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Mixed Outcome of Texas Textbook Vote

The Texas Board of Education — as discussed here last week — has voted on the guidelines for textbooks in that state, which represents a large enough market to have influence nationwide. The good news is that the board dropped a 20-year-old requirement that both "strengths and weaknesses" of all scientific theories be taught; score one for the teaching of evolution. The not-so-good news is that in a "compromise," the board also voted to require that students "in all fields of science, analyze, evaluate and critique scientific explanations ... including examining all sides of scientific evidence of those scientific explanations, so as to encourage critical thinking by the student." Score one for the Discovery Institute. A Republican board member explained that the words "strengths and weaknesses" have become "code for creationism and [the similar theory of] intelligent design. So by being more clear in the language and using words that aren't seen as code words, we were able to get all of the 15 board members to agree that this is how we'll teach all sides of scientific explanation, using scientific evidence." Reporting on the Texas vote is all over the map, as a US Today blog summarizes. Some reports claim that an amendment was passed that preserves a requirement that students study the "sufficiency or insufficiency" of common ancestry and natural selection. Other reports claim that the board also adopted language that would have students study the "different views on the existence of global warming."

83 of 646 comments (clear)

  1. not-so-good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The not-so-good news is that in a "compromise," the board also voted to require that students "in all fields of science, analyze, evaluate and critique scientific explanations... including examining all sides of scientific evidence of those scientific explanations, so as to encourage critical thinking by the student."

    How is this not-so-good news?

    1. Re:not-so-good? by colinrichardday · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It sounds as though they're assuming that creationism/intelligent design have scientific evidence.

    2. Re:not-so-good? by scdeimos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with the "how is this not-go-good news?"

      Good Science is all about putting science theory and practice under scrutiny and peer review. This promotes proper investigation and revision and kills-off Bad Science through attrition.

    3. Re:not-so-good? by jc42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Does the Texas law include a legal definition of "scientific evidence"? If not, then the creationists can quite easily claim to be doing "science" under their definition of the term. And it's probably going to be hard to find a Texas judge whose legal training included techniques for deciding scientific issues.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    4. Re:not-so-good? by JoshuaZ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that many teachers aren't going to use that to engage in genuine critical thinking. They will use this as an excuse to bring up every single tired creationist saw which have been debunked hundreds of times over. Many teachers would likely do that anyways but this way they can do it in an approved fashion as long as they are a) minimally clever enough to disguise the creationist roots and b) intimidate children and parents into not complaining too much.

    5. Re:not-so-good? by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Putting science theory to the test is all well and good when it is scientists that are involved in weighing the evidence to see what fits and what doesn't.

      With "intelligent design", you have theologians trying to make scientific decisions.

      It doesn't work.

    6. Re:not-so-good? by mark-t · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So because you think that people who endorse creation will attempt to use this as some sort of loophole through which they can slip in arguments that don't actually stand up to scientific scrutiny, you would rather that the currently accepted theory not be encouraged to be subjected to any further scrutiny than it already has been either?

      Uhmmm.. wow. that's all I can say is just... wow. Talk about cutting of one's nose to spite their face.

    7. Re:not-so-good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I really don't see a reason to be concerned with encouraging critical thinking or requiring the strengths and weaknesses with evolution. It is a theory and as far as theories go, it's a fairly weak one. We can use it for micro-evolutionary changes but macro-evolutionally changes are far from being supported. Pointing out it's flaw is the only responsible thing to do if we are truly educating students. We do that with all other theories and it doesn't seem to be an issue. Why here? Is the thought of God that annoying to the /. crowd?

      Before the rant begins about the Jesus freak from the trailer, this is coming from a Christian degreed in particle physics and nuclear reactor design. In all that I've studied, I have to say science leads me towards God being real. Too many variables for life to exist without Him. I'm also not afraid to mix my science and my faith. Science just explains how He works. I do agree that the Church has historically done a very poor job of dealing with science. I can't find nor do I want to find a defense for the actions in the past. With that said, why have we now decided to ignore the historical social, economic, and scientific influences in public schools if they refer to God?

      Science is the search for God's rule book.

    8. Re:not-so-good? by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Judges are not supposed to know everything - they only need to know who to ask.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    9. Re:not-so-good? by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Science is about trying to understand how things work. If you have already decided that god exists then you are not doing proper science.

      I don't understand how any reasonably intelligent person (and I take it that you are if you work in physics) can buy the micro vs marco evolution nonsense (akin to saying that people can walk a kilometre but walking a 100 kilometres is impossible!) - but I have seen plenty of otherwise intelligence people believe all sorts of silly things. Even such a tertiary source as wikipedia has all the information one would need to make the right conclusion, let alone all the primary sources that you as an educated person should be able to follow.

      There is nothing wrong with pointing out flaws in a theory - but with evolution everyone trots out quite bizarre arguments against it (as you yourself have done) which anyone with a bit of thinking should be able to reject. Any actual scientific debates would be about some of quite complex and in depth aspects of the theory which would not be taught at school level.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    10. Re:not-so-good? by belmolis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, its exactly the other way around. In the evolution controversy, we have theologians (or, rather, most of the time, preachers) trying to make scientific decisions.

    11. Re:not-so-good? by FooGoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree but having a litmus test to see who is qualified to talk about what subject isn't a good idea. While I think the evangelical movement is disturbing I don't think their views should be silenced. It is by argumentation and refutation that the public's understanding of scientific and philosophical matters is expanded.

      --
      People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
    12. Re:not-so-good? by mark-t · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If evolution is genuinely scientifically valid, it will stand under all possible scientific scrutiny anyways, even from those who might advocate alternative theories with no evidence. To discourage such scrutiny, simply out of fear that they might utilize the opportunity to push some religious agenda they actually have, even if this fear is completely well founded, is to strike down the very scientific method that enables us to discover more about the universe than what we already know.

    13. Re:not-so-good? by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I feel your pain, bro. But look at the bright side - at least you're not in Louisiana.

    14. Re:not-so-good? by colinrichardday · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree but having a litmus test to see who is qualified to talk about what subject isn't a good idea.

      If you claim to be teaching science in school, you better know science.

    15. Re:not-so-good? by GospelHead821 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree with you wholeheartedly and I'm a Christian. I believe in some variant of intelligent design (I mean, if you're going to choose to believe both the Bible AND science, you kind of have to), but the only reason it should ever be mentioned in a science class would be as part of a lesson on spotting BAD SCIENCE.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    16. Re:not-so-good? by FooGoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You should also know about the inadequacies or weaknesses in the scientific theories you are teaching. It might inspire a future scientist to study and resolve those inadequacies. Teaching intelligent design as science on par with evolution is bad but avoiding the weaknesses or unresolved issues in evolution is just as bad.

      --
      People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
    17. Re:not-so-good? by sjames · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course it means a science teacher can properly ignore creationism and stick to scientific debate.

      Judges may not fully understand science, but they DO understand that science is done by scientists and they will understand that the creationist side can't seem to find a single credentialed scientist that will say creationism is a scientific theory.

    18. Re:not-so-good? by FooGoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I hope realize that Galileo (apparently the poster boy of the science vs religion debate) was educated at Camaldolese Monastery outside Florence. Without the religious institutions who ended up persecuting him he may never have advanced our understanding of the universe as much as he had.

      Science and religion have always been intertwined and the conflict between them has been very beneficial.

      --
      People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
    19. Re:not-so-good? by JoshuaZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No is objecting to genuine scientific scrutiny. The problem is that we know that isn't going to happen. It won't happen for one simple reason: There are no problems with evolution as a whole. And the open issues such as the importance of neutral drift, the exact mechanisms of speciation, the connection between parasites and sexual reproduction, are simply not at a level that high school students can reasonably discuss. They won't have the background unless they had a lot more time available. To use a more extreme example, imagine someone asking high school physics students to critically analyze general relativity. If they can understand any of it at all, then we are happy. There's no way they'll have any of the appropriate background to understand it at all beyond a very vague conceptual level. The issue here is not identical to that but similar. No one is saying that people cannot critically analyze topics. But there's a problem when critical analysis becomes repeat creationist mantras. And it is all the more a problem when the people who one would want critically analyzing the idea don't have the necessary background to do so.

    20. Re:not-so-good? by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Again school is not the place for this. I am all for teaching children the scientific method, and to question everything - but this is not where this is going.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    21. Re:not-so-good? by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nobody is trying to silence the evangelical movement. Nobody has tried to pass a law that their bible must have a sticker saying Genesis is an opinion. Nobody has demanded that they hand out Darwin tracts along with their usual ones. Nobody expects the preacher to give equal time to Darwin on Sunday.

    22. Re:not-so-good? by obarthelemy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not really. The church has long been a powerful financial/political/educational machine, one of the few accepted carrers for children of the elite. For all those reasons, intelligent and educated people often had some involvement, at some point, with the church, apart from possible religious convictions.

      That is no longer the case though, or not as strongly. We no longer have to deal with that conflict and jump though hoops to try and make science without angering paymasters / teachers / bosses.

      --
      The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
    23. Re:not-so-good? by Walkingshark · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree but having a litmus test to see who is qualified to talk about what subject isn't a good idea. While I think the evangelical movement is disturbing I don't think their views should be silenced. It is by argumentation and refutation that the public's understanding of scientific and philosophical matters is expanded.

      This isn't about discussion between rational adults. This is about what we teach children. Children will believe something if the teacher says it, to the point where if one of the other students attempts to correct the teacher when they are wrong, the other children will shout that person down. I'm sure many of you have seen or experienced this directly.

      This is a primary vector that allows mythology memes like Christianity to survive: indoctrinating children.

      The religious memes wish to use the school vectors that they see having such massive effectiveness to spread themselves. Of course, I'm anthromorphizing a bit, but please allow me some poetic license, the metaphor holds.

      These conflicts are entirely about preventing the government from indoctrinating children with false beliefs while at the same time creating mental structures that make them resistant to being educated with actual facts and reality based thought constructs.

      The fact that people feel the need to lie, repeatedly and often, shows that they know, deep down, that their mythology is not true. If they truly believed their supernatural being of choice was omnipotent and all knowing, they would not feel the need to lie to further the belief and worship of it.

      But of course, the whole point of evangelism for most (if not all) of these people, and the whole point of public proclamations of faith, is to desperately prove to one self that one really, truly believes.

      Of course, the sad part is that the only ones who really, truly believe are the mentally damaged and insane. The rest of them are all faking it, because they know that if they stop the people who are still faking it will shun them from the herd. The cycle continues until enough people loudly proclaim their disbelief. This is why athiests are considered enemy number one to all religions.

      Maybe we'll get lucky. Maybe athiests will finally reach critical mass and blow this mind cancer/meme virus out of the minds of humanity once and for all.

      Looking at the sheer number of infected, though, I often doubt it.

      Its sad. Humans could be something really special.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    24. Re:not-so-good? by Walkingshark · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you being intentionally dense or do you really not understand what you're talking about? Do you really think elementary school students, in general, have the mental deveolopment and intellectual context to perform a rigorous scientific debate? Yes, kids are more clever than many people give them credit for but no, this does not mean that we can turn the Tevatron over to a bunch of 3rd graders.

      Explaining the scientific method to these kids is the right thing to do. Letting their teachers stand at the front of the room and use rhetorical tricks honed over years by propagandists to brainwash those children is morally repugnant and puts the lie to everything these relgious people claim to believe in.

      If you have to lie and decieve to spread the "gospel" of your religion, then it ISN'T THE RIGHT RELIGION. No omnipotent, omniescient being needs a bunch of sychophantic simpering weasels to slip pamphlets about its awesomeness into the lunch boxes of little kids. If it does, then it doesn't deserve to be worshipped.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    25. Re:not-so-good? by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thank-you for reading through the article. Naturally there will not be every step in the evolution recorded in the fossil record, but can you honestly say that the evidence displayed there is not enough to reasonably dismiss any claims of the 'impossibility of evolution'?

      Naturally scientists are humans, and there are egos involved, however I have never seen this to turn into a major issue. What I have seen is a love of truth rather than theory - that is scientists are happier to have been corrected as they now know more rather than disappointed to have been incorrect!

      I cannot say I agree with you on the issue of religion and science. I have not experienced religion to be a search for truth - to me it in an insular search bounded by doctrines which make the whole exercise pointless as a search for truth. I have never seen a discussion on religion that didn't involve notions of 'faith' or personal experience - these are cop-outs - why not demand anything less them empirically tested results to base your opinions on! Perhaps this is just my experience with religion and you may have an better appreciation of it. No doubt my particular area of work has coloured my opinion in this matter due to the disreputable behaviour of a minority of people.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    26. Re:not-so-good? by Walkingshark · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think we both know this, but lets get it out in the open. People like the one you replied to perfectly understand that the arguments they are making are bullshit. They are aware of this. Now, their conscious mind might inhibit thinking about this as much as possible, but their overall consensus mind knows the truth.

      In order to defy this voice in their head that is whispering, "This is a bunch of horse shit," these people feel compelled to perform acts demonstrating their faith. This helps bolster their internal argument, and also helps with their herd status. This is common behavior in any herd and most of us do something similar, though in the case of religious beliefs it often leads people to do irrational things like give money to child molesters or have unprotected sex.

      Yes, it is idiotic. Yes, they know better, but part of the problem is that they think that they're defective. They think they're different, that everyone else beleives truly and deeply (after all, you can tell everyone else believes because look at how virtuous they are) and they think that their lack of belief, their doubting voice, is an abberation. Of course, they often also know that this is not true, but there is never a way to prove it, and they fear the backlash of the tribe.

      So what do you do if you're a cloest athiest, suspect everyone else is a cloest athiest, but everyone you know is really good at pretending and part of you is convinced that they all believe and that you're defective, and all of you is worried that if you come out and say, "You know, this is bullshit," that all your friends and family will shun you? You perform public acts of faith. The more shakey your belief system and the more insecure you are, the more radical your actions will be. This is why you see the people like all those Republican Senators who talk about family values and then cheat on their wives (sometimes doing so in extreme circumstances, like having homosexual trysts in airport bathrooms). This is also why you see votes like this. It is all a big smoke and mirrors act to desperately try and convince everyone (including the possibly watching and angry superbeing in the sky) that hey, they really are faithful!

      As for the people who are harmed by this demonstration of faith... well, fuck those guys. Relieving the stress of fear is more important.

      Some people relieve that stress in less showy ways, by doing things like coming to slashdot and copypasting tired discredited arguments from places like the discovery institute.

      I guess the really sad part is, for a lot of these people their fears are justified. If they came out as athiests or even talked about their doubts, they would be socially shunned and attacked by those they care the most about, all because for their friends and family maintaining the illusion of faith and going through the motions of being a faithful person is more important than the happiness of the people they claim to love.

      As a funny side note, all of this happens because the human brain was never designed to try and do the things we ask of it. It wasn't "designed" at all. It does perform many functions that serve the purpose of helping create conditions where sperms and eggs can meet and then the resulting life form can survive to breeding age though. Social things. Like going to church.

      Thats right kids. God exists so that people will fuck.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    27. Re:not-so-good? by FooGoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I agree with your points where would you say the evangelism regarding global warming in our schools fits within the paradigm of not indoctrinating our kids?

      As far as your description of group psychology and religion those same points can be applied to any social group from climate scientists to the local electricians union. They are not problems specific to religion they are problems that manifest in all human social interactions.

      --
      People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
    28. Re:not-so-good? by khayman80 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If it is wrong or bad science or whatever it needs to be discussed and and an argument needs to be made as to why it is wrong.

      That's the problem. If you read just the first part of my link, you'll see that creationism isn't even wrong. Creationism isn't bad science, because that implies that it somehow qualifies as science in the first place.

      There is nothing wrong with healthy debate on a topic even if you are radically opposed to your opponent. Avoiding the debate or demeaning your opponent doesn't help anyone and it doesn't advance understanding.

      I agree that this subject stirs up a lot of vitriol on both sides, which is profoundly unproductive.

      But the problem is that there's no genuine debate here. Creationists have been presenting the same arguments decades after they've been thoroughly debunked. That's not debate, it's a form of amnesia. It's just as valid to say that we need to teach elementary school children that the earth doesn't move.

      The sad thing is, creationists are preying on your better nature. It's commendable to want to be even-handed. But sometimes certain positions are just nonsensical, and it's intellectually dishonest to tell children otherwise.

    29. Re:not-so-good? by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While optimism is nice reality is what one has to deal with on a day to day basis.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    30. Re:not-so-good? by khayman80 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How is the scientific any different than a religious ritual? Both are performed by anointed individuals according to prescribed methods.

      How is a ritualistic human sacrifice any different than open heart surgery? Both are performed by anointed individuals according to prescribed methods...

    31. Re:not-so-good? by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It has. For 150 years. That's what you don't get. No one has found rabbits dating back to the Pre-Cambrian. Highly sure no one ever will. You can keep searching though. Let us know what you find.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    32. Re:not-so-good? by Boronx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Name one church that has ever argued that they're entitled to $5000-$7000 a year per school child by governmental force.

      Never heard of school vouchers? This is precisely what they are advocating.

      The issue hear isn't freedom. You don't have the freedom not to send your kids to school, not to pay for school in this country and you never have.

      This is about the rights of your kids to actually learn something about the world despite the ignorance of their parents.

    33. Re:not-so-good? by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's only because of militant creationists that we need to be militant evolutionists. Keep religion out of our public schools and science classes and we'll happily stop calling you out for it.

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    34. Re:not-so-good? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Name one church that has ever argued that they're entitled to $5000-$7000 a year per school child by governmental force.

      Actually seeing as churches are tax exempt for property taxes and income taxes and often sit on prime real-estate while pocketing millions of dollars I would say that they do quite well for themselves.

      And I would hardly say that a single class can be held accountable for the entire school year budget. Or is it morally outrageous that the religious must spend $5k for secular transport as well?

      I am happy for schools to teach creationism. But I want equal time given to the wiccan beliefs. And I want witches to oversee the wiccan corriculum.

    35. Re:not-so-good? by kinnell · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The good news is that the board dropped a 20-year-old requirement that both "strengths and weaknesses" of all scientific theories be taught; score one for the teaching of evolution.

      And how is this good news? Once a scientific theory is established, we should ignore any evidence that may disprove it because it has become the accepted truth? I don't see how teaching evolution as "the truth" is significantly better than teaching intelligent design as "the truth". Science is not dogma.

      --
      If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
    36. Re:not-so-good? by khayman80 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Speaking as a scientist, that's not the way science is done these days. You're right to say that many non-scientists treat science as though it's a religion, but it's important to distinguish that from genuine scientific investigations. Let's not conflate common misconceptions about science with the real thing...

    37. Re:not-so-good? by Pheonix28 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Will people PLEASE quit linking stupid "contradictions" like this?
      If you're going to post the "contradictions" maybe you should post the other side of the "contradictions" so people can see both sides of this.
      Answer
      Of course, this is slashdot, and anything pro religion is wrong, anything anti-religion is right.

    38. Re:not-so-good? by digitig · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Spot on. If kids are not taught to "analyze, evaluate and critique scientific explanations... including examining all sides of scientific evidence of those scientific explanations, so as to encourage critical thinking by the student" then they're not being taught science at all. Science is the process of critiquing scientific explanations.

      This could only be an issue if people fear that the teachers themselves are clueless about science. That might or might not be the case (I don't know any Texan science teachers), but then it wouldn't be an issue for the syllabus, it would be an issue for teacher accreditation.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    39. Re:not-so-good? by megrims · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This kind of attitude bothers me. Not because you call my belief in a deity into question; I'm okay with questioning myself.

      Instead, your attitude towards religion reminds me strongly of the very same attitude that you are protesting. It's the smug superiority that irks me, whether in a theistic person or an atheistic one.

      Despite the reactions of many misguided people, the ideal fields of religion and science do not really overlap. The problem is that these things have been made to appear in opposition of one another, regardless of reason. It's like we're all living out of a mindset brought on by the power-play by some (or some series of) religious (or irreligious) nut, and are entirelly unable to see past it.

      I have no problem living out of a scientific world-view while retaining a belief in the divine. The first concerns itself with the observation of what is and the consequences of that, while the second concerns itself with how it ultimately came to be, and the consequences of that. The latter cannot be attacked with the scientific method, because we have no way to observe the origins of existence.

      Religion is experiential speculation. It's not an inherently bad thing. The highest aspects of human culture can also be described in a similar manner. I mostly agree that it shouldn't be the only thing taught to children, or even that it's appropriate for religion to be institutionalised. We should teach our children in a manner that is balanced and reasonable: not one topic to the exclusion of another.

      Religion isn't a mind cancer. The cancer is something in humanity which leads it to accept what it is told without question. Something that makes us hate on demand. It's something like the idea that curiosity is a bad thing, or that questioning ourselves is bad.

      It's a bad thing when religion puts people in a position to be manipulated by others, sure, and that happens all too often. However, this isn't a problem restricted to religion; few of the problems people cite with reference to religion are limited to it, or even present in healthy examples of religious expression.

      When I say that I have with your attitude, I mean this: your disdain doesn't promote critical thinking, it discourages it. That you're discouraging an idea that you disagree with at the same time is mostly irrelevant.

    40. Re:not-so-good? by radio4fan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except your 'answer' does not explain these contradictions.

      In fact, your link says:

      "Proof that it is not a creative account is found in the fact that animals aren't even mentioned until after the creation of Adam."

      So it appears to me to be saying "because these accounts are contradictory, it proves that they are not contradictory."

      Of course, this is slashdot, and anything pro religion is wrong, anything anti-religion is right.

      Maybe everything pro-religion should be right? Vishnu has ten avatars, Xenu destroyed the slave races in a volcano, God chose to give the book of Mormon to a 14 year-old boy on a set of gold plates which later conveniently disappeared.

      But I'm guessing you're an atheist about everyone else's religion, just not the one you happen to be have been indoctrinated into.

      Maybe I'm wrong and you converted as an adult from Zoroastrianism.

    41. Re:not-so-good? by atraintocry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That calling mainstream science "evangelism" whenever you don't like the implications is demagogy.

    42. Re:not-so-good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      the creationist side can't seem to find a single credentialed scientist that will say creationism is a scientific theory.

      Not to nitpick, but they actually do have credentialed scientists claiming ID is a scientific theory. Take that how you will.

      And the guy on the infomercial has a degree too, do you believe that you really can get a work out while sitting on your couch while some gizmo zaps your fat ass?

      Just because the guy graduated somewhere (where would be very important in this case) doesn't mean his degree is worth the crayon its written with.

      Also exactly what they have a degree OF is important too, If someone with a PHD in biology remarks says that evolution is wrong and he can prove it, ill be interested in what he has to say.

      If someone with a PHD in theology says evolution is wrong I know hes talking out his ass, because thats not his field.

    43. Re:not-so-good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What's so wrong with leaving people be and letting them live their lives how they want and teach their children what they want to teach them.

      Nothing, teach your kids whatever the fuck you want.

      But stop trying to shove your ignorant bullshit down MY kids throat.

    44. Re:not-so-good? by Jurily · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Proof that it is not a creative account is found in the fact that animals aren't even mentioned until after the creation of Adam. Why? Probably because their purpose was designated by Adam. They didn't need to be mentioned until after Adam was created.

      Seriously, does that make any sense to you? If it does, can it be called proof? I'm not even sure what he's trying to say there, let alone find logic in it.

      My interpretation: "I have no fucking clue, but I already decided I believe it, so there must be a logical explanation."

      Of course, this is slashdot, and anything pro religion is wrong, anything anti-religion is right.

      Not really. But it helps to read the book you claim to believe in.

      And please understand that science is not the equal and opposite dogma to religion. I don't believe in evolution the way Christians believe in God: I accept that I will probably not know for sure.

    45. Re:not-so-good? by Pheonix28 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That is funny, you're basically saying that I haven't read the Bible. The funny thing is, 90% of the people who "believe in evolution" (/.ers are included in this) have never actually read anything about the arguments against or for evolution, aside from what they were told in their 6th grade science class. (I'm not saying that is how slashdot is, because I'll get 20 people trying to say they are someone special, and are a professional blah blah blah.)
      I've never seen a place that is more egotistical than slashdot. The sad thing is, I could actually give good reasoning behind what I accept or believe, but It wouldn't matter. This is slashdot and there is no way anyone on slashdot could be wrong, unless they think that science isn't perfect, or they like Microsoft. Those are two things that are always wrong, because right now, as humans, because of science, we OBVIOUSLY know EVERYTHING that is possibly known. Right? I mean, Every time someone says something that isn't pro what we know now "science" they get modded down and someone trolling them gets modded 5 for insightful.

      Now I'll have 4 people reply to me saying my math is wrong, 2 telling me I misspelled something, and another 6 telling me I've done something grammatically incorrect.

    46. Re:not-so-good? by koiransuklaa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a sidenote to anyone else not familiar with american evolution discussion: that site is definitely not impartial. It presents only weaknesses (go ahead and see the 404 at http://www.strengthsandweaknesses.org/Strengths) and includes choice quotes like these:

      Survey shows Darwinists completely out of touch with nearly everyone!

      ...the pro-abortion, pro-homos_xual, extreme leftist everything group founded by a former chief of staff of Nancy Pelosi...

      Darwinists attempt to censor science education! They sounded like "broken records" at the Texas State Board of Education hearings. They cannot tolerate diversity of opinions regarding evolution theories, and cry the "sky will fall down" if "strengths and weaknesses" language is used. Most were so ignorant of the issues that they did not even realize that "strengths and weaknesses" have ALREADY BEEN in Texas schools for TWENTY YEARS!!!

      Impartial my ass. Lifyre, do you have any justification for saying that these "want to play both sides"?

    47. Re:not-so-good? by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Give your reasoning - for the 1 or 2 people who reply missing the point or trolling, there are hundreds more that just read it, some of whom would agree with you. You're far better off saying what you think on your own terms than trying to find a way to say it in such as way that no one reading will attack you for it.

      For all their obnoxiousness, the discussions on slashdot are a very good way to test the rigorousness of a belief or argument by exposing it to both reasoned debate and open hostility.

      If your position is sound, a calm and reasoned exposition stands on its own merits, even if the person you're discussing it just responds by sneering.

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    48. Re:not-so-good? by colinrichardday · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, I am not a biologist. But perhaps the burden is on advocates of ID to produce such evidence?

    49. Re:not-so-good? by jav1231 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And yet the words "creation," "creationism," "intelligent," and "design" isn't even mentioned in this statement. What's funny to me is the fact that this statement seeks to encourage critical thinking, a supposed pillar of scientific thought, and yet it's the scientific community that seems to want to quell it. If it's truth, it will stand the test, Folks.

    50. Re:not-so-good? by coastwalker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The monarchy is hardly in the same league as fanatical Christianity. The monarch does a nice job of promoting British business and keeping the rich and powerful neutralized.

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      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    51. Re:not-so-good? by anderix · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hm, could it be that the US is the world leader in science and technology because we continually challenge the accepted "satus quo" in scientific thought?

      Why is it that anyone would celebrate a legal statute that prohibits examining all sides of an argument? Are these people afraid that if the theory of evolution is not presented as though it is fact, then people may actually think about it and evaluate whether or not it is sufficient in and of itself? If it is indeed fact, then why would anyone be afraid of having it examined? Should it not be scientifically provable beyond a shadow of a doubt?

      The truth is, Darwin's theory it is just that: a theory. A proper scientific view should teach that, and continuously evaluate the theory scientifically. Anything less is intellectual cowardice.

    52. Re:not-so-good? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      With the theory of evolution, you have scientists trying to make theological decisions.

      Sorry, but that gets a blunt: BULLSHIT.

      Galileo and other scientists examined the evidence and said the earth moves around the sun.
      Some on the Church engaged in denialism on theological grounds.
      Galileo was proven right by more than a hundred years of science and evidence.
      Galileo and other scientists were not "scientists trying to make theological decisions".

      Darwin and other scientists examined the evidence and said life evolved.
      Some on the Church engaged in denialism on theological grounds.
      Darwin was proven right by more than a hundred years of science and evidence.
      Darwin and other scientists were not "scientists trying to make theological decisions".

      Just because you have the hubris to tell God that He is forbidden to have used a moving earth does not mean that scientists supporting Galileo, Newton, Darwin, and Einstein and making "theological decisions".

      High school science class must give an ACCURATE representation of each field of science as understood and practiced by professionals in that field. And the fact is that 100% of biologists consider evolution the uncontested foundation of their field.

      Yes, there exist people-with-biology-degrees who deny evolution, just as there exist people-with-astronomy-degrees who deny stellar fusion and instead claim the sun is powered by electricity, and just as there exist people-with-history-degrees who deny the holocaust. But a single crackpot does not represent a genuine controversy. A handful of crackpots do not represent a genuine controversy. To the nearest percentage point, 100% of biologists accept evolution and 100% of astronomers accept nuclear fusion powering the sun, and 100% of historians accept the holocaust.

      Teaching children that historians consider there to be any controversy about the holocaust is just plain fraud.

      Teaching children that astronomers consider there to be any controversy about stellar fusion is just plain fraud.

      Teaching children that biologists consider there to be any controversy about evolution is just plain fraud.

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    53. Re:not-so-good? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but NO. You do NOT teach refuted holocaust denialism to children as if it were legitimate.

      Teaching children things we KNOW are wrong, teaching them holocaust-skeptic arguments we know are wrong, teaching them holocaust "weaknesses" and and "holes" and counter arguments as if they were valid is NOT a proper way to teach critical thinking skills. Holocaust-denialism exploits, feeds on, and entrenches weaknesses in critical thinking.

      All of the anti-evolution criticisms have been examined under expert scientific peer review, and they have all been found flawed and just plain wrong and completely contrary to the evidence. It has all been scientifically refuted.

      You do not teach refuted arguments in a class unless you are explicitly teaching it as an example of something that has been refuted, and you also present the explanation of how and why it has been refuted.

      The people pushing this anti-evolution stuff either don't know or don't care that every single point has been scientifically refuted, and they want to present it to students as if it were real and true and scientifically legitimate. They want to teach errors and untruths to children, and the children do not have the factual knowledge and scientific expertise to identify the errors and refute the false claims.

      Just as with a holocaust denialist history education, it is designed to lead children astray, to mislead them about the facts, and it will only impair their thinking.

      People will figure it out for themselves if they are given the necessary tools to do so

      I'm all for teaching kids the tools for critical thinking.

      However a holocaust denialism education and an evolution denialism education are *not* helpful toolkits. They are poison, they are corrosive, they are anti-tools. Their only valid purpose is as a case study in the dangers of misinformation and logical errors and invalid arguments and bad thinking.

      Most education is (unfortunately) taught as memorization, and (unfortunately) science class is often taught as a list of facts to memorize. With all of the lies and misinformation out there about evolution, it is particularly critical that students be taught the evidence and WHY evolution is correct. That's the real problem, that so many people are unaware of just how absolute the evidence is proving evolution. For example while most of the fossil evidence is "gappy", there is a significant chunk of the tree of life where the fossil evidence is absolutely continuous and complete. Absolute irrefutable proof. DNA analysis also proves the evolutionary family tree of common descent with the same courtroom level "Proof Beyond Any Reasonable Doubt" that courtroom DNA analysis proves the family tree relationships between people. And then there's the fact that evolution is an applied science, used in hundreds and hundreds of businesses solving problems and creating new valuable complex information. People who state that there are no fossil intermediate forms are just plain wrong, they are stating just plain falsehoods. People who argue that evolution cannot create information, cannot create complexity, cannot create so-called "Irreducible Complexity", they are just plain wrong, they are stating just plain falsehoods. At best they are innocently ignorantly asserting untruths, at worst they are being outright deluded or outright dishonest.

      My position is that we should be teaching the evidence, the proof, in class.
      In evolution, of all fields of science, it is most critical that student see and understand the evidence and proof backing up evolution. In chemistry and astronomy and other fields they are not going to come under attack from misinformation and aggressive misleading arguments, they can be "told" about elements and the planets and no one is going to badger them with fallacious arguments that atoms don't exist. But with evolution students need the facts to back up the science. Students need to understand WHY 99.9% of biologists consider evolution right, students need to

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    54. Re:not-so-good? by Alsee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry for double-replying, but I missed something:

      What the agenda may be of the people who are advocating it is quite irrellevant

      Actually it is relevant, in that they are misrepresenting the content they are proposing to bring into class.

      In the Dover Pennsylvania case the judge blasted them for lying about their motivation and about what they were trying to do. If you look at the candid statements of the activists pushing this, if you look at the candid statements from the people compiling the materials they want to present in class, they say to each other that what they want to do - what they are actually doing - is to teach their theology in the classroom. They want to teach their particular fundamentalist literalist interpretation of the Bible in the public schools. Of course they think that's a good thing - God is good and of course they think their views and interpretation of the Bible are the One True interpretation of the Bible. Just as many in the Church believed when they denied Galileo. And of course they believe it is good for schools to bring children to (their view of) God.

      When they tried explicitly teaching Biblical Creationism in the public schools, the courts ruled that the government cannot single out a favored religion to teach in the public schools. And since then they have not changed their goal. They have been steadily trying to place a Halloween mask on the materials they want to teach. They literally took the old Biblical Creationist textbook and started clipping out words like "God" and replacing it with an "unnamed" designer. They did a search-and-replace on the text removing the word "Creationist" and replacing it with "design proponent". In fact one version of this textbook leaked out with the odd phrase "Cdesign proponentist". The botched the job of changing the word "Creationist" into "design proponent". It's the exact same textbook, it's the exact same Biblical Theology textbook, and by HIDING the word "God" they want to pretend that they aren't pushing religion. They are trying to put on a Halloween mask of science, and by relabeling the materials as "science" they hope to slip it past the courts and into the science classroom.

      So yes, the agenda of these people is relevant. It's relevant because they are lying to you. They are saying they want to improve science education, they are saying they want to present scientific information to the students, they are saying they they want to students to have a better understanding of science, they are saying they merely want to present students with fair valid and educational scientific critiques of evolution, but it is just not true. After stripping out the overt references to God and the overt theology, basically all that's left is their theme "gee that looks complex and I don't understand it, therefore God must designed it" (except God becomes an unnamed designer), and the exact same unscientific and flawed bashing of evolution that filled in their Biblical Creationism textbook. Their sole purpose and their sole intent is to undermine evolution in the presumption that students will then need to turn to their Biblical Literalism theology. But those materials they prepared in the first place, the materials they are pushing now, they were never science materials and they still are not science materials. They were never valid criticisms and they still are not valid criticisms. They were never designed for proper educational purposes, and they still are not designed for proper educational purposes.

      I would LOVE it if out science education rose to a level where teachers were able to deal with genuine scientific controversies and genuine critical thinking skills to better understand and evaluate science. But that's not what we are facing here. If you defend these people, that is not what you are supporting here. These people solely want to undermine a field of science they don't like. The materials they want to present are not science. They are not tools for critical thinking. They are not educational ma

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  2. Pardon but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pardon me, but I fail to see how not teaching the weakness of a theory, whether it be evolution or gravity or special relativity, is a win for anyone?

    1. Re:Pardon but... by misanthrope101 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It would be different if by "weakness of a theory" creationists don't mean the already refuted arguments they've been using for decades. It is a problem when I meet someone who thinks that it's a "weakness of the theory" that the 2nd law of thermodynamics makes evolution impossible, and they want that taught in class.

      If there are weakness in evolutionary theory, creationists won't be the ones to know them, because they don't understand the theory in the first place. Many of the arguments used by creationists are false--for example their claim that there are no transitional fossils, or that we've never witnessed speciation.

      They want to present these lies in class and act as if they're only presenting the weakness of the theory. They're just lying for Jesus. Every few years they have to change their wording because their tactics become known as baseless smears. Hence ID, the wedge strategy, etc.

  3. Go Texas! by AtomicDevice · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think we should teach how gravity might not exist. After all, it's still just a "Theory" we havn't actually found the particles (or whatever) that cause it. I for one don't believe in gravity.

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  4. Score for who? by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The not-so-good news is that in a "compromise," the board also voted to require that students "in all fields of science, analyze, evaluate and critique scientific explanations... including examining all sides of scientific evidence of those scientific explanations, so as to encourage critical thinking by the student." Score one for the Discovery Institute.

    No, score one for science. If one examines all sides of scientific evidence for those scientific explanations, then creationism and ID are left out in the cold because they are not based on science, are not scientific explanations, and thus can not be discussed.

    Further, if the goal is to encourage critical thinking, then ID and creationism are in trouble because they do not stand up to critical examination.

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    1. Re:Score for who? by bh_doc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're assuming that both the students and the teachers have the competence, knowledge and understanding of the science in order to properly evaluate it, and that the teachers guiding such student evaluation do so in an honest and unbiased fashion.

      Good luck with that.

    2. Re:Score for who? by interiot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that "critique scientific explanations" means different things to different people. To a good science teacher, it means valid scientific critiques, and yes, that's very good. To a bad science teacher though, that means critiques that sound like science to the uneducated ear, but are really nothing of the sort. Surf some of the anti-evolution videos on YouTube for a few minutes to see just how good some people can be at blurring the line between science and hogwash.

    3. Re:Score for who? by ubergeek2009 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      yeah I agree with you, but the problem is that that is not the way it will be taught.

    4. Re:Score for who? by SetupWeasel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I find that many scientists have neither the competence, the knowledge, the understanding, nor the integrity to evaluate their own field. I agree with scientific criticism and wish it were taught more.

  5. I don't see how that is a bad thing by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The not-so-good news is that in a "compromise," the board also voted to require that students "in all fields of science, analyze, evaluate and critique scientific explanations... including examining all sides of scientific evidence of those scientific explanations, so as to encourage critical thinking by the student." Score one for the Discovery Institute.

    Everyone knows that scientific theory is not scientific fact. A better theory may come along and frequently does in the the sciences. Especially if this criticism examines scientific evidence as the amendment requests and not "biblical evidence" which a lot of creationism is based upon. (Lots of circular arguements that basically end with the bible said so and it's correct because it's the word of god, ad infinitum, ad nauseum.)

    Hopefully it would be interpreted that way and not just be a vehicle to introduce creationism. Afterall, scientific dogma is still dogma.

    1. Re:I don't see how that is a bad thing by Sabz5150 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Everyone knows that scientific theory is not scientific fact. A better theory may come along and frequently does in the the sciences. Especially if this criticism examines scientific evidence as the amendment requests and not "biblical evidence" which a lot of creationism is based upon. (Lots of circular arguements that basically end with the bible said so and it's correct because it's the word of god, ad infinitum, ad nauseum.)

      Hopefully it would be interpreted that way and not just be a vehicle to introduce creationism. Afterall, scientific dogma is still dogma.

      Bzzzt. Sorry. Theories are built by facts. They are frameworks for facts. If a theory is discarded in favor of another, it is because new facts have arisen that the original theory does not account for.

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  6. Well... by evanbd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The wording as described in the summary sounds fine in the abstract; I suspect the problem will come in the implementation.

    As I see it, the problem with creationism and ID isn't that it's wrong, it's that it's untestable. Anything taught in the science classroom should be testable. There is a place for testable but wrong theories -- I remember learning about the aether, for example -- but things that make no testable predictions have no place. A discussion of how a popular theory (like the Ptolomeic theory of the solar system) gets disproved is quite valuable; if such a discussion was possible about creationism or ID it would have a place in the science classroom. But, as it makes no testable predictions, putting it in the same category as Aristotelean physics or Ptolomean astronomy is wrong.

    1. Re:Well... by gardyloo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When one makes a distinction between so-called microevolution and macroevolution, then there's a hint that one has been absorbing far too much ID woo.

  7. Wasting Time by devnullkac · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Requiring students to evaluate every scientific explanation in light of the evidence that supports it will be a monumental waste of time. From the theory of gravity to the theory of the atom, spending time discussing the basis of scientific consensus will prevent students from getting very deep into any topic. I'm just glad that the most likely effect for students outside Texas is that science textbooks will be distributed in two volumes: the part Texas students are able to get through while critiquing the evidence and the rest of the curriculum all other high schools will be able to get to.

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    1. Re:Wasting Time by servognome · · Score: 2, Insightful

      From the theory of gravity to the theory of the atom, spending time discussing the basis of scientific consensus will prevent students from getting very deep into any topic.

      Such discussions would result in students reviewing subjects in more depth, not less.
      Instead of just accepting an explaination of gravity or the structure of an atom, students will need to understand how the scientific models were constructed.
      For example a student will learn more about science on the atomic scale if they reviewed the historical steps and theoretical changes which contributed to the current model of the atom.

      Examining the pros and cons of competing theories creates a deeper understanding of the subject, and ideally inspires students to investigate ways to improve our model of the universe

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  8. the reason by digibud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The reason it's not such great news is that phrasing, however subtle, is still meant to appease the fundies. The perception, I believe, is that it still allows for a principal or school board to put pressure on the teaching of evolution by pushing teachers to "examine all sides". The desire is to get ID and/or young earth creationism in here one way or the other. There is nothing wrong with teaching a theory and the evidence to support it - as long as that theory is a valid scientific theory with evidence that is widely accepted by the scientific community as such. ID isn't science (read the Dover transcripts if you are STILL confused on that point) but "examining all sides" is all about trying to get ID snuck into a science curriculum. Scientists are not against teaching weaknesses in any theory. Examining weaknesses is what science is all about. What scientists do NOT want done to "examine" those weaknesses by contrasting observations and facts that led to a theory (evolution) with observations that fit a pre-set fairy tale (creationism in whatever form you want to call it) and then pretend that both are valid science. The language used (above) is vague enough that it will provide the grist for many subsequent arguments between teachers and parents and schools and districts and I'm sure, many others. Nice job. Not.

  9. Re:Why does CmdrTaco put up with kdawson? by evanbd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because trolling works -- it produces responses, and with those come page views and ad revenue. Trolls in the comments are bad because they piss people off and they leave; trolls on the front page are good because they piss people off and then they comment and view ads.

  10. Re:Sorry, but they're absolutely right by iseletsk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Theory of Evolution was proven? I clearly need to get out more. I didn't know that it is Theorem of Evolution now.
    From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory
    "Theories are abstract and conceptual, and to this end they are never considered right or wrong. Instead, they are supported or challenged by observations in the world"

  11. Re:Sorry, but they're absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the one major sticking point for evolution is the problem of abiogenesis-- disregard the domain name for a minute and read this: http://www.christiananswers.net/q-crs/abiogenesis.html

    very valid -scientific- evidence against evolution from abiogenesis

  12. Start calling a spade a spade by drDugan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is so sad that people even allow "creationism" as a debate still. Get a real
    spine and tell these people to shut up and leave the room.

    Here, these words will help:
    "Collective, viral mental illness"
    "Collective, viral mental illness"
    "Collective, viral mental illness"

    (keep repeating it...)

    They need treatment and counseling to address their illness. There was
    no virgin birth. There was no loaves and fishes feeding thousands. There
    was no man who came back to life. There was no garden of Eden. It is
    grossly ridiculous to discuss the world as 6000 years old. They are stories!
    There was no placement of fossils to test our "faith". And most of all, we
    have zero observations to support the story of a sentient creator
    . Personally,
    I don't know if there is a God, but collectively teaching blatant falsehoods
    should be completely unacceptable and called as such every single time.

    Loudly.

    Men wrote the bible. It was written long after the historical figure "Jesus
    of Nazareth" died. Men created the church, every church. There is absolutely
    no space for discussion with "creation scientists". Those with a straight face
    who "teach" such extreme views, (see for example here (if you can stomach it
    without vomiting): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_CLIGJW6Ic ) are
    *mentally ill* and should be offered treatment.

    Even if a large group of people are deluded, they are still deluded.

    1. Re:Start calling a spade a spade by BitZtream · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, don't you sound like a religious nut job.

      Let me give you a hint, if you think you're 'way' is the only way, and you are 'right' ... then you are in fact wrong, and an idiot, or at best you're the worst excuse for a scientist on the planet.

      Science teaches falsehoods ALL THE TIME. Why? Because we're wrong a lot more often than we're right. Most of what we 'think' about how stuff works is missing some key lower level component that when we find it, often comes back to make us realize that although we 'observed' what we thought was happening, our observservaions were either wrong or tainted by our own preconceptions.

      A GOOD scientist does not rule out ANY possibility, Ever, even when there are laws defining how something acts. A GOOD scientist knows that preconceptions kill good science.

      A good scientist doesn't say 'religion is a bunch of tripe and isn't science!', a good scientist says 'I have no evidence to support the theories proposed by creationism and believe them to be false based on evidence supporting evolution.'

      The key difference there is that a good scientist is open to anything.

      You sound like a religious nut, but in favor of science as your religion. If you're going to act like a religious nut job and make such sweeping generalizations about people who disagree with you, you might as well go pick a name for your new religion, I'd suggest scientology but some other nut jobs beat you to it, I donno though, you're acting about as silly as they do, might work for you.

      If you're going to talk about religious people being extremists, it helps when you don't do the same retarded shit they do.

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    2. Re:Start calling a spade a spade by kcburge · · Score: 1, Insightful

      we have zero observations to support the story of a sentient creator

      What programmer will confidently concludes he's actually fixed a randomly occurring bug, when he makes an educated change to the code, that, without knowing for certain WHY, causes the problem to no longer appear in testing?

      Observation is not an infallible fountain of truth. It takes.... faith... to believe that we NOW (finally, today) perfectly understand, based on observation, analysis, and trial and error. If I'm not mistaken, that's why conclusions of science are called Theories, and not Truth. Scientific Theory allows that some day newly observable phenomena may disprove the Theory, and wholly change our understanding of a matter. Anyone who clings to the old ideas will then be a regarded as a fool, even if you yourself were one of them at one time.

      Conclusions based on 1% educated guessing are still educated guessing (uncertain).

      Even if a large group of people are deluded, they are still deluded.

      Reason tells us that popular opinion has nothing to do with reality. But this knife cuts both ways. Popular acceptance of the Theory of Evolution among skeptics doesn't make it any more reality than popular acceptance of Bible account of Creationism amongst the religious.

  13. Critical Thinking is a Good Thing by johnnyoxford · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The best class I took at the University of Chicago was one focused at dissecting a number of the scientific papers that were most "worshipped" - they were written by the best and the brightest and were highly referenced in the field. When we read them critically, we found that often (always in the set of papers we looked at) the claims of these papers simply could not be substantiated by the content. Sometimes, it was just not supportable - sometimes even the opposite result from the claim was demonstrated. Critical reading and thinking is hugely important. I have no problem with this. That is what real science is all about. As long as these kids also have the ability and opportunity to question the bullshit that is in these textbooks, then everything will be just fine.

  14. Re:Sorry, but they're absolutely right by williamhb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Theory of Evolution makes predictions about the kinds of fossils that should be found, and guess what, we keep finding them. It has been tested and proven itself quite well.

    Technically, those are quasi-experiments (approximately, relying on the experiments already done by nature rather than setting up your own experiment) and they are rightly seen as of somewhat lesser value than controlled experiments -- the reason being that there's a strong temptation to be so selective about what data gets considered that you'll never allow a negative result. Say you were a mad scientist who believed dogs evolved from elephants. So you predict there'll be an almost-dog-almost-elephant fossil out there. You haven't found it? "Well, there's a lot of places to look," you say as you toss the 999,999th almost-dog-almost-wolf fossil away because it doesn't match what you're looking for so you didn't consider it in the study.

  15. I learned about religion in school... by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In 7th grade, I learned about Christianity and creationism, as well as Buddhism, Islam, Judaism, Hindu, and touched briefly on some others. It was quite informative and I'd recommend it to everyone.

    This was, of course, done where it belonged -- in Social Studies class, not Science. Perhaps if the people of the school boards of Texas would just agree to teach it similarly, there wouldn't be a big stink about it.

    1. Re:I learned about religion in school... by jc42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In 7th grade, I learned about Christianity and creationism, as well as Buddhism, Islam, Judaism, Hindu, .... This was, of course, done where it belonged -- in Social Studies class, not Science.

      Actually, it's not all that uncommon for scientific degree programs to include a few History of Science courses, where you'd expect coverage of the important religious-vs-science disputes. Such courses wouldn't need to go into great detail about the religious belief systems, of course, but they should include enough information to appreciate the religious sides' viewpoints. Thus, you can't really understand the Church's persecution of people like Bruno or Galileo without some understanding of contemporary religious dogmas. And you can't make sense of the current American problems with teaching evolutionary theory without understanding American fundamentalist Christian doctrines.

      But generally you're right; such courses are typically taught by historians, not scientists. This is a typical example of what is properly an inter-disciplinary topic. Good teaching would require a background in both topics, though the primary classification would be "history" and/or "sociology". After all, the scientific parts of such disputes is generally fairly simple. It's easy to teach historians or sociologists the basic concepts behind cosmology or evolutionary theory; it's only in the details where these topics become complex. But theologies generally can't be understood without extended study, which scientists (people like Isaac Newton or Charles Darwin excepted) generally don't have the patience for.

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      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  16. from a Texan by reiisi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You're assuming that the compromise wording is still code for "excuse to attack science."

    It's not particularly hard to find un-biased judges in Texas.

    It is, I admit, easy to find biased judges, as well, but that's not a peculiar problem to Texas.

    The specific issue here is perhaps the nature of the biases you find.

    But the question you're driving at is, without a legal definition of "scientific evidence", you must rely on common law, and common law in a particularly place tends to reflect the common sensibilities of that place.

    Being one who believes in that government should be by the voice of the people, even when the people are not perfectly correct, I don't see this as something to be fought on terms of the kinds of us vs. them arguments prevailing in this thread. Us vs. them is wrong, even when "we" believe in "the truth", whether the truth is "science" or "religion".

    Unfortunately, much though it might be uncomfortable to you and me as geeks, the best solutions to social problems tend to be social, and this is primarily a social problem.

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    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
  17. Re:Weakness of a theory by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You may believe that the proponents of this language are using it to get falsehoods taught, but the wording calls for teaching critical thinking. Apparently a lot of people posting on slashdot don't believe that the theory of evolution will stand up to critical thinking.

    Oh, please. You really think this reaction is because we're secretly thinking "Oh no, if third-graders really apply critical thinking to some of our greatest scientific theories, they will realize all the flaws and won't believe in it"? Evolution has stood up to an awful lot of critical thinking over quite a long time (as scientific fields go).

    There are excellent ways to teach critical thinking via evolution. For example, you could start with early understanding of natural selection, and show how the idea of "slow and steady progress" was replaced with punctuated equilibrium because a variety of observations and theoretical models showed that was more accurate. Or look at other ideas that have been gradually refined, and show the evidence that was used to reach the current understanding.

    If, on the other hand, you're going to stand in front of a bunch of little kids and teach them established fallacies to trick them into thinking that the current understanding is not really supported by the evidence, then that is a bad thing. No one here is worried about actual, genuine, evidence-based critical thinking. The problem is that what IDers call "critical thinking" is just "repeating falsehoods that the hearers are too young / inexperienced / uneducated to recognize".

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    I am the man with no sig!

  18. Typical pseudo-reasoning with hug generalizations by Renegade+Iconoclast · · Score: 2, Insightful

    90% of the people who "believe in evolution" (/.ers are included in this) have never actually read anything about the arguments against or for evolution, aside from what they were told in their 6th grade science class.

    And 76% of statistics are made up on the spot. You put the phrase "believe in evolution" in quotes, as though it's something a scientist (or /.er) would say. It's not. Science isn't about belief, and I no more believe in evolution than I believe in my computer, or believe in rocket ships. We say evolution is the best theory because it makes predictions, and so far, those predictions have been amazingly accurate. To note this requires no sort of belief, any more than I need to believe that my computer works in order to program it.

    I've never seen a place that is more egotistical than slashdot. The sad thing is, I could actually give good reasoning behind what I accept or believe, but It wouldn't matter.

    Have you ever looked in a mirror? That statement is completely egotistical and arrogant.

    This is slashdot and there is no way anyone on slashdot could be wrong, unless they think that science isn't perfect, or they like Microsoft. Those are two things that are always wrong, because right now, as humans, because of science, we OBVIOUSLY know EVERYTHING that is possibly known. Right?

    No. However, we know that Intelligent Design is not science, because it doesn't make testable predictions, it expresses no falsifiable theory, and it merely pushes the problem into the unknown. What created the creator? Intelligent design is not useful in any way. Intelligent Design science has not produced any antibiotics, or gene therapies, and the fact is that it cannot, because it is not a useful theory to study the natural world.

    I mean, Every time someone says something that isn't pro what we know now "science" they get modded down and someone trolling them gets modded 5 for insightful.
    Now I'll have 4 people reply to me saying my math is wrong, 2 telling me I misspelled something, and another 6 telling me I've done something grammatically incorrect.

    Intelligent design has no math, so if you're advocating for that, your math is not wrong, just non-existent.

    The only math I've seen associated with ID 'science' is math explaining how improbable our existence is, which is terrible reasoning. Using the same logic, I could say that you are impossible.

    Your dad had to meet your mother, and have sex with her. Let's say they grew up in a small town, be generous, and set the probability of that at about 1000:1. Next, your father released 500,000,000 sperm into your mom's vagina, only one of which became you, odds against, 500,000,000:1. Your mom starts with about 2 million eggs in her ovaries, only one of them became you, so the odds of that are 2,000,000:1.

    Therefore, you are too improbable to exist, because the odds against you are 1,000,000,000,000,000,000:1.