And yet strangely compelling . . .xelabale wrote:Round and round we go - this thread is retarded.
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And yet strangely compelling . . .xelabale wrote:Round and round we go - this thread is retarded.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Nicely done on the "sarcastic dodge".Neoteny wrote:Your mom.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Oh stupid me. I thought it was because you had no answer.Neoteny wrote:Abiogenesis is a bit of a distraction from a discussion of evolution.
Neoteny wrote:Your mom.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Then that would make me .......!Neoteny wrote:I have an answer.
Neoteny wrote:Your mom.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
NOT EVEN CLOSE!daddy1gringo wrote:Players, come on. It's out of place for Martin to give his opinion on this, but OK for you to throw in your shot as if it's the last word on the subject? Really I'd come to expect better from you.PLAYER57832 wrote:This is completely off topic, so answer in another thread if you wish to continue, but how is putting forward a website on a man who created an idea that permeates our entire real scientific world, that is only controversial in a few religious groups, comparable to a political ideology that is based on loose data?Martin Ronne wrote:However, creating a website dedicated to the promotion of darwinism and calling everyone else uneducated is for the greater good, right?Snorri1234 wrote:Propaganda is not the same as advertising. Promoting an idea to further your cause is not the same as "selling" something.
If I create a site dedicated to promoting creationism and calling everyone else gaynoobfags, I am not selling anything but spreading an idea to invade minds.
The scientific debate is not as one-sided as you make it out. This very statement shows that your point is the result of propaganda:This is a great piece of circular logic. All the "real" scientists are evolutionist because you reject all of the creationist scientists as "real" since they believe that unscientific theory. How do we know it's unscientific? Well, none of the "real" scientists believe in it! Kind of begs the question....our entire real scientific world,
First, NO SCIENTIST, be they a paleontologist (as those who study fossils are now called) or in another field assumes much of anything. The study of science is precisely about NOT making assumptions. The reasons there are strict methodologies are to get around biases. They certainly did not start out with any "pre-supposed model" as you claim. Just the opposite. IN FACT, up until Darwin came along, the assumption of most was that the earth was young. I won't get into the religious aspects here since Widowmakers has defined this as a non-theistic evolution thread. However, while Genesis time was always historically considered to be inexact, that "days" meant an undefined segment of time, people in the Middle Ages (European culture anyway) had a hard time imagining anything like a million year old Earth. It was just beyond their scope of reasoning. So were a lot of things .. like the idea that , that the Earth could revolve around the sun, that the earth could be round, or even that people could be of differant color, have very differant cultures and still be intelligent.daddy1gringo wrote:Evolutionists and creationists both examine the fossil evidence with the supposition that it fits into a particular model, and presuppose certain processes involved. The only difference is that the creationists admit it, and so are actually more objective. You just happen to agree with one of the sets of assumptions and not the other.
Not true, though I suppose you have been taught this is true. What IS true is that the pictures were made by an artist who got a lot of stuff incorrect. That was known even when he made the drawings, but since people had nothig better, they used them and somewhere along the line the little "detail" about their inaccuracy was missed. They are close enough for a lot of purposes, but not scientific proof of anything. What is also true is that there are many of some fossils, very few of others. The number of hominids (things that look like humans loosely) has grown, not shrunk. And, some initial thoughts/theories have been shown wrong.Have you ever seen those frequently spoofed drawings showing a parade starting w/ Ramapithecus, going through Austrailopithecus, Neanderthal, and Cro-magnon (with other interlopers that change from time to time) to modern man? Every one of the marchers has been shown to be either just a man, just an ape, or just a hoax. Not one remains.
Again, you grossly misunderstand and misrepresent what biologists actually say and make some pretty big assumptions. "a whole system has to be in place" is just ridiculous. A system evolves as a whole while the species within evolve. Nothing happens all at once.On both sides, there are things that are not known and have to be filled in with guesses, but the evolutionists have to do at least as much tap-dancing to explain things. For example, take the physical and behavioral adaptations necessary for flight. It makes no sense for one of them to begin developing without the whole system being in place.
Cute, except I had already started on a response to Martin Rowe here. I had it written when my two year old got up from his nap and hit the wrong button before I had saved it... stupidity on my part, yes. Disrespect, no.daddy1gringo wrote: Oh, Players, this whole subject is off topic for the thread. If you want to answer it, you should do it in another thread. (\;-/)
PLAYER57832 wrote: Of course, you were never taught any of this because it would not fit with your teachers ideas and beliefs.
Not true, though I suppose you have been taught this is true.
Had you really been taught about Evolution, and not just Creationism, you would know this.
Because there's a proposed law that would give the Institute for Creation Research in Texas the right to grant degrees without state oversight. Which means you could have a certified MA of Biology (or physics, or whatever field) who uses the bible to verify or falsify his theses but not the scientific method.HapSmo19 wrote:Why does this matter again?
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
and because roughlyt thirty states now require that this be taught in science classes. Because by the time this issue actually hits your local school board, the Creationists have already amassed lawyers, experts and multipl signatories.MeDeFe wrote:Because there's a proposed law that would give the Institute for Creation Research in Texas the right to grant degrees without state oversight. Which means you could have a certified MA of Biology (or physics, or whatever field) who uses the bible to verify or falsify his theses but not the scientific method.HapSmo19 wrote:Why does this matter again?
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/tlodocs/ ... 02800I.htm
daddy1gringo wrote:While we're talking about dispelling myths, these made me laugh.
PLAYER57832 wrote: Of course, you were never taught any of this because it would not fit with your teachers ideas and beliefs.
Not true, though I suppose you have been taught this is true.
Had you really been taught about Evolution, and not just Creationism, you would know this.
Um... what do you know about who my teachers were?
IF you majored in biology or geology, that might be relevant. A general ed class, even at the college level, often just barely brushes on these issues.I can guarantee that the teachers at my public schools and the Professors at the University of Connecticut, from which I have my degree, were not fundamentalist-fanatic creationists.
Except you missed most of what I said, about my field being biology, about my having seen fossils .. not just those Creationists try to present, but the "inconvenient" ones they ignore.It seems that you have determined what is true based on your preconceived ideas and summarily rejected evidence that doesn't fit in with them. Hmm, that sounds familiar.
Fine, I'd love to see your evidence. Join me in Real U... or keep posting here.Another problem with your mythology that if I reject evolution it must be that I unquestioningly parrot religious indoctrination, is that I used to believe in theistic evolution, that God created by means of evolution. I changed my opinion based on the fossil evidence. If evolution were proven, I would go back to believing in it, and it would not trouble my faith a bit. I would have to revise my theology about the connection between physical and spiritual death, but it would not be the first , nor probably the last time I made such a change.
Mine as well ... bring it on!Really, there is so much question-begging and bad logic in your post that I'll have to come back and deal with it later. That is MY field
To believe Creationism, as put forth by the Creation Institute, is to do away with almost all of physics, chemistry, biology, Geology, etc.GabonX wrote:An educated population is essential to having a functioning democracy, but this particular issue has no relevance. The time could better be spent teaching more useful and less divisive topics.
The more you talk, the more I like him.PLAYER57832 wrote:If you seriously believe it is not a serious issue, at least in the US, you have not had any real exposure to it. Understand, roughly 25% of the Bush administration believed this way. It was a major reason why the US is so far behind in Global warming legislation.