Ok, Barabus - let's take the time, again, to walk through you posts:
1: Write very lengthy responses that take a lot of time to wade through.
You write a lot of things that are based on fundamental mistakes. Are you interested in dialogue or not?
2: Rarely directly address the point the poster you responded to made but rather derail the conversation onto whatever tangent you think will best make your point.
Every single point you've made, I have addressed directly. As to your criticisms below, I'll be more than happy to demonstrate how you missed MY point. As you missed it, I can certainly understand how you fail to see how it addresses your point.
3: Use big flowery words in an attempt either scare or confuse the person you are arguing with, or at a minimum, confuse the other readers into thinking you must know what you are talking about.
I'm pretty sure that none of the words I have used have been at all big or flowery. Your assumption of the ignorance of the readers of this board is telling. The fact that I use the names of the fallacies demonstrates my confidence in the competence of the reader. This little nugget here indicates your distain for them. Good to know you respect your audience, whom you have never addres, so much. Perhaps, considering that I have been here for years, I know something about these people that you don't.
4: Despite never answering questions asked of you, you claim that your own questions must be answered to your level of satification, otherwise your opponent must concede defeat.
I claim you must concede defeat when you dodge the question, not when you offer a weak answer. A weak answer is just that, an answer. A dodge is an evasion, which means that you do NOT have an answer. I've castigated fellow theologians for doing just that. It's not just you, Barabus (or whoever you are). It's what people do when they don't have a response.
Awfuly disengenuous. I dare say its awfuly close to breaking one of the commandments as well......but technically its not a lie, so you'll probably get off scott free.
And the ad hominems continue.
Okay, so you start off by stating that different bits of knowledge can be attained through different methods. Your first paragraph makes a good and correct point........but missed the point I was making. It appears as though you cherry picked which part of the discussion you wanted to read to make your point.
Oh, and a veiled ad hominem. At least you are subtle. Yes, I could be cherry picking, but more likely, I've read the work, have every confindence in j's argument thus far, and point out in this case where you have made a glaring mistake. In short, I am pointing out your philosophical errors, Babs. You can debate the rest with whomever you like.
The very last sentece is classic JAC3510, in which you attempt to belittle those who disagree with you as being inferior....in this case demonstrating ignorance. God cannot be prooven....not through science, not through history, not through philosophy. I don't wish to debate this with you. I've been there, done that, and have a project due in 10 days.
This is downright comical. Was that directed at YOU? Only if you believe that recognizing that the question of God's existence is philosophical, rather than scientific, "devalues the validity of the question." If you don't think it devalues the question, then you clearly are not demonstrating ignorance on the question. So, do you think it invalidates the question? If not, then don't get worked up over something that I've not said about you. You see, I haven't assumed anything about your personal views on this matter. Perhaps you should practice the same.
Though your grasp of the english language and ability to write are competent, I fail to see what point you are trying to make. What I got out of this was a few paragraphs of your support for philosophy, an argument against a case I never made, and an attempt to belittle opposing points of view. I'm starting to remember why I pretty much ignored this post.
Given your incorrect misreading of my previous point, I can see where you would have difficulty here. In that paragraph, I show why claiming that the nature of the question of God devalues its validity is self-refuting. If you make no such claim, then you can agree and move on. If you do make the claim, you have to deal with that issue.
Translation: "I rambled on for several paragraphs not really saying much and certainly not supporting my position. I'm pretty sure no one really understood what I was talking about, so I should add this little tag at the end."
Just sticking QED on the end of a proof doesn't make it valid.
No, I am applying the first paragraph that you admit makes a correct point. AGAIN, I will lay it out for you.
1. J claims evolution is unobservable, and therefore not scientific;
2. You claim that the belief in God is not observable, and therefore not scientific.
3. You continue to claim that if one cannot believe in evolution on the basis that it is not observable, one has no basis on which to believe in God.
4. I reply that you are conflating all types of fact with scientific fact. Again, one can reject evolution as a proper science, due to the fact that it is NOT observable and testable, and STIL Lhave a basis for believing in God, because the nature of the facts are different. Evolution is to be evaluated on scientific grounds (so we are told). God is to be evaluated on philosohical grounds. Thus, evolution MUST be observable and testable, whereas God does not have to be.
5. Thus, your counter response to J is INCORRECT.
6. Because it is incorrect, J's point is validated until you come up with a different counter argument.
All that is nothing more than what I have already said, and what you seem to have failed to grasp (or you grasp it and are simply ignoring it).
Okay, now we are back on topic. *shew* all that and finaly we get to discuss what the issue was to begin with. If you have forgotten after reading through your version of War and Peace, Jlay made the claim that we needed to directly observe a dog create something that is not a dog in order to validate Evolution. (I'll go under the assumption that he'd accept any organism creat a different species in a single generation). When I responded that this was an "unreasonable standard" he then responded "being testable and observable is unreasonable?"
If you haven't been able to follow, he clearly misunderstands the nature of science and what they consider to be "testable and observable." ID, for example is not testable or observable. Neither is the existence of God, which is why neither are considered science. As far as scientists are concerned, Evolution IS. Jlay (and potentialy you) are confusing the concept with "directly witnessing the event." Most people on this forum agree that the Earth is billions of years old. Is that testable and obervable? According to Jlay's standard, it is not.
Personally, I would have taken a different approach to your discussion regarding the dog, but the discussion is what it is. I'm not going to go back and change it. Now, J made a specific point, namely, that any organism (he used two, a dog and virus) should be able to produce something that is not the same organism if evolution is true. It should be testable and observable. You reply that "A dog will ALWAYS produce a dog. It will NEVER produce something that is not a dog," which is just silly. The whole premise of evolution is that organisms change over time. Certainly, it doesn't happen in one generation. The separation of populations and the slow mutation of the two in different ways may explain a lot, but in the strictest sense, dogs came from non-dogs (so says evolution). THAT is what should be observable, and it simply isn't.
The age of the earth, however, IS observable and testable just as much as the distance from the Sun to the earth is. Those are static measurements. We've seen the laws of physics at work. That is, we have observed and tested them. The same cannot be said about Darwinism. You have a picture you have painted, but that picture is NOT testable. Thus, it isn't science. It is a philosophy, and the sooner that is realized, the sooner it can be properly understood and debated.
So I made the correlation to a belief in God, which is not testable or observable either. I think its only reasonable that if he holds scientists to an extreme standard that handicaps what science is capable of determining, in this case requiring *direct observation* as demonstrated in the bulk of what he has written, then shouldn't he hold his belief in God to the same stadard.
No, that is not reasonable. The belief in God has NO CORRELATION to the claim that evolution is or is not scientific. Even if you take J's statements the way that you did, that he wants, in one generation, a dog to produce a Flargh by direct observation, that STILL does not make your statement reasonable. Yes, the evidence for God is not testable or observable (in the sense we are talking about), but from that, it does NOT follow that ALL KNOWLEDGE requires direct observation. That is the point you keep on missing.
Let's try it this way:
1. ALL knowledge is based on facts;
2. NOT ALL facts are of the same type (some are scientific, some are mathematical, some are historical, etc.);
3. Different types of facts are known through different means;
4. Therefore, knowledge is gained by different means.
If you claim evolution is a scientific issue, then it MUST be proven by scientific facts, which, by definition, means facts that are observable and testable. If those facts cannot be observed and tested, then evolution is NOT scientific. The belief in God is NOT based on scientific facts. It is based on PHILOSOPHICAL facts, which are NOT testable and observable. Thus, you central point here is mistaken, because you are confusing two different types of facts.
Or to simplify using your analogy......we know Lincoln gave the Gettysburg address through history (not science) but if Jlay was to apply teh same standard to the subject of history that he does to science, ie that it needs direct observation, then we could not reasonably state that Lincoln gave it because none of us saw it, historical evidence be damned.
No no no no no no no no. THIS is my point that you keep misunderstanding. It is exactly because Gettysburg is NOT a scientific fact that it does NOT have to be observable. Please note this:
ONLY SCIENTIFIC FACTS MUST BE TESTABLE AND OBSERVABLE, BUT ALL SCIENTIFIC FACTS MUST BE SO.
Thus, the same criteria does not apply to Lincoln or God. Thus, your counterpoint to J is simply WRONG.
In classic JAC3510 fashion, you simply belittle points made that you have no case against. What we've had so far is a sad attempt by a theologian to refute the Theory of Evolution. You've given me no reason so far to believe that you are any kind of expert on the matter, nor have you made any convincing argument other than to pull out a definition from a dictionary and then claim that the Theory of Evolution doesn't fall under that definition.
First off, this is a genetic fallacy. Regardless of whether I am a trained expert or not, arguments speak for themselves. To reject an based on the person giving it is fallacious.
Second, there is not a single word of belittlement in the words which you quoted. That was in response to your saying:
- What you are suggesting is that the overwhelming amount of evidence that would take a small library to fill is all one giant coincidence. The body of evidence as a whole simply can't be discussed in a couple of paragraphs on an internet forum. As I have typically come to expect, any time a pertinent example is given......which, mind you, is but one small example encompassing a single paragraph from this small library.....the same counter arguemnt is given, that being that there could be another explanation for whay that one piece of evidence alone does not lead to clonclude the reality of evolution.
My point is that, contra you (if I read you correctly - it was rather hard to follow your syntax), the overwhelming body of evidence has to be looked at one at a time. If a counter argument can be found for each one (and there are for), then the whole body of evidence is as overwhelming as a whole body of bad arguments. You can't lump a LOT of bad arguments together to form one overwhelming big one.
Yet somehow it looks like science to me. Maybe I don't know what science is.......despite having a degree in it. Maybe my Ameircan University education has failed me. Perhaps had I received my degree in theology I would be better prepared to understand why the study of evolution fails under the rules of science. Maybe at the same time I would also understand why ID IS a viable field of study.
Maybe you don't? I don't know. I gave you a definition of science that you said was wrong, even though it is echoed Britannica.
I appreicate your degree in science, but what you need to understand is that you got a degree in a METHOD. Science and the philosophy of science are two different things. Science asks questions about the world. The philosophy of science asks questions about science. You can't use science to talk about what science is. That is a philosophical question. Perhaps if your degree was in philosophy, you would see that more clearly.
Oh won't deny that you are skilled in the art of debate. You and I can sit here and argue about whether or not teh study of Evolution is *real* science, but neither one of us is a scientist in that field. So I think it is a very peritinent question to ask you that if the theory is not scientific, then why is it that all of the academies of science on the planet accept it as one? C'mon, JAC3510.....from a guy as smart as you I would at the very least expect you to support your position. All you have managed to do so far is display your misunderstanding of the field. At least give me a baseless conspiracy theory....or *something.*
Again, you miss the point. Being a scientist in a field does not qualify me to say if that field is science. Being a specialist in a field means only that I have learned the methods of that field. The nature of that field and its classification is a philosophical question.
Now, I've already answered whey all the academics think that evolution is science. I'll address your reply to that below.
<watch this>
If you can't, then you'll have to conced the point.
You are correct (hey, you are learning! Maybe you aren't just a preacher after all . . .
) And I can, and already did in my previous post, although you missed the point again. I'll make it clearer below.
Did you just figure you'd throw this in there to score some points. Maybe you should elaborate exaclty where this happened. As far as I can tell, it never happend. My best guess is, especially since this was in the post where you wrote this, you think this is a Tu Quoque fallacy:
You are going to have to explain yourself, because to the best of my knowledge, that is not remotely a Tu Quoque fallacy. A Tu Quoque would have been if my own line of reasoning was questioned, and I turned around and told Jlay that he did the same thing. ie, I would have written:
"How can you question MY standard for MY belief when you do the same thing"
But that's not what I asked. I asked him why his own belief system was inconsistent. It wasn't meant to prove that either belief system was correct or incorrect. I was merely questioning how he manage to pick and choose which beliefs require a high degree of scrutiny and skepticism and others a low degree. I'll admit that BOTH of his lines of reasoning may be faulty.
No, that's not where the fallacy was made. I ALREADY explained it. Here, let me just quote myself:
- I said quite a bit more than that. jlay made a specific point as to evolution's lack of observability and testability, the hallmarks of the physical sciences. Your rather weak response to that objection was to claim that belief in God is not observable or testable, and therefore, he had the same problem (hence, the tu quoque, as if proving jlay had a problem would resolve your own).
In other words, J pointed out a problem in your view, and you pointed out that he had the same problem. In your own reply to me, you make a BIG point of that. Note again, here, you said: "I made the correlation to a belief in God, which is not testable or observable either." See the word "either" there? You said, "So evolution isn't testable by your definition? Well guess what? Neither is God!"
Tu quoque.
And this is called the strawman argument. Perhaps you are familiar with that as well? Any other arguments I didn't make that you'd like to refute with some flowery language? Maybe a line of reasoning that I'm not using that you'd like to spend 4 or 5 paragraphs on why its invalid......only to cap it off with something like, "So, as it stands, your line of reasoning is invalid. You are irrational."
That's not a strawman. It's just a statement of fact. A strawman is a version of your argument that I make on my own to tear down and thereby claim victory of your argument. I did no such thing in the words you quoted. I simply stated a fact: fallacious arguments are irrational. People that make judgments based on irrational arguments are irrational, because it means that they are making judgments without reason.
That's a judgment of your position. Not a counter argument.
Now, how is your argument irrational? I've shown repeatedly. Your response to J committed the tu quoque fallacy, and it was also based on a false premise, namely, that all knowledge is based on scientific fact. It was, then, BOTH invalid (the fallacy) AND unsound (the false premise).
JAC3510, this is about all I really have time for. This is exactly why I didn't engage you in the first place. I have to spend pages and pages and pages refuting your bad arguments one at a time. You typically respond with more of the same. Its just not worth it. I don't have the time nor do I really care. You seem to get off on bumping around from forum to forum engaging people in this way. Have you not landed a preacher gig yet?
I've been at this forum longer than just about anyone here (second, I think, only to K . . . did I miss anyone?). Anyway, you can't expect to go around making logically invalid arguments and not expect to get called on it. Sorry if you don't like that. I'm glad you know some things about the mechanics of your scientific field, whatever it is. Hey, we need people with your knowledge. But that doesn't mean you know anything about how to think about the fields. And you are consistently showing that you misunderstand that aspect.
So amongst all of the babble, the ranting, the tactical gymnastics, the strawmen, the misaplication of logical fallacies, and the flowery language, I'll leave you with one simple point:
JAC3510, who has no formal training in the sciences, thinks that the academies of science don't know what science is.
Again, there is a difference on the question of WHAT science is and HOW to make measurements and create theories. The former is philosophy. The latter is science.
Again -
I am the one who gave a valid definition of science, which YOU rejected. MY defintion is backed by Britannica. YOU rejected that. Not me. That tells me a great deal about who understands what science is better.
You still didn't answer my question. My question had nothing to do with Richard Dawkin's personal philosophy which he may or may not use Evolution (or abiogenesis) to support. My question is specifically about the Theory of Evolution. Why is it that thet theorym which you claim is not science, is accpeted by the academies of science.
Can I draw a conclusion by your continual dodge?
By your labeling it a dodge, I can certainly draw a conclusion about your interest in interacting with ideas (I'll choose to look at it as your interest, rather than ability here . . . benefit of the doubt).
Now, my reference to Dawkins had nothing to do with abiogenesis. As I myself said: "Since I'm just a theologian who doesn't understand science (despite my proof to the contrary), let me quote someone who answers this question themself who DOES understand science and Darwinism."
You asked why people accept evolution as science when I claim it is not. Now, why should I put words in their mouth when they give me their own words? Are you saying that I know their reasons better than they do? That, my friend, is called research. It is called using primary, rather than secondary, sources. You can feel free to tell Dawkins that he doesn't understand science. That is fine. I am still going to reply that the reason HE accepts it as science is because HE accepts the worldview REGARDLESS OF THE EVIDENCE. That is, he accepts it for PHILOSOPHICAL REASONS, precisely the point I've been making all along.
As for any worldview that someone may use evolution to support, it does not matter if it is correct of incorrect or whether it is philosphical, scientific, mathematical, or historical.......it has nothing to do whatsoever with the Theory itself. The theory is either valid or invalid despite what people use that information for.
When the scientist tells you that he accepts the worldview REGARDLESS of the evidence, then it has everything to do with it. Furthermore, as any philosopher of language, science, or history can tell you, one's worldview has a massive impact on how one views and catagorized evidence. Your not seeing that says something about your understanding of philosohy, not my understanding of science.
Your argument reminds me of the last 30 minutes of Expelled where the case was made that Darwinism lead to the application of Eugenics in Nazi Germany. A) it did not, but more appropriately B) that has no more bearing on the validity of the theory than dropping a bomb on Hiroshima has on nuclear physics (well....at least I should state that the danger of killing people doesn't mean that nuclear physics must be wrong).
Wheteher (A) is true, you are correct about (B). But you didn't ask me if evolution was VALID. You asked me why so many scientists accept it as science if it is not. I gave you the answer from their own mouth.
Nevetheless, thanks for posting as your response displays the same irrational fear of knowledge that I have seen among many other religious zealots. Yes, understanding the Theory of Evolution *could* lead someone to a Godless world view. I personaly think Jesus will forgive, but if they be damned to hell for their loss of faith, it would be falacious reasoning to say that those consequences should make you conclude that it musn't be science.
I've never said anything about evolution leading to godlessness. There you go reading into my statements again. Further, I've never once mentioned my religion in this thread, which tells me that this entire time, you've rejected everything have said, or could say, out of hand on the basis of your labeling me a "religious zealot." That is, again a genetic fallacy.
You may understand how to DO science, Babs. But your understanding of WHAT science is or of philosophy generally is absolutely terrible.