelings is the old forum-ettiquette of "don't attack the poster, attack his point of view", Dawkins sometimes steps over that line.

      When? Examples, please.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    84. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      The argument goes like this: if there is a God (generally defined as an infinite being/force), then the existence of such is so far beyond our understanding that it is pointless to try to say anything about it, as anything we could possibly say is provably false.

      This is a completely irrational position. Why is it "provably false"? Why is the existence beyond our understanding? You are ASSERTING these things. It is as irrational as theism, whereas atheism is the lack of belief, which is completely rational when there's no evidence.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    85. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Uh, how can you estimate the possibility of a completely untestable assertion being true as having ANY value at all short of simply holding a belief? How does he know the true probability isn't in fact 99.99% and that he is being needlessly uncertain of his convictins?

      The point here is that Dawkins thinks it's extremely unlikely that God exists because there is no evidence that God exists, and what evidence we do have points somewhere else.

      Then again, there is no such thing as probability in the absence of data.

      There is not an absence of data. Read The God Delusion.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    86. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Atheism is a belief because you don't know the answer and you have no way of getting the answer, but you assert it anyway.

      False. Atheism is the lack of belief. Otherwise not believing in Santa is "asserting that Santa does not exist", as if there is any evidence that he does.

      You may be denying the supernatural, but you are making a assertion about the lack thereof, which in itself requires proof.

      False. There is no evidence of the supernatural, that's the point.

      You can hold your belief in good faith, confident that it explains the world to your satisfaction.

      Atheism is not a belief, and doesn't explain anything what so ever.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    87. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      But, I hate listening to his talks. His voice is annoying, he's prissy, he's rude. He is, in the words of the GP "callously disrespectful" of questioners.

      Nonsense. Just because you don't like the way his voice sounds(!) doesn't mean that he's prissy, rude and disrespectful. If you believe that he is, please come up with some specific examples. Every time I've seen him in debates, he's so polite he even lets his opponent stomp all over him!

      He is, unfortunately, a poor spokesman for atheists. I think when he gives talks he is counterproductive to his own mission.

      Nope. He convinces a lot of fence-sitters. He isn't even trying to convert the religious fundies.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    88. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Science might not be a belief system, but it is also more than just a word or a single definition. When I said science, I meant science as a profession, an area interest, a way of life, etc.. As for the rest of your point on religion, it still seems very naive to me.

    89. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      Science might not be a belief system,

      Correction: Science can best be described as an anti-belief system which requires reason and fact.

      When I said science, I meant science as a profession, an area interest, a way of life, etc.

      Science is *not* a "way of life," it is nothing more than a methodology for inquiry.

      As for the rest of your point on religion, it still seems very naive to me.

      I'm not aware of any definition of "naive" that fits my position, please explain how I am "naive."

    90. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He ends one of his lectures by saying how religious fundamentalists crashed into the twin towers, and therefore it's time to stop being so respectful of religion.

      Those are pretty offensive comments to me..."

      I can understand that. The thought that religion can motivate fanatic people to do such horrors to innocent people is a rather offensive thought. But we have 9/11, Northern Ireland, and centuries of war over religious differences as examples. Religious fundamentalism and the fanatics it fosters can do terrible things. Reality can be pretty offensive.

      And even if they are disgusting and offensive products of a long history of biological evolution, I can't exactly deny the existence of parasites and pathogenic bacteria either.

      Pointing out either of these facts of human history or biological history shouldn't be grounds for being "offended" by someone's statements about reality, because regardless of the bluntness of someone's expression, it's still a reality we have to deal with.

      What good do you think it would do to sugar-coat the reality that religious fundamentalism breeds a lot of intolerance and hate in the world, and therefore that the products of religion aren't always good? Do you think that casting it in terms of rainbows and fluffy bunnies will help people face the real problem?

      Religion can do good. But if the bad parts aren't plucked out, don't be offended by other people pointing out the reality that it is also the source of some very bad stuff.

    91. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      What does that mean that "you will not entertain any such nonsense"? If I'm having a discussion about my beliefs with someone, will you insert yourself into the conversation and try to convince me that I'm wrong? Will you yell insults from across the room? Will you run over to us and start yelling jibberish so that we can't continue our discussion? Or will you just put your headphones on and mind your own business?

      If you add something along the lines of "Will you run over and kill me?", you would have the reactions of religious people the atheists.

      Remember, most, if not all, religions allow for the murder of non-believers for the heinous crime of not believing.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    92. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      There is not an absence of data. Read The God Delusion.

      Uh, how can you have data supporting the non-existence of God? At best you could have data to indicate that everything makes sense without the existence of God. You might even have data to disprove specific accounts about somebody's specific assertion as to how God has intervened in the world. However, unless one is claiming to be God one can certainly not claim to have evidence as to whether God does or does not exist.

      I don't need to pay $9.95 for a book to tell me this much... :)

    93. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      What proof would it take for you to accept that a man lived several thousand years ago and did a bunch of improbable things and then died in his early 30's?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    94. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      What proof would it take for you to accept that a man lived several thousand years ago and did a bunch of improbable things and then died in his early 30's?

      contemporary and historical records that document it, 1st person accounts, etc. None of which, by the way, exist for the myth of Je'sus. In fact, it is likely that the character is a composite of people during a populist/rebellious movement of the time.

      It is interesting that no account appears in the historical record of je'sus until about one hundred years after his supposed death.

      It is also interesting that the christian church did not actually profess "divinity" of the je'sus character until 3 or 4 hundred years after his death.

      Islam isn't much better either. Mohamed was supposed to have written the quran, but no evidence that he actually was able to write exists. In fact a "written" quran doesn't appear in history until a few hundred years after his death.

      It is much more likely that islam and christianity are nothing more than myths like the easer bunny or santa clause. if this offends you, it isn't me, its the facts, and you are offended by the truth. Sorry.

    95. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Fatalis · · Score: 1

      The question of theism is so loaded for some people that speaking against it in any manner would be genuinely offensive. This is the point behind all the "shut up" arguments, that there are some with hair-trigger sensibilities. The point ONLY works to stifle free speech, and is so tired that I'm actually expecting people to let go of it sooner or later when they see that atheists aren't shutting up and that their objections are unsound.

      --
      Deus est fatalis
    96. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      as he seemed to want to convince non-atheists, he is totally without a clue as to what would simply drive them away

      Actually, he isn't aiming to convince religious fundies. He appeals to fence-sitters, and it works. I was one of them, and was convinced.

      The first page of Chapter 2 I think is probably so offensive to many that they won't make it past that page.

      Why? Please be specific.

      especially acerbic and insensitive

      In what way?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    97. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I find a lot of the time he can be callously disrespectful and religiously athiest

      How is he disrespectful? Examples, please. You can't be RELIGIOUSLY atheist. Atheism is the opposite of religion. Atheism is NO FAITH.

      I feel the way he handles some questions and situations doesn't help his cause.

      Examples?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    98. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by renoX · · Score: 1

      >You honestly believe that religious people are all abusing their children?

      We're talking about 'mental abuse' here: if you organised the education of your children so that even as grown-up they believe that Santa Claus is real, I would call you a child abuser.

      For me God == Santa Claus.

      >You think that concept is 'reasonable'?

      That's a funny one, ever since we have a quite good scientific understanding of how the universe is working, no religion has even been able to show that it was 'reasonable' to believe in it, so how teaching one religion to children could be reasonable??

    99. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Correction: Science can best be described as an anti-belief system which requires reason and fact.

      Anti-belief? Belief is not just restricted to the realm of religion, you know. For something to be a fact, you have to believe it to be so, you have to believe in the evidence. Whether something is intrinsically true or not is irrelevant in this case. Perhaps you are talking about blind faith? Which is not a part of all religions to begin with.

      Science is *not* a "way of life," it is nothing more than a methodology for inquiry.

      May scientists, me included, use science as a way of life. The strict definition of the word science may be just a method, but I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about the broader, more encompassing definition. Science is many things.

      I'm not aware of any definition of "naive" that fits my position, please explain how I am "naive."

      Because you think that all religious people take everything literally, and that you think you know enough about every religion to say that such a thing is a problem to begin with.

    100. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      For something to be a fact, you have to believe it to be so, you have to believe in the evidence.

      This is one of those obfuscation arguments that center on the fact that a word has multiple meanings with subtle differences.

      Religious "belief" requires faith.
      Science doesn't "believe," it accepts as true evidence that it has verified. Unfortunately, in the english language, we would use the phrase "I believe this to be true," not as a proclamation of faith that it is so, but that we are satisfied with the evidence thus far presented. If more evidence is forthcoming that nullifies our previous evaluation of the facts, then we would no longer be satisfied with the evidence.

      May scientists, me included, use science as a way of life. The strict definition of the word science may be just a method, but I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about the broader, more encompassing definition. Science is many things.

      Then you misunderstand science. It is not a way of life. It is a method by which we come to the truth about facts, but it has nothing to do with the human condition.

      Because you think that all religious people take everything literally, and that you think you know enough about every religion to say that such a thing is a problem to begin with.

      The assertions in this paragraph are false. I think religious people are fundamentally very very silly. They believe in fantastic things which can't possibly be true with no evidence at all.

    101. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Yay, take a quote out of context and declare victory. It's the creationist way.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    102. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I find it funny that my Dawkins apologist tone was apparently harsh enough to warrant a second Dawkins apologist to step in.

      Are all theists this paranoid? Do you really think there's a great atheist conspiracy to track your comments and respond, and if necessary, call in backup? You don't think that maybe, just maybe, I just happened to read your comment as well, and wanted to respond on behalf of myself and no one else?

      Dawkins refers to the beliefs that many people base their entire lives on as "infantile", and their God as an "imaginary friend".

      Quote mining, eh? Typical creationist tactic. I looked up "infantile", and here's a bit more context: "There is something infantile in the presumption that somebody else has a responsibility to give your life meaning and point [or the view that] somebody else must be responsible for my well being and somebody else must be to blame if I am hurt."

      And the "imaginary friend" thing: "I do discuss all those things especially the imaginary friend which I think is an interesting psychological phenomenon in childhood and that may possibly have something to do with the appeal of religion."

      Or: "Wouldn't it be lovely to believe in an imaginary friend who listens to your thoughts, listens to your prayers, comforts you, consoles you, gives you life after death, can give you advice? Of course it's satisfying, if you can believe it."

      But insulting someone's faith, even if it's justified, isn't the best way to convert them.

      Dawkins isn't looking to convert fundies. He's talking to the fence-sitters. And it works.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    103. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      Are all theists this paranoid? Do you really think there's a great atheist conspiracy to track your comments and respond, and if necessary, call in backup?

      Great atheist.. wha..? I'm not a theist, as I thought I made clear in my first post. Why would I think there's a conspiracy? In my last post I was merely remarking on our differing levels of support for the man, and outlined why I thought he could be called "confrontational".

      Quote mining, eh?

      Huh? No, those are words I pulled from an interview I heard recently online. I didn't have the luxury of a transcript, or at least I didn't know if I did - that was from memory (less than a week prior).

      Typical creationist tactic.

      What the fuck are you talking about? What are you, an atheist or a theist? Which do you think I am?

      And why are you so hostile to my (very mild, at that) criticism of a man? You can't just argue your point without speculating that.. well, I have no idea what you were even trying to insinuate. I just know it was decidedly strange for a Dawkins supporter to go after style and characterization instead of pure substance and force of argument.

      You're confusing the hell out of me.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    104. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But hey, thanks for judging me based on the actions of a handful of nutjobs (with vastly different beliefs than mine) who did a terrible thing.

      A handful of nutjobs whose beliefs *are so nearly identical to yours that you'd have to go down to several decimal places of precision to even pick up any meaningful difference whatsoever* Is what you meant if you were actually intending to be honest
      That is the deep problem with your argument and the reason why your half assed "faith" in the same evil demon that those people worship is absolutely a problem for the good and decent people of this world.

      Those nutjobs are the only ones who actually have faith in your god. You have broken your faith with him, and that's why you aren't engaging in the evil actions he demands. The nutjobs really really believe the really insane parts of your faith that you've chosen to disregard, since you've convinced yourself that you know god's will better than he does. That's a real serious problem. You claim to believe, but you don't take the actions demanded of one who does believe. So now you're condemning people just because they are truly men of faith and you are too weak to be so while claiming to have faith in the same god who ordered all the murders.

      That is why weak willed pseudo faithful pussies like yourself are a problem for the world. Your faith is truly believed by only the most extreme monsters among our species. They aren't the ones going against the teachings of your god. You are. Your cowardly refusal to completely reject your faith when you obviously know it's bullshit (be honest if you didn't know it was bullshit, you'd be the one murdering innocents as your god clearly demands), and try and pick and choose a few quotes in order to pretend you actually have real faith absolutely legitimizes the most gross atrocities which are the essence of your faith whether you ever cared enough about it to learn that or not.

    105. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I only have a remote knowledge of what exactly Dawkins said, but as I understand it he's arguing that all religion is fictional mythology, that all religions are fundamentally crafted to brainwash people in how to accept absurdities and falsehoods.

      I'm sure you'll object to that characterization, but allow me to elaborate. All religions are fundamentally systems of Faith. They are dedicated to creating Faith, preserving Faith, how to thinking about Faith, and how to answer questions of Faith, and how to resolve challenges of Faith.

      If something can be proven, if something can be reached based on evidence and logic and reason, then that thing does not require Faith. Faith is essentially by definition believing in those things that cannot be proven, that are not established by evidence, that do not follow from logic and reason. Now plug that into my above statements about religions and Faith.

      All religions are systems dedicated to creating belief in things without evidence, creating belief in things that do not follow from logic and reason. All religions are dedicated to preserving belief in things without evidence, preserving belief in things that do not follow from logic and reason. All religions are dedicated to thinking about things without evidence, thinking about things that do not follow from logic and reason. All religions are dedicated to how to answer questions of things without evidence, answering questions about things that do not follow from logic and reason. All religions are dedicated to how to resolve challenges of things without evidence, how to resolve challenges things that do not follow from logic and reason.

      Religions are elaborate systems of training people how to believe things without evidence and without logic and without evidence, and in fact they are training in how to believe and preserve beliefs even in the face of challenges from contrary evidence and contrary logic and contrary reason. They are training in how to believe absurdities, and how to steadfastly maintain that Faith when challenged on those absurdities. They are training in how to avoid thinking about conflicts and challenges to that Faith, training in how to evade evidence and logic and reason based questions against that Faith.

      Just to cite a single and typical example, theres the cliche "God works in mysterious ways". That line is a religious psychological tool - it is a catch-all psychological technique to SQUASH all further thought and all further logic and reason. It's God... it's religion... it doesn't have to make sense... you're not supposed to be able to understand it. It's a psychological tool to protect and preserve Faith when logic and reason fail. It's a technique to protect Faith when overwhelming logic and reason threaten to refute and destroy that Faith. It is a psychological technique to terminate thought that threatens the irrational belief.

      Consider this honestly... if someone were to come to you today and tell you a story about a Talking Snake and a Magic Apple... isn't the obvious reasonable rational reaction to consider that story silly? To call that story an absurdity? Talking snakes and magic apples are absurdities. But when religion tells stories about talking snakes and magic apples, we are supposed to ignore how absurd it is. We are supposed to accept that absurdity unquestioningly, and we are supposed to take offense and become angry at anyone who calls that story silly. Can you honestly blame me for saying the Muslim Koran is silly and absurd for telling stories about talking snakes and magic apples? Can you honestly blame me for saying the Jewish Torah is silly and absurd for telling stories about talking snakes and magic apples? Can you honestly blame me for saying the Christian Bible is silly and absurd for telling stories about talking snakes and magic apples?

      Religion is a tapestry of ideas, and if you look closely it threaded through with many many examples of such psychological techniques. Religion is training, indoctrination, into how t

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    106. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      If you are familiar with the concept of memes, is it interesting to consider science as a belief system. It is an extremely functional, extremely successfully, extremely valuable system of beliefs. It is a system of beliefs that values evidence and logic and reason and analysis. It values the expert peer review system, and it places trust (or faith) in the the results of expert adversarial peer review. Some areas of science I trust (have faith) in because of my personal examination and understanding according to the principals of the science system. I trust (have faith in) other areas of science because of the open invitation to examine them and the repetitive success of every every area I have explored, and because of my trust (faith) in the science system creating and validating and correcting those other fields of science. And of course I have trust (faith) in the science system in general because of the awesome success of the practical application of that system.

      Science is itself a tapestry of memes. One of the critical requirements of a successful meme system is that it incorporate self-replication memes. And yes, science clearly does include such ideas, the ideas that all children should be taught science in school, and that directly opposing claims and systems should be discredited.

      Science as a memetic belief system is generally tolerant and compatible with religion, however science is well armed for battle with any other system - religious or otherwise - that hostilely intrudes on science's turf.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    107. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Uh, how can you have data supporting the non-existence of God?

      I haven't read the God Delusion so I don't know what specifically the other poster was referring to, but at least one answer to your question occurs to me.

      You can have the same sort of data supporting the non-existence of God as for the non-existence of Superman. Specifically, you can come up with data identifying Superman as a specifically fictional concept created by one-or-more people. That of obviously does not prove a Superman doesn't exist somewhere, but yeah, evidence supporting it being a construct originating in human fiction is pretty dang good evidence for non-existence.

      Which of course leads to the question of quantity and quality of data indicating God being of human-fictional origin. Maybe you should take a look in The God Delusion. Maybe I should take a look in The God Delusion.

      I don't need to pay $9.95

      You're right. Our local libraries probably both carry copies, chuckle.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    108. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      the only way one position or the other can be privileged except by convention is if some source of omnscience exists, and somehow I don't think that such a source would be an athiest unless the source also holds to its own non-existence.

      Oh, I exist alright.
      I just decline to prove my omniscience.
      I insist you have faith in me.
      If you don't, I'm going to torture you for all eternity.
      Yeah, I'm a sadist.
      I like it when people disbelieve me.
      More people for me to torture.
      Torture is cool.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    109. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by HikingStick · · Score: 1

      The origin of "atheist" is "a theos", "without god", whereas the formation of "agnostic" is from "a gnosis", "without knowledge".

      Like many words, there are often cultural assumptions and definitions. I saw an earlier post making that point regarding whether atheists "don't believe in god" or whether they "believe there is no such thing as god". It is a subtle shift in meaning, but a significant one.

      Most professed agnostics I know would fit the definition I know: they acknowledge that there must be someone or something out there, but they don't have a name they can attach to that "god".

      --
      I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
    110. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      I'll keep it short: To think that science and religion are fundamentally incompatible is to misunderstand religion.

    111. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

      I'll keep it short: To think that science and religion are fundamentally incompatible is to misunderstand religion.

      They are not as a concept "incompatible," but "faith" that something is "true" without any credible evidence is.

      There may be pink unicorns that live in the forest, but until credible evidence as to their existence is presented, I will not accept edicts, laws, or social rules supposedly dictated by them.

    112. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      And since when did all religions require blind faith?

    113. Re:My only problem with Dawkins is.. by pnuema · · Score: 1
      This comment is probably far too old to reply to, but:

      Atheism is the belief in the non-existence of a deity. Lack of evidence is not the same as contradictory evidence. Therefore, atheism is a belief based on lack of evidence. The truly rational position is "I don't know". There is no evidence one way or another, so you can make no conclusions based on logic.

      As to provably false:

      If we are going to talk about God, we have to define what we are talking about. Usually, that definition begins with some attribute of the infinite. You can make an argument that God is not infinite, but most people would say that you are no longer talking about God at that point.

      Once you clear that semantic hurdle, try the mental exercise yourself: assert *anything* about something infinite. Then try to come up with the counter. You can do it, every time. This is why philosophy of religion classes will define God as infinite, but then caveat it immediately after by stating that this topic will not be explored. You literally cannot have a philosophical discussion about God where you do not ignore the infinite-ness. This is the main reason why I left the field.

  26. Disingenuous BS by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    ...the Oklahoma House of Representatives encourages the University of Oklahoma to engage in an open, dignified, and fair discussion of the Darwinian theory of evolution and all other scientific theories...

    This, and the bit about cultural diversity is BS pure and simple. If they didn't have a problem with scientific theories then Dawkins wouldn't be a problem to them.

    1. Re:Disingenuous BS by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      Their problem is that they wanted their own crap theories represented at the conference as well, and probably given equal weight. If they did that then the legislature wouldn't feel the need to censure (not censor) the university.

      I don't understand why religious types would ever want a fair representation next to the likes of Dawkins. They'd get their clocks cleaned each time.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    2. Re:Disingenuous BS by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
      If they didn't have a problem with scientific theories then Dawkins wouldn't be a problem to them.

      I have a big problem with Dawkins, and I'm an athiest. The problem with Dawkins is that he is simply intolerant of any other viewpoint. He's convinced that he's got the one true answer and that anyone who understands the world differently is in error, and must be converted to his way of thinking. Alternative ways of understanding the world and seeking to answer life's questions have no value, they simply represent falsehoods that must be stamped out at any cost. Hrm... sound familiar?

      Dawkins is what I'd call an Evangelical Atheist. Now, I don't think that anyone can argue that a lot of awful things have been done in the name of religion, and have been encouraged by religion, organized and otherwise. But Dawkins holds that religion has never done any good at all, and he's unwilling to rationally consider the possibility that religion could also, at least sometimes, be beneficial for people and societies. He has a deep-seated faith in his lack of faith. He's an intolerant hypocrite... in professing to fight the fundamentalists, he's become one himself.

      I think Dawkins and other evangelical atheists ultimately hurt the cause of those trying to promote an understanding of evolution. The problem is that the fundamentalists are arguing that the Bible and the Origin of Species are incompatible ways of seeing the world, so you have to choose one. They say you've got to choose Jesus over Darwin. The evangelical atheists agree that the two texts are incompatible, and they say you've got to choose Darwin over Jesus. Well, there are a lot of people in the middle- people who aren't anti-science, but don't want to give up their faith, either. If you tell those people they must choose between God and natural selection, what do you think they're going to choose?

      The other issue is, well, multiculturalism. The United States is based around the idea that people with very different beliefs should be able to practice (or not practice) as they choose, and that as long as their faith (or lack thereof) isn't practiced in a way as to infringe on other's rights, you can do what you want. For Jews, Muslims, Christians, Cthulhu worshippers and atheists to get along... well, it's not easy. It takes a hell of a lot of "live and let live". Some parties aren't living up to their social obligation to treat others respectfully. You don't have to like or even respect their beliefs, but you must respect the individual's right to believe what they choose. Many evangelical Christians have been pretty bad about trying to shove their beliefs down other people's throats, so they haven't been living up to their side of the bargain. Now we've got atheists like Dawkins who are doing the same thing- trying to shove their lack of belief down people's throats. It's a Holy Atheist Crusade. Either way, it's intolerance, and something we could do with less of.

    3. Re:Disingenuous BS by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I agree with you about the "evangelical atheist" bit, as I believe strong atheism is a religious belief like any other, based on faith without any evidence whatsoever. The question of whether a god exists is simply something that science cannot answer. There's no way to disprove that a god exists, and the only way to prove one exists is to gather sufficient evidence (basically he needs to physically manifest himself to everyone), which has never happened. People claiming they "talk" to him in their thoughts proves nothing other than they might be crazy.

      However, as for "multiculturalism", we are talking about a scientific discussion or lecture here. "Culture" has no place there, especially if it's a stupid culture which demands that people ignore huge amounts of available evidence in favor of an idea (not a theory) based completely on faith. The OK resolution even said the University should allow discussion of other scientific theories. Well, where are they? No, "intelligent design" is not a scientific theory, it's just religion. If someone has a supportable, falsifiable, scientific theory about the origin of life and the way it has become what it has become, I'd like to hear it.

    4. Re:Disingenuous BS by Kandenshi · · Score: 1

      Reading that comment I'm not sure how much Dawkins you've read. It appears to make numerous claims that are not supported by his written work, nor public speeches.

      Dawkins for one has said repeatedly that a belief in evolution is neither neccessary nor sufficient to be an atheist. His opinion is that a good understanding of evolution takes a good deal of wind out of the sails of the arguement from design(an arguement that powerfully influenced many thinkers over the years, leading people who quite likely would have been atheists to instead advocate a form of Deism).

      You're right though that Dawkins is indeed intolerant of certain ways of thinking, I don't think he'd disagree with that. Nor would most of the New Atheists that you refer to. They tend to peacefully advocate that one should try one's best to make sure that one's beliefs are true. Beliefs that have no supporting evidence have aren't as likely to be true as beliefs that do have supporting evidence. "You don't have to like or even respect their beliefs, but you must respect the individual's right to believe what they choose." I am not sure where you've seen atheists arguing that we should make belief in Yahweh/Vishnu/Allah/FSM illegal. They tend agree that people have the right to believe whatever they want(up until those beliefs impinge on the rights of others). But that's not a sufficient arguement for saying that they shouldn't be trying to convince people to change their mind.

      As Sam Harris tends to say, I do think that you should be allowed to think that Elvis is still alive. But I don't think that means I can't try to peacefully convince you that it's likely he's not. Particularly not if your beliefs in Elvis mean that you close your eyes to evidence in fields such as biology, while trying to keep others from seeing it. Sam does indeed advocate intolerance. Conversation intolerance I believe is the term he uses? In essense, we start using the same intolerance for religions beliefs that have insufficient evidence to support them that we use for people who believe that aliens from Pluto are controlling the president's mind.

    5. Re:Disingenuous BS by JerkBoB · · Score: 1

      If you really listen to what Dawkins is saying, his problem isn't so much with what people choose to believe, in and of itself. It's that human nature steers us toward allowing what we believe to shape our thinking. Scientists are trained to look at evidence as "purely" as possible, with a minimum of personal beliefs and preconceptions. Doesn't always happen that way, exactly, but that's the ideal.

      The problem with religion, in general, is that it tends to shape peoples' perceptions to disregard evidence which is incompatible with the religion. Reasoning is discarded in favor of foregone conclusions, e.g. "Why is the Sun yellow? God made it that way. End of story." This is the opposite of scientific thinking, and it's anti-progress. Some religions do better than others at dealing with questions, but in the end, you can only go so far before the answer becomes "$DIETY did it."

      As Dawkins himself has stated, we can't prove whether $DIETY did or didn't do whatever the question was. In the end, it's irrelevant. $DIETY is unnecessary. Perhaps there was some "higher power" who created our universe, but logically it does not make sense that $DIETY cares about whether or not I follow some arbitrary set of rules for how I live my life, whom I love, or whether or not I believe in him/her/it.

      This is the core of Dawkins' position. His aspersions cast toward religious adherents are based in frustration about their willful ignorance. I tend to share his viewpoints, if you hadn't guessed that already.

      People don't like to be told that they're willfully ignorant, and so he's portrayed as an incendiary jerk.

      --
      A host is a host from coast to coast...
      Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
    6. Re:Disingenuous BS by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      The problem with Dawkins is that he is simply intolerant of any other viewpoint.

      How tolerant would you be of the Flat-Earth movement if they began to make serious inroads into your legislature and educational institutions? Denial of evolution by natural selection is an absurdity on the same level, at this point in time.

      No one should be any more tolerant of publicly-sanctioned religious stupidity than they would be of racism, sexism, or anything else that threatens the underpinnings of civil society.

    7. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? nothing in the bill says anything about religion, Dawkins has made it clear that he believe there is nothing else right on the subject except what he believes (not very scientific) and he has made inflammatory statements towards anyone with an apposing view regardless of if religion is present or not.

      In the bill, they talk about other scientific theories not religions or anything. Why do you need to show your anti-religion anxiety over this?

    8. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think you have suffered the results of the Evangelical atheist. You have Abiogenesis and the bubble theories of evolution which are scientific theories. You have scientific works done by Young earth scientists which is now actually the accepted idea for the creation of some canyons and low lands in western the United states that were created in weeks and days instead of millions of years.

      The problems isn't really the lack of other theories to compete with Evolutions, it's alternatives within evolution that could lead to a better understanding of the process. The evangelist evolutionist or evangelist atheist seem to want to lock understanding into what we know of today and only refine those processes instead of allowing other theories to play out to their validity if it might upset what he believes. It's like saying Science is the pursuit of the truth because it is always evaluating the weight of the facts and review them across the community, then saying shut up, this is the way things are, the way they always are, and I don't care what you or your evidence says. It sort of makes a religion out of science, especially concerning evolution which is apparent with Dawkins.

    9. Re:Disingenuous BS by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, he only really got angry when the church tried to get involved in scientific arguments, where of course they can play no part philosophically. A padre can still be a good scientist, but he can't base theories on his faith. The churches insistence on a significant role triggered his animosity.

      It amused me recently when they ran those ads on London buses. "There probably is no God, so stop worrying and get on with your life." One bus driver refused to drive any bus with that on the side, and as he put it - "they wouldn't dare say anything bad about the muslims, so why should we have to put up with it ?" It seems he clearly knows very little about his own religion, if he thinks the muslim god is a different one to his own, so how the hell could he have a valid view on scientific matters ?

    10. Re:Disingenuous BS by muuh-gnu · · Score: 1

      > The question of whether a god exists is simply something that science cannot answer.

      It absolutely is, sonce as long as you cant show he exists, he doesnt. Its like saying science cannot answer whether bigfoot, the tooth fairy, santa clause, freddie krueger or unicorns exists, because the only way to prove it would be them to physically show up. God really belongs to this category. If you cant prove it, and nobody else can, youve just made it up.

      It may hurt that you lived youre whole life under the presumption that you had a mighty "buddy" somwhere above the clouds which will help and protect you like a father when you feel small and insecure, but you will have to swallow the fact that theres just nobody there. I mean, as you were twelve at the latest, you accepted the fact that theres no santa clause. You maybe cried a little at first, but eventually you accepted it without requiring any kind "scientific proof". Whats so special about god that you still dont want to cross him off the list of imaginary superhero buddies you had once as a child?

    11. Re:Disingenuous BS by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      I had something of a WTF moment when I read your reply; it took me a moment to realize that you believe there are serious scientific alternatives to evolution.

      The school could invite speakers to discuss Lamarckian Evolution, but I don't see the merit of discussing disproven theories from hundreds of years ago for the sake of "diversity".

      In this case, the legislators are incorrect in their implication that there are viable scientific alternatives to the theory of evolution. The only one that comes close, in popularity and not merit of course, is ID, which is a religious viewpoint.

      Therefore, I don't understand how you can claim religion is not involved here.

      As for Dawkins "inflammatory statements torwards anyone with an opposing view": Dawkins attacks meritless propositions, challenging their supporters to reply with a rational counterargument. I don't see why intelligent discourse should be curbed simply to avoid being perceived as inflammatory.

      My "anxiety" by the way is anti-anti-science. I have nothing against religion in the broad sense, when it does not interfere with our efforts to better understand the universe.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    12. Re:Disingenuous BS by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

      (...) Dawkins has made it clear that he believe there is nothing else right on the subject except what he believes (...)

      Bearing false witness again? Please place a quote here where Dawkins says something like that. Dawkins makes it quite clear that he follows reason and thinks, not believes. I have every reason to think he is right, because he thinks. I have no reason to believe someone based on the contents of ancient scrolls.

      --
      Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    13. Re:Disingenuous BS by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      You have scientific works done by Young earth scientists which is now actually the accepted idea for the creation of some canyons and low lands in western the United states that were created in weeks and days instead of millions of years.

      As a long-time anti-creationist, this is news to me. The history of the fights about the Channeled Scablands are fascinating, but I don't think that Bretz was a YEC. Like Wegener's continental drift or Joseph Hart's idea's about iron deficiency, it has taken decades and decades to establish accurate scientific understanding. Is that what you are referring to?

      I really don't know of any creationist ideas that contributed to the advancement of science.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    14. Re:Disingenuous BS by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So I guess you think aliens don't exist either, even though we aren't even able to travel outside our solar system to look at the billions of other stars in our own galaxy alone to see that?

      I'm sorry, but any real scientist would know that science simply can't prove something doesn't exist. You can only prove the existence of something, not the non-existence.

    15. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I had something of a WTF moment when I read your reply; it took me a moment to realize that you believe there are serious scientific alternatives to evolution.

      It's not so much that I do believe there are serious alternatives to theories of evolution as it is the possibilities of other theories. Of course there is the Bubble theory that was semi-popular up till the late 70's and a few other theories. The bubble theory for instance doesn't discount evolution completely, just interspecies aspect of evolution and allows completely the development from single cell to modern life within the same species.

      Right now, the issues seems to be like the global warming nazis where nothing other then what they say can be true no matter how many times they have had to go back and include the areas in question raised by others.

      The school could invite speakers to discuss Lamarckian Evolution, but I don't see the merit of discussing disproven theories from hundreds of years ago for the sake of "diversity".

      That's a possibility, they could also only invite people who aren't as decisive.

      In this case, the legislators are incorrect in their implication that there are viable scientific alternatives to the theory of evolution. The only one that comes close, in popularity and not merit of course, is ID, which is a religious viewpoint.

      Well, not really. There is the bubble theory and while it is weak on support, it still conforms to what we think we know about paleontology and biology today with a few differences. The evidence doesn't exactly disprove it either, it just the interpretation of evidence that has disclaimed it. If we get away from the Dawkins style of evangelist atheism, more of these other theories might be known to you.

      Therefore, I don't understand how you can claim religion is not involved here.

      Because obviously, there are things to which you don't know about. Wikipedia used to have a link on the article about the Bubble theory of evolution but it seems to be gone now, the only other references I have to it is some 1960's era science book that I picked up at a yard sale. It was instructed to me in high school too so I know it was in the school texts in the 1970's and early 80's.

      The polarization of the situation in which the state legislature speaks of is actually the reason why you only know of ID as an alternative to the current Darwinian theory.

      As for Dawkins "inflammatory statements torwards anyone with an opposing view": Dawkins attacks meritless propositions, challenging their supporters to reply with a rational counterargument. I don't see why intelligent discourse should be curbed simply to avoid being perceived as inflammatory.

      And there in lies his problem. It isn't just merritless proposals, but all proposals that isn't what he believes in. He doesn't give the merits a chance nor does he want to allow the theories to play out in order to establish their own merits. It's sort of like insisting the world is flat because the best scientist known to man say it is and no one can change his mind. There is a possibility that the current understanding is incorrect on a number of scales and he leaves out the room for that possibility to be explored. That's his problem, he now just a preacher telling people what to think.

      My "anxiety" by the way is anti-anti-science. I have nothing against religion in the broad sense, when it does not interfere with our efforts to better understand the universe.

      I don't see religion in this at all. You already stated that you don't know of any alternatives to evolution inside it or outside of it which is why you jumped to religion. You probably think the current theory is fact or something, I don't know, I was taking a guess. But with religion

    16. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      As a long-time anti-creationist, this is news to me. The history of the fights about the Channeled Scablands are fascinating, but I don't think that Bretz was a YEC. Like Wegener's continental drift or Joseph Hart's idea's about iron deficiency, it has taken decades and decades to establish accurate scientific understanding. Is that what you are referring to?

      I really don't know of any creationist ideas that contributed to the advancement of science.

      Yes, that is what I was referring to. It was also A YEC that ended up pointing to the missing piece of the scabland puzzles showing that not only was it possible, but it was likely to have happened. I don't remember his name and the scientific community doesn't prop up that he was a YEC, But it was mentioned in the documentary on it that I watched. It was with the mechanism of the hydraulic differences with supercooled water verses regular water that made it likely.

    17. Re:Disingenuous BS by muuh-gnu · · Score: 1

      >I'm sorry, but any real scientist

      (which you aren't)

      >would know that science simply can't prove something doesn't exist.

      It doesn't even have to absolutely bullet-proof prove something doesnt exist. But after an analysis of available data, the scientific approach can give a probability of the existance of something. The probability of the existance of santa clause, the tooth fairy, god, bigfoot or harvey the rabbit is small enough for real life applications that you can "almost certainly" consider them non existant.

      You missed to answer my question why any kind of science should put more weight in analysing god (which one, there are literally hundreds of them) than in analysing the existance of harvey the rabbit?

    18. Re:Disingenuous BS by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree with you on a number of points. Dawkins is not (by and large) intolerant of other viewpoints, unless those viewpoints are truly absurd. He is very careful to show respect to the carefully constructed philosophical arguments which make things like deism a perfectly valid perspective. His 'disrespect' is directed to people who use these arguments to justify belief in virgin births and resurrections.

      People of religious faith are so used to a disproportionate level of respect that they become greatly offended when someone talks about their beliefs in the same way we talk about other patently absurd concepts. Dawkins does not have a deep seated faith in a lack of faith. He goes out of his way to point out that he is a teapot atheist (just like pretty much everyone else). What he then goes on to say is that everyone is a teapot atheist, except that some people (especially in the Abrahamic world) are teapot atheists to every god except one, and this is crazy!

      The real problem with religions like Christianity and Islam is that the fundamentalist fanatics are by and large correct in their interpretation and everyone else is rationalising. If you objectively read the Bible for instance it is hard to accept that the God of the Bible is the same God that the Church of England or the Catholic Church believes in. It is much easier to believe it is the God of the extreme evangelicals. This is hardly surprising since the doctrines of the latter emphasise biblical supremacy, while the former do not.

      This is where the conflict with evolution comes into play. Reasonable, sensible decent beliefs like those held by many atheists, episcopalians and catholics basically require one to ignore large tracts of the bible. The point being made by people like Dawkins is that these people are engaged in a grand cherry picking exercise. I like that bit of my faith, but not that bit. I want to love my neighbour as myself, but I think genocide is wrong. The golden rule rocks, but stoning children not so much. I think referring to other ethnicities as 'dogs' is offensive, but feeding the poor is good. These people are basically doing the same thing atheists do! The only real difference is they draw a disproportionate portion of their morality from a single source.

      The real problem with Dawkins is that he is not an effective mediator. He has successfully galvanised a community of atheists into speaking their mind, but has had little impact convincing anyone else. This is not necessarily a bad thing, atheists are the last minority you can discriminate against with aplomb and for a long time were lost in the wilderness. We needed galvanising. However, what do we do with this new movement? How do we convert our new found voice and confidence into actual changes that protect atheists in the same way that blacks, gays and women have done so in the past?

      The Dawkins approach wont achieve much advancement for atheists. The problem is now one of style. Dawkins bluff approach wont change other peoples minds. Religion might not deserve respect, but the system is to big for a comparatively small movement like atheism to attack from the outside. It has to be attacked from the inside, and that means giving the religious respect even if they might not deserve it. It means ignoring for the time being the hypocrisy of religion, ignoring the fact that the crazy people are right when they say they their version of a particular religion is the one true interpretation, ignoring that most religious people are rationalising their beliefs. We must engage with them constructively.

      I wanted to pick up on what you said about multiculturalism. Multiculturalism has been a immense disaster. We don't need multiculturalism, we need a tolerant monoculture. You want to worship God X, thats cool. You want to tell others they should worship God X, no problem. You want to force your daughter to marry someone at 16, not cool. And if your religion tells you to do it, then your religion sucks too. If your culture says that women should

    19. Re:Disingenuous BS by Nursie · · Score: 1

      So you support legislative censure based on the statement of multiple valid theories because you think there could be other valid theories.

      Whilst it's possible, the fact is that evolution happened. "Bubble theory" as you describe it is a nonsense, and the other competing "theores" we have now are not only false but deliberately dishonest.

      And where do you think the legislature are drawing their standpoint?

    20. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      So you support legislative censure based on the statement of multiple valid theories because you think there could be other valid theories.

      I don't support a legidlature censure but I don't have a problem with it being done. Now doing take that and an "either your for it or against it", it's not that was at all. There are the "it isn't significant enough to get your panties in a know over" position and probably a few in between.

      Whilst it's possible, the fact is that evolution happened. "Bubble theory" as you describe it is a nonsense, and the other competing "theores" we have now are not only false but deliberately dishonest.

      Perhaps how I describe it but it isn't nonsense to anyone willing to objectively look at the science. The point is that there is at least one other scientific theory that I know of and there could be more. This entire labeling something false or misleading and deliberately dishonest before even exploring them because they don't fit you mold is exactly what the problem is and why the state legislature felt it necessary to comment on the subject. You have already shown this problem when you labeled a plausible theory as nonsense when there wasn't enough time for you to find information on it and evaluate it, your not interested in science or scientific theory, your interested in preserving things to the understanding you have came to believe in. How is science supposed to work when this is happening? How are we supposed to realy find the understanding of how things work, of how nature works when anything not in the current versions of the scriptures is dismissed as dishonest or nonsense without the slightest investigations. Any alternative is going to look like nonsense until it plays out on it's own merits. Evolution looks like nonsense to the majority of the world until things started lining up.

      And where do you think the legislature are drawing their standpoint?

      The only valid place to look is in the viewpoint stated. It appears to me they are drawing it from science itself in much the same ways I just criticized you and Dawkins for being closed minded and unscientific. If that wasn't your intent, then you need to look outside your own box to see how your representations are viewed by open minded people.

    21. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Fuck dude, I need to proof read my shit better. I hacked that all up and apologize. The first paragraph should have been this instead.

      I don't support a legislature censure but I don't have a problem with it being done. Now doing take that isn't an "either your for it or against it", it's not that at all. There are the "it isn't significant enough to get your panties in a knot over" position and probably a few in between.

    22. Re:Disingenuous BS by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Perhaps how I describe it but it isn't nonsense to anyone willing to objectively look at the science.

      Well, there's what you said (and I apologise if I misinterpreted) - that it's another theory that somehow accounts for the fossil record by positing that all species developed from primordial micro-organisms without and branching or speciation - and there's what I could find from google (that bubbles in the ocean propagated early genetic material.

      AFAICT your description is directly contradicted by genetic/DNA evidence. And the second thing is not incompatible with any other theory

      This entire labeling something false or misleading and deliberately dishonest before even exploring them because they don't fit you mold is exactly what the problem is

      Please read up on the origins of the current "ID" movement and their "thin end of the wedge" strategy, a cynical attempt to use people's loyalty to god to try and divorce them from scientific thought, in order to try and go back to some sort of simpler panacea in which people believed preachers and scripture over the evidence.

      You have already shown this problem when you labeled a plausible theory as nonsense when there wasn't enough time for you to find information on it and evaluate it, your not interested in science or scientific theory

      I would genuinely appreciate enlightenment on any alternate theories that can account for even a good proportion of the genetic and fossil evidence we have. I looked for bubble theory and found only something about the propagation mechanisms of either abiogenesis or panspermia, not a competing theory to evolution. Absolutely genuinely, I would love to read about it/them.

      "You have already shown this problem when you labeled a plausible theory as nonsense when there wasn't enough time for you to find information on it and evaluate it, your not interested in science or scientific theory"

      I did investigate, couldn't find anything.
      What you described is flatly contradicted by evidence.

      "Any alternative is going to look like nonsense until it plays out on it's own merits."

      Any alternative will have to fit the current evidence as well as (or preferably better than) our current theory. AFAICT there are no others that do this.

      It appears to me they are drawing it from science itself in much the same ways I just criticized you and Dawkins for being closed minded and unscientific.

      Then I would suggest you are naive, a shill for ID/Creationism or a troll. Hopefully the former as I have addressed you honestly so far. This is a religious motivation and nothing else. If they want to prevent someone from coming to say something they find offensive because of their beliefs, or prevent someone coming specifically to say something offensive about their beliefs, then that would at least be honest. There are no valid competing theories I or anyone else is aware of.

      Again, if you have access to material that shows this attitude to be wrong then I would welcome it. Don't call me closed minded because I am sceptical, given that every attempt to present another theory in recent years has been a religious attack on the basis of evidence based science rather than an actual valid theory.

    23. Re:Disingenuous BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had something of a WTF moment when I read your reply; it took me a moment to realize that you believe there are serious scientific alternatives to evolution.

      It's not so much that I do believe there are serious alternatives to theories of evolution as it is the possibilities of other theories.

      ?!? What?

      But then you do not in fact have any objection to the positions of scientists like Dawkins! The entire *point* of science is to hypothesize and test against empirical evidence. When a theory does an excellent job of explaining the evidence, and there are no other theories around that do a better job, then we're as close as is reasonably possible to having an answer.

      Critically, this does *not* mean that we discount every single other idea with scientific merit - at least not in principle, although we may be dismissive as a practical matter in the same way we dismiss stories of UFO abductions. If someone came up to Dawkins with a unique and unheard of explanation for the origin of the species, and this theory was scientific in nature (for instance, falsifiable, unlike ID), and compatable with the existing evidence, and testable (by allowing for predictions of future fossil discoveries, for instance) - if all these conditions were satisified by an alternative to evolultion via natural selection - then Dawkins like any scientist would accept them as a credible alternative.

      And if you agree, then I don't understand your objection to him. Of course, I wrote all this after reading only your first sentence. ;)

      nothing other then what they say can be true

      If that's how it worked then we would have no new knowledge. But as I stated above, there are criteria for scientific theories before they can be given equal weight, and ID does not even come close to satisfying them, principly because it is not scientific. Even if it were, then there would be the matter of evidence and predictions.

      The polarization of the situation in which the state legislature speaks of is actually the reason why you only know of ID as an alternative to the current Darwinian theory.

      Interesting. But unless you're accusing Dawkins of being hypocritical, I don't see the point. If there are credible scientific alternatives, then it would be inconsistent with Dawkins' stated ideals to refuse them simply because they contradict evolution. I'm defending Dawkins' system of reasoning, not the particular detailed merits of evolution itself.

      It isn't just merritless proposals, but all proposals that isn't what he believes in. He doesn't give the merits a chance nor does he want to allow the theories to play out in order to establish their own merits.

      Can we get a consensus here that ID does not qualify? If not, I'm not sure how to even converse with you. If so, I'd like you to point out an instance of Dawkins rejecting the possibility of a worthy theory on ideological grounds besides those of science.

      You already stated that you don't know of any alternatives to evolution inside it or outside of it which is why you jumped to religion.

      Are you so intent on this matter because of my original statement a few posts up about "crap theories" and "religious types"? Then let me clarify: by crap theories I meant non-scientific theories that politicians either genuinely or superficially want expressed in a scientific context: namely ID. And by my next statement I meant that if a proponent of ID or any other brand of Creationism ever got into a fair and rational debate against a scientist as to explanations of the origins of the species, and this debate did not admit the likes of Scripture as evidence, then the Creationist wouldn't stand a chance.

      Happy?

      You probably think the current theory is fact or something, I don't know

      Using "fact" and "theory" in their usual non-

    24. Re:Disingenuous BS by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      Er, I don't know why my post came up as AC, but that is indeed mine.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    25. Re:Disingenuous BS by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      (Read this after my reply below (accidentally posted AC) to your higher comment.)

      Even if there are valid competing theories, they're not mainstream enough for the legislature to have been referring to anything besides ID. For that I fault them, since it underscores a general political bias against objective fact-finding and learning.

      The resolution says Dawkins'

      public statements on the theory of evolution demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking and are views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma

      "Diversity of thinking" at least has the form of a proper complaint against him. Furthermore, the complaint is correct in so far as one includes non-science under the umbrella of "diversity". I don't think science has an obligation to not hurt people's feelings. If we accept a narrower view of "diversity" and just include scientific ideas, then I'm not sure how you would substatiate the claim.

      But to attack a scientist because the evidence doesn't jive well with various cultures? Or because it doesn't match the thinking of a majority of the citizens of the state? They're not condemning Dawkins for being scientifically intolerant, they're condemning him for not compromising his views and representation of the evidence to suit the unscientific majority.

      I understand that you're trying to guard against a complacency in science that we need not challenge our existing ideas. But from what I've seen of Dawkins so far, your attacks are misplaced. You had a better claim against him when you called him inflammatory, but he is not unscientific.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    26. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Even if there are valid competing theories, they're not mainstream enough for the legislature to have been referring to anything besides ID. For that I fault them, since it underscores a general political bias against objective fact-finding and learning.

      They don't really have to be mainstream, they just have to have the possibility to be brought up. Saying the science is settled or something like this is fact and no other thing could be possible ceases to be a scientific endeavor and turned into a quasi religious on.

      "Diversity of thinking" at least has the form of a proper complaint against him. Furthermore, the complaint is correct in so far as one includes non-science under the umbrella of "diversity". I don't think science has an obligation to not hurt people's feelings. If we accept a narrower view of "diversity" and just include scientific ideas, then I'm not sure how you would substatiate the claim.Science has an obligation to entertain any alternative theories to the value of their merits. If the theory doesn't hold water, it can then be dismissed or altered until it does contain merits. Without the ability to explore, experiment, and investigate out side the narrowly defined box created by some people, science simply cannot happen and ceases to be the explanation of natural events. Science ceases to be present. Even if it is something pushed by some religious zealot, science doesn't invalidate concepts based around who brought them to the table. Science doesn't discriminate based on someone's connections to a religion, Science cannot dismiss something because of the messenger, science ceases to be the natural explanation of evens or science itself when it does so. Dawkins, at least from what I have saw, seems to not be in the real of science and pushing his "versions" the way he does is really no different the ID or YECs.

      You may not agree, but I would caution that your not taking an objective look and instead are biasing what you yourself agree with. However that is dangerous because you end up like Dawkins and rejecting anything that doesn't fit into the predefined box. If the truth is what we are after, we simple cannot do that.

      But to attack a scientist because the evidence doesn't jive well with various cultures? Or because it doesn't match the thinking of a majority of the citizens of the state? They're not condemning Dawkins for being scientifically intolerant, they're condemning him for not compromising his views and representation of the evidence to suit the unscientific majority.

      Actually, I don't think they are attacking Dawkins because of the evidence. It's because of how he has grasped the evidence and attempts to halt evidence he doesn't agree with. In short, it's more about his technique then the facts. It's how he presents the facts. There is a difference between "science say X happened because of or through A, B, then C" and "A, B, C, happened to get X and no other modifier or way could be present or possible". The previous is science, the later is more of a religion, the later is Dawkins.

      I understand that you're trying to guard against a complacency in science that we need not challenge our existing ideas. But from what I've seen of Dawkins so far, your attacks are misplaced. You had a better claim against him when you called him inflammatory, but he is not unscientific.

      I don't know if I'm trying to guard against anything other then to simply make the statement that the reaction to this is ridiculous. The state legislature acted on the information it had availible but as you will notice, their position isn't over evolution in itself but the person speaking about it. The school is having a month long celebration on evolution and you would think if the state was a bunch of bible thumpers pushing ID as most are attempting to imply, they would have censured that too. But instead, they passed

    27. Re:Disingenuous BS by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, there's what you said (and I apologise if I misinterpreted) - that it's another theory that somehow accounts for the fossil record by positing that all species developed from primordial micro-organisms without and branching or speciation - and there's what I could find from google (that bubbles in the ocean propagated early genetic material.

      That's pretty much the gist of it. The deviations in the chemical makeup of the bubbles in the primordial soup are responsible for differences in life as we know it today.

      FAICT your description is directly contradicted by genetic/DNA evidence. And the second thing is not incompatible with any other theory

      Well, no. Evidence is an observation, what it contradicts is the current interpretation of evidence. A rock falls from the sky and breaks a window, is it a meteorite, a crude projectile in an acts of war, or a couple of kids hitting rocks down the street with a baseball bat? Evidence held us explain actions and things that happen in our natural environment. You could look at theories around the evidence and explain that it had to be the kids hitting rocks with a ball bat and totally miss that it was I attempting to piss someone off without getting caught (act of war). Evidence is fact as in we know this happened or this does this, our interpretation of evidence isn't fact and rarely becomes fact.

      Please read up on the origins of the current "ID" movement and their "thin end of the wedge" strategy, a cynical attempt to use people's loyalty to god to try and divorce them from scientific thought, in order to try and go back to some sort of simpler panacea in which people believed preachers and scripture over the evidence.

      Christ, I don't care about ID. Their theories or science or Pseudoscience will have to stand the tests of scientific principles and will survive only on their merits. If science is your objective, there is no need to fear alternative ideas. The only reason for that it to protect something that might not otherwise stand or to make a statement about about the religions surrounding it. Why is it that science can't be science and work these things out to a best possible conclusion? If the scientific theories on the table are sound, they don't need to be protected against encroachment from the undesirables.

      I would genuinely appreciate enlightenment on any alternate theories that can account for even a good proportion of the genetic and fossil evidence we have. I looked for bubble theory and found only something about the propagation mechanisms of either abiogenesis or panspermia, not a competing theory to evolution. Absolutely genuinely, I would love to read about it/them.

      If the Bubble theory is correct, then there isn't a need for the single cell to miraculously spout into different species interconnected across the chain or tree of life. In other words, it would play into the same fossil evidence we have now except our interpretation of it would change slightly. Instead of having a bunch of genus's that branch into groups of species, we would have the species in itself connected only by the genetic material that originally made life to begin with. We don't have a complete fossil record of any animal that would link it back to another species, what we have is evidence spread out with a lot of best guess efforts linking them together. In other words, we are building the interpretations of evidence from preexisting assumptions that may or may not be right.

      I did investigate, couldn't find anything.
      What you described is flatly contradicted by evidence.

      What evidence? Or do you actually mean our interpretation of evidence. I think I explained the difference above well enough so I won't spend any more time here with it.

      Any alternative will have to fit the

  27. Re:They Have A Point by damagemanual · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I totally agree with you. I just finished watching Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed last night. As an atheist, I was embarrassed after watching the final interview with him. He came off as pompous and ignorant.

  28. The Earth is Flat by rift321 · · Score: 0

    The publicly perceived "intolerance" demonstrated by Dawkins is simply a misinterpretation. From Dawkins' point of view, the belief in a god is analogous to a stubborn belief that the world is flat. Continuing the analogy, which, in my opinion, is VERY representative, why would any *SCHOOL* condemn someone for speaking on behalf of their very logical, objective arguments against a flat world? Their reason for doing so is that they encourage "free thinking".

    The hypocrisy is quite literally boggling my mind, but the framers of such a bill would most likely fail to accept such a logical idea as hypocrisy.

  29. Meh. by nukeade · · Score: 4, Insightful

    On the plus side, the resolution isn't forbidding that Dawkins speak. Unfortunately, it is a thinly veiled threat to the president of the university that funding or job could be on the line if he lets Dawkins speak.

    "Whereas the University of Oklahoma is a publicly funded university..."

    I read that the US has lost 650,000 jobs in the last month. Maybe enough bad debt, cold and hunger will finally get people to realize that real science can be a vehicle to productive jobs and accept that their 6000 year old Earth hypothesis doesn't hold water.

    ~Ben

    1. Re:Meh. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      r they will keep there mouths shut because religious people are assholes who see any behavior that furthers their views as ok an so getting a atheist fired is "The Right Thing To Do".

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Meh. by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      > Unfortunately, it is a thinly veiled threat to the president of the university

      The reason they mentioned that the university is publicly funded was to establish their jurisdiction over its actions, as the legislature would have no business condemning a private entity for its beliefs except in the broad sense in which, for example, the UN can condemn human rights violations.

      > Maybe enough bad debt, cold and hunger will finally get people to realize that real science can be a vehicle to productive jobs and accept that their 6000 year old Earth hypothesis doesn't hold water.

      No, if anything hard times will make people turn to religion more than before.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    3. Re:Meh. by Grishnakh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      read that the US has lost 650,000 jobs in the last month. Maybe enough bad debt, cold and hunger will finally get people to realize that real science can be a vehicle to productive jobs and accept that their 6000 year old Earth hypothesis doesn't hold water.

      Sorry, no. As the other poster commented, hard times generally make people turn more to religion. As an example, look at all the backwards, fundamentalist Islamic countries out there. They're dumps, their economies are terrible, but do you see anyone there turning away from Islam (esp. strict interpretations of it)? Hell no. They're turning even more strongly towards it. Pakistan just had to allow its western side to implement Sharia Law to prevent a civil war.

      It's sort of like alcoholism and other drug addictions: they say that an addict has to "hit rock bottom", and want to fix himself, before he can overcome his addiction (if he survives).

      Remember how bad life in the Middle Ages was under strict Christian theological rule? We're probably in for another dose of that kind of society before another "Renaissance" comes around, 1000 years from now.

    4. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Maybe enough bad debt, cold and hunger will finally get people to realize that real science can be a vehicle to productive jobs and accept that their 6000 year old Earth hypothesis doesn't hold water."

      Actually I believe the usual response to such situations from those with faith is: "Pray harder."

    5. Re:Meh. by nukeade · · Score: 1

      While I agree that hard times do push people towards being more religious, I'm a somewhat more hopeful for the prospects of science in the US. While I know very little about the history leading up to the Dark Ages (Roman Empire Collapses->???->Renaissance), and I've never been to anywhere ending in "stan", the key difference between the US today and those situations is that in the latter there is very little in terms of science providing useful and immediate answers. We have an infrastructure of research labs in place as well a world-class population of scientists and engineers here and now that can give people a viable alternative to fundamentalism, and I am convinced that in the event of a "put up or shut up" situation that Biblical literalists will be unable to compete.

      Just a for-instance that I found amusing:
      http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090303/ap_on_re_as/as_afghan_iphone_mullah

      ~Ben

    6. Re:Meh. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, I'm seeing a trend towards isolationism, literal interpretation of religious texts and witch hunts galore. While I'm glad that there are finally bigger problems for the government to solve than porn on the internet, it seems that the population is regressing into dark caves.

      I hope I'm wrong.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    7. Re:Meh. by AeroIllini · · Score: 1

      ...6000 year old Earth hypothesis doesn't hold water.

      Yeah, but the flood theory does.

      *rimshot*

      --
      For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
    8. Re:Meh. by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, it is a thinly veiled threat to the president of the university that funding or job could be on the line if he lets Dawkins speak.

      Important to note here is that the Oklahoma legislature just got taken over by the Republicans last month, and that the president of OU is a Democrat (and ex governor). The threat may very well be more the point than any real concerns about Dawkins.

    9. Re:Meh. by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Why do people keep thinking that science is a replacement for religion?

      Its not like the financial markets were making loans based on Bible quotes or the I-Ching. They were using pretty math, applied badly along with a nice dose of greed. I don't see where the presence or lack of religion has any bearing whatsoever. The only real hope is that people stop being assholes, and you'll need a lot more than science to fix that.

    10. Re:Meh. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      the key difference between the US today and those situations is that in the latter there is very little in terms of science providing useful and immediate answers. We have an infrastructure of research labs in place as well a world-class population of scientists and engineers here and now that can give people a viable alternative to fundamentalism, and I am convinced that in the event of a "put up or shut up" situation that Biblical literalists will be unable to compete.

      There's a couple of problems here. First, unlike the Taliban in your linked article, fundamentalist Christians have no problems using modern technology of any kind. Their crazy doctrine is entirely historical: if we can genetically engineer crops (with possible side-effects) to get higher yields and higher profits, the Christians have no problem with that, even if it ends up causing unforeseen consequences. However, suggest that those genetics are part of "evolution", and you'll send them into a fit because they've convinced themselves that the Earth is 6500 years old and evolution is something the Devil came up with to tempt us to stray from God's path.

      Lastly, "world-class population of scientists and engineers here"? Have you looked around lately? Most students in hard-core science (i.e., not psychology, sociology, etc.) or engineering programs in Universities here are not American, and with the economy circling the drain and other economies rapidly improving, they're all going back home to China and India after they graduate or finish their advanced degrees. The talent pool of engineers is continually shrinking, and most engineering work is being sent offshore to India. My job was just sent to India last week. I just got an offer on a new job paying $10k more than the one I just got laid off at, so I'm fine, but this shows me that the employers still doing engineering here (and not going down the tubes financially like my former employer) in the US are getting more and more desperate for the remaining engineers, the number of which is constantly shrinking.

      Face it, the US is not a culture that values science and engineering highly. It used to, back in the 50s and 60s, but those days are long past. We're now paying for it, and it's going to get much, much worse in the coming decades.

    11. Re:Meh. by nukeade · · Score: 1

      I agree that people are likely to become more religious in the tumultous future ahead of us, but I simultaneously expect their influence in terms of science to decline. I believe that they became more influential in the last couple of decades mostly because the enormous surpluses allowed inefficient ideas to survive on the dime of a few religious think tanks. The fact that there is precisely zero demand for flood geologists or creationist antibiotics coupled with reduced tithing from congregations is likely to silence the religious lobby very quickly.

      Again, I am far more optimistic about the US scientific workforce. My view here may be skewed from being a graduate student in a school full of brilliant and ambitious young scientists, but I personally know several who went on to start new business in recent years. Myself and a friend are currently in the process of starting one of our own. I would cast the recession in a different light as an opportunity to get better deals from suppliers, hire workers for relatively low wages, and to eat the lunch of much larger companies that have failed. An interesting note is that our department's number of applicants shrinks during economic boom times, and grows during busts. In fact, according to our department head, the number of applicants spikes two or three years in advance of a recession. This may be an artifact of my note above: when efficiency is not at a premium, the market is a lot less interested in advanced science.

      So yes, I have looked around--and I understand that your opinion is an artifact of what you see every day. I hope it gives you some encouragement that while many people are losing their jobs, new work is already springing up in the ashes of the old.

      ~Ben

       

    12. Re:Meh. by nukeade · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean to imply that it was. I was trying to say quite the opposite--since they are not mutually exclusive, people could simultaneously become more religious but reject the brand of religious fundamentalism that tries to play the role of science since it fails to produce useful results.

      ~Ben

  30. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Has anyone in the Oklahoma heard of the First Amendment? Cultural diversity? WTF does cultural diversity have to to do with science, anyway?.

    That's a nice buzzword to make people who oppose their actions appear intolerant and narrow minded. Ignorance is now part of that vast cultural diversity that we must all respect.

    Of course, the legislature ignores that Catholic teachings allow for the coexistence of evolution and creation; after all we can not fathom how God accomplishes his goals. One is faith, the other science and neither need be exclusive.

    Of course, many of those same legislators might not consider Catholics Christian (and no, that's not sarcasm but experience).

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  31. Re:They Have A Point by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Richard Dawkins does "demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking". I see him as the atheist's Rush Limbaugh.

    Apart from his pro-atheist writings, speeches and such, Dr. Dawkins actually does do real scientific research. He has published numerous papers, as well as a number of rather good easy-to-understand books on evolution.

    Rush Limbaugh is an entertainer. He isn't even a real politician.

    So how is it exactly you can equate Limbaugh and Dawkins?

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  32. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Doublejaay · · Score: 1

    It doesn't even have to be Bible-Belt states that are this backwards. Just look at what Colorado is doing -- http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/03/05/215209.

  33. Re:They Have A Point by Rolgar · · Score: 1

    Actually, I think the Democrats in Congress voted with the Republicans 89-11 to prevent the FCC from re-instating the Fairness Doctrine. However, they're planning on forcing radio stations toward local minority ownership (read 'Democrat supporters'). Once they've forced the radios to sell to Democrat friendly owners, the decision to cut Limbaugh and Hannity became a 'business decision' instead of government censorship.

  34. Pastafarianism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our new noodly master and inquire why he didn't have a representative invited as well ;)

  35. Let the idiot speak by genner · · Score: 0, Troll

    He doesn't deserve all the free publicity your giving him.

    1. Re:Let the idiot speak by Gunnut1124 · · Score: 0

      Let the idiot speak

      We certainly seem to do that here on /.

      See parent as citation.

      --
      America is all about speed. Hot, nasty, badass speed. -Eleanor Roosevelt, 1936
    2. Re:Let the idiot speak by leathered · · Score: 1

      ..as opposed to the free and otherwise bankrolled publicity that a certain JC has had for the last couple of thousand years?

      --
      For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    3. Re:Let the idiot speak by genner · · Score: 1

      ..as opposed to the free and otherwise bankrolled publicity that a certain JC has had for the last couple of thousand years?

      Fine censor him then....there's no pleasing you people.

    4. Re:Let the idiot speak by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Fine censor him then....there's no pleasing you people.

      That's insufficient. I demand nothing less than a public crucifixion.

      Wait...

    5. Re:Let the idiot speak by genner · · Score: 1

      Fine censor him then....there's no pleasing you people.

      That's insufficient. I demand nothing less than a public crucifixion.

      Wait...

      We don't have the authority to do that.

      You'll need to petiton your local Roman Magistrate.

  36. Obligatory FSM by headkase · · Score: 2, Funny

    Ok, assuming that his Flying Spaghettiness Herself didn't just create the Universe 30 seconds ago with our memories of anything beyond that being created as well... Either that or we are "memories" in the FSM and She has been too lazy to create the Universe yet. Yeah, or something like that. But anyway!, Consider Evolution: all it says is things that change over time tend to change like "this" whether you're talking about a particular species or a mountain-range. Think of the moment our Universe first condensed from pure energy. This was "Eden", a purity of representation - just hydrogen which went on to fuel the first stars and the fusion reactions within them later on created the "crusty" stuff in the Universe: all the other elements. Everything you can see except hydrogen was once in a star. Evolution is a selection process, according to the laws of our Universe's constants some things will be more reproductive than others and the same constants allow for lower energy-states to create higher-ones with there always being a little net energy that slipped through the molecules radiating off everything. The Evolution of our Universe has taken thirteen billion years to produce us. Big number. Um, no, think of how many billions of years are ahead for our Universe (not necessarily including us). There is a lot more Evolution left to go. Consider the far future: say another twenty billion years. If you or I were to be transplanted through time to that distance we would probably be eaten by the first grasshopper to come along. Things will get more efficient. It has to to make up for the overall increase in Entropy. Now consider that if our Universe will have an end wouldn't that final state define a "calculation" it was performing? And if you want to get metaphysical then you could say that maybe God was there waiting for our Universe to tell Him what it was. The End of time is "Judgment Day" and its predators-against-prey to decide the final representation of our Universe.

    --
    Shh.
    1. Re:Obligatory FSM by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      Heretic! You are conflating religions together. The Flying Spaghetti Monster is generally male or neuter. When people talk about a female deity they are talking about the Invisible Pink Unicorn (may her holy hooves never be shod) When people want a deity that enaged in hyper-omphalism they have the God of Last Thursday who made the universe last thursday with all our memories intact. Please don't confuse them. This is serious theological error.

    2. Re:Obligatory FSM by Absimiliard · · Score: 1

      ZOMG! Heretic!

      His Flying Spaghettiness is obviously male.

      Don't you watch any bad anime? What did you think all those noodly appendages were for???

      Female Spaghetti Monsters are an entirely different, and hotter thing, but they didn't make The Mountain nor The Midget. (though rumor in my local church is that they did have a noodle in the trees)

      *hrmphhh*

    3. Re:Obligatory FSM by headkase · · Score: 1

      ...his Flying Spaghettiness Herself...

      Sorry, Herself and She were his maiden names. He's gonna divorce that stupid <BLEEP> soon. But anyway consider what Evolution doesn't say: What was before time?; what is after time?. Evolution is only valid within time. Before our Universe and After OUR Evolution is not necessarily in effect. Humans can't conceive of something that had no beginning or end and thats the "blind" spot God lives in.

      --
      Shh.
  37. Re:They Have A Point by stimuli_ii · · Score: 1

    I'm actually for the Fairness Doctrine. 'We' own the airwaves these wingnuts use. Opinions should be given equal access. And yes, that means on TV too.

  38. Re:They Have A Point by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    And I see every popular religionist as demonstrating an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking when they attempt to get their fairy tales taught as science, discriminate against people who do not believe in their fairy tales, murder doctors, and harass rational non-believers, sometimes driving them to suicide.

    Every time I see a group of religious people protesting against abortion or for led prayer in schools or the teaching of creationism (and so-called intelligent design is nothing more than creationism in a new set of clothes), I see them as ignorant, vicious fools who would resort to burning people at the stake to get their way, just as they did less than 300 years ago.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  39. Re:They Have A Point by geekoid · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You need more exposure.

    You can't have a resonable debate with the church, becasue the church as no reasonable points.

    How do you debate something with someone who refuses to accept real physical evidences and facts, and backs their argument with nonsense?

    That aside, with the exposure I have had, he only gets that way when:
    A) People are lying about atheists
    B) People refuse to understand that atheism is not a religion
    C) People lie and make stuff up about evolution

    Yes, he is passionate about seeing those facts get out into the light.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  40. Re:They Have A Point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you confuse intolerance with a desire to educate and give people an enlightened understanding of biology.

  41. Dean Wormer by Sfing_ter · · Score: 2, Funny

    So is Senator Bluto sending this to Dean Wormer?

    Hey, we umm... don't like those things he ummm... says... yeah... and ummm now you know ummm... that we don't... you know ummm like it... umm what he says...

    --
    A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing. Emo Philips
    1. Re:Dean Wormer by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Oh, come on, Bluto was much more open minded than that.

      And.....

      FOOOOODFIIIIIIGHT!!!!!!!

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  42. Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    The original theory of evolution -that all those bones in the ground implied the existence of evolution is easily shown to be false. Put the skeleton of a chihuahua next to that of a beagle next to that of a great dane. The theory would argue that this shows a historical track of evolution. But all these bones belong to the same species and are contemporaneous. Ergo - the morphology of bones is a very poor indicator of genetic change, and does in no way "prove" evolution occurred. There have been a few examples recently of the identification of new species, but this only shows that evolution is possible. Some day we will have a real theory of evolution, one in which we can identify which genes changed from each species to the next, and more importantly, we can identify the agents (radiation, chemistry, random errors) which really caused those changes.
    Until the REAL theory of evolution is developed, all we have is a philosophy of evolution to goad us to further exploration.
    But very few people have the intellectual honesty to admit this.
    This is partly due to fear that honesty will weaken the case for evolution and open the door to creationists.
    If responsible Christian authorities would simply admit that the story of the Garden of Eden is a morality tale and an allegory meant to illustrate the nature of man, and stop insisting that the authors of the Bible were writing factual accounts in the style of 20th century journalists, then we could all relax.
    Bible-reading believers could stop having fits of apoplexy when evolution is mentioned. And athiests could no longer claim that the obvious fact that the book of Genesis is allegorical in nature somehow disproves the existence of God.

    1. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      The theory would argue that this shows a historical track of evolution. But all these bones belong to the same species and are contemporaneous.

      No, it wouldn't because the science, through radioactive and other dating methods, would show them to be contemporaneous.

      As your entire argument is based on that false premise, the rest of your argument and post is likewise false.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    2. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rest of his post was total crap, but he had this part right:

      If responsible Christian authorities would simply admit that the story of the Garden of Eden is a morality tale and an allegory meant to illustrate the nature of man, and stop insisting that the authors of the Bible were writing factual accounts in the style of 20th century journalists, then we could all relax.
      Bible-reading believers could stop having fits of apoplexy when evolution is mentioned. And athiests could no longer claim that the obvious fact that the book of Genesis is allegorical in nature somehow disproves the existence of God.

    3. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And athiests could no longer claim that the obvious fact that the book of Genesis is allegorical in nature somehow disproves the existence of God."

      Let me substitute a few words here...

      "And Tolkien-haters could no longer claim that the obvious fact that the Lord of the Rings is fictional in nature somehow disproves the existence of Sauron."

      Kinda sounds silly now, doesn't it?

      Nice troll, by the way... I hope it starts a really amusing flame war. I mean, I'm hoping your post was all a big sarcastic joke... My respect for human intelligence is low enough as it is...

    4. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow- your ability to miss the point is amazing. Creatures with very similar genetic make-up can have very different bone structure. Genes evolve - not bones.
      But I suppose your inability to follow a line of reasoning is what makes it so easy for you to believe in evolution.

    5. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by pthreadunixman · · Score: 1

      you && science == FAIL

    6. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by grikdog · · Score: 1

      Evolution is not easily understood, but as you point out, failing to understand how evolution works does not mean evolution doesn't happen. There's a lot of fuzzy thinking around, especially among evolutionists forced to defend their ideas in fundamental, high-relief arenas of metaphor and unreason they themselves abandoned in childhood, and are not even comfortable thinking about.

      Perhaps evolutionists, considered as a species of human not well adapted to argument by crucifixion and fire, should collectively adapt by discarding our own comfortable cliches. For example, science and art diverge when the "Great Chain of Being," usually drawn as Fish -> Amphibian -> Reptile -> Mammal -> Monkey -> Ape -> Neanderthal -> You, takes an ironic place as explicator of natural selection.

      However we can derive an adaptive strategy from our own Weltanschauung by adopting a Darwinian style of metaphor. To wit, the thing that drives evolution OF SPECIES (not, of course, individuals) is natural selection. In other words, the thing that drives the warm wax of DNA variability into specific niches is EVERYTHING ELSE, not teleology. Even the word "niche" is wrong, since it suggests womblike comfort. The edges of niches are razor sharp, and niches are defined by entire ecologies, not happy thoughts in the service of creature comforts.

      --
      ``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
    7. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The original theory of evolution -that all those bones in the ground implied the existence of evolution is easily shown to be false. Put the skeleton of a chihuahua next to that of a beagle next to that of a great dane. The theory would argue that this shows a historical track of evolution. But all these bones belong to the same species and are contemporaneous.

      No, the theory of evolution would argue that they descended from a common ancestor. It would also argue that the two populations must have undergone significant selective pressure in order to diverge so much. Both predictions would be true.

      Ergo - the morphology of bones is a very poor indicator of genetic change, and does in no way "prove" evolution occurred

      Just because they're the same species doesn't mean they don't have different genes. And evolution has occurred between different breeds of dogs. Any change in the frequency of alleles in a population is evolution. In this example it's happened because of selection by man, instead of selection by nature. But the principle is the same.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    8. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Put the skeleton of a chihuahua next to that of a beagle next to that of a great dane. The theory would argue that this shows a historical track of evolution."

      No, your horrid understanding of the theory would cause YOU to argue that. If you seriously think that scientists are only taking into consideration bone size and structure then all I can do is apologize for whatever school gave you such a horrible education.
      Of course, nothing was ever stopping you from learning for yourself so I can't be too forgiving.

    9. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by JoshuaZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The point about dogs is actually a minimally good one. Some biologists like to bring it up when they think that paleontologists are getting too smug. But it doesn't quite work since we would see that the dating of all the species was about the same time period and would see that they have all all diverged rapidly from a very similar earlier species and would likely say "huh. Something weird is going on here." We would correctly get that the species were closely related but would likely have trouble telling much else.

      But there's a more serious problem with your comment: You seem to be under the mistaken impression that the primary evidence for evolution is fossil evidence. That's simply not the case. There are many different pieces of evidence from many different disciplines. For example, we have the nested hierarchy from morphology and the genetic nested hierarchy which agree with each other. Indeed, even if we had no access to fossils at all, the evidence for evolution would still be very strong simply based on genetics.

      The rest of your post has similar problems; whether or not we can identify the exact cause of any specific mutation does not mean we don't have a working theory of evolution. We in fact have a very good understanding of mutations and selection pressures and can identify certain types of mutations as due to specific effects. Moreover, you may want to look up the word "philosophy" since it doesn't seem to mean what you think it means.

      Your understanding of religion and Christianity is similarly flawed. Most major Christian denominations have little or no problem with an allegorical reading of the beginning of Genesis (indeed the summary of TFA says just that).

      Moreover, you misunderstand why many atheists care about evolution. Many atheists like many religious people care deeply about how we got here. Many atheists, like many religious people see the overwhelming evidence for evolution and get annoyed when people try to spread ignorance and lies about. Finally, the atheists who care about evolution for two additional reasons: 1) evolution leaves one fewer unaccounted things for someone to shout God did it and 2) many atheists think that the Biblical text was meant to be read literally. Thus, in that regard, those atheists are like many liberal Christians and Jews who are willing to concede that the text is highly imperfect. However, many atheists see this as an argument for rejecting the Biblical text as a whole. Thus, in that regard some atheists are actually in agreement with the Biblical literalists about how the text should be read.

    10. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm.. bones in the ground? Fossils are not bones. They're rock, for the most part. Your argument is pretty much irrelevant as a critique of evolution.

    11. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by canuck08 · · Score: 0

      The original theory of evolution -that all those bones in the ground implied the existence of evolution is easily shown to be false. Put the skeleton of a chihuahua next to that of a beagle next to that of a great dane. The theory would argue that this shows a historical track of evolution.

      That is not correct.
      Please re-read the chapters on evolution, natural selection and the scientific method.

    12. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Rumagent · · Score: 1

      Whoever modded this interesting is a fucking moron.

    13. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that I'm agreeing w/gp, but how many species of dogs are there? 1, and that's a subspecies... 140000 to 15000 years of domesticated dogs being bred by humans (read selective breeding) and we get a subspecies.... Info from Wikipedia.

    14. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Wow, another idiot creationist without a clue. Go figure.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    15. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      You just described every single IDist/Creationist in the world.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    16. Re:Evolution is just a philosophy by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure saying they have "different bone structure" is accurate. While the 3 canines you mentioned vary considerably in size and therefore the bones differ in length, thickness and proportion they all probably have the same bones in the same locations and a future paleontologist may be easily able to tell they were the same species or at least be able to surmise they were very closely related.

  43. Re:They Have A Point by leathered · · Score: 1

    Dawkins regularly holds public debates with theologians so I would hardly call him intolerant of 'diversity of thinking'. Unless of course you belive that religion is a special case that is above criticism or ridicule.

    --
    For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
  44. Re:They Have A Point by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Do you even know what that is? the "Fairness Doctrine" strengthens the peoples ability to express there own speech. It would in NO WAY limit anyone elses speech.

    It was one of the many travesties of the Reagan administration.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  45. Actually only introduced, not passed. by couchand · · Score: 5, Informative

    A quick search of the Oklahoma state legislature status page (http://www.okhouse.gov/Legislation/Leg_Status.aspx) shows that HR1015 was introduced March 3 and nothing has happened since. In truth it has not been passed.

  46. Re:Wow. Just wow. by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

    Creationism is just a cover for the real debate amongst Christian sects: Biblical Literalism (Fundamentalists) vs. a more figurative interpretation of the Bible (non-Fundaementalists). (Full disclosure: I'm not Christian)

  47. Sweet! Next stage...WIN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win. - Gandhi?

  48. so what's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oklahoma and most of Texas provide a valuable service. If morons had no where else to go you would be forced to live among them.

  49. Three words (plus commentary) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Irrefutable (fucking) fossil records. (now go away)

  50. Where's The Problem? by mpapet · · Score: 1

    Many reading these comments will end up being members of a loosely defined group that sees this kind of thing as, among other things, a huge waste of legislative time.

    The problem with most of this Right-Thinking Fellows Club is that it is a similar kind of thinking/acting as the freaks that wasted their time on the legislation and (no doubt) political pressure being applied in the University.

    Did you see what I did there by name-calling?

    I don't know how, but somehow their crazy world view needs to be redirected so they stop wasting everyone's time. A giant screen TV in every home and *severe* economic stress doesn't seem to be refocusing them at all.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  51. Of Political Necessity in Jesusland by srobert · · Score: 1

    Imagine being a state legislator in Oklahoma. A large proportion of your constituents will be bible thumpers who will expect you to vote yes on a bill like this. Since it doesn't actually censor Dawkins, the only rational thing to do is figure that it does no harm and vote in favor of it.

  52. This is the core issue by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The core issue is very simple to express. In the 19th century, a trend in english-speaking Christianity appeared that asserted that the Bible was factual and should be interpreted literally. That very simple single assertion on which Christian fundamentalism is based is the root cause of this and many other issues grouped together in the U.S. by the term "Culture Wars."

    It is conceptually simple to understand, particularly for people who are not of an analytical bent. It does not require deep thought or incisive intelligence, it is by and large unambiguous, it results in absolute truths that can be used as rules and maxims, and concentrates all authority on the literal meaning of the scripture. This allows true believers to dismiss anything else out of hand, because the literal interpretation is held to be the literal word of God. That is the great appeal. Simple people need not worry about analysis, interpretation, consistency or anything else. Unfortunately, it is an illusion.

    In practice there is as much ambiguity as before, absolute truths are difficult to pin down, consensus is difficult, and physical reality contradicts practically all attempts to assert literal truth of biblical claims. On top of this is the curious trait of religious fundamentalists in general to cling to their arbitrary beliefs even more strongly in the face of contradiction, as if, rather counterintuitively, that in itself confirmed their beliefs.

    1. Re:This is the core issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Whilst there may have been a relative increase of literal interpretations of the bible in the 19th century I really think that line of thinking had been in place and exploited far, far before then.

      All the points in your paragraph beginning "It is conceptually" could basically be said to sum up the entire point of any religion in the first place - the means to control a mass and (usually) concentrate power and wealth into the hands of a few. That is not a new goal for certain members of humanity, it is as old as humanity itself.

      Of course there is as much ambiguity now as before - that's because the whole thing is and always has been bollocks! The Inquisition, for example, were not known for their liberal interpretation of the bible and they were around long before the 19th century. Look at Galileo. Those are just two simple examples off the top of my head but there are obviously many more going back right up to the foundation of the religion.

      I know you specified English speaking and I have only mentioned non-english speaking examples but if you look at the history of England you will see many cases where the supporters and proponents of religion were far more rabid and fixed on the literal interpretation than today. Throughout most of England's history the church fought with the crown (both covertly and overtly) for primacy.

      The trend to take the bible literally waxes and wanes but it is not a new phenomena at all, and as long as there are simple minded people who do not wish to question their reality, and as long as there are unscrupulous scum wishing to control and exploit that defect, there will be religion.

    2. Re:This is the core issue by pnuema · · Score: 1

      As a religious studies major, I can provide the reason: a literal interpretation of the bible was used as justification for slavery. That's where it started.

    3. Re:This is the core issue by Xaedalus · · Score: 1

      You are correct, sir. I call it the 'logic bomb'. Take someone with a logical, behavioralist mindset. Introduce them to the bible and tell them that the Bible contains the word of God. Since God is ineffable, then His Word must be completely correct. And then state that the Bible was written by divine direction. Since God is ineffable and cannot ever be or do wrong (so the logic goes), then nothing in the Bible is wrong because it is divinely inspired. Hence, literal interpretation. To someone of a logical, behavioralist mindset it's a supremely addictive meme. They can't process the paradox of God doing something wrong and thus are stuck. I would add that this is also how fundamentalism of ALL stripes works. Islamic fundamentalists, Jewish Fundamentalists, even die-hard atheists. All you need is a logical paradox and a component reeking of absolute truth and you've got a recipe for fundamentalism.

      --
      Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
    4. Re:This is the core issue by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you are the person who thought up the notions of religion as a human logic bomb or a rootkit, but I must say I find them to be brilliant analogies. The mind as a hapless operating system utterly compromised but unable even to realize that it has a destructive parasite attached, let alone rid itself of it. Atheism, politics, religion, practically any ideology can be a trojan. It is, in its way, as beautiful in its elegance as it is horrifying in its consequences.

  53. Re:They Have A Point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because they're both pompous ass hats who have made fortunes by pandering to narrow minded people who need the validation of a public figure that deems itself flawless. BTW, I'm no Limbaugh fan, but the fact that he's not a politician enhances, rather than diminishes, his credibility.

  54. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0, Troll

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  55. Re:Wow. Just wow. by bugi · · Score: 0, Troll

    we can not fathom how God accomplishes his goals. One is faith, the other science and neither need be exclusive.

    Good fathoming. Is it your conclusion that God's goal is war leading to extinction of humans? That seems the only way to interpret your assertion that God's means are "science" and "faith".

  56. The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    the leading advocates of Intelligent Design are very fond of protesting that they are not talking about God as the designer, but about some unnamed and unspecified intelligence, which might even be an alien from another planet.

    Any sufficiently advanced alien is indistinguishable from God.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  57. Re:They Have A Point by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

    Names and citations, please.

    --
    Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
  58. Why I will never live in Oklahoma by hansamurai · · Score: 0, Troll

    1. They only allow Democrats and Republicans on their presidential ballots (I assume that trickles down to at least Senators, Congressmen, etc.).
    2. Crap like this where their House actually wastes time condemning people. I don't care if they're religious, atheists, or ax murderers, people can make up their own minds.

    Those two are pretty much enough for me, actually, number one is, but this doesn't help. Plus the weather probably sucks.

    1. Re:Why I will never live in Oklahoma by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      if by "probably sucks" you mean "is in the middle of tornado alley" then yes, it does, a lot.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    2. Re:Why I will never live in Oklahoma by jimwelch · · Score: 1

      Others can qualify for the ballot here in OK. These rules were put together to stop 100's of parties being on the ballot. It DOES cost money. OK, The rules may need to be adjusted.

      If he was speaking at a public forum, instead of a tax-payer sponsored event, I might agree with you. Past abuse, by the liberals, against conservative speakers, may make the Politicians a little thin skinned.

      BTW, you are playing the same game, by condemning all Republicans. As I tell my liberal friends, say that again, only substitute xxx (black, gay, Muslim, ...) for Republican and then decide if it now becomes hate speech? If so, you are a hypocrite.

      The weather sucks everywhere, one way or another. (Floods, Earthquakes, Tornadoes, Hurricanes, Snow, Ice).

      --
      Never trust a man wearing a coat and tie!
  59. it might be a dig in the other direction by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Interest in "diversity" is semi-frequently used by left-leaning college types as a reason to oppose conservative speakers whose views they find offensive.

    (I'm left-leaning myself, FWIW, but I find this particular strain of lefties to be as much opposed to my views as right-wingers are, since indeed "free speech was intended to protect offensive speech".)

  60. Re:They Have A Point by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

    He is directly insulting/dismissive to broad classes of theists, but he doesn't make unqualified categorical anti-theist claims that he can't back up. For instance, for those who believe in an active God as opposed to a one-time non-interventionist Creator, he calls this an infantile belief in an imaginary friend. For the Creationists who don't have anything to do with an active God, he'll use more reserved terms directed at accurately describing their systems of beliefs and reasoning. "Infantile" in that case would not apply, but "unsophisticated" might.

    The point is, he doesn't attack people for anything they don't have an obligation to defend.

    --
    Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
  61. Re:They Have A Point by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Um, Dawkins "fortunes", such as they are, are likely more due to tenure and because of several books he's published on evolution. His pro-atheism publishing has likely made him good money, but really is a small proportion of his total output.

    You are aware, I trust, that Richard Dawkins is actually a working scientist, right? I mean, you don't think he's just some guy that makes his living on talk shows.

    I think you may actually be silly enough to think that Dawkins is simply some sort of anti-religious version of Limbaugh.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  62. Re:They Have A Point by Workaphobia · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Eh? I've heard an interview and a lecture by Dawkins (neither one live), and I don't think I ever heard him attack individuals, except for the actions their beliefs may lead them to.

    --
    Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
  63. Re:Wow. Just wow. by jbeaupre · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unfortunately or fortunately depending on the circumstances, the 1st amendment doesn't say there can't be consequences for speaking freely. Just that laws can't be passed preventing free speech. Relative merit, such as it being solid scientific evidence has no bearing on whether the speech is permitted (no "especially" clause). But it does have a bearing on consequences.

    In this instance, the legislature is stating that they are going to be pissed. The implication is that the university may not get the support is wants next time it comes calling. They aren't putting anyone in prison. Not taking any property. Just hinting they may not give money.

    You might say not giving money money to the university is the same as taking it, but it's not. Any organization that takes in money has to keep their benefactor happy. Golden handcuffs are part of the bargain. Even when the benefactor is a douchebag. Solid scientific evidence means the consequences are that everyone now knows the OK legislature is filled with douchebags. That's the consequence of their free speech.

    --
    The world is made by those who show up for the job.
  64. Censorship by arhhook · · Score: 1

    Oh no! Silence those that think different and may possibly offend someone! We must make sure that we have diversity and make sure that everyone is heard...except that guy. Most of us just don't agree with him.

  65. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    we can not fathom how God accomplishes his goals. One is faith, the other science and neither need be exclusive.

    Good fathoming. Is it your conclusion that God's goal is war leading to extinction of humans? That seems the only way to interpret your assertion that God's means are "science" and "faith".

    No, war is the result of our being given free will.

    I can see where my ending could be misconstrued - I did not mean that faith and science are means; rather that a belief in a God that created man is faith and evolution is science and those two items do not need to be mutually exclusive.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  66. What this is about by T.E.D. · · Score: 4, Informative

    The real issue here is that, for the first time since possibly statehood, the Republicans have just taken over the Oklahoma state legislature. Since this is pretty much their first time ever to be relevant, they are really anxious to make their mark, and do it now. The fat kids who always had their faces pressed up against the glass at the legislative candy store suddenly have the keys, and they are going hog-wild. To give you further examples, in the last couple of weeks we Okies have also seen bills to: o Outlaw the wearing of Muslim head coverings on driver's licences o Weaken worker's comp o Prevent teacher's unions from engaging in political activity o Make it harder to persue "pain and suffering" claims in court. My personal favorite was the School Prayer bill we barely managed to get killed in committee. It would have allowed for student-led school prayer at mandatory attendence events, but stipulated that the prayer leaders had to be "school leaders". Their definition of school leaders included, I shit you not, head Cheerleaders and the captain of the football team. We were wondering aloud what would happen if a school just happened to have a Wiccan captain of the football team...

    1. Re:What this is about by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      We were wondering aloud what would happen if a school just happened to have a Wiccan captain of the football team...

      "We found a witch, may we burn her?"

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    2. Re:What this is about by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Their definition of school leaders included, I shit you not, head Cheerleaders and the captain of the football team.

      I was captain of my high school chess team.
      Does that mean I get to lead a Satanic Prayer?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  67. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  68. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Colorado may not be in what is commonly thought of as the bible belt, but take a close look at Colorado Springs. Ever hear of Focus on the Family? Ted Haggard? Tony Perkins?

  69. The Horrors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone having an opinion that doesn't agree with the majority of other people? We can't have that! Doesn't he know what Democracy means? It means the minority can shut the hell up!

  70. Re:They Have A Point by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Name them. You're saying a Democratic Congressman is trying to bring back the Fairness Doctrine, so surely you can actually name this congressman, right? Right?

  71. Add another to the list by Evildonald · · Score: 1

    *sigh* Yet another state I have to scratch off my list of "Potential States I Could Possibly Move To". Even if these legislators don't represent the majority (which I think is the real case), they have now represented their lovely state to the world as a bunch of backward, in-bred, witch-burning first-amendment haters.

  72. Re:They Have A Point by cens0r · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And you think that they would edit him to look non pompous and intelligent? That would have defeated the entire purpose of the movie.

    --
    Jack Valenti and Orrin Hatch will be first up against the wall when the revolution comes.
  73. Evangelicals are crazy by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

    Please don't confuse Evangelicals with Catholics.

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

    The Church isn't against evolution.
    Yes there are a few "Catholic organization" that are against evolution, but I believe that the Church needs start using the Inquisition a bit more and wave the ban hammer

    http://www.incunabulum.co.uk/inquisitor.jpg

  74. Thanks for proving Darwin wrong by MazzThePianoman · · Score: 1

    Thanks for proving Darwin long because people like that are obviously not evolving our species and our ability for rational thought.

    --
    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" Franklin
    1. Re:Thanks for proving Darwin wrong by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      You imply that rational thought would be beneficial to the human races survival.

      it has been shown that group think and herd mentality is stuff that will help the race survive and produce offspring.

      That is the only goal of evolution. Evolution doesn't exist to make smarter people, just more people. Sometimes those two things coincide, sometimes they don't.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    2. Re:Thanks for proving Darwin wrong by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      Fusion doesn't exist to create stars; it is necessary for stars to exist. Similarly, evolution doesn't exist to make more life; making more life (or, more succinctly, reproduction) is necessary for evolution to occur. There's not a whole lot of evolution going on if a life form abiogenisistically appears, doesn't reproduce, then dies.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
  75. The Christian way by cheesygrapes · · Score: 1

    Well, since science is obviously irrelevant in the abortion debate when up against the rantings of religious fanatics, if we're going to ban abortion we should ban it in the christian way.

    And in all the writtings of early christians and the early catholic church, it's not the brain that develops over time but the soul. The soul starts out as the equivalent of a plant-soul (okay to kill) then over time develops into an animal-soul (okay to kill), then into a human soul (OH NO!). This last stage was supposed to be reached about 60-90 days after conception.

    This is why christian groups, including the Catholic Church have always been pro-abortion (during the first 60 days of pregnancy) until modern times. Now that it can be turned into a wedge issue and one of the few remaining tools left the church has to screw with women, all the religious doctrine goes out the window and suddenly every sperm is sacred!

    Thus I claim that all christians that oppose abortion in the first 60 days of pregnancy are either bad christians or must allow religious dogma to change over time ( and thus have no excuse for hating gays).

    P.S: I know in the bible, it specifically says not to have abortions, but for most of the church's history, people who violated this were treated no worse than those who violated the ban on masturbation or working on Sunday. You paid a small fine to the church and everything was okay. Early abortions weren't considered "murder" until modern times.

    1. Re:The Christian way by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      One of the oldest non-Biblical Christian documents is known as the Didache, at it explicitly forbids abortion. The Catholic Church has never allowed it, unless you'd like to provide some sort of proof. Nancy Pelosi tried to say something similar last year during the usual controversy leading up to the election, and she, and the millions who support her, were unable to provide the proof you would require. Now, some theologians, speculated that the soul developed at some point after conception, but that was part of the debate about some technical issues relating to soul, salvation, and maybe in part, abortion, but what you describe was not an actual teaching of the Church.

      A similar case was the speculation by Augustine on the souls of unbaptized children, which he thought probably didn't deserve heaven or hell, so he postulated that they went to a previously unmentioned place known as 'Limbo'. Limbo took on a near-doctrine like presence in the Church for over a thousand years, but was never taught as an official doctrine, and was recently rejected.

  76. Go God Go XII by morgauo · · Score: 1

    I want to go watch SouthPark now.

  77. Re:They Have A Point by jgtg32a · · Score: 1

    The 1st never mentions any thing about giving you a platform to speak, it just gives you the right to say what you think.

  78. Re:They Have A Point by Shakrai · · Score: 1

    Name them. You're saying a Democratic Congressman is trying to bring back the Fairness Doctrine, so surely you can actually name this congressman, right? Right?

    My own Congressman is one of them.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  79. Re:They Have A Point by Shakrai · · Score: 1

    So will the Libertarian Party get equal access? How about David Duke? Will the KKK get equal access? Or does some Government bureaucrat get to decide which views are popular enough to deserve "equal" access?

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  80. Biblical evidence? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You don't have to be a drooling moron to be Just Plain Wrong. Sometimes intelligent, honest people are Just Plain Wrong. Hundreds of years ago, the religious also honestly believed based on biblical evidence that the Sun revolved around the Earth.

    Um, "biblical evidence"? Ptolemy and Aristotle?

    Not to say that the authors of the bible were heliocentrists, but the church in the time of Copernicus and Galileo rejected heliocentrism for scientific reasons: it contradicted Aristotelian mechanics, and was not predictively superior to geocentrism. This is one of the reasons Newton was successful where Galileo wasn't--Newton provided a alternative to Aristotelian mechanics that had a number of very clear advantages; Galileo was trying to do so, but didn't get nearly as far.

    1. Re:Biblical evidence? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yes. The Catholic church has this sort of Hellenic fixation that goes just beyond the physical sciences.

      Although what the orthodoxy chooses to believe is largely irrelevant as long as heresy is
      tolerated. That is the key problem with Xian institutions being in charge of what is the
      current state of the art in scientific thinking. Science ends in the hands of beaurocrats
      more worried about protecting their power and turf and they have the power and authority
      to do that protecting.

      The problems of science and the Xian churches has much more to do with human failings
      and politics than it does genuine religious dogma. "Followers" being such, are just
      prone to "follow" whatever nonsense their religious corporation may be engaging in.

      Xianity in general/particular encourages thoughtless followers.

      No one will ever get burned at the stake for disagreeing with
      Dawkins or translating his books into a language he didn't approve of.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Biblical evidence? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Not to say that the authors of the bible were heliocentrists, but the church in the time of Copernicus and Galileo rejected heliocentrism for scientific reasons: it contradicted Aristotelian mechanics, and was not predictively superior to geocentrism.

      Sorry, but this is just wrong. Wikipedia actually has a pretty good article about it. See the quotes by contemporary religious leaders, as well as the biblical quotes.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    3. Re:Biblical evidence? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia actually has a pretty good article about it. See the quotes by contemporary religious leaders, as well as the biblical quotes.

      Like this one?

      "If there were a real proof that the Sun is in the center of the universe, that the Earth is in the third sphere, and that the Sun does not go round the Earth but the Earth round the Sun, then we should have to proceed with great circumspection in explaining passages of Scripture which appear to teach the contrary, and we should rather have to say that we did not understand them than declare an opinion false which has been proved to be true. But I do not think there is any such proof since none has been shown to me."
      --Cardinal Robert Bellarmine

      The critical quotes are mostly from Protestants--not exactly the thing to cite when you're discussing what was wrong with the Catholic Church's treatment of Galileo.

      The Church, by its own standards, acted in error when it censored Galileo. The whole affair is a textbook case for separation of church and state; the Church shouldn't have had the power to censor Galileo in the first place, period. However, the claim that the Church rejected heliocentrism just because it contradicted the bible is wrong. The strongest claim you can make is that they subjected it to a higher standard of evidence because of some biblical passages; but they did consider it on its own merits as a scientific alternative to the geocentric models, and found it wanting.

      And there's also the fact that they left an out for Galileo to continue his research and publications about his theory ("teach it as a hypothesis, not as the truth"). In the broader view, of course, Galileo shouldn't need approval from the church to pursue his theory; again, this is a textbook case for separation of church and state. Let's just not morph it into an ahistorical myth of an anti-scientific church.

  81. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

    Replace evolution with holocaust denial and you'll see the basis the government entities have to condemn if not banish expressions that are protected under the First Amendment.

    --
    Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
  82. Prove non-existence of God? by Mathinker · · Score: 1

    > the Sun revolved around the Earth

    The only thing we've learned which "contradicts" this is that it is simpler to consider the motions of the planets from the Sun's frame of reference. It is possible to use the Earth as a frame of reference, it's just not intuitive (isn't part of the basis of the theory of relativity that all frames of reference are created equal?). And no, I don't think we should be teaching Earth-centric scientific theories in our schools, or rather, only in history classes.

    > And hopefully someday people will realize they are Just Plain Wrong about the existence
    > of God, but unfortunately that's not as easily proven beyond a reasonable doubt as
    > evolution.

    How on Earth do you think it could be possible to prove the non-existence of an omnipotent entity? And why do you think there is some connection between "proof" and "belief"? I.e., even if you could prove such a thing, why do you think it would cause people to stop believing?

    1. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How on Earth do you think it could be possible to prove the non-existence of an omnipotent entity?

      I didn't say "prove", I said, "prove beyond a reasonable doubt." You can't prove it beyond all doubt. You can only continue to remove all the superstitious nonsense and hope that when people see that absolutely nothing is left that they decide for themselves that it's most rational to conclude that nothing was ever there.

      We don't have "proof" that the Egyptian god Ra never existed, or that Zeus was never real, but most people accept those. Someday (hopefully) people will accept that the Abrahamic God was every bit as real as Ra and Zeus -- not real at all.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    2. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by D+Ninja · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I didn't say "prove", I said, "prove beyond a reasonable doubt." You can't prove it beyond all doubt. You can only continue to remove all the superstitious nonsense and hope that when people see that absolutely nothing is left that they decide for themselves that it's most rational to conclude that nothing was ever there.

      I never actually understood the fight between creationism and evolution. It's not like they have to be polar opposites. The Bible never actually says anything about how long it took to create the world (unless, of course, you take a literal look at the Bible, and then it's 6 days). However, it's quite feasible that evolution was used in the creation of the world. Why not use some excellent tools that would allow growth and expansion of so many billions of creatures? I can't see God just saying, "Let me do things the hard way, when there's this really awesome way of doing things..."

      Maybe that's just me.

      As to your "prove beyond a reasonable doubt" and "no real" remarks - whether God is or is not real (and I believe that he is), is it really such a big deal that people want something to believe in, even if you don't particularly want or need that?

    3. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      The only thing we've learned which "contradicts" this is that it is simpler to consider the motions of the planets from the Sun's frame of reference.

      I am not sure that is the case. The first thing to take in mind is that both geocentrism and heliocentrism are families of models; there are several historical models that fall under each of the two categories. The Ptolemaic model isn't the same thing as the Thychonic system, no more than the Copernican model is the same as the Keplerian one, or the various Newtonian models. Some historical heliocentric models were no simpler than their geocentric counterparts.

      Also, Friedrich Bessel's research in 1838 disproved the Ptolemaic system (and I think the Tychonic system too). So yeah, it is quite possible to learn things that contradict specific geocentric models.

      It is possible to use the Earth as a frame of reference, it's just not intuitive (isn't part of the basis of the theory of relativity that all frames of reference are created equal?).

      But here you're getting close to a really important point: to put it in our modern day, Newtonian terminology, in Aristotelian mechanics there is an implicitly privileged frame of reference relative to which objects are "truly" moving or "truly" at rest; and the Earth is at rest relative that privileged reference frame. So in Aristotelian mechanics, it's not just intuitive to use Earth as the frame of reference, it is obligatory; using the Sun as the frame of reference would entail that all objects on Earth are systematically in real motion, despite being at apparent rest. That would be very, very un-Aristotelian.

      The change from geocentrism to heliocentrism was only really possible by changing from Aristotelian mechanics to Newtonian mechanics.

    4. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Bible never actually says anything about how long it took to create the world (unless, of course, you take a literal look at the Bible, and then it's 6 days).

      The problem isn't the six days, it's the Adam and Eve mythology. The Bible clearly states that God created man, and all people were descended from Adam and Eve. That directly contradicts evolution, which states that man descended directly from animals.

      Now, I realize that you can mangle the bible into fitting evolution if you accept that the bible is allegory, but unfortunately, too many Christians can't accept that. And truthfully, they *shouldn't* accept that the bible is allegory. It says what it says, right down to killing anyone who works on the Sabbath. Christians should accept ALL of the bible, from advocacy of slavery on down -- or none of it (as would be my preference). Most Christians are total hypocrites when it comes to accepting the word of God.

      is it really such a big deal that people want something to believe in, even if you don't particularly want or need that?

      It wouldn't be a big deal if people would keep their beliefs to themselves. Astrology is relatively harmless, because people don't generally want it taught to students as an "alternative theory" to astronomy. But when you have wackos who want prayer in schools, or who will never vote for an atheist into public office, then religion has very real consequences.

      Of course, I shouldn't have to mention religiously-motivated terrorism.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    5. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

      I don't think the problem was saying that the Sun revolved around the Earth via an Earth-based reference frame. The problem was saying that everything revolved around the Earth, because then the planets and comets had to follow really funny orbits and the idea of general gravitation is pretty much incompatible with geocentrism. These are also people who mostly believed the Earth had planar topology instead of spherical, mind you. It's much easier to believe in geocentrism when gravity is a uniform vector field pointing down at the turtles or Atlas.

    6. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christians should accept ALL of the bible, from advocacy of slavery on down -- or none of it (as would be my preference).

      Only a Sith deals in absolutes.....

    7. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem isn't the six days, it's the Adam and Eve mythology. The Bible clearly states that God created man, and all people were descended from Adam and Eve. That directly contradicts evolution, which states that man descended directly from animals.

      Unless you suppose that the method of creation might have been a long, complex, apparently random but secretly-guided process. Which most Intelligent Design proponents seem to.

      (I'm not an ID proponent, but I don't have any major problems with it -- other than that it doesn't work as a model on which to base scientific inquiry.)

    8. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by SoupGuru · · Score: 1

      Well, it's obvious that only certain parts of the Bible are to be taken literally while the other parts are to be interpreted. Which parts are which depends on what point you're trying to make.

      --
      What doesn't kill you only delays the inevitable
    9. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by maugle · · Score: 1

      is it really such a big deal that people want something to believe in, even if you don't particularly want or need that?

      Yes, because it never stops there.
      There are always people who are compelled by their religion to spread it to others. In a worst-case scenario, that compulsion changes from "make everyone believe in my religion by converting them" to "make everyone believe in my religion by killing everyone who doesn't".

    10. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      Hear! Hear!, and well said!

      And truthfully, they *shouldn't* accept that the bible is allegory. It says what it says, right down to killing anyone who works on the Sabbath. Christians should accept ALL of the bible, from advocacy of slavery on down -- or none of it (as would be my preference). Most Christians are total hypocrites when it comes to accepting the word of God.

      Yes, that 'pick and choose' dichotomy has bothered me for as long as I have expended thought on the subject. The underlying philosophies of 'hurray for me, and screw you', and 'do as I say, not as I do' turned me against any form of christianity early on...when I could think for myself, YMMV.

      Maybe the Roman Games should have had a more 'Lions to christians' ratio?!!...I'm Game!!!New Reality Show, FTW!!!!!!!!!

      I would be more open to the 'religous' viewpoint if it wasn't constantly being forced/legislated down my throat. But it is being used that way, so I have to resist to keep my freedom of religion/speech alive.

      My value of 'soul' is just as important to me as the christian's value of soul is to them. To think anything different is an affront to both christians and my own beliefs, much less the Constitution of the United States. Seperation of the 'church and state' is imperative, not optionable, if we are to avoid a theocosy.[which I will fight tooth_n_nail for Constitional reasons, as well as humanatariaan reasons)

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    11. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by kyousum · · Score: 1

      And truthfully, they *shouldn't* accept that the bible is allegory. It says what it says, right down to killing anyone who works on the Sabbath. Christians should accept ALL of the bible, from advocacy of slavery on down -- or none of it (as would be my preference). Most Christians are total hypocrites when it comes to accepting the word of God.

      Are you telling people that they should believe in a particular interpretation of a book when you don't believe in that book at all? I call that real hypocrisy.

      If someone claims their belief is correct "because it is written in the bible, and that's all the evidence it needs" than you can challenge them about cherry picking parts of the bible. If they claim "every word in the bible is true and should be literally interpreted", you can point out the many contradictions in the bible. I, a Roman Catholic, won't stop you.

      But those claims are a minority within the Christians. For starters, the Catholics and the Orthodoxes don't claim that. (I believe many Protestant faiths don't claim that either.)

      If you want to criticize non-fundamentalist Christian, you should criticize them for what they believe in (which may be based on parts or the bible, or not). Not what you think would make more sense for them to believe.

      I think you are either

      1. just whining because it is relatively easy to show that atheism is more sensible them fundamental Christianity, but it's not as easy to show that atheism is better then non-fundamental Christianity, or
      2. you are a fundamental Atheist, so can sympathize with fundamental Christian more then you can with non-fundamental Christians.
      --
      but why not?
    12. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Are you telling people that they should believe in a particular interpretation of a book when you don't believe in that book at all? I call that real hypocrisy.

      No, I'm saying that if someone is going to believe in the word of a God, then they should believe in every single word of that God, otherwise they are a hypocrite and don't really believe in that God.

      Please quote me the passage in the Christian bible where it says that Christians can pick and choose which passages of the bible to "interpret"?

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    13. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by syousef · · Score: 1

      As to your "prove beyond a reasonable doubt" and "no real" remarks - whether God is or is not real (and I believe that he is), is it really such a big deal that people want something to believe in, even if you don't particularly want or need that?

      For a fantastic explanation why incorrect beliefs are harmful, read "The Demon Haunted World: Science as a candle in the dark" by Carl Sagan.

      Short version: Making decisions for yourself and others based on non-truths means you are not using the best actual knowledge you have, often in matters of life and death (or quality of life) of large numbers of people. You still have to contend with reality and reap the consequences of your actions. For example if you decide to consult a mystic to decide what you do on a particular day, it might be very bad, if you're in a position of power. E.g. if you're the US president and what you do for the day is decide whether or not to start WWIII.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    14. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by kyousum · · Score: 1

      if someone is going to believe in the word of a God, then they should believe in every single word of that God, otherwise they are a hypocrite and don't really believe in that God.

      Your argument is based on the fact that either (1) the bible is the inerrant word of God, or (2) Christians claim that the bible is the inerrant word of God.

      Atheists and non-fundamental Christian agree that (1) is not true. Only fundamental Christians claim (2) is true.

      So, your logic doesn't stand against non-fundamental Christians.

      If you want to call me a hypocrite, please point to me to a Roman Catholic tenet that says that every single word in the bible is the inerrant word of God. Or, maybe argue to me that every single word in the bible is the inerrant word of God.

      Also by your logic, Muslims who don't think the new or old testament is the direct word of God but believe that the Koran is the direct word of God would be believing in a different God than Christians and Jews. While most Christians, Jews and Muslims would agree that we believe in the same God.

      Please quote me the passage in the Christian bible where it says that Christians can pick and choose which passages of the bible to "interpret"?

      You seem to be stuck in the idea that the Christian faith must be based solely on the bible.

      It doesn't. It never needed to. Most Christian faiths don't. (By the way, I would be amused if you quote me a passage from the bible that says you have to take every word in it as the inerrant word of God)

      Your argument also seems to be based on your belief that (1) God is a fabrication (2) based solely on the Bible.

      From a point of view of Christians, (1) and (2) are both wrong. (1) God actually exists. (2) Since he exists he exists even if you don't believe in parts of the bible, or even if the bible never existed.

      From a Atheist's point of view, (1) God is a fabrication made by humans. That 's a valid interpretation of history.

      But for a Atheist to understand this fabricated Christian God, he has to research the actual history and teachings of the various Christian faiths. If he does, he would notice that they are usually not based on the belief that the bible is the inerrant word of God. History will show that (2) humans fabricated God based somewhat on the bible, but were also strongly influenced by other religions, political influences, local customs, practical experience, logic, etc.

      --
      but why not?
    15. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Informative

      I never actually understood the fight between creationism and evolution. It's not like they have to be polar opposites.

      The reason you find that confusing is a matter of definitions. The definition you are applying for "creationism" is "God created the universe". While that is a reasonable definition, it is not the commonly used definition. The common understanding of "creationism" is the position that God created Man and all the "kinds" of life in essentially their present form. So yes, by the common meaning of creationism, it is in direct conflict with evolution.

      it's quite feasible that evolution was used in the creation of the world.

      Only a small few percent of the population are atheists, and the majority of Christian accept evolution. Nearly all evolutionists are Christian.

      So except for a couple of percent of people, that essentially defines the evolution position.

      whether God is or is not real (and I believe that he is), is it really such a big deal that people want something to believe in, even if you don't particularly want or need that?

      Most atheists don't much care about other people's personal religious beliefs.

      However atheists, and many Christians, do have very serious objections when some overzealous fundamentalists attempt to hijack the force of government in an effort to impose some of their peculiar ideology on others. Atheists, and many Christians, seriously object when fundamentalists start damaging public school science education, attempting to discredit actual science and instead substitute their theology under a fraudulent mask of science. Harming our children's science education and hijacking the government public school system to forcibly impose their fundamentalist theology on our children.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    16. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Earth" is a poorly defined inertial frame anyway, since any arbitrary patch of ground is quite dynamic at scales of nm/s (from the perspective of a observer at infinity comoving directly above it) because of local deformations (traffic, weather), diurnal and seasonal tidal and solar irradiance deformation, plate tectonics, and so forth. The local gravitational potential wanders on its own and varies with latitude and other factors, all of which has all sorts of interesting GR effects when trying to choose a map such that a sizable local slice through spacetime is flat (in the MInkowski sense). So Earth's surface physics with three Euclidean spatial dimensions is only approximate, and even if one carefully chooses a site and conditions (equator, sea level, standard atmospheric conditions, aposol, neap tide, ...), you can play fun nonrepeatability games with interferometers or frequency generators vs accelerometers.

      That said, there is the frame in which there is zero dipole anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background radiation for an observer in local free-fall. We can't get there any time soon, being stuck deep in a highly energetic part of a galactic supercluster, but we can -- and do -- use the nonzero dipole anisotropy we do see as an indicator of speed and heading (and the mean temperature as a clock, and the small angle temperature variations as a map). However a lot of the universe has thermalized to the CMB and is at rest to the limits of measurability in the frame in which there is no CMB dipole anisotropy, so it's a popular frame.

      There is nothing special about that frame with respect to the propagation of electromagnetic radiation or gravity, however, which is the point of "no privileged frame".

    17. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Please quote me the passage in the Christian bible where it says that Christians can pick and choose which passages of the bible to "interpret"?

      The Bible Interprets itself. Take Judges Chapter 9:8 for instance says Once upon a time the trees decided to elect a king.

      Then the rest of the Chapter explains it's allegory and what it means.

      Read Daniel or Revelation and see all the dreams and wild beasts/monsters. Does Daniel or John really believe in the literal existence of these Beasts? No... Daniel 8:20-22 gives the meaning.

      Also all six creative days in Genesis are called 1 day in Genesis 2:4 Also the Bible equates 1 day with 1000 years. 2 Peter 3:8

      There are just a few. If you want more, let me know. BTW If you don't like "Christians" in politics, check out John 6:14,15. or John 18:36

      Just so you know, I defend no stance taken by blueletterbible.org or any reference they quote, just an easy online bible to quote. I will not defend all Bible translations either.

    18. Re:Prove non-existence of God? by Yadyn · · Score: 1

      As to your "prove beyond a reasonable doubt" and "no real" remarks - whether God is or is not real (and I believe that he is), is it really such a big deal that people want something to believe in, even if you don't particularly want or need that?

      As soon as those people want to pass laws, start wars, and generally impact the lives of us and everyone else being influenced by what we believe to be false, then yes... yes it IS a "big deal."

  83. No sense at all... by copponex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Religion is the adherence to a set of rules made by a particular culture hundreds or thousands of years ago, with small, rare changes in views. Science is the sum total of testable human knowledge from all cultures from the beginning of modern human history to the present. If Dawkins decided that all of science in 2009 was correct, and any new theories incompatible with 2009 science were wrong simply because they were new, he'd be religious.

    Belief in a higher power has helped people cope with psychological stress and diseases of habit, but in my opinion, modern medicine has saved many hundreds million more lives than any spiritual affiliation. I'd wager that every single senator who supported that bill would laugh out loud if you suggested they visit a Shaman to cure cancer, but would accost you if you insisted that praying for someone had the same effect.

    Some people just don't get it.

    1. Re:No sense at all... by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      Religion has, in part, to do with how did the universe come to be, and what does that mean for how an individual views the world. It can also relate to what something believes without proof, since no religion I've ever seen has proof of it validity.

      Dawkins is clearly an atheist, and believes the universe just is. Since he has no proof of that, that is a religious belief, which he believes as strongly and irrationally as an Christian believes in God.

    2. Re:No sense at all... by copponex · · Score: 1

      Religion has, in part, to do with how did the universe come to be, and what does that mean for how an individual views the world.

      As far as religions are simply popular cults, they retell creation stories, and can provide some moral values to their adherents. Over the past few thousand years, those values change in practice or the cult is abandoned for more "advanced" ideals. (For instance, the changing values of Judaism are nearly perfectly in line with their exposure to technologically superior cultures.)

      It can also relate to what something believes without proof, since no religion I've ever seen has proof of it's validity.... Dawkins is clearly an atheist, and believes the universe just is. Since he has no proof of that, that is a religious belief, which he believes as strongly and irrationally as an Christian believes in God.

      Sort of. Dawkins knows that there are many theories about how the universe came to be. There are certain theories that line up with each other, which also line up with the observable universe today. So, by default, he accepts this collection of theory as the known reality, until more is discovered, or what has been discovered is proven to be false. Anyone outside of this view is there purely on personal conviction based on faith and a little bit of ancient hearsay. (I say a little bit because, excepting many Muslims, very few religious people actually read the thing they've bet their soul on.)

      To put it more succinctly, if you ask a scientist about something that is a mystery, they'll tell you that they have some ideas, but they don't know. A religious person would insist that their creator knows, and that the fact that it's a mystery is proof that their version of the creator exists.

      Whichever stance you think is more supportable by rational thought is really up to you.

    3. Re:No sense at all... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      "Science is the sum total of testable human knowledge from all cultures from the beginning of modern human history to the present."

      Science is ALSO a method for generating new knowledge. You cannot decide that certain things are unquestionably true (or false) and still be doing science.

      Dawkins isn't afraid to word things strongly, but he is still a scientist. He shows that the existence of God is extremely unlikely, but does not claim that conclusion is an unquestionable fact.

    4. Re:No sense at all... by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Dawkins is clearly an atheist, and believes the universe just is. Since he has no proof of that, that is a religious belief, which he believes as strongly and irrationally as an Christian believes in God.

      Wrong, liar. He will readily admit that we don't actually know for certain. What he will tell you is that such-and-such explanatory is much more plausible than believing that God did it. So there is actual evidence to support his beliefs, and he is open to being wrong. Unlike religious idiots like yourself.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    5. Re:No sense at all... by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      Unitarianism Pentecostalism,Mormanism?

      Oh, I invite you to spend about 6 months with the Shona if you think that shamans don't have power...Actually I would advise against it. Things wouldn't come out so pretty for you.

      Religion is basically belief (or conviction) in a higher power or truth. i.e. YHWH or evolution.

      And I say evolution is higher truth to dawkins b/c he spends more time preaching it than 99% of Religious people preach their religion.

  84. Re:They Have A Point by cheesygrapes · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry but as an atheist and wholehearted supporter of evolution, I still have to admit that Dawkins is an asshole.

    As much as I used to be a fan of his writings, he seems to have blind faith that religion is the cause of every single problem in the entire universe, however unrelated, and is not afraid to admit it in the most asinine way possible. I don't like religion, but he takes it to quite a ridiculous extreme.

    That being said, it shouldn't prevent him from speaking or anything. Universities invite assholes to speak all the time.

  85. This is problematic by aepervius · · Score: 1

    Quote: Please don't forget that it is a subset of "religious people" who are fighting to discredit science and impose their beliefs via government and laws. There are plenty of religious people who don't support those more extreme views. Belief in God and a respect and enthusiasm for science are not mutually exclusive. Maybe you should try to be more careful about making that distinction when using your vehement means.

    See, if those nice people which are not the dark religious one would speak a tad bit more loudly, and fight way more that small subset, it would not be a problem. But it ain't happening. Only when the FULL spectrum of religion is attacked, the bigger subset raise the flag , protest , and say the smaller subset is responsible. Well. Yeah. You would be believable if you (the greater subset) did something against that plague. Surprisingly that is not what is apparent to the non-religious.

    So.... When will be the nmext spontaneous big manifestation in the street, organized by you the bigger subset , on the street of oklahoma, to ask for tolerance of open idea, and when will you confront the smaller subset ? Don't let me hold my breath.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:This is problematic by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      The vast majority probably don't go out marching "We're religious and accept science" because they're not interested in pushing their religious beliefs on others. They might also support science, but not know enough on their own to hold their own in an argument with a creationist. (Many creationists are good at giving reasonable-sounding arguments that, false as they may be, will prove troublesome for Joe Average to refute.) The vocal minority, however, wants to convert everyone over to their way of thinking and isn't above marching or getting bills passed to "teach the controversy" or "expose the flaws of evolution." They also don't fear "debate" because they honestly don't care what counter arguments are given to them. They're not interested in logic and reason and normal debate. They're interested in pushing forward God Did It as the official answer so that souls can be saved as people convert en masse to the vocal minority's religious beliefs. (Not that it would happen, but it's the wet dream of the vocal minority.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  86. Hypocritical? by somethinghollow · · Score: 1

    Is the bill not itself guilty of demonstrating an intolerance of diversity by attempting to prevent someone with opposing views from speaking about those views?

  87. I just emailed their speaker of the house. by MazzThePianoman · · Score: 1

    chrisbenge@okhouse.gov
    subject: you are making national news

    Dear Chris,

    It might be good for you to note that your debate on House Bill 1015 is resulting in a mockery of your entire house.

    http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/03/06/1726211

    Are you aware that the Vatican sponsoring a five day conference to mark the 150th anniversary of the publication of Charles Darwin's Origin of Species. The subject is the compatibility of evolution and creation.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7920205.stm

    You understand the bill itself is a contradiction?

    The resolution begins:

    "WHEREAS, the University of Oklahoma is a publicly funded institution which should be open to all ideas and should train students in all disciplines of study and research and to use independent thinking and free inquiry..."

    By paragraph THREE it is condemning Dawkins for:

    "views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma"

    I do not know if you support or do not support this bill but asspeaker you might want consider stopping this nonsense before more of the American people give up on the government's ability for rational thought.

    --
    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" Franklin
    1. Re:I just emailed their speaker of the house. by Em+Emalb · · Score: 2, Funny

      "I do not know if you support or do not support this bill but asspeaker you might want consider stopping this nonsense before more of the American people give up on the government's ability for rational thought."

      Dude, asspeaker? LOL.

      "but asspeaker"

      Please tell me you actually sent it in that way.

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    2. Re:I just emailed their speaker of the house. by MazzThePianoman · · Score: 1

      Yep, and I do not care. I got my point across all before my workstation finished squashing some PDF files together for work. I am allowed one missing spacebar depression if they are allowed to waste the taxpayers time with this crap. :)

      --
      "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" Franklin
    3. Re:I just emailed their speaker of the house. by Em+Emalb · · Score: 1

      Fantastic. You just made my day.

      Hey, it's a Friday, not like it takes much!

      --
      Sent from your iPad.
    4. Re:I just emailed their speaker of the house. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (...) not support this bill but asspeaker you might want (...)

      asspeaker
      noun (asspeakers)
      A person who was tricked into peeking into a certain individual(*1) his ass, by clicking on a deliberately mislabeled hyperlink on nerd-news site slashdot.org, that lead to a picture with the aforementioned individual in a bend over position.

      *1: this individual was also known as 'The Goatse Man'

  88. Take THAT, Illinois! by snspdaarf · · Score: 1

    We are the Oklahoma Legislature! Nobody can out-stupider us!

    If Dawkins would just say something bad about UT Austin football, they would give him a torchlight parade.

    --
    Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
  89. Re:They Have A Point by Americano · · Score: 1

    It would in NO WAY limit anyone elses speech.

    There are only 24 hours in a day. There is some finite number of radio stations in the country. If you pass a regulation stating that radio stations must allow some percentage of their time for "opposing viewpoints" that they would not normally air, then you are necessarily limiting someone else's speech by taking that time to speak away from one person and giving it to someone else.

    For the people who think fairness doctrine is a net-good for "the marketplace of ideas," does that also mean you'd be okay with the FCC declaring that for every hour MSNBC airs Keith Olbermann, Rachel Maddow, or Chris Matthews, they must also schedule an hour for Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Bill O'Reilly?

    I didn't think so.

    "Fairness Doctrine" is a polite way of saying "I'm going to use government regulations to force the people who don't agree with me to shut the fuck up."

    If you don't agree with them, don't listen to them. Turn on Air America instead, and support a commercial enterprise that aligns with your beliefs.

  90. Re:They Have A Point by Rolgar · · Score: 1

    Actually, eleven voted to block a amendment to prevent reinstatement, but 57 voted for an alternative method to 'encourage' 'minority ownership', which means they will try to force local ownership by Democrat friendly minorities, who will then boot conservative shows off the air.

  91. Need more info: Re:Let the idiot speak by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

    Just out of curiosity, how is Richard Dawkins an idiot?

    1. Re:Need more info: Re:Let the idiot speak by genner · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, how is Richard Dawkins an idiot?

      Idiot may be the wrong word but he is a jerk.

    2. Re:Need more info: Re:Let the idiot speak by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is he a jerk? He never attacks or even criticizes believers simply for believing. You anti-atheist bigots see anyone who dares publicly discuss their atheism and reason for lacking belief as jerks, no matter how nice they are. Dawkins is very nice to people who simply believe. He only insults those who do bad things, lie, etc. in the name of such belief, which is completely valid. You are the only one here being a jerk.

    3. Re:Need more info: Re:Let the idiot speak by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Elaborate, please. The most I've heard the man say is "Your ideas are delusional."

    4. Re:Need more info: Re:Let the idiot speak by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      So, you fucking retard, are you going to answer the questions, or are you going to continue to be a fucking retard who just spews out nonsense and then runs off like a fucking pussy?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  92. We're all athiests, but ... by the_rajah · · Score: 1

    Some of us carry it one god further.

    --


    "Do the Right Thing. It will gratify some people and astound the rest." - Mark Twain
    1. Re:We're all athiests, but ... by Faylone · · Score: 1

      I think there are some polytheists that would like to have a word or two with you.

    2. Re:We're all athiests, but ... by JavaRob · · Score: 1

      ...some of us are athier than others?

  93. Re:Wow. Just wow. by vell0cet · · Score: 1

    I think we can all agree that religion does not belong in science, but I think that the religious would also say that science does not belong in religion. The two are unrelated to each other. One studies natural law while the other studies supernatural law. The problem is that people like Dawkins tells the religious that there can't be a God (which is beyond the domain of science) and the religious tell scientist that there MUST be a God (which is beyond the jurisdiction of faith). So although I respect Dawkins as a scientist, I do not respect his atheist dogma. (I am an agnostic).

  94. Politicians out of control by meerling · · Score: 1

    Anytime the legislation tries to use it's legislative powers to silence an individual, ESPECIALLY on religious grounds, you should start taking immediate action to remove them from office. If I have to explain all the founding principles of this country they are violating, you really need to take a civics class.

    Let's see, Dawkins, as an atheist, is saying that your religion (those not atheist) is wrong. Gee, let's see... Hmmm.... Yep, a quick review of all major religions reveals that they all say the same thing... Except they like to use the terms of heretic or pagan and the like. Most of them say things far worse than those people are misguided and wrong, several say they are evil and dangerous.

    At a conference dedicated to the founding publication of what is probably the most important basis of biology, they didn't invite naysayers? Mind you, not critics, those would have to use science, and no, so called I.D. isn't science any more than Astrology is. Gee, I wouldn't invite them either. If they can get tickets and partake as audience members that don't cause disruption, that wouldn't be a problem either, but there is no way I'd be giving those anti-science demigogues a science spotlight.

  95. Re:They Have A Point by Americano · · Score: 1

    Senator Jeff Bingaman, Democrat, New Mexico
    "Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) told radio station 770 AM KKOB in Albuquerque, N.M., that he didn't know if Democrats in Congress will try to re-impose the Fairness Doctrine next year - but he would certainly like them to. Bingaman told the station he would support reimposition of the regulation - which was rescinded in 1987 - on the station."

    Senator Debbie Stabenow, Democrat, Micigan
    "Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., told radio host and WND columnist Bill Press yesterday when asked about whether it was time to bring back the so-called Fairness Doctrine: 'I think it's absolutely time to pass a standard. Now, whether it's called the Fairness Standard, whether it's called something else - I absolutely think it's time to be bringing accountability to the airwaves. I mean, our new president has talked rightly about accountability and transparency. You know, that we all have to step up and be responsible. And, I think in this case, there needs to be some accountability and standards put in place.' Stabenow's husband, Tom Athans, was executive vice president of the left-leaning talk radio network Air America. He left the network in 2006, when it filed for bankruptcy, and co-founded the TalkUSA Radio Network."

    Senator Tom Harkin, Democrat, Iowa
    "Well, anytime - just let me know Bill. I love being with you, and thanks again for all you do to get the truth and the facts out there. By the way, I read your Op-Ed in the Washington Post the other day. I ripped it out, I took it into my office and said 'there you go, we gotta get the Fairness Doctrine back in law again.'"

    Former President Bill Clinton, Democrat:
    "Well, you either ought to have the fairness doctrine or you ought to have more balance on the other side," Clinton said, "because essentially there has always been a lot of big money to support the right wing talk shows." Clinton cited the "blatant drumbeat" against the stimulus program from conservative talk radio, saying it doesn't reflect economic reality. "I think we need to have either more balance in the programs or some opportunity for people to offer counter-veiling opinions." He said he had not been in favor of getting rid of the fairness doctrine, which the FCC did back in 1987."

    Let's not pretend like it's not something they'd like to see to silence at least some of conservative talk radio.

  96. Re:They Have A Point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is true, however Richard Dawkins bases his ideas on facts and observations and, like any good scientist, adjusts them to account even for inconvenient facts. Rush just ignores or tries to shout down inconvenient facts that don't match his ideology.

  97. When I lost respect for Dawkins by Fished · · Score: 1, Informative

    I once heard an interview with Dawkins (I think it was on NPR's Fresh Air) in which he claimed that virtually no "Theologians" believe in the miraculous anymore. Speaking as someone with a Master's in Theology, I can say this is utter nonsense, and I lost all respect for Dawkins at that point. Dawkins is no longer a scientist, if he ever was, but a theologian and evangelist of atheism. And, from what I can tell from the couple of books of his I've read and miscellaneous interviews and articles, he's far more judgmental and intolerant than most Christians.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    1. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 1

      You lost respect for him why? It's a fact, most theologians don't believe in the miraculous anymore. I'm a biblical scholar myself and I agree completely with Dawkins. And I propose you a lying if you claim you've read any of his books. He has never been judgmental about anyone. He judges the beliefs. If that's judgmental, he should be proud of such.

    2. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Jerry+Beasters · · Score: 1

      Also how dare you, no scientist, try to define who and who is not a scientist. He gives the valid scientific critique of the idea of a deity. You might not like it, but even many religious scientists agree that strictly scientifically he is correct.

    3. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I can say this is utter nonsense

      How?

      I lost all respect for Dawkins at that point

      Why?

      Dawkins is no longer a scientist, if he ever was, but a theologian and evangelist of atheism.

      Atheism is nothing apart from lack of belief in God, so no one can be a "theologian and evangelist of atheism".

      And, from what I can tell from the couple of books of his I've read and miscellaneous interviews and articles, he's far more judgmental and intolerant than most Christians.

      How? Please give me a specific example. Just because he doesn't blindly accept empty claims doesn't mea that he is "judgemental and intolerant".

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    4. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by kindbud · · Score: 1

      ...he's far more judgmental and intolerant than most Christians...

      Ok, whose house did he torch? What clinic did he bomb? How many blacks has he lynched? How many books has he burned? How many TV shows has he censored? Let's make this qualitative statement of yours quantitative, shall we?

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    5. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if Dawkins is wrong, I humbly submit that this is quite an overreaction. If I had to bet based on anecdotal evidence I'd bet that you're probably right but that there is a trend away from the mystical beliefs other than maybe the resurrection and virgin birth (i.e. most miracles are treated as allegory). However to make this claim one way or the other anecdotal evidence does not suffice. If you have the data, point out his mistake and he will likely take kindly to it and ask forgiveness for his error, as a true scientist would. If you don't, then maybe you should not be so certain. Taking such a reactionary and adversarial attitude not only detracts from the discourse but is not exactly Christlike.

    6. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Fished · · Score: 1

      Ok, whose house did he torch? What clinic did he bomb? How many blacks has he lynched? How many books has he burned? How many TV shows has he censored? Let's make this qualitative statement of yours quantitative, shall we?

      Ooohm, quantitative. I LIKE quantitative. Let's see... a quick Google search shows roughy 80% of Americans claim to be Christians. That makes it about 240 million American Christians. How many of those have torched a house? Almost none. Last time I looked, the house-torchers were members of the KKK, not Christians. How many of those have bombed a clinic? By my count, four, although if you wanted to include arson under "bombing" you could stretch it to 10 or 12. How many books burned? That's sort of an interesting question... let's just say that if I advocated for Origin of Species what he advocates for Genesis, you'd call it book burning.

      Now, while we're at it with quantitative analysis, let's see... how many atheists were actively involved in the abolitionist movement? Hmm... funny, I can't find any prominent ones (although I daresay you could dredge up one or two somewhere. Certainly there were none to compare with Wilberforce or Harriet Beecher Stowe, and the Quakers were the core of the movement.) Who made up the core of the civil right movement? Hmm... Black and white ministers, from all across America (including far too few from the South, but there were a few.) Oddly enough, I don't seem to see much about Madeline Murray O'Hare or Americans United or even Richard Dawkins during the civil rights era... apparently they were too busy looking out for themselves and policing the schools up north for mentions of God to worry about the black folks down south. How many atheists stood up to Hitler? Can't find any, but I can name half a dozen people of faith who did.

      Now, one more "quantitative analysis." In recent history (i.e. since we've had people who formally identified themselves as "atheists" ideologically), how many religious people have practiced genocide, and how many atheists? Let's see... Stalin, Pol Pot, Miloshevich, Mao... just off the top of my head. Hitler is the only Christian that occurs to me, but of course even Hitler seem to have been Christian only for the sake of its useful polemic against the Jew. For John S. Conway and many other historians it is beyond doubt that Hitler held a "fundamental antagonism" towards the Christian churches.' (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitler#Religious_beliefs).

      Gosh, I love quantitative analysis.

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    7. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Fished · · Score: 1

      Not sure what sort of Biblical Scholar you might be if you seriously think that no theologian accepts the supernatural any more. I'd have to say you're probably the sort who picks up Crossan's latest book at Barnes' and Noble and thinks that that represents the sum of mainstream Biblical Scholarship. If you're really ambitious, maybe you read Funk or Elaine Pagels too. Off the top of my head, prominent Biblical Scholars and theologians who accept and defend the possibility of the supernatural:

      • Rowan Williams (Archbishop of Canterbury, Anglican)
      • Tom Wright (Bishop of Durham, Anglican)
      • Richard Hays (United Methodist, Professor Emeritus at Duke Divinity School)
      • John Howard Yoder (Formerly of Notre Dame, deceased, Mennonite)
      • Millard Erickson (I think he's at Truett Seminary now, American (not Southern) Baptist)
      • Karl Barth (the most influential theologian of the 20th century, by far. Swiss Reformed.)

      None of these would be considered "fundamentalist", although a couple might be evangelical if you squint. As for reading Dawkins' books, yes I have. But I'm reminded of the refrain of Louis l'Amor's Poem, "No, I haven't read Gone With the Wind":

      For every book you think you've read, I've read forty-two.

      Cheers

      --
      "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
    8. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in which he claimed that virtually no "Theologians" believe in the miraculous anymore. Speaking as someone with a Master's in Theology, I can say this is utter nonsense, and I lost all respect for Dawkins at that point.

      Then you got your Master's in a university founded with the specific intent of furthering a religions view, like Bob Jones.

      When I was taking my theology courses, all religion was treated as a myth. Some of the things that pissed off the more religious students, who took the introductory courses expecting Sunday School, was an analysis of how Christianity borrowed many of its myths from earlier religions. That was in the US. I imagine that around the world, the religious theologian is almost completely extinct.

      No offense intended, just pointing out what Dawkins was referring to. You're in the minority among theologians these days.

    9. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting argument style. The post above yours says:

      You lost respect for him why? It's a fact, most theologians don't believe in the miraculous anymore. I'm a biblical scholar myself and I agree completely with Dawkins.

      In response you say:

      Not sure what sort of Biblical Scholar you might be if you seriously think that no theologian accepts the supernatural any more.

      and proceed to name a few people to disprove your own statement.

    10. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      I haven't read his books, but I did see his DVDs, and I have to agree. He has the same attitude towards religious people as some religious people have toward atheists. In some of the interviews, the way he was arguing, it was like watching two like-minded individuals. They both seemed to believe they are Right and despise or ridiculed the other person for not seeing things their way.

    11. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Now, while we're at it with quantitative analysis, let's see... how many atheists were actively involved in the abolitionist movement? Hmm... funny, I can't find any prominent ones...

      Does the name Samuel Clemens ring a bell? What about Abraham Lincoln?

      Hitler is the only Christian that occurs to me, but of course even Hitler seem to have been Christian only for the sake of its useful polemic against the Jew.

      There's good evidence to support the idea that Abraham Lincoln was publically a Christian for the same polemic reasons, but privately an atheist.

      Gosh, I love quantitative analysis.

      In other words, you can't find one shred of evidence to support the notion - which was all I was rebutting - that Richard Dawkins is more intolerant than Christians.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    12. Re:When I lost respect for Dawkins by Starcub · · Score: 1

      In other words, you can't find one shred of evidence to support the notion - which was all I was rebutting - that Richard Dawkins is more intolerant than Christians.

      His claim was that Dawkins was more intolerant than "most Christians". Most people who claim to be Christian aren't even Christian and yet you selected only the worst cases of those to make your arguement. One could easily go the other way and argue the best of cases agaist Dawkins, but that wouldn't prove much either.

      However, if one looked at the data on the whole, most people who claim to be Christian don't care about whether or not someone is athiest, let only attack them. Most people who are Christian don't actively attack atheism unless it attacks them.

  98. hahahahaha harun yahya by unity100 · · Score: 1

    he is not a creationist. he is a total clown. he is the turkish counterpart of the kooks they put on fox news in america.

  99. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that neither one can be explained within the framework of the other.

      Given that science actually has produced tangible results in our physical reality, and faith has not, I'd have to say that science is the one that actually means something.

      People of faith will say "Yeah, but faith produces tangible results in human behavior" - but I'll point out that so do mind-altering drugs - and anyone who says that religious faith - superstition - has done more good than harm has a pretty steep burden of proof to present.

  100. Re:They Have A Point by damagemanual · · Score: 1

    One can carry on an interveiw and not look like an ass, even when it's been edited.

  101. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    Any sufficiently advanced alien is indistinguishable from God.

    Except that God, taken to mean an actual supernatural divine being such as the Christian God I believe in, does not require an explanation for its origin. "I AM" is His answer to the question of what he is and where he came from.

    Any alien race, no matter how advanced it was at the time at which it decided to Design us, would nevertheless be natural and must have come from somewhere, and is thus subject to the same arguments of ID against such complexity arising naturally. Ergo, this god-like alien race must too have been Intelligently Designed by some other god-like race of alien beings, who also must have been designed... You see where this induction is going.

    So the options basically are:
    1) The universe is infinitely old and there are infinitely many alien races designing other races back through time with no beginning,
    2) The "original" Intelligent Designers arose naturally, essentially disproving the central thesis of ID and eliminating the need for such Designers in the first place.
    3) The "original" Intelligent Designers are supernatural beings, not in the sense of aliens who eventually developed technology so advanced they would appear to us like gods, but literally beings not subject to the rules of nature.

    So there is a way to distinguish God and god-like aliens. Specifically, one is consistent with ID and the other isn't. The notion that Intelligent Design could be talking about aliens as the designers is nothing but a horseshit dodge put forward to avoid the obvious: ID is a thin veneer of sciency-ness plastered over Creationism. It's disingenuous, and as a Christian it offends me that they would try to get God through the door through such underhanded tricks.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  102. Don't forget by mario_grgic · · Score: 1

    nutritional information on water bottles. Or labels on honey saying it is fat free, which is a good thing, but only in America is it a surprise.

    --
    As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.
  103. What's a Mosaic Form? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know this may be a little off-topic, but . . . .

    In school, I always learned that the Platypus and Tiktaalik are an examples of "intermediate forms". However, I've read articles by Creationists contending that leading evolutions concede that these forms are actually not "intermediate forms" but rather "mosaic forms", (but these articles were rather high on fluff, and thin on details).

    This is the first time I've ever heard of a "mosaic form". What exactly is a "mosaic form", and how does it differ from an "intermediate form"?

  104. How much money was spent trying to pass that? by MattW · · Score: 1

    Doesn't the legislature have more important stuff to do?

  105. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone in the Oklahoma heard of the First Amendment? Cultural diversity? WTF does cultural diversity have to to do with science, anyway? Free speech was intended to protect offensive speech. This should apply especially when said offensive speech is based on solid scientific evidence.

    What is this First Amendment you speak of? There is only one Amendment in Jesusland, formerly known as Oklahoma, and that is "the right to keep and bear arms".

    Everything else is nonsensical, Liberal mumbo-jumbo, and anybody who believes this is going to burn along with the Catholics when Jesus comes back.

    This is a fact because a man claiming to be a prophet told me so. I know he was a prophet because he had a vision of a 1000' Jesus tell him so.

  106. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_of_attainder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    1. Re:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_of_attainder by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      From the site listed:

      A bill of attainder (also known as an act or writ of attainder) is an act of legislature declaring a person or group of persons guilty of some crime and punishing them without benefit of a trial. ...
      The United States Constitution forbids both the federal and state governments to enact bills of attainder, in Article 1, Sections 9 and 10, respectively. It was considered an excess or abuse of the British monarchy and Parliament. No bills of attainder have been passed since 1798 in the UK. Attainder as such was also a legal consequence of convictions in courts of law, but this ceased to be a part of punishment in 1870.[5]

      This is not even close to a Bill of Attainer. Quit being a dumbass.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  107. Re:They Have A Point by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    Name them. You're saying a Democratic Congressman is trying to bring back the Fairness Doctrine, so surely you can actually name this congressman, right? Right?

    How about Nancy Pelosi?
    On June 24, 2008, U.S. Representative Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco, California (who had been elected Speaker of the House in January 2007) told reporters that her fellow Democratic Representatives did not want to forbid reintroduction of the Fairness Doctrine, adding "the interest in my caucus is the reverse." When asked by John Gizzi of Human Events, "Do you personally support revival of the 'Fairness Doctrine?'", the Speaker replied "Yes." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  108. Let's be fair about it...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The bill is critical of Dawkins because he presents a one sided view that does not allow for the open exchange of ideas. This is exactly what religious fundamentals are accused of all the time. It's about time the same standard should be applied to evolutionists!

    I don't care if Dawkins speaks at the University, but to be fair, invite Ray Comfort to speak as well. If they're really serious about and open exchange of ideas then THAT is what would happen.

    1. Re:Let's be fair about it...... by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      he presents a one sided view that does not allow for the open exchange of ideas

      How does he not allow for that, exactly? Just because he is able to argue logically, factually and rationally for his position doesn't mean that he doesn't allow for the open exchange of ideas. And what do you mean by "one sided view"? Are you saying that he shouldn't express his own opinions?

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  109. Re:So?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's how they got the Dust Bowl in the 30s.

  110. Re:They Have A Point by osgeek · · Score: 1

    Yes, and then we get the ultimate and most-abused source of power and force in our society to also tell us what "equal access" means as they give us the opinions that we all should have.

    Thanks for all that hot sticky fairness.

  111. Re:They Have A Point by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

    Tell that to the Democratic Congressman who are trying to bring back the so-called "Fairness Doctrine"

    It'll never happen. The current policy is "allow large corporations to underwrite conservative talk radio and convince people that voting against their economic interests is 'macho' and 'rugged'" (while whining about the 'liberal media').

    It sucks, but it's better than "there are only two sides to every story, and we're going to treat them as if they're both equally valid." How would the "Fairness Doctrine" apply to slavery? Equal time for slaveholders?

    --
    (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
  112. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

    Any sufficiently advanced alien is indistinguishable from God.

    Actually, nope.

    From "Lord of Light" by Roger Zelazny:

    "Then the one called Raltariki is really a demon?" asked Tak.

    "Yes - and no," said Yama."If by 'demon' you mean a malefic, supernatural creature, possessed of great powers, life span and the ability to temporarily assume virtually any shape - then the answer is no. This is the generally accepted definition, but it is untrue in one respect."

    "Oh? And what may that be?"

    "It is not a supernatural creature."

    "But it is all those other things?"

    "Yes."

    "Then I fail to see what difference it makes whether it be supernatural or not - so long as it is malefic, possesses great powers and life span and has the ability to change its shape at will."

    "Ah, but it makes a great deal of difference, you see. It is the difference between the unknown and the unknowable, between science and fantasy - it is a matter of essence."

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  113. Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you read the draft copies of the 1st Amendment, you will see that they rejected language that was so limited as to only protect us from a national religion.

    Jefferson's own writings, among those of other founders, emphasizes that the infidel's rights were to be as cherished as any believer's rights.

    True freedom OF religion is also freedom FROM religion.

    Talking about religion in a publicly funded forum is fine. Advocating for religion isn't. There is a big difference. For example, talking about religion includes views that are anti-religion, as Dawkins is to a large extent.

    1. Re:Wrong... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Atheism may not be a religion but it IS an unfounded religious stand just like that held by any other form of 'believer'. If belief rather than evidence is the foundation of the stand it doesn't belong in a school.

      If Dawkins is being brought in to speak about evolution from an agnostic and scientific standpoint that is one thing but he has no more right to preach his religious stance than any of the other nuts.

    2. Re:Wrong... by AGMW · · Score: 1
      ... unfounded ...

      I'd say the 'foundation' for atheism is evolution! At least part of the foundation anyway! And you don't so much believe evolution either, rather you examine the evidence and conclude it is the most likely mechanism by which we, and all the other species on the planet, got here.

      That seems to be the difference between the religious and the scientists. The religious seem to only have a "religion" shaped hole and try to shoehorn the scientist's arguments into it and end up saying things like ".. he has no more right to preach his religious stance ...". The scientists, on the other hand, have a "science" shaped hole and equally wrongly try to massage religious belief into it, ending up being frustrated by the apparent religion-blinkers put up to their 'reasonable' scientific arguments ("how can you not see the Earth is not flat!").

      Of course, the other difference is that the religious tend to say "this is THE answer" and dogmatically refuse to budge, whereas scientists should be saying "with the current level of knowledge, this is the MOST LIKELY answer", and are willing to change that opinion over time as the sum of human knowledge grows.

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    3. Re:Wrong... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'And you don't so much believe evolution either'

      You don't so much believe evolution but you DO choose to believe atheism. Atheism is NOT the logical conclusion of evolution, in fact it is no more or less likely because of evolution.

      Evolution merely makes some interpretations of creation myths unlikely or obsolete. It certainly has nothing to do with whether or not there is a deity or creator.

      Atheism is a CONCLUSION. Religion (in the modern sense of the word) is also a CONCLUSION. Conclusions without conclusive evidence are NOT scientific at all. Atheism might qualify as a hypothesis but someone who holds to the atheism hypothesis would be an agnostic. The term atheist is for those who have reached and BELIEVE said conclusion, not those who simply believe in its likelihood.

      'Of course, the other difference is that the religious tend to say "this is THE answer" and dogmatically refuse to budge, whereas scientists should be saying "with the current level of knowledge, this is the MOST LIKELY answer", and are willing to change that opinion over time as the sum of human knowledge grows.'

      Exactly and an atheist like a religious believer claims to know the answer. Agnostic is the term for someone who does not claim to know the answer. The religious claim there is a creator and that is final, atheists claim there is not a creator and that is final, agnostics claim none of the above pending actual observations to support a claim.

    4. Re:Wrong... by millennial · · Score: 1

      Atheism is a rejection of belief in a deity. The rejection is the conclusion. There are no "beliefs" required of atheists. The word just means "without a deity".

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
    5. Re:Wrong... by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Atheism is not merely the rejection of belief in a deity, it is the rejection of the possibility of a deity.

      The faithful believe in a deity, agnostics do not believe in a deity but believe in the possibility, atheists believe that there is no deity.

      Believers and atheists both BELIEVE they know the answer to the question. There isn't actually any evidence to base that belief on either way, therefore ANYONE who chooses to believe they know the answer to the question is doing so based on faith and not reason or logic derived from evidence.

      3 - 2 - 1 = 0, 0 is an answer, it is not the lack of a number (in this context), or the rejection of a number, it is a conclusion (poor example since mathematics are self proving but that the point is its a conclusion, not whether it is a correct conclusion). "Black", Zero, Cold, they are all negatives but that does not mean they are 'nothing', they can all mean something. Simply because you believe in a negative does not negate the fact that you are believing; you have chosen a position or stance, you have drawn a conclusion. There is no escaping that. Atheism is not merely not believing in a particular deity or any proposed deity, atheism is believing there is NO (not even an unlikely) possibility that there could be a deity.

      I fail to see why people cling so desperately to the atheist label. Is it simply because of the repression caused by judeo-christian culture? Or is it because scientists who actually believe in crazy concepts, like anything not yet observed is possible and the only difference between these things is statistical probability, have mislabeled themselves as atheists for so many years?

    6. Re:Wrong... by millennial · · Score: 1

      Look, you're redefining atheism to fit your paradigm. The rejection of a belief based on lack of evidence is no more a belief than "bald" is a hair color or "not collecting stamps" is a hobby.

      There are certain bits of evidence that should exist if there were a God (answered prayer being one such thing). These things *don't* exist. Therefore, while it's not certain (since nothing in science is about certainty, just the best explanation for phenomena based on the evidence), the evidence *against* a deity is stronger than the evidence for.

      "Atheism is not merely not believing in a particular deity or any proposed deity, atheism is believing there is NO (not even an unlikely) possibility that there could be a deity."

      If you need to define it that way to argue against it, fine. But you won't find many atheists who say that. There's *always* a possibility that we're wrong. We just don't think we are, based on what we do and don't observe.

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
  114. What if they make you feel offended? ;) by sznupi · · Score: 1

    Oh how I wish to have something similar here (Poland); our law "against religious discrimination" in theory means that you can't make anyone FEEL (I kid you not) offended, but in practise it's even worse - you can't make catholic christians feel offended, while they can freely threaten you with perspective of eternal torture (that includes traumatising schoolchildren with this perspective of course)

    Luckily there's some movement to abolish that, we just have to make a little more stir... (and thankfully, beeing in EU is some sort of protection at this point - not only procedural; the rest of Europe would be laughing at this country even more...)

    --
    One that hath name thou can not otter
  115. Re:They Have A Point by PitaBred · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Blaise Pascal: "Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction."

    Steven Weinberg: "I think that on the balance the moral influence of religion has been awful. With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil. But for good people to do evil -- that takes religion."

  116. Re:They Have A Point by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the substantiation. I'd heard of Limbaugh shoveling crap about the Democrats' position on it, but nothing nearly as reliable as a series of quotes a guy pasted in a comment thread on the Internet. ;)

    Seriously, I didn't realize that anyone was still actually considering reinstituting the Fairness Doctrine. I'll be a bit more alert when I hear Democratic talking points.

    For the record, I generally recognize the authority of the FCC to impose the doctrine at its discretion, but wish that it didn't have that power and instead focused on increasing diversity of ownership.

    --
    Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
  117. Re:They Have A Point by PitaBred · · Score: 1

    Hint: He was misled when he was approached about the film, and it was a "guerilla" style interview that will put anyone on the defensive.

    What speaks more to me is how they treated the people they asked to be in the movie. Bunch of fucking hypocrites if you ask me.

  118. Re:They Have A Point by canuck08 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Indeed. Dawkins, like Chomsky, uses language very precisely.
    When Dawkins uses words like 'deluded' and 'unsophisticated' a great many people take them as insults rather than interpreting them based on their dictionary definitions.

  119. Re:Wow. Just wow. by rezalas · · Score: 1

    threw and through are two different words. Learn the meaning jackass.

  120. No Problem by dbcad7 · · Score: 4, Funny

    He can just take it down the road to Oral Roberts University.. I am sure they are more open to this kind of thing.

    --
    waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
  121. Re:They Have A Point by PitaBred · · Score: 1

    You can't have a reasonable debate with some churches. Watch Religulous, with Bill Maher. Catholics may think you're wrong, but they tend to be pretty nice about it. And science is generally accepted... it has been that way with Catholics pretty much since that whole Galileo debacle :P

  122. I think the OKLA folks are harming *Christianity* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I'm both a scientist and a Christian (I was basically an atheist from the ages of ~16-35), and I have to say I'm appalled at anti-evolutionists and the like. There is nothing important to Christianity that contradicts evolution or anything else in modern science.

    Religion (at least as I understand the term after quite a few years) is not a license to propagate ardent nonsense, and I do believe the anti-evolutionists are engaging in ardent nonsense. The Bible is a guide to help us lead our lives as God intends (albeit a very confusing and misleading guide without sufficiently careful study). It is not a history text, and is most certainly not a science text.

    I believe in the scientific method, and believe that the findings of science are generally correct. If science seems to contradict something about religion, then it means my understanding of *religion* is not sufficiently advanced. This has not happened for me in many years.

    I also believe in being politely respectful of others' views, whether they are believers or non-believers. This sort of civility seems to be lacking on both sides of this argument.

  123. Re:Let the idiot speak - Need More Info by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

    Just out of curiosity, in what way is Richard Dawkins an idiot?

  124. Temperatures of Heaven and Hell by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is quite a bit of "what" and "how" in the Bible.

    Indeed, the Bible contains explicit data from which we can deduce that heaven is hotter than hell!
    * Lower bound on temperature of Heaven: 525C.
    * Upper bound on temperature of Hell: 445C.
    The thermodynamic analysis leading to this result can be found in Applied Optics, 11, A14 (1972).

    Religions don't seem to know when they are making assertions which have scientifically testable implications.

    --
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    1. Re:Temperatures of Heaven and Hell by Alsee · · Score: 1

      All in all it's a pretty lame attempt to refute the Bible.

      I looked up the Applied Optics analysis you referred to, and they misinterpreted the Bible and used invalid assumptions to get their "science" result. They cite Isaiah 30:26:
      The moon will shine like the sun, and the sunlight will be seven times brighter, like the light of seven full days

      They take that as moonlight = current sunlight, plus 7 * 7 * the sun = 50 suns shining on Heaven. The moon part is fine, but Isaiah says "the sunlight will be seven times brighter, like the light of seven full days". Seven times brighter is LIKE the light of seven days. The two mentions of "seven" are clearly repetitive and redundant, NOT multiplicative. It should be the one full sun for the moon, plus 7 suns for the sun, for 8 suns. That math yields a temperature of 231C (449F) for the temperature of Heaven. That is rather toasty, but it is well below the Hell result.

      It's also possible that God has installed a huge active airconditioning system throughout Heaven, totally invalidating the assumption of thermodynamic equilibrium behind the calculations. It's just Bad Science trying to refute the Bible like that.

      I don't need your pseudoscience mumbojumbo. I'll just stick with the fact that Talking Snakes and Magic Apples are Just Plain Silly, thankyouverymuch ;)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  125. Re:They Have A Point by Americano · · Score: 1

    For the record, I generally recognize the authority of the FCC to impose the doctrine at its discretion, but wish that it didn't have that power and instead focused on increasing diversity of ownership.

    For what it's worth, Pres. Obama has stated (via press release, at least), and recently reiterated that this is the approach he prefers as well.

    From the press release referenced in the first link above: "That is why Sen. Obama supports media-ownership caps, network neutrality, public broadcasting, as well as increasing minority ownership of broadcasting and print outlets."

    For the record, I oppose reinstating the Fairness Doctrine, and I think "media-ownership caps" and "increasing minority ownership of broadcasting and print outlets," will probably translate in practice into "pretty much like the fairness doctrine, but with a different name." With that in mind, however, I would have no objection to government oversight intended to ensure that *anybody* wanting to own/operate a media outlet has the chance to do so, and is allowed to succeed or fail in the market on the merits of the content they produce & distribute.

    If there aren't enough people in your market who want to listen to the programming you choose to broadcast, then find a better business model.

  126. Re:They Have A Point by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

    I totally agree with you. I just finished watching Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed last night. As an atheist, I was embarrassed after watching the final interview with him. He came off as pompous and ignorant.

    Don't be, it was just the editors working a little of their movie magic.

    --
    If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
  127. Re:They Have A Point by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

    Richard Dawkins does "demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking". I see him as the atheist's Rush Limbaugh.

    In tolerance of ignorance is not the same as "demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking"

    --
    If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
  128. OU Student by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    As a student of the University of Oklahoma, I apologize for the government of OK. The students here (for the most part) are interested to see what he has to say. Try not to generalize the state based off of our idiotic leadership.

  129. Please study the history of science someday. by Xenographic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > Hundreds of years ago, the religious also honestly believed based on biblical evidence that the Sun revolved around the Earth.

    Yeah, except not. Didn't you ever take a history of science class?

    At the time, the evidence they had made the theory that the Sun revolved around the Earth the weaker one. The theory you're repeating is widely claimed on the web, but it's so bad I'd say it's not even wrong.

    For one, no one could measure stellar parallax (it's too small). I mean, how could you expect to claim that the Earth was moving if the stars didn't move enough to measure? How can you expect them to believe that, just because it simplifies some calculations, the Earth is actually moving even though you CAN'T see the stellar parallax (and they DID know that they should be able to see it).

    The Bible had very little to do with it. Aristotle had a lot more. Please don't make up reasons why people believed things. We know the actual reasons people believed things. Although they were right (and eventually vindicated), they did not have enough evidence to prove their theories.

    Thanks to thinking like this, we can expect that someday, we'll be ridiculed for thinking that [crackpot scientific theory that happens to be right] was ridiculous just because there was only a little bit of proof for it and a bunch of gaping holes in the theory no one had yet filled in.

  130. please make stupidity illegal by Tom · · Score: 4, Funny

    his 2006 book "The God Delusion," and public statements on the theory of evolution demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking

    No, you fucktards, your attitude is the intolerant one. Mr. Dawkins makes claims, cites the supporting evidence, and draws conclusions, and then arrives at an opinion that he can solidly argue. And - from what I've seen of him - he does not mind listening to those who have a different opinion, and doesn't deny them forum.

    Oh yes, he also doesn't belong to a group of people with a thousand year history of silencing and killing its opponent. Like you.

    If the penalty for stupidity were death, Oklahoma would have to hold new elections.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:please make stupidity illegal by willow · · Score: 1

      I firmly support others right to believe they're "chosen" and their "supreme being" dictates how they should live.

      They just don't get to have a say in any public policy decisions since they're unable to differentiate physical evidence from make-believe friends. In addition, their inability to reason out a sound argument disqualifies them from telling any else what to do or how to behave.

      I.E., You're free to delude yourself to whatever extent you can tolerate but you don't get to tell me or my kids how to live.

      --
      Moderation in everything, including moderation.
    2. Re:please make stupidity illegal by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      There are other people groups in history who used facts and solid arguments to justify the seclusion and destruction of entire religions and people groups too.

      Are you for or against China's destruction of the thousand schools of thought? How about Tibet? Genocide? Most of these were well justified by logical thinking within their own demographic.

      I don't care how logical you think it is, when you get to the point of calling someone's belief system criminal (and he does), then you're off the rails I'm willing to follow.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    3. Re:please make stupidity illegal by l00sr · · Score: 1

      No, you fucktards, *your attitude* is the intolerant one. 'Fraid so infinity+1!!!

    4. Re:please make stupidity illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      his 2006 book "The God Delusion," and public statements on the theory of evolution demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking

      No, you fucktards, your attitude is the intolerant one. Mr. Dawkins makes claims, cites the supporting evidence, and draws conclusions, and then arrives at an opinion that he can solidly argue. And - from what I've seen of him - he does not mind listening to those who have a different opinion, and doesn't deny them forum.

      Oh yes, he also doesn't belong to a group of people with a thousand year history of silencing and killing its opponent. Like you.

      If the penalty for stupidity were death, Oklahoma would have to hold new elections.

      But who would be left to vote?

    5. Re:please make stupidity illegal by Tom · · Score: 2, Informative

      There are other people groups in history who used facts and solid arguments to justify the seclusion and destruction of entire religions and people groups too.

      Actually, most of these are examples of pseudo-science and pseudo-logic. Just like ID. In most cases (euthanasia, for example), the rational argument can be re-examined and falsified.

      I don't care how logical you think it is, when you get to the point of calling someone's belief system criminal (and he does), then you're off the rails I'm willing to follow.

      Crime is not defined by what you think, but what you do (intentionally). When you use the term in this context, he is quite right. The history of christianity, especially but not exclusively that of the catholic church, is choke full of crimes. In fact, we would call any non-religious organisation with that amount of past and current criminal activity a mafia.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    6. Re:please make stupidity illegal by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Using history as a measure of judicial decision would imprison most white people in the United States, would it not?

      You committed an egregious error in logic yourself, claiming that the history of Christianity somehow gives one the right to judge the legality of modern Christianity, or in fact has any bearing at all on it.

      While prejudice like yours against a group of people is easy to come by, and sometimes seems logical (as it has historically), it is still an invalid reason to judge people.

      Each person deserves to be judged on their own merits, and that's all, according to western laws.

      Mind you, personally, as a Christian, I believe people should be treated mercifully and not judged by me at all.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    7. Re:please make stupidity illegal by Tom · · Score: 1

      Using history as a measure of judicial decision would imprison most white people in the United States, would it not?

      The measurement is continuity. Obviously, I can not be imprisoned for the deeds of my grandfather, whatever they were, because we are not the same person.

      The roman-catholic church, however, is still the same institution. Continuity dictates that is is responsible for the actions it did two hundred years ago. Note: The institution, not the people. Except where they continue those actions today (which is plenty).

      The same holds true of the faith at large. Let's make a quick check if it might be you who is consistent - or not. Imagine that John Doe would set up a party called the National Socialist Democratic All-American Party (NSDAP). And his rhetorics, claims, etc. are all the same as they were 70 years ago in Germany. What would you think? "Hey, it's a different bloke, yeah, same belief system but maybe this time they'll implement it human-friendly" ?

      Each person deserves to be judged on their own merits, and that's all, according to western laws.

      Person, yes. But I'm judging the faith, not the persons holding it, or rather only in regards to their faith.

      I'm not saying you are a bad person. I'm saying the christian faith is a fucked up evil belief that continues to kill throughout history, and would very likely qualify as a form of insanity if it were possible to investigate that matter without bias.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    8. Re:please make stupidity illegal by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      The roman-catholic church, however, is still the same institution. Continuity dictates that is is responsible for the actions it did two hundred years ago. Note: The institution, not the people. Except where they continue those actions today (which is plenty).

      Is it though? I have no love lost for the Catholic Church (just putting that out there) but even from a theological perspective, the same church declared Luther a heretic in one generation and at this point has removed that designation and the Church now agrees with most of the points of the thesis he nailed to the church in Wittenburg.

      Judging a group or an individual is very complex. Do I judge the Catholic Church for their handling of allegations of clergy abuse this century? Certainly. If they improved the situation, would I still hold them accountable? of course. Do I for their past sins? yes. Should present parish members and clergy be held responsible directly however? Not if they weren't involved.

      Person, yes. But I'm judging the faith, not the persons holding it, or rather only in regards to their faith.

      As a person of faith, I can assure you that there are people of my beliefs who've done moronic things in the name of my beliefs which are patently against my beliefs. People are stupid. People do stupid things. People interpret some things poorly.

      Think of the person who has a hard time grasping calculus or physics in school, now consider a similar brain fart with absorbing good theology in a Christian. It happens. They listen, they hear, and then they go kill someone (hypothetically), when that was never the point.

      Again, if it was done by clergy or higher members, they should be appropriately judged, of course, no question. They, personally.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  131. Re:Wow. Just wow. by bugi · · Score: 1

    Science and religion overlap by virtue of both attempting to explain nature's wonders.

    Science is application of logic to discovery of nature's wonders. It never concludes anything, instead constantly refining based on evidence.

    A religion is a set of metaphors purporting to explain nature's wonders. Its conclusions can be amended only by strife.

  132. Does the view and opinions of most citizens matter by jopsen · · Score: 1

    ... Richard Dawkins of Oxford University, whose published statements on the theory of evolution and opinion about those who do not believe in the theory are contrary and offensive to the views and opinions of most citizens of Oklahoma.

    How does views and opinions of any majority matter in the context of science???
    (Science is NOT democrazy).

    That the Oklahoma House of Representatives encourages the University of Oklahoma to engage in an open, dignified, and fair discussion of the Darwinian theory of evolution

    If Dawkins really is a troll who is only going to talk about how stupid people who does believe in creationism is, then I don't see what's wrong with stating that you do not agree.
    Nevertheless if he was troll, then he'd probably not be of Oxford University... :)

  133. 29% believe: The sun goes around the Earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well 29% of the people in a relativly recent Eurobarometer questionare answered yes to the following question:

    "The Sun goes around the Earth"

    I kid you not! 4% more were uncertain.

    Take that Galileo!

    But at least 70% confirmed the following statement:
    "Human beings, as we know them today, developed from earlier species of animals"

    http://www.student.oulu.fi/~ktikkane/EUevocre.html

  134. For fuck sake by zaumbi · · Score: 1

    As someone living (trapped?) in Oklahoma, I can say it doesn't come as much a surprise. The state government pulling publicity stunts like this to give conservatives something to chew on isn't exactly an uncommon occurrence. Still, legislating opinion -- and that's exactly what it is -- is a fallacy. The majority of Oklahoma citizens, contrary to whats stated in the bill, don't care let alone even know who Richard Dawkins is.

  135. dawkins is a career troll at this point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad he's not doing biology anymore. Since he got out of science and into polemics, he's got the worst of all worlds. Nobody who's not already convinced is going to listen to him. He's become so obnoxious and publicity-seeking, anybody who is seriously exploring the subject will just ignore him. Prominent atheists have told him this, in public forums. The hordes of the faithful will still rally whenever he speaks, or whenever his name shows up on slashdot.

    I could do without the knee-jerk "I'm sooo smart that I gotta be an atheist cuz riligious people are stoopid". Oh wait, this is SD.

    1. Re:dawkins is a career troll at this point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody was in the NYTimes telling him he was a bad spokesman for atheism.

    2. Re:dawkins is a career troll at this point by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Nobody who's not already convinced is going to listen to him.

      False. He convinced me, among others. I was undecided, and actually held a weak belief in God.

      He's become so obnoxious and publicity-seeking, anybody who is seriously exploring the subject will just ignore him.

      You are an idiot.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    3. Re:dawkins is a career troll at this point by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      It was probably a religious person, who is SOOOO concerned that atheists look bad and cannot help giving us advice for our own good.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  136. Re:Wow. Just wow. by bugi · · Score: 1

    This "God" to whom you refer, is he the one who is claimed to have created that Adam fellow from mud? Of what was this "mud" composed? Was it the standard mud that supplies nutrients to growing plants? Or is it a metaphor for some sort of advanced technology, the grey goo of scifi? Or is it a metaphor for aggregate composition of order from chaos over time? Or is it simply Divine Will, a metaphor for something one refuses to further investigate?

    Or is religion (a) originally an attempt at explaining nature's wonders; and (b) now simply a means of forming and maintaining social groups?

    I would agree that your religion and evolution were not mutually exclusive if your religion's statements about Man's origins provided testable theories that bore the weight of the evidence.

  137. Creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does the majority of slashdot readers hold evolution to be true?

    I posted a ludic, clear, well written response to the fish evolution article yesterday and it was rated -1 within hours.

    I will repeat that here: The evidence for creationism is massive, and much of the evidence for evolution has been disproven. Both of these things are often kept from the public, for reasons unknown. See http://www.bcmin.us/main/?q=node/31

    1. Re:Creationism by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      I posted a ludic, clear, well written response to the fish evolution article yesterday and it was rated -1 within hours.

      The reason is that you are spreading lies. Remember rule 1: Creationists lie.

      The evidence for creationism is massive, and much of the evidence for evolution has been disproven.

      Complete and utter nonsense. All creationists arguments I've heard so far are blatant lies. You confirm this by linking to the blatant liar Kent Hovind.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  138. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    This "God" to whom you refer, is he the one who is claimed to have created that Adam fellow from mud? Of what was this "mud" composed? Was it the standard mud that supplies nutrients to growing plants? Or is it a metaphor for some sort of advanced technology, the grey goo of scifi? Or is it a metaphor for aggregate composition of order from chaos over time? Or is it simply Divine Will, a metaphor for something one refuses to further investigate?

    That, of course, depends on one's beliefs and which God (if any) is the basis of those beliefs.

    Or is religion (a) originally an attempt at explaining nature's wonders; and (b) now simply a means of forming and maintaining social groups?

    Probably bot at the same time.

    I would agree that your religion and evolution were not mutually exclusive if your religion's statements about Man's origins provided testable theories that bore the weight of the evidence.

    They need not be testable if you no do not believe they are literal explanations of how we came into being. After all, we scientists and engineers often explain phenomena in a manner that is understandable but necessarily 100% accurate in order to get ideas across to lay people.

    So, from that perspective there is no contradiction for someone to believe in God and accept evolution as a rational scientific explanation for how we came to be.

    What I find interesting about your post is I did not at any time profess to believe in any particular religion or God, yet you immediately reacted in a negative and condescending manner. That, IMHO, is what prevents dialogue between opposing viewpoints.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  139. What's wrong with instructions for Pop-Tarts? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    For Christ's sake, we have *cooking directions* on POPTARTS. We have chain saws with explicit warning labels to keep you from touching the flying blades with your fingers. My tractor's digging bit has a giant warning label depicting someone getting wrapped around the screw, and people STILL get killed by the damn things. At hospitals, motorcycle riders are referred to only as organ donors. How many people have fallen into a wood chipper, or tried to clean an obstruction while the thing was on and gotten eaten? I can't remember the last time I've gone a month without hearing of somebody dying due to their own stupidity. Americans steal high-voltage power lines for the copper, cut through tree limbs above themselves, and screw anything that moves, without protection.

    I think you're making two big mistakes here:

    First, you seem to assume that those labels are really meant for people who are stupid enough to deliberately take the depicted action which causes injury. No court would really accept liability for a company that made a chainsaw when someone deliberately stuck their fingers up to it -- most likely this is there to prevent people who acted recklessly from claiming that they didn't know how big of a risk their was in whatever action they took that led to flesh touching whirling chain. (And if you're implying that half of America would be killing themselves at any moment now but for a few good labels, I think you're exaggerating a bit.)

    Second, what the heck is wrong with proper cooking directions for Pop-Tarts? Cooking something without directions without ruining the food (or in the case of Pop-Tarts, creating a hazardous risk to the soft, burnable tissues in your mouth) is a skill for experienced cooks only, and Pop-Tarts are a food product marketed to people who don't cook for themselves mostly.

    I'd like to see you cook something you've never cooked before without any directions. Go ahead -- roast a duck or do something tasty with jicama or even just warm up some random frozen food item in the toaster oven without knowing what temperature and how long you're supposed to heat it. Pop-Tart instructions are practical.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  140. Sad... by shadowedsilence · · Score: 1

    Its sad that such problems exist, that we live in a country where the flags of ideals is so easily torn by the very ones who claim to defend it on both sides. Oh, yes, when confronted by the outside world, as we so tend to easily within our own, both sides included, we furiously defend our ideals, theological or not, against the forces that seek to merely speak out. And so now, I find myself so inclined to throw my own opinion into this swirling mass of ideological thunderclouds. You can argue the existence of god or not, throw around the ideas of proving "its" existence "beyond reasonable doubt." You can do all these things and yet, you will be left with one small undeniable fact that no matter what you do, it cannot be escaped nor eluded, no matter how barrier of faith and reason you put to it. None of you know. And none of you will ever know until one small event occurs. Until you die, you will not know. Until your final breath is drawn and the last beat of your heart is exerted and you pass into the unknown, you will not know. Place whatever barriers you choose to put it, but know this. In faith and scientific reason, there is nothing that any of you have that concretely says YOU ARE RIGHT. Those of faith do not, and neither do those of science. And yet, you are all so drawn, like moths to a flame to find yourselves in the firestorm of logic and faith, so blind to that one simple reality. You really don't know.

  141. Because of this im ashamed to be an Oklahoman. by sammyboy405 · · Score: 1

    Im From Oklahoma.. And Im sad to say we have people in out Political area that dont seem to think that people should be able to think for themselves. :( By doing this makes Oklahoma Look very bad.

    1. Re:Because of this im ashamed to be an Oklahoman. by Iberian · · Score: 1

      Stop trying to pretend to be an Okie. Anyone from Oklahoma doesn't call themselves and Oklahoman.

    2. Re:Because of this im ashamed to be an Oklahoman. by Iberian · · Score: 1

      Really should say NOBODY from Oklahoma.

    3. Re:Because of this im ashamed to be an Oklahoman. by sammyboy405 · · Score: 1

      Pretend? lol ok Im Pretending.. you got me..

  142. Richard Dawkins at the University of Minnesota by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had the pleasure of listening to Dawkins' lecture at the University of Minnesota campus last Wednesday.

    This was included in his presentation. Worth a good chuckle :-)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2z-OLG0KyR4

  143. Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Robert Heinlein said it best:

    "History does not record anywhere at any time a religion that has any rational basis. Religion is a crutch for people not strong enough to stand up to the unknown without help. But, like dandruff, most people do have a religion and spend time and money on it and seem to derive considerable pleasure from fiddling with it."

    All them evilangelists should probably also check this for "enlightenment":

    http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/

  144. Re:Wow. Just wow. by sdguero · · Score: 1

    That term has been used widely for things like affirmative action, political correctness etc. I've seen it used a lot by people with agendas.

    I think the largely right leaning creationists used the wording "cultural diversity" as a jab at liberals and they see it as fighting fire with fire.

  145. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Niggers.

  146. Christendom needs to follow it's leader by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And get out of politics. John 18:36

  147. But why even BE religious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can still be moral and ethical and just plain good without worshipping gods or fearing demons.

    Sorry, but you will never get my sympathy, no matter how "reasonable" you claim to be, because I simply don't have sympathy to squander on those unwilling to face reality.

    1. Re:But why even BE religious? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      You can still be moral and ethical and just plain good without worshipping gods or fearing demons.

      How? More precisely: when faced with the various choices presented to you in life, how can you know which of the alternatives are good and which are evil? The way I see it, this is a question atheists have no good answer for, period. You can't any more or less appeal to your upbringing as providing the answers than the theist can appeal to his upbringing to justify his belief.

      Not that the theist is doing great with regard to this problem either: he's basically traded the problem of knowing what's good for the problem of knowing what God wants.

    2. Re:But why even BE religious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How? By behaving yourself, for one.

      I'm a decent, law-abiding citizen because I know it's the right thing to be, the best way to live.

      It's not because I'm afraid of the wrath of some supernatural boogey creature who floats around in the sky wearing a toga and throwing lightning bolts around.

      Stealing is wrong. Rape is wrong. Murder is wrong. Cheating, lying, armed robbery, torturing small animals, lots of stuff are wrong.

      It's why we have laws against such things, with stiff penalties for those who breach them.

      People who behave well because they don't wish to be "bad", and because they respect the other inhabitants of Earth, have at least as much cause to feel good about themselves as those who only behave because they're afraid not to.

      Grow up and accept that we're on our own and the decisions are ours to make without input from the non-existent supernatural. But your question makes it plain that you'll have a tough time of that.

    3. Re:But why even BE religious? by cain · · Score: 1

      It's not difficult. That which does the least harm is the good choice. No need to believe in anything to see that. Is that answer good enough for you?

    4. Re:But why even BE religious? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      how can you know which of the alternatives are good and which are evil? The way I see it, this is a question atheists have no good answer for, period.

      It's funny how virtually every atheist successfully does so with no difficulty, yet so many theists are apparently so morally or intellectually handicapped that constantly experess their own lack of understanding and their own lack of capability to accomplish it, and quite often expressing how that apparently *they* would be evil rapists/murderers/thieves/whatnot if they didn't have a pre-cooked morality system imposed on them.

      How?

      I'm not going to build an entire system for you here, but I will give you give you an incredibly simple and incredibly powerful foundation for doing so. A single point capable of constructing almost an entire system all by itself:

      In a single word: Symmetry.

      You don't get to assign yourself unique status under the system. A coherent universal system applies to you on the same terms it applies to everyone else. I do not want you to kill me, I consider it "evil" for you to kill me, therefore it is immediately obvious that I shouldn't go around killing people. I don't exactly want people stealing from me or breaking my leg either. It's closely similar to the Golden Rule.

      Right there, a single-word principal, and I've already built a fairly comprehensive morality system. Symmetry.

      I'd like to make an additional point. If I were to ask you to come up with some strictly objective standard for measuring morality, can you think of any approach to attempt it?

      I have a proposed standard for measuring morality. I acknowledge that this is an extremely imperfect approximation for measuring morality, but I propose that crime is a completely objective standard and that it is a very reasonable approximation for measuring morality. People who are violent, who kill, rape, steal, commit fraud, or violate the standard assortment of other crimes, that is an imperfect but extremely solid indicator of violations of morality - measure of "evil".

      The fact is that atheists are quite significantly UNDER-represented in the prison population. It seems to me that there are only two ways to explain those statistics. Either (1) atheists are *more* moral than theists, at least to the extent that crime accurately approximates morality levels, or (2) atheists are equally or more criminal/immoral as theists, but that atheists are incredible supra-geniuses in crime and aren't getting caught.

      Personally I don't particularly buy into the second alternative there. Chuckle.

      I have some possible thoughts towards explaining first alternative. For one thing, an atheist has to put much more and much deeper thought into building his morality system. A theist is simply handed a set of rules, they don't need to figure them out, they don't need to think them over, they don't need to analyze them, they don't much even need to understand them. The theist is just supposed to do what he's told. So the atheist much more deeply internalizes the system. The atheist is also equipped to evaluate novel situations on his own when he runs into them. If a theist runs into a novel situation and he has trouble fitting it into the morality framework he was given, then he's just plain stuck over what is right or wrong in that situation. I also think people have less respect for rules that are imposed upon them - people can be very creative in rationalizing their way around rules they dislike at the time. For an atheist, he isn't circumventing the rules of some distant external entity, he knows damn well that any excuses or circumvention are breaking the rules, when he breaks a rule he's violating himself, he's failing himself. He's not fearing that maybe God will look down on him for it, he knows and he feels that he's looking down on himself for it. He's not breaking some outside rule, he's violating his own integrity.

      Several times I've seen theists essentially indicate that they would become some selfish evil monster

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:But why even BE religious? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      Good luck quantifying "harm," dude.

      Actually, I take it back. In fear that you may actually go ahead and get a harm quantification proposal of your own implemented, I wish you the worst of luck doing that.

    6. Re:But why even BE religious? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      I'm a decent, law-abiding citizen because I know it's the right thing to be, the best way to live.

      How do you know it's the right thing to be? Aren't you just repeating the beliefs that were inculcated into you as part of your upbringing?

      It's not because I'm afraid of the wrath of some supernatural boogey creature who floats around in the sky wearing a toga and throwing lightning bolts around.

      That's a strawman.

      Stealing is wrong. Rape is wrong. Murder is wrong. Cheating, lying, armed robbery, torturing small animals, lots of stuff are wrong. It's why we have laws against such things, with stiff penalties for those who breach them.

      We have laws against them because of the general belief that they are wrong. But, again, how do you know that they are wrong?

      Grow up and accept that we're on our own and the decisions are ours to make without input from the non-existent supernatural. But your question makes it plain that you'll have a tough time of that.

      No, my question is a way of pointing out that your grounds for believing that murder is wrong are no better than the theist's grounds for believing in a deity. You believe that murder is wrong because of your upbringing, just as the theist does. Therefore, you shouldn't act high and mighty like you're so much smarter and rational than the believer. You've got plenty of beliefs very important to you that you can no more justify than the theist can justify their belief in God.

    7. Re:But why even BE religious? by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      You don't get to assign yourself unique status under the system. A coherent universal system applies to you on the same terms it applies to everyone else. I do not want you to kill me, I consider it "evil" for you to kill me, therefore it is immediately obvious that I shouldn't go around killing people.

      So you say that if I consider X "evil" when you do it to me, then I should consider X to be evil when I do it to others. And because of that, I should not do X to others. Problems:

      1. Why should I consider anything "evil" when done to me, to start with? I know you said that you were not going to lay out a complete system to me, but I think that's just disingenious; you've given me the recursive rule without giving me any of the base cases, so to speak.
      2. What about genuine disagreements between people as to what things they should judge to be "evil" when done to them? The extreme case would be a person who thinks it would not be evil of others to murder him, and therefore, fails to find any ground under your principle of symmetry to conclude that it is evil to murder others.

        More modest examples are easy to construct, because this is in fact a common, everyday type of moral argument. Joe complains when Tom does X to him, and says that he shouldn't do that because he wouldn't like it if somebody did it to him. Tom answers that he wouldn't object if somebody did it to him. Joe then answers that Tom should object to somebody doing X to him.

      3. A variant of the previous one: what happens when I think it's evil for others to do X to me, but nobody shares my judgement? And what's worse, what if I'm right? E.g., what if I was the only person who believed that murder is evil, and therefore, was the only person who refrained from murdering others?
      4. Aren't there asymmetrical moral prohibitions? There are many things that parents are judged to be in the right when they do them to their children, but the children would be judged in the wrong if they did them to their parents. For example, if the parents would consider it evil to have somebody restrict their freedom of movement and association, how can they not conclude that grounding their daughter would be evil?

      So yeah, while this principle sounds like a useful rule of thumb that's valid in many situations, I remain very skeptical that this principle is as central as you make it to be. Not to mention that you've not answered the big question, which is: how do you know if alternatives in a situation are good or evil?

      The fact is that atheists are quite significantly UNDER-represented in the prison population. It seems to me that there are only two ways to explain those statistics. Either (1) atheists are *more* moral than theists, at least to the extent that crime accurately approximates morality levels, or (2) atheists are equally or more criminal/immoral as theists, but that atheists are incredible supra-geniuses in crime and aren't getting caught.

      (3) Atheists are, as a group, more highly educated, have better jobs, etc.; more generally, they fit into a number of social categories that convicted felons do not. Do you have any data that controls for these factors?

    8. Re:But why even BE religious? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      First first, I want to give you a nod for "[theists] traded the problem of knowing what's good for the problem of knowing what God wants". I appreciate that level of insight and objectivity and reason. Most people who raise the atheism-morality question tend to be.... well lets just say they tend to be rather-less-than-humble about knowing what God wants :)

      Let me start by summarizing the basic issue, as I see it.

      Some people believe that good and evil, morality, that they are inextricably bound to God. There are various ways to try to define/describe the connection between God and Goodness/morality, but the key point being that without God it is either impossible to know what is good/moral, or that good/moral would cease to exist without God.

      Some people believe that we cannot have or know a system of right and wrong if it is not given to us by God. That atheists cannot have such a system and cannot be moral, without getting that system from God. Some people even have the extreme position - and I'm specifically not accusing you here - some people even have the extreme position that atheists *cannot* be good and moral, even if the atheist's behavior happened to exactly match up with the morality-from-God.

      I believe that all religions were created by humans. For example I believe Jesus almost certainly existed, and that he was a great philosopher and great teacher. That he taught much great wisdom and morality - of human origin. That while religions are fiction, they are woven with human truths and human wisdom and human teaching and human morality.

      In the improbable case that some sort God God does exist, I believe that none of the warring religions on earth are holding His Magic Instruction Book. If a God did hand down that sort of divine scripture, I'm sure it would be self-evidently far above and beyond all of the false scriptures crafted by humans. The truly Divine scripture would quickly persuade people, and we wouldn't have all these religions squabbling endlessly. No religion on earth, no scripture on earth, has more than 33% of global population behind it. Any truly Divine scripture wouldn't be failing so badly as to be stuck at less than one-third when competing against the "mere fiction" of the false religions.

      At this point I would like to point out that the various religions across the earth - from Christians to Native Americans to Buddhists to Wiccans to Hindus and on and on and on - they all come to largely the same agreement on morality. There are differences in detail, but they draw the same picture. They all come to basically the same set of criminal laws, and largely the same set of social values of honesty and kindness and generosity (vs lies cruelty geed), and on and on. And they are pretty well the same set atheists come to.

      So even if one religion does have a Magic Instruction Book from God, it seems that humans inventing all of the other False religions managed to create basically the same definition of morality as well. It's not just atheists. Between reason and human nature, virtually all humans tend to generate the same basic morality framework.

      I plan to come back and answer the questions you asked last post, but I neeeed sleeeeeep :)

      But first let me leave you with a sort of puzzle to mull over. The puzzle actually holds some deep insights to answering your questions.

      Two suspects are arrested by the police. The police have insufficient evidence for a conviction, and, having separated both prisoners, visit each of them to offer the same deal. If one testifies (defects) for the prosecution against the other and the other remains silent, the betrayer goes free and the silent accomplice receives the full 10-year sentence. If both remain silent, both prisoners are sentenced to only six months in jail for a minor charge. If each betrays the other, each receives a five-year sentence. Each prisoner must choose to betray the other or to remain silent. How should the prisoners act?

      Not

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    9. Re:But why even BE religious? by cain · · Score: 1

      It's not really that difficult. Look at the choices, figure how who is effected, of those effected, which choice causes the least harm either physically or mentally. I suspect you're trying to articulate something else and not doing it clearly. If you'd like to try again, I'll respond.

    10. Re:But why even BE religious? by Alsee · · Score: 1

      >>atheists are quite significantly UNDER-represented in the prison population
      (3) Atheists are, as a group, more highly educated, have better jobs, etc... Do you have any data that controls for these factors?

      My "explanation" (2) that atheists might be criminal masterminds not-getting-caught was purely my sense of humor :) Your (3) alternative is basically that atheists might correlate with more socially successful socially well adjusted non-criminal traits is interesting, but I think in any case it still paints atheists with an at-least-neutral light.

      I don't cite the prison statistics to claim any sort of superiority, nor do I claim any certain knowledge or explanation for it. Like many things about people, it is a very messy question and any attempt to explain it is going to be at least partially creative speculation. One thing that is clear though, is that any attempt to interpret it to cast a negative light upon atheists would be pretty obviously a biased manipulative dreamed-up rationalization.

      Any reasonable interpretation of it casts atheists in at least a neutral and equal light.

      I have seen people assert that any atheist is inherently going to be some sort of rampaging monster of evil (you didn't go there, chuckle). That statistic is an extremely powerful point in establishing that, by an extremely reasonable and extremely objective measure, atheists can and do manage to behave at least as well as theists. Atheists don't go around raping robbing or harming people any more than theists do, if anything there's pretty strong indication they do it less. It can still leave the question - as you ask - of how and why atheists behave as well as theists, but I think it strongly shows that they do. I think it establishes that even if you don't understand it, that some valid explanation must exist, and that somehow it does work.

      I find that if people actively believe something to be false, if they believe there is no valid explanation for something, they can be reluctant to believe that explanation when they see it. You said "The way I see it, this is a question atheists have no good answer for, period." That sounds to me like at least a partial active dis-belief that an answer exists. I was just hoping that the prison factoid would lead to increased openness to explanations, that some explanation must exist, so therefore possible explanations should not be viewed with an overcritical expectation of failure.

      (1)Why should I consider anything "evil" when done to me, to start with?

      Whether you call it "evil" or "bad" or "not good" or "undesirable" or whatever, it is sufficient to get things started that you simply don't like it when the other children hit you or take your stuff away. You personally find it physically and emotionally painful when other children do criminal/immoral things to you. Your physical or emotional pain is "bad".

      And once you start categorizing things into "good" and "bad", you quickly learn that it just plain Doesn't Work in society if you attempt to ignore the principle of symmetry. You consider getting kicked to be "bad", and if you ignore symmetry and think kicking others is ok, you go and kick another kid and discover that you often get kicked in response. There are many ways that social interactions teach and reinforce the symmetry principle and even actively punish disregard for symmetry.

      (2) What about genuine disagreements between people as to what things they should judge to be "evil" when done to them?

      There are disagreements.

      Twin bothers of the same religion and faithfully attending the same church will have genuine disagreements.

      Atheists don't have divine perfection of logic, they don't have identical experiences, they don't have identical temperaments and emotional reactions, they don't have identical priorities. Despite all that, atheists come up with nearly identical systems on the big picture points, and they come up with substantially equivalent s

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  148. dog breeds = forced evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Consider for a moment that dog breeds were intentionally developed to be big, small, mean, cute, or whatever. Most breeds have been developed in the last 500 years or less. People actually accelerated evolution in these animals by un-natural selection. If these animals were "pure bred" for long enough they would become separate species.

  149. Re:They Have A Point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which would also result in the end of capitalism.

    The facts speak for themselves: Office Depot is the better deal, Mom and Pop Paper shop is out!

  150. Re:They Have A Point by init100 · · Score: 1

    Except that "militant atheists" write books and hold speeches, while militant creationists start wars and blow up abortion clinics.

    Since the word militant itself conjures up an image of someone who uses violence to further his goal, I'd say that Richard Dawkins is certainly not militant.

  151. Re:Wow. Just wow. by bugi · · Score: 1

    God job avoiding the question, but no fair changing the rules. Please remain devil's advocate, the context in which you assigned yourself the role of Believer. I did catch from your original post that you're not in fact the True Believer, and incidentally agree with your main point about misappropriation of cultural diversity. (Perhaps I should've led with that...)

    Probably bot at the same time.

    Of course not, thus the "originally" and the "now".

    Metaphor is certainly a useful tool in building a basis for understanding in students or layfolk. Continuing with the metaphor as fact after that however is rather a problem. It leads to all sorts of nastiness like insistence that the metaphor is The Truth rather than simply a metaphor.

    Clinging to a metaphor such that it warms the heart is entirely understandable. One must nevertheless endeavor to separate fantasy from reality, and not excuse those who fail to do so, because those are the people who will make your children's lives miserable with their foolishness.

  152. It's Only A Resolution by reallocate · · Score: 1

    It's a resolution, not a bill. For those of you who don't know the difference, repeat high school civics.

    Of course, the people voting for it are as dumb as frogs, but that's another story.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  153. Re:They Have A Point by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

    Yeah, especially when the interview is edited specifically to make you look like an ass. Idiot.

    --
    Clever signature text goes here.
  154. Re:They Have A Point by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

    Agreed, being a militant atheist (one who aggressively attacks people's beliefs as well as the people themselves)

    Dawkins argues against irrational beliefs. He does not attack people. Nice try, though.

    --
    Clever signature text goes here.
  155. Yes it can. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Pope John Paul II understood this, which is why he reproached Stephen Hawking for getting close to an absolute proof of the lack of need of a god from the moment of the Big Bang.

    Refer to Hawking's best seller "A brief history of time" where he relates the incident.

    What you fail miserably to understand is that scientists are arriving to the conclusion that a god does not exist tangentially: Darwin did not study natural selection as a means to negate religion, simply natural selection does not require a god at all to function, but that is a secondary discovery, not the main aim of Darwin studies.

    Ditto with Hawking and many other scientists.

    What Dawkin does is to collate all those tangential and secondary conclusions against the existence of a god and presents them as a coordinated understanding of how our universe works, which is that all scientific evidence point to a universe that needs no god to at all to exist and function.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  156. "How" may lead you to a "who" that is nobody. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    If you investigate how, and that how sayas that no who is necessary then what?

    Your simplification is useful but I don;t think it is leading where you would have liked it to...

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:"How" may lead you to a "who" that is nobody. by Stickerboy · · Score: 1

      >If you investigate how, and that how sayas that no who is necessary then what?

      Your simplification is useful but I don;t think it is leading where you would have liked it to...

      And I think you mistake the two questions again ("who" versus "how"), just like the OP pointed out.

      Should I just call you a fundie atheist? Because there seems to be quite a few on Slashdot for this topic. Fundie Christians try to answer the "who", and then use their answers to tie into the "how", even though they are completely unrelated. You and your fellow fundie atheists try to answer the "how" and then answer the "who", even though they are completely unrelated.

      "OOOH! Look at me! I just showed that the methods of the universe take no God to work! That must mean I dispr.... um, I mean, reduced to an infinitesmal value the chances of God existing! Check out my aura of smug superiority!"

      Repeat after me: showing that God does not need to exist for the universe to work does not relate in any way to the answer to whether or not God exists.

      --
      Light a fire for a man and he'll be warm for a day. Light a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
  157. It is not only Adam and Eve. Genetics disproves it by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Genetics disproves creationism.

    The genetic pool of species that descend from a small number of ancestors is very small and can be measured.

    The cheetah for example is suffering terribly because this, it is believed that all modern cheetahs descend from a very small group of animals.

    If humanity descended from a single couple (with identical genes mind you, if you believe literally the Bible) then our genetic variety would be much smaller than it is (as a matter of fact different populations of people have different levels of genetic variation, people in Iceland for example are pretty much a big family.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  158. more interesting by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    Would be Darwin's views on God as opposed to Dawkin's views on the lack of one.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  159. Induction by Slur · · Score: 1

    Hmm, well isn't the whole notion of a cohesive "God" entity INDUCED into the whole equation in the first place? Where, when, and how did this hypothesis ever get beyond fable status?

    Why aren't we debating the existence of orange basketball-shaped beings who sing the universe into existence? Could it be because we would prefer the source of the universe to be something like ourselves?

    I guarantee the Slashdot crowd, there is no singular entity behind everything that is... no composite being with parts, history, preferences, or anything conditioned or non-transcendent. It seems clear to my inductive reasoning and intuition that the universe is a unified phenomenon - no separation of the physical universe from its source in the eternal present.

    The sort of God most modern people seem to believe in is a folly, but people find it useful to pretend he exists so they can justify their preferences, opinions, and bigotries. Sure, there is the rare mystic who uses this concept as an object of contemplation and actually gains insight as a result, but by and large most people have a retarded notion of reality.

    The Atheists who deny any sort of spiritual aspect are likewise deluded. Both Theists and Atheists alike for the most part are ideologues trying to one-up each other, both feeling smugly superior.

    Fact is, meditative practices and prescriptions like the noble eightfold path and the esoteric teachings of Jesus are meant to help people drop their pointless views on these subjects and get them into direct contact with the non-dualistic reality of which they are an intrinsic part.

    Of course, these reasonable practices are not widely promulgated in our media or our capitalist culture. Instead everything revolves around the pointless argument as to whether or not there are fairies and unicorns. Of course, we can't have people getting liberated from their ignorance and growing into fully-realized humans. So-called civil society might collapse!

    --
    -- thinkyhead software and media
    1. Re:Induction by rts008 · · Score: 1

      I guarantee the Slashdot crowd, there is no singular entity behind everything that is...

      You obviously have not encountered Linus Torvalds...nor RMS!

      I jest! I jest!

      BTW, basically, I do agree with the point you make, and happen to follow the Eightfold Path. Works for me.

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  160. Kang by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

    "Religion for all."
    "Boo!"
    "Very well, no religion for anyone."
    "BOO!"
    "Hmm... religion for some, secular government for others!"
    "YAY!"

    --
    Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
  161. Inhofe by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Mod parent informative. Inhofe did indeed invite an anti-science fiction writer to present "scientific" evidence. IMHO Chriton is an excellent author of fiction, meme's that he popularised in his book "State of fear" such as "AGW is a religion" and "scientists are are in it for the grant money", are still common on slashdot.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  162. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

    Except that God, taken to mean an actual supernatural divine being such as the Christian God I believe in, does not require an explanation for its origin. "I AM" is His answer to the question of what he is and where he came from.

    That, I think, is where scientists and believers differ. Scientists would like to know why, exactly, this particular Christian (or Islamic, or Jewish, or Hindu, etc.) God exists, and not one or more of any number of other possible gods (Zeus, Baal, Ra). Does causality have meaning for gods? Do gods always know they are gods, or do some think they are merely an evolved being in a random universe? In theory, any god would work for intelligent design, the outcome would just be different based on their personality. What is the ordinal number of God in relation to other sets, for instance the universal set of positive set theory or new foundations? Do things exist because god causes them to, or is existence an independent property of things? Are there other possible realities where things exist that even an omnipotent god in our universe has no control (or possible even knowledge) of?

    Once those simple questions were answered, it would make sense to discover what sort of being god is, e.g. does perfect omniscience preclude free will or merely break causality (which, in a sense, sort of breaks free will to an extent)? Does omnipotence extend to self-altering actions, including perhaps the ability to give up omnipotence? Basically, the ultimate question is whether the domain of god's omniscience includes god himself, or if god is entirely separate from his range of possible actions (e.g. is god unchangeable?) and furthermore whether or not god plans out all the possible quantum futures of the universe when using omniscience, or only looks down the lines he knows (chooses) the world will go?

    Beyond that, it would be nice to know if mathematics is an inherent property of the universe, or perhaps of god himself, that would turn out the same given the same axioms in some other universe, and what the question answered by 42 is.

  163. The general reason for Atheism by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
    As I see it is: Since God doesn't control those who claim to be his followers to act non-hypocritically and also since God doesn't control human population in general to not be bad to each other, there can't be a God. (Can you see flaw in logic?)

    Also, Genesis 1 and 2 generally follow the idea that living things started simple and got more complex. The fact that all life has essentially just GATTACA would argue for one source of all life... Big bang is another. Where does matter come from? Energy. Where does energy come from? Matter. *Must invent New rules*

    I am very interested in science. I believe in (or am convinced of) the existence of God, mainly because it explains why so much bad happens. And it predicts What this whole discussion is discussing...

  164. Right Wing Morons by jkeelsnc · · Score: 1

    Well I am glad I don't live in Oklahoma anymore. Attitudes like this are why I left that place. And its not just OK. There are a lot of ignorant morons in this country. They have a right to their opinion but don't try to legislate out someone else's lectures because you disagree? Did you not learn about science or for that matter freedom of speech? I am tired of right wing religious nuts. They need to &*&% themselves and go to &*&?.

  165. God gives the nuts, but he does not crack them by benjamindees · · Score: 1

    The Bible never actually says anything about how long it took to create the world (unless, of course, you take a literal look at the Bible, and then it's 6 days).

    You know, sometimes I marvel at how, despite the overwhelming odds of complete failure, evolution can create as complex a web of interdependent systems as a human.

    I think that the vast majority of people would have to be seriously defective, somehow, for natural selection to have a strong effect. And yet I look around, and most people are quite healthy, and functional, and capable of working and reading and writing and reproducing. And the majority of children, even without the small amount of postnatal care that Western medicine provides, would survive into adulthood to be (by most criteria) perfectly functional people. And of the millions of children born annually, most of them do not have third arms or twelve toes or weird horns or hair on their eyeballs. And the vast majority can not only easily breathe air and digest foods but even heal wounds and withstand bacterial infection. It's really amazing when you think about it.

    But then I see something like this; a post, in the middle of a rather serious public intellectual discussion about logic and religion and matters of deep consideration; a post, so utterly devoid of meaning or even review as to call into question not only the judgment of it's author, but the purely horrifying Lovecraftian processes that must have spawned it. Every once in a while I see something like this and it reminds me of how the rest of you drooling retards are mostly just thinly-veiled automatons masquerading as thinking people, barely managing to do a slightly better job of interpreting and regurgitating what you have heard than a twelve-line Perl script; that it's a miracle you manage to continue breathing and using indoor plumbing despite what should be crippling mental defects. And it temporarily restores my faith in evolution.

    --
    "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  166. Oxymorons R us???? by rts008 · · Score: 1

    The classic Christian tradition has always valued rationality.....

    Bwahahahahaha!*ROFLCOPTER*

    You have to be joking!

    Surely you jest?!?!?!?

    --
    Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  167. I actually attended the lecture by PuckSR · · Score: 1

    After reading this story earlier in the day, I decided to attend. I honestly hadn't been aware that Dawkins was lecturing tonight at OU.

    It was a fun speaking engagement, but a bit boring. Dawkins tends to try to do two things at all times: make everything easy to understand AND carefully avoid oversimplification or poor analogy. The result is a very vague and shallow discussion of evolutionary biology.

    I expected a bunch of crazy people, but there honestly wasn't anything too bad.
    One guy asked a question about atheism and morality, but no fireworks or drama.

    That was my big FU to those against this OU lecture

  168. Resolution was "filed". It has not been "passed" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Slashdot summary is incorrect.

    The resolution was filed, but no decision had been made on whether it will even be heard by the legislature. Feel free to criticize Todd Thomsen, but it's not fair to criticize the entire legislature for this. They didn't pass or even have anything to do with it.

    ref:
    http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=12&articleid=20090306_298_0_OLHMIY776958

  169. Being from Ill-Annoy (Illinois) by gillbates · · Score: 1

    Which just this week recently declared Pluto a planet, I'm somewhat relieved that Oklahoma has decided to one-up us in the "Most Asinine Law" contest. At least now I won't have to hear about how stupid and corrupt our politicians are... for a week or so.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  170. attendee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I actually Attended this. He gave a great lecture. At the very beginning he acknowledged the legislation against him, then he compared intelligent design versus evolution to "Intelligent Falling versus Theory of Gravity".

  171. Oklahoma resident's opinion, FWIW.... by rts008 · · Score: 1

    ...and the Invisible Pink Unicorn.

    You've obviously not visited/lived in Oklahoma.

    We do not put up with those 'Pinko, commie, terrorist fags here![apply sarcasm heavily]

    OU only worded the announcement to CYA[display displeasure without actually censoring the speaker]. The will of the people here in OK would back that up.

    Oklahoma is a very conservative/neocon state by majority. We are in the Bible Belt, proud of it, and seem to take it to absurd extremes. {no, I am not part of the majority here-it drives me insane mostly}
    Think back to the Sen. McCarthy/J. Edgar Hoover Era...it is that way today in OK.(check election results!) For the first time in decades we have a Republican House and Senate both in state. (we[as a state, not individuals] jumped on the neocon/Family Values/Moral Majority bandwagon the past several Pres. elections- the State seems upset that McCain/Palin did not win) Outside of OSU[Oklahoma State University], the whole state went 'nuts' this past election, from my perspective....I look forward with trepidation to this new administration of Obama's, and hope for the best.

    --
    Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  172. Fearmongering by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

    I love how the summary is supposed to make me agree with it. Richard Dawkins does in fact "demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking." His comments are very hostile to certain ways of thinking or belief systems, and that hostility has no place in a tolerant society.

    If for some reason you believe science is incapable of error and the future as predicted by most sci-fi you've ever read or watched is never going to happen and that we will never regret our lack of tolerance or realize we've made mistakes, then go ahead and slam them for saying it.

    If on the other hand you have a basic knowledge of history or some common-sense or better yet, a little wisdom, you'd realize his acidic tone toward Christians and their beliefs is both unnecessary and dangerous, no matter how much you may agree with his beliefs or perspective.

    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    1. Re:Fearmongering by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      His comments are very hostile to certain ways of thinking or belief systems, and that hostility has no place in a tolerant society

      As opposed to Christianity which states that anyone who doesn't believe in it will burn forever in a hell?
      As opposed to Christianity which continually tries to codify bigotry and hatred into the laws?
      As opposed to Christianity which has and still does kill people who will not conform to it's rules?
      As opposed to Islam which says it is OK to lie, cheat, steal from, and kill non-believers?
      etc.etc.etc.

      Exactly how is his "acidic tone towards Christians" dangeous? Will the Christians kill him, as they done to others in the past?
      Or, will they merely find a way to put him under house arrest for the rest of his life, as they have done in the past?

      Religion has no place in a tolerant society because religion is never tolerant to those who will not conform to the tenets of religion.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    2. Re:Fearmongering by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      As opposed to society which states that anyone who doesn't believe in its rules shall be imprisoned?
      As opposed to society which continually tries to pretend bigotry and hatred don't exist?
      As opposed to society which has and still does kill people who don't conform to its rules?
      As opposed to society which encourages lying, stealing and cheating on everything from taxes to speeding.

      Your statements are fallacious. Have a nice day.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    3. Re:Fearmongering by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      That word you use, I don't think it means what you think it means.

      Congratulations, you are an asshole.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    4. Re:Fearmongering by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      You haven't actually studied formal logic, have you?

      You made attempted derogatory comments about Christianity where your comments could be directed at most groups of people in the world. I simply re-created them with a random other subset of society with great success.

      That is to say, while the content of your statements is possibly true, their implied effect is invalid -- making your argument a fallacy, in fact.

      Call me names all you like -- it doesn't help your point much.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    5. Re:Fearmongering by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      I simply re-created them with a random other subset of society with great failure.

      There, fixed that for you.
      The implied effect is not invalid, and wishing it were does not make it so.

      You are still an idiot.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  173. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... well, if you really want to know. I have a friend who is a leading expert on Raman spectroscopy. He is unable to discuss his political views because he will loose funding at a state university.

  174. What really happened by igb · · Score: 1
    The scene: two good old boys have discovered Doctor Who, and have found that once they've finished lusting after Billie Piper --- it's OK, we all do it here in the UK --- that there are other Doctors and, of course, other assistants.

    ``Hello, Mrs Dawkins, we've been watching some Tom Baker-era DVDs and we wonder if you'd like to come to Oklahoma. No, no, leave him at home. What, he's booked to come here anyway? Look, why don't you come instead: we'll get your ticket swapped over. No? We can legislate, you know...''

    ian

  175. More religious hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trying to ban criticism of religion is actually what is intolerant. Typical fundamentalist hypocrisy.
    Dawkins is only objecting to the fundamentalist nuts spewing religious mumbo-jumbo, in a similar way that they are objecting to Dawkins stating scientific facts. If Dawkins is wrong to speak his beliefs, then shouldn't their own zealot friends be banned from making their beliefs public too? The difference here, however, is that Dawkins beliefs are supported by verifiable scientific evidence, whereas the religious have only a twisted book of medieval insanity, featuring brutal torture, child molestation, a vengeful, vindictive, vain, and psychopathic 'god', and various other twisted, psychotic, paeodophillic, and insane characters.
    The citizens of Oklahoma must be mortally ashamed of the crazed religious zealots, who are publicly, and globally, doing such damage to their collective reputation.

  176. "Quashing", you idiots--not "squashing"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Quashing", you idiots--not "squashing"!

  177. Re:They Have A Point by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

    So how is it exactly you can equate Limbaugh and Dawkins?

    Ah... finally a question I can answer. This is simple, they're both homo-sapiens and therefore likely decendants of apes.

    Well at least Dawkins is...

    --
    XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  178. Most educated christians accept evolution. by quenda · · Score: 1
    This may be news to Americans, but evolution is not a hot topic in the rest of the developed world.

    Most Christians accept modern biology, just as they accept modern cosmology or medicine.

    Mass-belief in Creationism is as peculiar to the US (or should I say, parts of the US) as alien abductions, fake moon-landings, or hand-gun rights.

  179. Re:I think the OKLA folks are harming *Christianit by Rumagent · · Score: 1

    Respectful is a word being thrown around a lot by believers of some god or another, but it always means the same thing. Do not question, do not criticize. I am sorry, but I am not buying. People can believe whatever they want - I sincerely do not care. But when they ask me, to "respect" their particular brand of nonsense, I am all too happy to utter the words "Fuck off".

  180. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Cederic · · Score: 1

    To be fair, ignoring Catholic teachings is not something I would criticise a legislature for.

  181. Re:They Have A Point by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1

    An admirable sentiment Mr. cens0r, but Jack Valenti is dead.

    --
    "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
  182. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    To be fair, ignoring Catholic teachings is not something I would criticise a legislature for.

    Nor I; I was just pointing out that not all Christians think evolution and faith can't coexist. In fact, some actually support the idea that evolution is a valid scientific theory for explaining how we came to be and that that does not imply the lack of a God.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  183. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    God job avoiding the question, but no fair changing the rules. Please remain devil's advocate,

    Would being an advocate for teh devil not require me toi believe in his existance?

    Metaphor is certainly a useful tool in building a basis for understanding in students or layfolk. Continuing with the metaphor as fact after that however is rather a problem.

    That is the difference, IMHO, between religion and faith. Faith is a personal belief in a creator who has a plan (which we cannot fathom) and a willingness to accept that plan. It is, to me, a deeply personal thing that does not require either the validation or understanding of others; nor my attempting to force it on others.

    Religion, on the other hand is a set of dogma that attempts to impose rules on its adherence and often, IMHO, interferes with faith. Religion, not faith, is the cause of many problems; especially when it is blindly followed by people who cannot accept divergent viewpoints and seek to force their correct beliefs on others.

    It leads to all sorts of nastiness like insistence that the metaphor is The Truth rather than simply a metaphor.

    Clinging to a metaphor such that it warms the heart is entirely understandable. One must nevertheless endeavor to separate fantasy from reality, and not excuse those who fail to do so, because those are the people who will make your children's lives miserable with their foolishness.

    That's because religion can result in narrow minded fools who must have the right answer; and are to weak to think for themselves.

    Religious stories,if viewed as that - stories that provide insight and attempt to explain the why, not the how, of God's plan are fine. Taking them as gospel and literal depictions of the how is where religion starts to go wrong.

    I understand and share your concern about the impact of such literal interpretations on others. I had a friend who the local Fellowship of Christian Athletes did not went to let join because he was Catholic, and hence not Christian (according to their religious views). Once again religion rears it's ugly head. To his credit, he said FU and joined anyway.

    That's not say religion is bad - if it gives you comfort to have a structure and defined beliefs, fine. Just don't attempt to force others to follow your dogma. Explain it, live it, take comfort in it just leave me out of it.

    So, to sum up; I think you need to separate faith from religion. Once you do that; there is no conflict between science and God. In fact, you could say God was a pretty darn good engineer for developing the evolutionary process; or you can say there is no God and continue to work in the realm of science.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  184. UGH! by stanjam · · Score: 1

    It really gets me how both sides tend to approach the other as mutually exclusive. Darwinism does noy mean that God does not exist. Nor does belief in God mean that you can not accept the theory of Darwinism. The only exception here is if you take the Bible literally, which is foolish, because that also means you believe in slavery, killing people for simple offenses, and a host of other nonesense that these people don't actually believe in. They take portions of the Bible that are convenient to them and believe it literally, and conveniently forget those that do not agree with their faith. I hope the Vatican council gets it right, and decrees that there is no conflict between Darwinism and faith. This is what the creationists fear, and by not being invited, they can not exercise their heavy handed practices at the council.

    --
    Open Source: Eroding the Digital Divide
  185. Re:They Have A Point by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

    The small exposure I've had to him (a documentary he did supposedly on Darwinism) portrayed him as a fundamentalist nutbar intent on dismissing and arguing with people who are trying to have a reasonable conversation.

    Oh yeah? Which documentary was that exactly? And how did he "dismiss" them? Did he dismiss them because their arguments were invalid? If so, he is perfectly justified in doing so.

    Were I an impartial viewer, I'd have come away seeing the Church as the more reasonable and rational movement, and this fervent 'darwinism' as quite worrying and deluded.

    Nonsense. You are not impartial. It is in your interest to lie about Dawkins because you cannot argue factually and rationally against him.

    --
    Clever signature text goes here.
  186. Re:They Have A Point by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

    Dawkins is an asshole

    How? Please be specific.

    he seems to have blind faith that religion is the cause of every single problem in the entire universe

    Nonsense. This just proves that you haven't even bothered to listen to what he says. Instead, you are relying on lies about him or making up lies yourself about what he is saying.

    I don't like religion, but he takes it to quite a ridiculous extreme.

    How? Please be specific.

    --
    Clever signature text goes here.
  187. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Jawshie · · Score: 1

    I was lucky enough to attend the lecture at the OU campus on the 6th. It was very well done and what you would expect of Dawkins. Very intelligent as always with a tongue-in-cheek humor about him. However he was also a little more direct. He immediately proceeded to shred Todd Thomsen when he began to speak. It was lovely! :) Also on the agenda was a new documentary by Ben Stein called Sexspelled... about Sex theory. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ThQQuHtzHM

  188. Re:Wow. Just wow. by Jawshie · · Score: 1

    I forgot to mention that during the Q&A a gentleman stood up and said "Shut the f* up! I'll show you my theology!" or something to that effect. It made the whole trip worth it!

  189. Why the religion bashing ??? by JoshDmetro · · Score: 0

    If you want to worship the great Dawkin go ahead but what gives you the right to attack christians? Anyone who believes in God can be ridiculed and its free speech. I'm not attacking your lord and saviour Dawkin so why attack mine. Who is the real religious fanatic here? You are. You only believe in equality if every one agrees with you. tisk tisk how childish and uneducated.

  190. Gotta ask the obvious question by ITgrrrl · · Score: 1

    WWTFSMD? What would the Flying Spaghetti Monster do?

    --
    'The longing to be primitive is a disease of culture' George Santayana
  191. Not a priori by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Dawkins holds that to be an intelligent scientific thinker you must hold to both strict naturalism and evolution apriori

    I'm pretty confident that Dawkins does *not* require one to hold to either view a priori; in fact, doing so would probably conflict pretty strongly with what he would advocate, since he said that he would accept actual evidence demonstrating the existence of Yahweh. Thus, holding to strict naturalism and evolution must be a posteriori -- it depends on the status of evidence.

  192. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    I'd say "nope" back, but you're such an idiot I can't even tell what you're trying to say.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  193. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Any alien race, no matter how advanced it was at the time at which it decided to Design us

    I never said that we were designed by aliens.

    So there is a way to distinguish God and god-like aliens.

    You talked about philosophical differences, but that doesn't mean you can tell the difference.

    How would you, as an observer with an iron age level of technology, be able to distinguish a miraculous burning bush from one that had been zapped with a heat ray?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  194. Y-Chromosomal Adam and Mitochondrial Eve did exist by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
    Umm, Maybe you didn't know... Y-Chromosomal Adam and Mitochondrial Eve

    Just so you know.

  195. Why not prove non-existence of love? by Mathinker · · Score: 1

    > Someday (hopefully) people will accept that the Abrahamic God was every bit as real
    > as Ra and Zeus -- not real at all.

    You're probably right, but as I said, why do you think that'll prevent people of that era from believing in something else which seems equally ridiculous to you?

    Possibly in the far future mankind will understand that this "love" thing is only a manifestation of various neurotransmitters in various concentrations at various sites in the brain. What a relief that'll be, eh? We won't have to believe in such an unclear, subjective, non-quantifiable concept, then.

    Somehow I don't envy them (at least, in that --- they'll probably have real flying cars, too).

  196. Unless... by gillbates · · Score: 1

    Both Richard and Lucifer cancel their 5 oclock meeting on Friday.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  197. Re:They Have A Point by Alsee · · Score: 1

    One can carry on an interveiw and not look like an ass, even when it's been edited.

    I think you underestimate the depth of Expelled's dishonesty.
    Their "editing" did not merely trim things down in a deceptive manner - they literally fabricated question-response combinations. They literally went from one question and cut to the answer from a different question.

    Interview:
    Q: Would you like some tea? Coffee maybe?
    A: No, but thanks (smile).
    Q: Are you a homosexual?
    A: No.
    Q: How would you define 'homosexual'?
    A: Having sex with other men.
    Q: What s your favorite hobby?
    A: Bowling.
    Q: Your wife looks like she got hit in the face with a bowling ball.
    A: Fuck you, you motherfucking asshole.

    Editing, Expelled style:
    Q: What is your favorite hobby?
    A: Having sex with other men.
    Q: Would you like some tea? Coffee maybe?
    A: Fuck you, you motherfucking asshole.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  198. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 1

    You could check the hyperlink. It spells it out pretty well. I just didn't make the whole reply a hyperlink, because I assumed I was communicating with adult humans who could notice things like that. It tends to annoy people when you make a whole paragraph a hyperlink. :->

    --
    PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
  199. Easy to Disprove by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just find a species created on a Sunday!

  200. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    I never said that we were designed by aliens.

    Okay, fine then, just consider my post a reinforcement of the claim in the post you replied to that the "It's not necessarily God, maybe it was aliens" dodge of the IDers is really nothing more than a dodge because aliens doing it is logically inconsistent with ID, and not a rebuttal of whatever your point was.

    You talked about philosophical differences, but that doesn't mean you can tell the difference.

    How would you, as an observer with an iron age level of technology, be able to distinguish a miraculous burning bush from one that had been zapped with a heat ray?

    Yes of course, because the part of the quote on technology you modified that everyone forgets to include is "... if you don't know how it works". If you don't understand how the technology works, then it's magic, and the people who control it are gods.

    That's irrelevant to the question of whether the D in ID could be aliens. At the end of the day, whether we can detect the difference or not, it's either magic or technology, they're either supernatural gods or advanced aliens subject to the same natural laws as everyone else. If it's the latter case, then no matter how advanced the technology of an alien race is, that technology is based on natural laws, the aliens themselves are based on natural laws, and the alien species themselves arose naturally (or the aliens who designed them arose naturally, etc). However, the entire premise of ID that leads to the ID-supporter claiming the IDer could be an alien and not a god is that something as complex as intelligence cannot arise naturally. Ergo, we have a contradiction, and the ultimate IDer in ID cannot be a naturally-occurring race of aliens. It must be supernatural.

    ID implies a supernatural entity, a supreme being, a God. And in particular for the vast, vast, majority of ID proponents, it's the Christian God, and they know it, but pretend like it's not the case. Because ID is nothing but pseudo-science spread thinly over Creationism to get past the Separation clause.

    This has nothing to do with the question of if some being landed on our planet and claimed to be a God would we be able to prove that they are really divine or not. It's an interesting hypothetical, but really not related to ID at all.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  201. Re:The Von Daniken - Clarke hypothesis by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    That, I think, is where scientists and believers differ. Scientists would like to know why, exactly, this particular Christian (or Islamic, or Jewish, or Hindu, etc.) God exists, and not one or more of any number of other possible gods (Zeus, Baal, Ra). Does causality have meaning for gods? Do gods always know they are gods, or do some think they are merely an evolved being in a random universe?

    I'm clipping your post, but understand that I am including the entire thing when I say that these are all things believers wonder about. Millennia of religious philosophers have pondered the question of free will, the nature of omnipotence, and all these other things. The question "can God create an object so heavy that He cannot lift it?" predates the modern scientific method by centuries. Wondering about the nature of God is a fundamental part of an active faith.

    As a scientist, I get to the very first question -- does God exist? -- and realize I can never craft a falsifiable experiment that tests for the existence of an omniscient and omnipotent creator being, much less to test for the properties of omniscience or omnipotence. We can't test for the existence of 'free will', even assuming we could define it. Thus the scientist correctly decides that these questions belong in the realm of religion and philosophy, not science.

    It's perfectly possible to do both -- ponder questions empirical and falsifiable, and questions philosophical and unanswerable -- as long as you know that they are distinct.

    Which is kinda the point of what I was saying -- Intelligent Design logically precludes the idea of a naturally-arisen Designer, it only allows for the super-natural. Thus the only answer that satisfies ID is a religious one that must be taken on faith, and this is not science. ID is not science. People who say that it is science, and justify this by saying the Designer could be an alien race, are lying to cover up ID's religious foundation.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  202. FromOklahoma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one here supports this sort of stuff. Well at least very few people. :-(

    I am a Christian and I think Dawkins' reasoning is flawed, but the guy has every right to speak wherever they want to invite him.

    As long as we are on the subject, most (or at least many) Christians understand and accept the scientific viewpoint on evolution or don't really care one way or the other.

    There is a narrow, but vocal, group of people who insist that the first few chapters be read literally rather than figuratively, but it would be wrong to judge mainstream Christianity based on their actions. Just like it would be wrong to judge Islam based on the 911 terrorists.