Theres a thread already. But id like a response from the author or anyone who can tell me what he is thinking.
9/16/2005 4:27:01 PM
in this response to a readers remarks;
9/16/2005 4:27:31 PM
sounds like he had a basic philosophical thought and explained itwow, great
9/16/2005 4:31:58 PM
evolution is science, not philosophy. thats the whole point. you cant refute science on the grounds of philosophical conjecture.i see no reason why point masses can spin, yet they do. we dont refute the existence of electron spins , though.[Edited on September 16, 2005 at 4:33 PM. Reason : -]
9/16/2005 4:33:06 PM
you cant prove anything everis that the answer you're looking for? cause its the right answer
9/16/2005 4:35:32 PM
no
9/16/2005 4:38:26 PM
im just saying in general you cant prove a lot of things beyond a shadow of a doubt...if the person wants concrete evidence of the source of the big bang, hes shit out of luck...i tend to believe things that make the most sense and seem the most likely at the time, while acknowledging i could be dead wrong
9/16/2005 4:41:18 PM
of course -- thats the nature of science.we go with the evidence; we select the best. [Edited on September 16, 2005 at 4:56 PM. Reason : -]
9/16/2005 4:55:19 PM
9/16/2005 5:53:04 PM
I did not think Underwood was that stupid.
9/16/2005 6:15:38 PM
Smath's evolution thread(s) are better
9/16/2005 7:43:58 PM
fuck daniel underwood
9/16/2005 7:46:58 PM
9/16/2005 8:41:34 PM
I actually kinda like a few of his columns. Hes conservative but I agree with a lot of the points he makes about the social ways of undergraduate life. If I thought he was a complete idiot I wouldnt have asked for a response.
9/16/2005 10:34:19 PM
Whoa... I had no idea this column -- being nearly a year old -- might still attract attention.Were I to re-write this column, there would be a few things worded differently.Yes, I'm quite aware that evolutionary theory deals with change, not creation. Yes, I'm quite aware that evolutionary theory and various theories of the origin of the universe and/or life are to be treated separately.The thrust of my argument, however, did not deal with origins. I tried to build a case -- both contingent upon certain assumptions of the reader and constrained by a bothersome 900 word limit -- that, if one accepts a few, as I called them, "experiential realities," this person cannot accept a naturalistic, non-theistic theory of evolution (assuming, of course, that evolution is to be held guilty for spawning mankind).And now, for the quote that has bothered nearly half the NC State campus, for perhaps good reason:
9/17/2005 1:08:14 AM
Josh8315 wrote:
9/17/2005 1:11:22 AM
It would be great if the author of this column could just stick to things he's knowledgeable about. It doesn't take much research (or education into the subject) to find 'proof' of evolution. But I suppose you don't need much of real research or facts when all you want to do is argue philosophical ramblings.
9/17/2005 1:32:42 AM
Thanks for responding, so my grand point is; Most people dont believe life was created due to utter random chance, and people like yourselves accuse people who believe in evoution of that pervert the discourse and rally the radical extremists. Thats why being very clear about who you are arguing against is so important.So please, if you ever publish anything again on evolution or creatism or intellegent design, you must be very explicit about the terms you use, and you should define them in at least the introduction. [Edited on September 17, 2005 at 1:40 AM. Reason : -]
9/17/2005 1:36:15 AM
Eh, so what if it's all random chance? "Well I don't think my life is meaningless 'coz that makes me feel bad" - that's not much of an argument. And don't even get me started on the, "OMFG, rape and Hitler! RAPE AND HITLER!!111" part...
9/17/2005 2:53:13 PM
^yea, those are some of the most irrelevant arguments
9/17/2005 3:23:32 PM