The problem here is, I wouldn't say there is nothing but blackness when you die. No one can make that claim. We don't know what happens when you die. That is what I would tell my child. We don't know, nobody does. Some people believe X some people believe Y, but we don't have any evidence for it. If my child asked what I personally believe, I would probably compare it to what it was like before I was born, but again, nobody knows.moonstroller wrote: One day I told him that grandpa would not always be here with him and introduced the idea of death by mistake. My answer was I would go to heaven. He told his grandmother who decided this might be a bit heavy for him but he seemed settled with the idea but, wanted to know what heaven was.
I'm an agnostic by behavior,Jewish by choice and scientific minded by practice. Heaven is hard to explain to myself, much less a child. No matter your belief, most people use the heaven option to explain death to kids. It's considered a cold thing to say to a child, "...when you die, there is nothing but blackness....just nothingness." This can cause nightmares in children to say such a thing so even most atheists use the heaven idea.
I don't know about causing nightmares in children. Maybe? But teaching them about Heaven, and following that, Hell, certainly can.
True, faith can invoke hope. This faith can come from a number of different religions or spiritual ideas. We could then ask the question: is false hope better than no hope? What happens when the person with false hope discovers it was false? I would hope that most of us would be more interested in the truth above hope.moonstroller wrote: Faith is the power of spirituality to invoke hope in helpless situations. Hope has power in the mind to cause the body to heal itself, and ease the pain of death. Science has reveled material methods to do the same, but both methods are proven to work but not equally so.
I don't think the scientific community is boasting when it says "We don't know." Compared to the various religions which say they do.moonstroller wrote:Neither can boast that it has the corner on the question of from where did we come and to where are we going.
I disagree, but maybe I'm misunderstanding what you mean by "faith." Do you mean faith in a higher power? If that's the case, I don't need science to give me a reason to continue in life just as I don't need a higher power for a reason to continue in life.moonstroller wrote:There is room for both, faith and science, to continue to seek answers to our greatest questions.
To seek answers with science without faith is a futile expedition. It is meaningless. Science cannot give us reason to continue in life but faith can.
The rest of your posts I agree with on most parts. The parts I disagree with weren't that big of objections, and were more philosophical in nature.
We're working on itProinsias wrote:Any progress on whether hypothetical kids should be taken, or allowed to go, to church?
I proposed the idea (let me talk to the pastors and choose the church) to my girlfriend. She said she wanted to choose, so I didn't really get anywhere.
I don't know why you keep using the word "Darwinism." Geologists don't call themselves "Lyellists." Evolutionary biologists don't call themselves darwinists. Evolution isn't an idealogy. There is no -ism. There is no dogma. I've quoted what is meant by scientists when we refer to "facts" on several occasions. If you aren't going to read any of my responses, why even continue the conversation.jlay wrote:hmmmm. I was under the impression that u and others saw darwinism as a indisputable fact. My bad. Im good with that.Like I said, science never claims to know everything with absolute certainty. There are always going to be these assumptions (based upon the evidence).
Btw. Ive seen the fossils, the pictures, the renderings, etc. what I see are fully formed extinct species. The only facts being that they once lived and are now gone.
It's called a hypothesis. We can see insects using their wings for many different purposes today which gives us clues to how they may have developed in the past. As far as I can tell the first substantial record of insects was deposited from about 315 to 300 million years ago, by which time insects had evolved wings and a variety of other specialized structures. The evolution of insect wings is still a great question, but we do have some pretty good hypothesis.jlay wrote: OK, certain stoneflies use their wings to skim across the water. Great. Problem solved. Oh wait. How is that evidence for complex nerves, muscles and wings themselves arising from their absence? It isn't. Is it an explanation? Sure. But is the explanation evidence? No. It has to be taken on faith, and it HAS TO be taken with the presumption (faith) that it did happen. Is that really following the scientific method?
The premise of "we can't prove a specific evolutionary path every step of the way, and until we can do that, there are gaps! Therefore we need to hypothesize an intelligent designer to fill those gaps." There is continuous research filling in these gaps. Will the research fill all of them? Probably not, but again, this is no reason to dismiss evolution (or any other scientific theory) altogether. If we take a snapshot of any scientific discipline at any time, there are always going to be gaps in our knowledge. The presence of these gaps is not an indictment of the legitimacy of the discipline. A much more telling picture will not be a snapshot, but a look at the whole picture over time. Are those gaps static and intransigent? No, they are constantly shrinking.
Edit: Sandy hit the nail on the head.
jlay wrote:but no leg, fossil or otherwise.
Pierson5 wrote:I'm curious, what would you call these vestigial appendages? Flippers? Because it looks like they are a bunch of leg bones packed inside a whale to me. Let's hear your hypothesis. Are you claiming ignorance and saying you don't know (nothing wrong with that) or do you have evidence for a different hypothesis? I'm sure it is backed up with more evidence than what I have shown you.
It's not an appeal to authority. I never said he was correct because of who he is. I simply agree with his statement. ID was thrown out of court because it was unscientific and linked back to creationism. You give me a link from a ID website written by a pastor defending ID. You really think there is no agenda behind that?Reactionary wrote:That's not an answer. It's merely another appeal to authority. I want to know why ID is claimed to be religious. Unlike you, I'm satisfied only by arguments, not opinions.Pierson5 wrote:"We have concluded that it is not [science], and moreover that ID cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents," Jones writes in his 139-page opinion posted on the court's Web site."To be sure, Darwin's theory of evolution is imperfect. However, the fact that a scientific theory cannot yet render an explanation on every point should not be used as a pretext to thrust an untestable alternative hypothesis grounded in religion into the science classroom or to misrepresent well-established scientific propositions,"Reactionary wrote:Now, if someone could explain to me what Intelligent Design has to do with the separation of church and state...
http://www.c4id.org.uk/index.php?option ... &Itemid=31
Check question 5 specifically.
Jones' decision was based on the evidence presented to him. He concluded that ID has historical connections to creationism. There are very specific examples he cited such as the "Of Pandas and People" book. There were multiple drafts of this book available of which the earlier drafts used the word "creationism" (I think something like 150 times). The final draft was essentially a "search and replace" the word creationism with the word intelligent design. The timing was also very significant. This change occurred right after the legal case ended which stated creationism could not be taught in public schools. These are strategies employed by creationists. It doesn't matter if they morph their strategy from A to B to C, it is still creationism. If you want a more in depth explanation, watch the trial, read the judges conclusion.
Even so, for the sake of argument let's say ID isn't linked back to creationism. It isn't science! (If you disagree, see my closing paragraph) ID violates the ground rules of science by invoking supernatural causation. The argument that irreducible complexity, central to ID, employs the same flawed logical contrived dualism that doomed creation science in the 80's. And, ID's negative attacks on evolution have been refuted by the scientific community. The judge spent a lot of time writing about these issues. ID proponents are not simply presenting ID as science. They are trying to redefine science to include supernatural explanations. Every single ID defendant in the case admitted that there is no ID without supernaturalism. It does not therefore meet the conditional definition of science. The judge then goes on to explain why supernaturalism = religion and why it is not admissible in the halls of science. The 2 are incompatible. You can't change the rules of science, they are the way they are by necessity.
Jones went through the testimony on both sides and showed on every single point the plaintiff's expert witnesses (the defenders of evolution and science) absolutely crushed the ID proponents. The ID proponents committed logical fallacy after logical fallacy. The fact is, when you're in a court of law, where there are rules of evidence and logic and you are dealing with people who are experts in logic. Lawyers are, if nothing else, experts in logic. You can't get away with anything, and the judge saw through every single one of their misdirections, every single one of their illogical statements. This is what has happened in every creationism case that has gone to the high courts.
Like you said, we see more "advanced" species later in the fossil record. I never said it explained the mechanism....Reactionary wrote:Cool. But again, what does that have to do with evolution? We notice that more "advanced" species tend to appear later in the fossil record, but we don't see how those species allegedly turned into each other.
Because intelligent design DOES.Reactionary wrote:Evolution also says nothing about the existence of God, you admitted that yourself. So why bring up "fictional beings"?Pierson5 wrote:What does that have to do with anything? Evolution says nothing about the origin of life.Reactionary wrote:We likewise have no evidence of anything coming to being from nothing.Pierson5 wrote:4. Sure they can, we can make up any number of fictional beings to account for these. But we have no evidence of them, so they are dismissed.
What? Natural selection produces offspring with modifications...Reactionary wrote:Natural selection doesn't create anything, so what's the difference?Pierson5 wrote:.... Cars don't reproduce. There is no natural selection going on. This requires no designer.
How is it idealistic? No evidence = no reason to believe it.Reactionary wrote:Sounds so idealistic. I wonder if you really believe that.Pierson5 wrote:They are open minded if the evidence is there. You can soundly argument a case, but if it's not backed up with any evidence, there is no reason to believe it.Reactionary wrote:I know what you mean. A scientist, even if he was renowned, would be bashed if he published an article on, let's say, Intelligent Design, even if he soundly argumented his case. The issue is that a certain interpretation (evolution) is not allowed to be questioned, and anyone who does will be mocked and discredited. The modern day scientific circles aren't really famous for being open-minded, that was my point.
I'll take a look at it and address this next time.Reactionary wrote:How? Well, I don't think it's that complicated, Pierson. Atheism teaches that the brain is material. All the material, physical objects are prone to laws of physics and chemistry. So we can't really talk about free will, if our thoughts are chemical reactions in the brain. That's because chemical reactions, and/or electrical discharges, don't think. They just react according to the physical laws. What would then make our brain any different? Consciousness, reason, free will, it's all an illusion under atheistic materialism, which makes it a self-refuting worldview as it denies you the very instruments that you use to reach your conclusions.
http://www.bethinking.org/science-chris ... ralism.htm
I'll address this with the other one later.Reactionary wrote: so are you implying that God should throw an updated version of the Bible from the sky whenever dominant languages in the society change? Please.Why don't you look at things from another point of view? God gave the humans mental abilities to build computers and establish the Internet. So we can quickly and efficiently exchange information. Finally, "translation mistake of some guy 900 years ago" isn't a threat because all the translations are done after the original manuscripts, written long before that.
I knew when I was writing it I should have added a tidbit. I was going off of the majority here. Obviously there will be exceptions, but the vast majority of people who are born in a country with a certain religious ideology, adopt that ideology.Reactionary wrote:I don't live in the United States. What made you think that? I put my location on my profile, it's visible on the right side of my every post.Pierson5 wrote:You say to really reach in and study the Bible. Why not study the book of Islam, why not the Upanishads and discover the truths behind those? Is it because we live in the United States? The same interpretation variations and apologetics exist within all these religions.
Good idea.Reactionary wrote:By the way, I agree, why not study other religions? Let's examine them thoroughly and see which has the most credibility. If you want to discuss them, post a thread about it.
Haha! I love how I get criticized for committing supposed straw man fallacies and then you commit one in the same post you criticized me. This was on the topic of abortion. If a full grown human being was hooked up to you and using your body to live (regardless if you put him in that situation) he would be violating your bodily autonomy. Does this mean I think that all human beings are violators of other human's bodily autonomy? No, that is a straw man.Reactionary wrote:Wow, please tell me about how you're concerned about children's minds. I don't know, however, how old they have to be for you to recognize them as humans. Last time I heard, you considered them violators of their mothers' bodily autonomy.Pierson5 wrote:Woh, I never said anything about intellectual legitimacy. If Sandy brought up a disagreement with something I said, we would engage in conversation. We both trust the scientific community, that's something we have in common. I was expecting this community to have a similar mindset (based off of the title of the site), that's all. It's perfectly fine that you don't (as long as you aren't pushing the "distrust" to be taught to my future children )
I don't see why you bring this up, this is also a red herring argument. If you want to continue talking about that, post in the ethics and morals section. I'll get around to it when I have time. Stay on topic.
I've explained why it is linked to creationism.Reactionary wrote:Nobody mentioned religion in the paragraph. Once again you're attacking straw men. ID is not religion. You failed to prove otherwise, instead you provided me with a quote. Maybe next time?Pierson5 wrote:Fear has nothing to do with it. It has to do with trust. It's not idolization. You are correct. Humans are not infallible, mistakes are made, people are biased. In the scientific community, however, if a scientist is found out to be biased, it ruins their career. If mistakes are made, their paper gets corrected. The scientific community is a self correcting community. This is THE BEST method we currently have for deciphering truth. We do our best to minimize or eliminate these errors and biases. I have not seen anyone propose a better method. I have not seen a scientific answer, however inadequate, for which now a better answer is a religious one.
Experts build a lifetime of knowledge, not in isolation but in concordance with other scientists. As was said before, trusting the opinion of someone who accurately represents the preponderance of evidence is not an appeal to authority, it is using an expert by proxy to state a position on the evidence. Surely not everyone has the time to research all of the topics themselves in science. It would be hard to learn all of the ins and outs of evolution if that was not your field or if you do not have the time, but knowing the basic facts and the weight of evidence behind evolution is enough to state my case. The same can be said about any discipline in science.Reactionary wrote:My tendency to see all humans as imperfect and emotional, therefore biased. Again, I don't idolize anyone, and the fact that someone wears a lab coat and has a PhD doesn't mean that I'll accept anything the person says. Even if a community consisted of such persons agree with him/her. I hope I'll earn a PhD one day (and I'm working hard - so far successfully - to progress intellectually) but I have no illusions - I don't hope that a degree will make me more objective or more important than I currently am. And I'm afraid that you haven't realized that yet, unfortunately. When I don't see the evidence, I'll doubt. I'll ask questions and if I don't get adequate answers, I'll look for an alternative explanation. I haven't got adequate answers from the evolutionist camp. When I was 12, I read through my biology textbook and wondered, "Why are there so many maybe-s, might-s, likely-s, probably-s...?" And it's not much different today, I'm afraid.Pierson5 wrote:I have no reason to distrust the scientific consensus. What are yours?
Regarding the "maybes, mights, etc..." These are in every discipline in science. Chemistry, Physics (is a big one), etc.. I still don't see why you single out evolution.
Just out of curiosity, which discipline are you hoping to earn your PhD?
5 years? I don't recall saying that. It's only 2 actually. I did mention, however, that my major is not evolutionary biology. It's general biology. I have spent only a few months going over evolution in my biology courses and texts. I trust the examination of evidence in the frontier science in evolution (I'll explain below). The evidence presented to me during the short time during my undergraduate (and from what I've read about in my spare time) led me to conclude the core concept of evolution is fact. I never said I wasn't convinced. I don't know how you came to that conclusion from what I said.Reactionary wrote:In other words, you've been studying biology for... five years (if I remember it right), and you don't have any conclusive evidence that you can demonstrate to us, which should convince us that evolution is a fact? You trust the examination... so you're not even convinced yourself?? And you wonder why we mistrust??Pierson5 wrote:However, the scientific community does have very sufficient evidence to show evolution occurred and have classified it as fact. I trust the scientific community's examination of the evidence.
Oh my, this is worse than I thought... At least thanks for being honest, if nothing else.
There are CORE ideas in science. They have been very well tested, they are major theories, major explanations. We use these concepts to explain the natural world in many ways. Heliocentrism is here to stay. Astronomers are not debating if the planets really revolve around the sun. This is a well accepted scientific concept. So is cell theory, atomic theory, inflationary theory and evolutionary theory (descent with modification/common ancestry) are all core ideas in science.
Around these core ideas are the FRONTIER ideas of science. This is what's going on in journals that are produced and work that is being done in laboratories and in the field. This is where we are testing new ideas and seeing what ideas fit with the core ideas. Some of these frontier ideas will become core ideas. Many aren't going to work out. A lot of the questions you guys are asking (mechanisms, drift, patterns) fall in this category. Some of these frontier ideas end up out in the FRINGE.
FRINGE ideas are the third concentric section. Scientists aren't really spending a lot of time on fringe ideas. These are ideas that in some way conflict with the core ideas of science. The probability that these ideas are actually going to lead to something useful with regards to our understanding of the natural world is very low. These are things like ESP, telekinesis and yes, intelligent design. Now, it is possible for fringe ideas to become frontier ideas to become core ideas. A classic example from geology is plate tectonics. The idea of continental drift was a fringe idea in science. Then, sea floor spreading was discovered, a mechanism for how the continents could slide around on the shelves was understood pretty well and the idea of continental drift and plate tectonics became a frontier idea of science and ultimately a core idea in science. If the evidence is presented, the scientific consensus will admit they were wrong and accept the new idea.
My point here is, if you think ID has any chance at becoming a core idea in science do the work. If you disagree with my points above and you want ID to become a legitimate science, the burden of proof is on you to show that you have something that helps us understand the natural world. Tell me a way in which ID can be subjected to a scientific test, NOT a test of evolution. A common theme I see here is false dualism (if it's not evolution, then it's ID, which is the false dichotomy logical fallacy.