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Geocentrists Convene To Discuss How Galileo Was Wrong

rollcall writes "'Galileo Was Wrong' is an inaugural conference to discuss the 'detailed and comprehensive treatment of the scientific evidence supporting Geocentrism, the academic belief that the Earth is immobile in the center of the universe.' The geocentrists argue that 'Scientific evidence available to us within the last 100 years that was not available during Galileo's confrontation shows that the [Catholic] Church's position on the immobility of the Earth is not only scientifically supportable, but it is the most stable model of the universe and the one which best answers all the evidence we see in the cosmos.' I, like many of you, am scratching my head wondering how people still think this way. Unfortunately, there is still a significant minority of Western people who believe that the Earth is the center of the universe: 18% of Americans, 16% of Germans, and 19% of Britons." I hope there is live blogging from the conference.

35 of 1,027 comments (clear)

  1. Doesn't really matter... by Darkness404 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unfortunately, there is still a significant minority of Western people who believe that the Earth is the center of the universe: 18% of Americans, 16% of Germans, and 19% of Britons."

    ...And assuming that they aren't working in astronomy, there really is no loss.

    If your mechanic thinks that "The Little Mermaid" was a Shakespearean drama, that really doesn't affect his ability to fix your car. Same with this.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    1. Re:Doesn't really matter... by catbutt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As long as he doesn't have the right to vote.

    2. Re:Doesn't really matter... by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...Which is one of the flaws in democracy rather than true self-government and is why democracies need to transition to self-government with a tiny government to protect people from force and fraud.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:Doesn't really matter... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...And assuming that they aren't working in astronomy, there really is no loss.

      "No loss?" What a monstrously stupid statement.

      This kind of ignorance may be "no loss" to society until it becomes widespread enough to perpetuate itself... which is exactly what happens when these people vote. Then, we'll end up having to "teach the controversy" of heliocentrism in the schools.

      Have you ever seen Idiocracy?

    4. Re:Doesn't really matter... by Ironchew · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or...maybe things won't be all nice and peachy like that.
      Doing away with social security? Seriously? Investing and saving wisely does nothing for you when the financial system collapses.
      Let me know when the private space industry has a space station that they're sending people to on a regular basis.
      You basically did nothing to support your statement about education. I could just as easily say education would be less productive and more inefficient using private schools. (This "efficiency" factor you're talking about: is it efficient in a purely profit-driven sense, or efficient for the public good?)
      Excessive taxation is the only thing keeping us from donating more to charities? Most people won't give a shit, and besides, there's no organized effort among *all* charities to take political action against a political problem. Let me know when the Labor Movement will be handed to us by charities...
      Speaking of which, protecting citizens from force and prosecuting lawbreakers I can understand, but contract enforcement? Why would you possibly want government to enforce contracts between two private organizations? I thought they would have figured it out between themselves with their whole "self-governance" thing. Oh, maybe it's because you want contracts to be law? I've seen enough shitty EULAs in my life to be glad that isn't the case.
      You're right, it isn't anarchy. It sounds more like a corporatist police state.

    5. Re:Doesn't really matter... by vadim_t · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That seems a bit short-sighted.

      One of the nice things about knowing things like that is that you can derive other things from them. For instance, from knowing the motions of the planets a sufficiently clever person would be able to figure out moon phases, eclipses, seasons, the position of the sun in the sky on a given day and the times of sunrise and sunset. I don't think it's very hard to imagine those being used in a Sherlock Holmes story.

      A bit of knowledge can go a long way. If you have a good starting point you don't necessarily need to keep volumes of related things in your head. All you need to know is enough to know where to look for the rest.

    6. Re:Doesn't really matter... by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Spoken as a true fundie. Government makes everything worse. If something is an obvious consequence of a laissez-fair ideology, this cannot be the case, and as there always was a government, they're there to take the blame.

      I'm sorry dude, you should try to do some economics 101 at some point. Maybe start with Adam Smith and not Ayn Rand.

    7. Re:Doesn't really matter... by shaitand · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "A corporation that screws their employees in a free society soon has no employees to work for them, so the company dies. A corporation that is unethical soon has no customers so it dies. Unlike governments, corporations must work to the will of the people or else die. "

      Blatantly false. Corporations have common interests with their competitors. It is more profitable to collaborate with a small number of competitors than to have true competition and try to win out. One of the things they collaborate on is working conditions. You can't quit and go somewhere else because everywhere else does the same thing. Corporations have areas where they can compete now for employee attention, areas like invasive drug testing. Good luck quitting and causing the corporation to die because of drug testing.

      What you are describing is not individual anarchy, you want individuals policed. But it is corporate and financial anarchy. It doesn't work to allow individuals to do what they want because the bad will they earn will not bring them in line. The same is true of corporate and financial anarchy.

      Your system fails because right is not on the side of he with the most financial leverage. An employer always has the upper hand over an employee because the employee has only one job and employer has many employees. If an employee quits an employer simply replaces him because they structured things to handle the loss of employees but if the employee quits he may well starve.

      The entire reason we form government in the first place is to more evenly distribute power. We have police because collectively the weak are stronger than the brute and with our police we equalize the brute to make everyone equally strong. The same is true of the financially strong, we must equalize their strength vs that of poor so the poor are not subject to wishes of the rich. Your idea of a weak government fails to protect the poor from the rich. Perhaps because you are rich yourself or hope to be or maybe you are poor and stupid and bought the rich mans line.

    8. Re:Doesn't really matter... by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not an american nor I ever set foot in it but even I know that you grossly failed to provide an accurate quote of that statement. I don't know if you did that intentionally in order to try to deceive anyone or if you just so happen to be just an ignorant fool that had enough memory to write that quote without checking it first. Either way, here is the correct quote:

      from Pelosi Remarks at the 2010 Legislative Conference for National Association of Counties

      But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it, away from the fog of the controversy.

      If you just happened not to get that quote, the meaning behind what your Speaker said was that the american people would only be able to trully understand what that bill meant when all the "fog of the controversy", which is a reference to all the FUD and propaganda which was thrown at the bill, subsided. That statement does not, by no mean, means "you only get to see the rules after we implement it". It means "there was so much crap thrown at it that you will only be able to view it objectively after it passes, after the FUD attacks have ceassed".

      --
      Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
  2. Relativity Says It can be. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the rest frame of the Earth the entire universe revolves around it.

    1. Re:Relativity Says It can be. by danielrendall · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No it doesn't. The Earth is rotating and this may be demonstrated by experiment, ergo it cannot be said to be at rest. You can argue that one inertial frame of reference is as good as any other, but the Earth is not an inertial frame.

  3. Website Design for Crazy People by Arcady13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do the websites of lunatics always seem to be based on the same template from some horribly awful site made for Mosaic in 1995? Does crazy dictate design? Or does each wackjob just copy the code from the previous wackjob? Or maybe these sites are all made by the same escapee from the insane asylum? Maybe they are still in the asylum, and the computer in there is running Windows 3 on a dialup modem?

  4. Evidence by tgd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    90% of the world believes in God(s), and there's nothing but imaginary evidence for that, too.

    But by all means mock the fringe dimwits who don't actually negatively impact society.

    1. Re:Evidence by Coolfish · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think it's far fewer than 90% actually "believe" in deities, rather a good chunk of them profess belief in deities - that is, they say that they do to fit in.
      When pressed on the details of their beliefs, I think that only a few people will actually say that yes, they truly believe in transubstantiation (after that
      term is defined for them, after all I've talked with a lot of people who claim to be catholic who have no idea what that meant), or that jesus was of virgin birth, or any other number of ridiculous notions in any of the current day mythology texts.

      Not surprisingly, people get quite defensive when you do actually ask them about this stuff - and often resort to the "well, a lot of it is just stories, but I do believe in the CORE stuff" response, leaving to question what is actually core to a mythology. Dan Dennett wrote a great book about this stuff, Breaking the Spell, worth the read!

  5. Re:Doesn't the Bible say so? by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No you don't, because the earth is a non-inertial frame.

  6. Re:Haha you got me by rakuen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At the risk of starting a shitstorm, see the people who believe the Holocaust never happened. If an idea exists, it's likely some entity believes in it and will find/shape evidence to support it.

  7. It's really a moot question by Fished · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's no preferred point of reference, so you could just as well say that the Sun revolves around the Earth as vice versa. It's not like the Sun is a fixed immovable point around which everything revolves either, at least once you get beyond the solar system. Nor is there any other single fixed immovable point. You can pick any fixed immovable point you like and construct a model to match it. (The big problem with a geocentric model is retrograde motion--that is, the planets appear to go backwards from time to time.) The thing is that it's a lot simpler to look at it from the point of view that that the Earth goes around the Sun--both conceptually and mathematically, which is why astronomers do so when they are looking at the solar system. But it is possible to construct a description of the universe in which the opposite is true that is consistent, just damned inconvenient and not very useful.

    So, in that limited since, Aristotle was as right as Galileo. Galileo just happens to be more useful.

    --
    "He who would learn astronomy, and other recondite arts, let him go elsewhere. " -- John Calvin, commenting on Genesis 1
  8. Re:In Soviet Russia... by Haeleth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, truly religion is the root of all ignorance, and -- thanks to its staunch atheism -- Soviet Russia was a scientific paradise.

    Oh, wait ...

  9. Re:In Soviet Russia... by Xtifr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Atheism" is about the belief in god(s), which is not necessarily a required component of a religion. If Buddhism (which is neutral on the topic of gods) and Scientology (which believes in alien clams that build DC-10s inside volcanoes, or something) qualify as religions, I don't see why Soviet "Communism" doesn't.

    Of course, by this interpretation, the Communists (or "Communists", since the USSR had few actual Communists) didn't purge "all the morons^religious nuts." They merely purged the heretics.

  10. Re:In "believe anything written down" land by bieber · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Loosely," of course, meaning "blatantly ignoring context and treating obvious similes and metaphors as literal statements of fact." I suppose the author would also assume that any poet or author through the centuries who has ever used the phrase "ends of the earth" also believes in their heart that the earth is not spherical?

  11. Re:In Soviet Russia... by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because not collecting stamps is not a hobby?

  12. Re:In "believe anything written down" land by ceoyoyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That would be insightful, except for the fact that there are a large number of people who "blatantly ignore context and treat obvious similes and metaphors as literal statements of fact" in other parts of the bible as well.

  13. Re:In Soviet Russia... by chrb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fair enough, but then I don't see why atheism (as practiced in OT discussions on countless bulletin boards, if you prefer) shouldn't qualify as a "religion" as well.

    Religion: a strong belief in a supernatural power or powers that control human destiny

    Atheism: a lack of belief in the existence of God or gods

    These are contradictory - you can't believe in gods and at the same time lack belief in gods. Hence atheism is not a religion.

  14. Re:I am not surprised. by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most of modern science is the result of hundreds of years of research by people who were religious to some extent.

    Yes, because people had less of an understanding back in the day of how stuff actually works. Being religious was also compulsory in those days. Bach, one of my favorite composers, glorified god in his music while he was fooling around with maidens in wine cellars and beating up his musicians in street fights.

    Anyway, back to your point. Religion is stifling "modern science" rather than advancing it forward. We all know what happened to Persia after Islam, and about Europe in the dark ages, etc. I think it's safe to say that the world as a whole would be much more advanced if magical thinking was abolished somewhere in its history.

  15. Re:Doesn't the Bible say so? by colinrichardday · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The essence of General Relativity is that a non-inertial (accelerating) frame of reference is identical to an inertial frame of reference within a gravitational field--curved paths in Euclidean space become straight paths in gravity-warped space.

    No. What gravitational field would explain the rotation of an object on the Equator? You can treat the paths of freely falling objects as geodesics in curved space time (within limits), but you cannot treat objects traveling along nongeodesics as freely falling.

    If one treated a point on the Equator as an inertial reference frame, then many stars would be travelling at superluminal speeds with respect to that reference frame.

  16. Re:I am not surprised. by GNUALMAFUERTE · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is simply not true.

    Of course, religion did play a big part throughout history, and it even helped human kind advance a very long time ago. But saying that religion helped man get organized, leave by a certain set of rules, and develop the wheel millions of years ago is one thing, and saying that it still does that today is just plain stupid. Religion has been nothing but our biggest problem for at least 3000 years.

    Remember, even in the golden days of Greece, religion was already trying to murder science.

    And, really, why am I supposed to treat religion different from other mental diseases?

    You wouldn't dare take seriously a scientists that was also an astrologist, or one that claimed aliens visited him daily ... then why do we accept those that believe in that creepy guy in the sky? It's certainly just as crazy as all those guys that keep their head wrapped in tinfoil to prevent the government from controlling their minds, and we love to lock those away at mental institutions. Instead, we grant tax exceptions to those that believe in the crazy guy in the sky. But beware, the rule of thumb is: if your guy in the sky is green and lives in a starship, you get locked away. If your guy in the sky has a badass beard and a jewish son, you get a tax exception. Just remember that, it might come in handy if you ever choose to become schizophrenic.

    --
    WTF am I doing replying to an AC at 5 A.M on a Friday night?
  17. Re:I am not surprised. by c6gunner · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But saying that religion helped man get organized, leave by a certain set of rules, and develop the wheel millions of years ago is one thing, and saying that it still does that today is just plain stupid.

    Actually, they're both equally stupid, which is why I didn't say either of those things. RTFP.

    You wouldn't dare take seriously a scientists that was also an astrologist, or one that claimed aliens visited him daily

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton's_occult_studies

  18. Re:I am not surprised. by Alexandra+Erenhart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And, really, why am I supposed to treat religion different from other mental diseases?

    Because it is not.

    My mother is very religious. She attends mass every Sunday, she's a roman catholic so she believes in God, Jesus, Virgin Mary, the apostles and the saints. Yet she doesn't believe the Sun goes around the Earth, or that the Earth is the center of the Universe, or that we actually came from Adam and Eve. She's a smart, balanced, and certainly not mental diseased person. I think what you should consider a mental disease is fanaticism. Over anything. Specially religion. That's what really distortion reality for some.

  19. Re:Correction... by gophish · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know when people ask me questions in a survey, there comes a point in time when I begin to get bored, and another point in time very near to that when I begin to answer questions either randomly or in an intentionally absurd manner just so I can get some revenge over having them waste my time. If the writers of the survey know something about how to incur that attitude hey could be intentionally skewing the results by placing the questions in the portion of the survey guaranteed to have the most people answering randomly. Then again, maybe I should just not take surveys...

  20. Re:I am not surprised. by fractoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If we're picking our axioms, then why can't we choose to believe in a universe which operates on a universal set of rules unless its workings are altered on a case-by-case basis by some being existing outside of those rules? That would sort out the inconsistency - you can get general rules like gravity, electromagnetism etc. but also leave room for "acts of god" which may not be subject to such rules.

    --
    Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
  21. Re:Next up on slashdot: by the_womble · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is actually the closest I have seen to a sensible response to this. Slashdot needs a way of marking stories "flamebait".

    Follow the links throught to Robert Sungenis's site. He is a complete nut case. He is a creationist, probably anti-semitic,conspiracy theorist. The "news alert" links on the front page of one of his sites include one to a site that claims that the Vatican has been infiltrated by "satanic cults".

    Why is this even worth discussing?

  22. Re:I am not surprised. by Bodrius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You mean the dark ages where fear of heresy stifled secular innovation, or the dark ages where the core of hellenic, roman and islamic learning was preserver in monasteries while the kernels of the renaissance and the core of modern thinking and the scientific method was born between the rabbinical, islamic and christian scholars of the convivencia,?

    By your tone, I'm not so sure 'we all know what happened to Europe in the dark ages' - one thing I know is that the foundations of *non-magical thinking* were preserved by the clerical population, not the secular one. Any reasoned study of the Inquisition (the catholic institution, not the spanish one under secular authorities) would be a good exposition of how the simplistic is the idea that removing religious authority out of the picture would suddenly make intellectual advancement flourish.

    I say this not as a 'believer' but as someone who divorced himself from a religious tradition for very similar naive intellectual pride - only to rediscover later that much of the scientific and philosophical heritage that I so prized was due to the intellectual traditions that were preserved, cultivated and brought unto the world by brilliant scholars from religious traditions and dispositions.

    You can disagree with them all you want (for what's it's worth, I do), but if you feel "it's safe to say the world as a whole would be more advanced" if they had not been there, I'd have to say you have a poor understanding of history.

    --
    Freedom is the freedom to say 2+2=4, everything else follows...
  23. Re:I am not surprised. by monoqlith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Very good. Thank you.

    More people should take a longer and more precise view of history, such as yours.People should realize that religion and science are two sides of the same nature, our inquisitive mind, which evolved along with millions of neocortical columns relatively quickly such that we became able to ask such questions as "What the fuck is that?" and "Why am I here?" The same impulse that drives science drives religion . That doesn't make science and religion equivalent as modes of explanation, but it does connect them.

      Religion may seem like a silly vestige of prehistorical and ancient mythologizing. It may seem like a leftover piece of our brains that we should have learned to think around by now. But science is no less hardwired into our brains than religion. It's all about explaining experience. Some of us do it more with our left hemisphere than our right hemisphere, and situations where it's not lateralized so neatly blur the line between complete and incomplete explanations even more.

  24. Re:I am not surprised. by Cabriel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Religion is not stifling science. Idiots are. It just so happens that some (maybe even many) of them happen to also be religious.

    Actually, no. I don't think even the idiots are because science is still advancing faster than they can attack it. I mean, more than 80% of people know better. Assertions to the contrary aside, I am not of the belief that we need to worry about the remaining ones.

  25. Re:I am not surprised. by hesiod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If there was no religion the Library of Alexandria would still be standing.

    That's first assuming the story of Julius Caesar accidentally burning it down is untrue. It is also an incredibly large assumption that it would continue to exist for 2000 years and that no one would attempt to conquer Alexandria.

    But even more, it's quite possible that without religion, it would not have been built in the first place. That library was also a temple to an Egyptian god, though the contents of the library were not specifically religious texts. The Ptolomies (the library was built at the beginning of that dynasty) helped increase their power through the acceptance of the Egyptians' religion, and by at least appearing to respect and even observe it. Maybe if the Egyptians were not religious they would not have been conquered by Alexander. If religion did not exist, perhaps Alexander would not have created Alexandria. Heck, he might not have ever had any power to begin with. Maybe he would not even have been born.

    For the record, I do agree with much of your post, but condemning someone for a poor understanding of history and then attempting to suggest that you can divine the consequences of removing an immense aspect of human history, especially one so influential as all religion, ever ... Well, that is not insightful in the least (as a few moderators seem to think) but it is incredibly ignorant and unbelievably arrogant.