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creationism / intelligent design
 

offline Ezkerraldean from the lowest common denominator (United Kingdom) on 2006-01-31 09:51 [#01831134]
Points: 5733 Status: Addict



ha

funny how the prominent supporters of evolution/darwinism
are biologists and paleontologists (i.e. people who actually
know about that sort of thing) whereas the prominent
supporters of creationism/intelligent design are just
wankers in southern US churches who have little or no
knowledge or training in biological science.


 

offline Mertens from Motor City (United States) on 2006-01-31 10:48 [#01831168]
Points: 2064 Status: Lurker



Now that everyone is calming down after this evolution
circle-jerk, here is a nice link to a site with
slightly higher debating standards that what I've observed
here.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-01-31 10:57 [#01831172]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ezkerraldean: #01831134 | Show recordbag



eh.. read what you wrote...

I'll give you some clues
1: believing in intelligent design excludes believing in
evolution.
2: if you don't believe in evolution, you're not interested
in studying it nor current biology.
3: If you don't study biology, you can't become a
biologist.

you do the maths.. being an educated biologist doesn't
automatically make you right.


 

offline Exaph from United Kingdom on 2006-01-31 11:32 [#01831176]
Points: 3718 Status: Lurker



i dont see why science and religion cant co-exist..

if there were a god that created this place (the bit that
science cant explain) then why would he tinker with it (all
the time)? surely he would let it evolve (at least till shit
hits the fan - cue the prophets and jesus?).

i dont really see how anyone can deny evolution these days -
there are fossils dating millions of years. bill brysons' a short history of nearly everything
gives a very accessible insight into to the scientific side
of things. i felt pretty naive after reading that.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2006-01-31 11:39 [#01831180]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker | Followup to Exaph: #01831176



believe it or not, it has actually been argued by some
creationists that the fossil evidence (and any other
evidence that contradicts their model of the world) was
created by SATAN to deceive humans into rejecting the
biblical account of creation.

science and religion can coexist happily. the problem is
attempting to call religion "science" so that it can be
taught in publicly funded schools.


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2006-01-31 11:48 [#01831186]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to Mertens: #01831168



I dunno, I still see IDers as fringe dwelling kooks living
in nooks and crannies of uncertainty until they're
explained, then moving on to other nooks and crannies.

Things only seem irreducibly complex until they're, er,
reduced. Eukaryotic cells were in some ways inexplicable
until Lynn Margulis hypothesized that chloroplasts and
mitochondria were originally free-living cells that became
symbiotic in their hosts as a result of failed digestion.

It seems to me that ID is a faith in our inability to expand
knowledge into areas of doubt (abiogenesis, for example) and
a reveling in the improbability of specific outcomes. How
can ID be researched and studied other than by pointing at
the state of the art in science and bemoaning that it isn't
omniscient?


 

offline Exaph from United Kingdom on 2006-01-31 11:56 [#01831189]
Points: 3718 Status: Lurker | Followup to plaidzebra: #01831180



yeah that is a problem.. i recently saw a derren brown show
where he blagged a live american audience that he was a
spiritualist.. he'd say things like.. i have someone called
john with me now, tall with dark hair, and there was always
someone in the crowd that thought it was their dead relative
- basically the moral of the story was people will believe
anything if they want to believe it. sad but true.. i mean
satan creating fossils?


 

offline Dannn_ from United Kingdom on 2006-01-31 13:04 [#01831219]
Points: 7877 Status: Lurker



The whole problem with this argument every time it comes up,
and thousands of other arguments, is that people have this
view of science being something very arrogant and
definetive, and that science is supposedly truth. It is not.
Science is a process, the most logical process to deduce the
most information from things. For the sake of getting
anywhere you have to build upon conclusions, which in many
cases are wrong or contain errors, but I think most people
would agree this is just an extension of any rational
investigative process and is the closest you can reasonably
expect to get to solid fact.


 

offline evolume from seattle (United States) on 2006-01-31 13:39 [#01831244]
Points: 10965 Status: Regular | Followup to Dannn_: #01831219



yeah, you're talking about peer reviewed scientific
journals. it's the saftey check for scientists making
outrageous claims. for example, the korean scientist that
recently claimed huge advances in cloning. turns out he
faked a lot of his results. when a scientist tries to
publish work based on bogus results, it's like chumming the
waters. other scientists swarm in like sharks because you
can make a name for yourself by disputing research as well
as breaking new ground.

I.D. has no such checks and balances outside of real
scientific journals. They often try to site actual articles
to back up their claims, but virtually always, they take
their quotes and data waaaay out of context.

Don't know if this has been discussed here yet, but
TALK ORIGINS is an excellent resource to refute
practically every claim made by a creationist or I.D.
proponant ever presented.


 

offline Mertens from Motor City (United States) on 2006-01-31 14:28 [#01831331]
Points: 2064 Status: Lurker | Followup to fleetmouse: #01831186



Sorry fleetmouse, but I think you're thowing the baby out
with the bathwater. What is so anti-intellectual about the
idea that we can reliably detect the effects of
intelligence? How is it reveling in ignorance to think that
life might be a product of bio-engineering? And if
intelligent design is inherently religious, exactly which
one is the concept itself endorsing?


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2006-01-31 14:48 [#01831368]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to Mertens: #01831331



How is it reveling in ignorance to think that life might
be a product of bio-engineering?


Because there's not one iota of positive evidence for
that conjecture.

What do you call it when you follow around scientists doing
real, primary research and heckle them that they haven't
answered every question of origins perfectly? Do you call
that science? Because I sure as fuck don't.


 

offline Dannn_ from United Kingdom on 2006-01-31 15:04 [#01831401]
Points: 7877 Status: Lurker | Followup to evolume: #01831244



Well peer review is a good system but it's still fallible...
more to the point is that no scientific conclusion is
complete without it's methods and the other conclusions it
relies on. Peer review comes in because not everyone can
read/understand any given research paper. What's really
important for science to be of any use is logical and
exhaustive experimenting. Any valid conclusion will admit
it's shortcomings but they are likely to narrow down the
possibilities, and that's all we can really ask for because
there is no other way to find facts.


 

offline evolume from seattle (United States) on 2006-01-31 15:17 [#01831415]
Points: 10965 Status: Regular | Followup to Dannn_: #01831401



infallible, no.

but yeah good system. people's careers and funding relies
on publishing data. publishing data sorta hangs your career
and funding in the hands of your peers. some people have
gotten away with publishing bad data, but in the end, every
published experiment must be reproducible, and when somebody
tries to reproduce a bad experiment, they can show that the
original conclusions were bogus. This is pretty much what
my lab does. we look at genetic findings in the literature,
then we reproduce the experiments using much larger sample
groups. then we publish whether we confirmed the theory or
disproved it. we do good work and get plenty of funding
because of it.


 

offline plimtaxil from Mom's box on 2014-07-31 14:01 [#02474622]
Points: 39 Status: Regular



DUBturbo, no.


 

offline drill rods from 6AM-8PM NO PARKING (Canada) on 2014-07-31 14:03 [#02474623]
Points: 1171 Status: Regular



DUBturbo is proof of intelligent design


 


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