DaveOT is right. Our coutries performance in scientific areas is terrible. I mean, I've taught people in a senior biochemistry course (as he knows) and I've seen it first hand. Its really fucking bad.
8/3/2005 2:28:14 PM
Good thing we're cutting down on Visas to foreign students.Oh..shit.
8/3/2005 2:56:41 PM
8/3/2005 3:08:14 PM
since when is an engineer not a scientist?just because they are more interested in the practical applications of science doesn't make them unscientific and not scientists.[Edited on August 3, 2005 at 3:23 PM. Reason : .]
8/3/2005 3:21:14 PM
^ I didn't say they were "unscientific" (since I don't believe in the term), I simply said they were not scientists. I define a scientist to be someone that uses empirical methods to investigate the natural world. If we define a scientist as simply someone who applies "scientific" knowledge, then it's hard to find folks who aren't scientists. Business managers are trained in and apply behavioral psychology, economic principals, and statistics for example. Just because they are more interested in applcation doesn;t not make them scientists does it? But this gets us far off the subject, which is what Armabond1 wanted I think. ---Can someone please tell me what is scientific? Or even what is not?[Edited on August 3, 2005 at 3:44 PM. Reason : ``]
8/3/2005 3:41:19 PM
you people are a bunch of morons
8/3/2005 3:54:50 PM
The whole irony of the situation is you can use agrument from uncertainty to "prove" everything is falsifiabile just as easily as you can prove everything isn't.So at the same time everything is unscientific and scientific, which is a bullshit argument which.... ahem... ADDS NOOOOOOOOO VALLUEEEEEEEEEEEEE[Edited on August 3, 2005 at 4:07 PM. Reason : ed]
8/3/2005 3:59:38 PM
yeah, observation and testing workthat's why this piece of crap is here for me to type onthat's why I can send data to y'allso does it really matter how any of it looks in theory?
8/3/2005 4:10:13 PM
8/3/2005 4:25:36 PM
How about this theory?
8/3/2005 4:39:54 PM
The whole argument is that you can't OBSERVE God creating the world or influencing human development (currently). Nor can you form an experiment to test the hypothesis that a god does or does not exist. Thats what we mean by falsifiable. You can hypothetically create a situation in which gravity would not work according to theory, which WOULD negate that theory.If someone can come up with an observation or experiment to test the existance of a superhuman being then people would shut up. Thats not to say that there isn't one, just that its not testable.[Edited on August 3, 2005 at 4:44 PM. Reason : ed]
8/3/2005 4:43:51 PM
8/3/2005 4:48:15 PM
Yeah, they would have to find a way to explain what happened. Which would involve tests, etc. I take back that it would negate the entire theory because thats not really correct.Same thing happened to Einsteins theory. I forget what exactly happened, but light patterns in space weren't exactly was relativity predicted. It was a few years ago.
8/3/2005 4:49:53 PM
and Newton's theory was refuted by observations of the moon...
8/3/2005 4:51:41 PM
8/3/2005 5:25:31 PM
^thats why religion is "faith based"
8/3/2005 5:35:13 PM
and there's not some "faith" basis for science? The whole premise of science is that everything we can observe is true and is actually happening. At the risk of leading into a "head in a jar" argument, I'd say that such a premise requires faith, especially if you look at how that premise could be false: a creator being who made everything and made it all look older than it actually was...thus, both religion and science have aspects of faith involved in them.
8/3/2005 5:57:07 PM
The only faith involved with science is that our perceptions of "reality" are accurate.
8/3/2005 6:01:06 PM
8/3/2005 6:10:07 PM
8/3/2005 6:40:26 PM
8/3/2005 6:45:19 PM
^gg
8/3/2005 8:23:49 PM
8/3/2005 9:26:06 PM
^ How does that illustrate that it's not required to assume that everything we can observe is true and is actually happening for science to be valid? Or is it that the term "science" is too broad?
8/3/2005 9:35:55 PM
What do you mean "science is valid"? Is Newtonian mechanics valid? Science is USEFUL. There's not a single true statement in any of the sciences. However, there're plenty of useful statements that can help you do lots of things.P.S. And the second paragraph wasn't meant to illustrate the first one. Sorry for the confusion. They are two separate points.[Edited on August 3, 2005 at 9:42 PM. Reason : ..]
8/3/2005 9:42:01 PM
^ Not i single true statement in ALL of the sciences? i find that a little hard to swallow.
8/3/2005 9:52:49 PM
I actually wondered what kind of idiot would argue ID as a scientific theory until I read some of the responses in this thread.
8/3/2005 9:57:40 PM
8/3/2005 10:45:13 PM
8/3/2005 10:52:12 PM
you can learn about creation stories in humanities classes, science is for ACTUAL sciences.
8/3/2005 10:53:19 PM
8/4/2005 10:24:26 AM
And that, Zamboni, is why religion can't be taught in schools in this country.
8/4/2005 10:49:03 AM
You people are going to regret bringing this shit up again....
8/4/2005 1:06:08 PM
8/4/2005 2:05:37 PM
8/4/2005 2:14:14 PM
8/4/2005 3:34:12 PM
IN SOVIET RUSSIA, CREATIONISM TEACHES YOU!!111
8/4/2005 3:39:15 PM
8/4/2005 3:42:59 PM
aarons modus operandi is to annoy the crap out of everyone until they give up in disgust and then he claims a "win".
8/4/2005 3:52:15 PM
Or when somebody shows that he is a contradicting moron he simply ignores it and goes on with the snipet tactic.
8/4/2005 3:53:34 PM
8/4/2005 3:58:13 PM
Hey, Socksie, did you read that article I linked to?
8/4/2005 3:59:14 PM
8/4/2005 4:14:36 PM
WE DON'T EXIST. WHAT CHAIR? THERE IS NO SPOON. WE'RE MERELY A FIGMENT OF SOMEONE'S IMAGINATION. DUST IN THE WIND, ALL WE ARE IS DUST IN THE WIND.AD-FUCKING-INFINITUM.[Edited on August 4, 2005 at 4:18 PM. Reason : *]
8/4/2005 4:17:49 PM
Let me try and draw this out in crayon so aaronburro can understand...ID uses a negative argumentation. A negative argument uses the absence of something to prove something else is true. For example, a policeman sees no signs of a struggle in the house and thus concludes a murder took place elsewhere. In this example the policeman makes an assumption: the murder scene will show signs of a struggle.If you do not accept the assertion that a murder scene will show signs of a struggle, then you obviously will reject the policeman's logic. It's not a bad argument, but it does require that critical assumption. This is where my argument against ID originates...Intelligent Design makes a critical assumption. It assumes that if modern science can't explain the origins of a certain phenomena, then an all-powerful ominpotent being (God) must have designed it that way. My question then is simple: WHY?Why is God must be the one to explain these "irreducible complexities?" What if aliens from another world came and seeded earth with life? The real assumption is that if modern science can't explain the origins of a certain phenomena, then these phenomena were created by an outside source. THAT is a better assumption, but even that assumes too much. Why?Modern science couldn't explain the Grand Canyon until humans understood the concept of erosion. Modern science couldn't explain gaps and variation in fossil layers until humans understood techtonic activity. Modern science couldn't explain lightning until humans discovered electric charge and atmospheric environments.Modern science hasn't been able to explain a lot of things over the years, but it has been explaining MORE. Why is all of the sudden should we take science as it is now and draw the line between the explained and unexplained? Humans haven't ventured outside our solar system. The depths of the ocean are equally unknown. Scientists have named, recorded, and catalogued but a FRACTION of Earth's species. How can we be so presumptuous to believe that unexplained phenomena will stay unexplained?You can teach evolution. You can teach it's shortcomings. But you can't teach a theory that relies solely on the failures of another. Science has not and never will operate like that. Science demands evidence, and what evidence is there for ID? Just that evolution doesn't explain anything, and a religious/philosophical belief in a higher being. Is this science? Is it science to base a theory on the absence of evidence and theological conjectures?NO
8/4/2005 4:17:53 PM
8/4/2005 4:20:12 PM
GoldenViper, Sorry, didn't know that was ment for me. Just read it. It's a good article and a good idea. I've seen a similar argument in Philip Kitcher's book "Abusing Science". If there is a candidate for seperating "science" and "pseudo-scientific", this is probably the best. But, personally, I have my reservations. Here is a list of my concerns:1) It might dismiss some fields of inquiry as unscientific that we normally consider scientific, such as cosmology. The universe (as far as we know) has been only created once and we cannot we reproduce this act of creation in a lab. As such it would make formulating and testing novel predictions very difficult. We are mostly left trying to fit our theories of how the universe began to a set of already known facts, which would be unscientific according to this criteria. 2) I don't like the idea of putting so much weight on predictions. Certainly, some vry bad theories have made some very good predictions. Chinese accupuncture for example arguably made some pretty good predictions on certain types of pain releif based on some very bad theory. I don't see why the same couldn't be true in the future of novel predictions. We could possibly make good predictions with theories that aren't true. 3) Doesn't explainatory power count for something? Shouldn't science be also devoted to making accurate explainations of natural phenomia and not just make successful predictions?[Edited on August 4, 2005 at 4:53 PM. Reason : ``]
8/4/2005 4:51:15 PM
8/4/2005 5:01:46 PM
8/4/2005 5:16:28 PM
^
8/4/2005 5:46:53 PM