It's not about being anti-christian, it's about keeping public education secular. Redguard said it best, imo, lemme find his post.EDIT: here it is
12/20/2005 3:57:37 PM
junk science....
12/20/2005 3:59:28 PM
12/20/2005 4:02:44 PM
how about junk arguments
12/20/2005 4:03:34 PM
How dare we teach anything that we are not 100% sure of?From now all, all the books I'm reading are blank.
12/20/2005 4:15:52 PM
12/20/2005 4:16:32 PM
12/20/2005 4:19:26 PM
i love evolution so much i took ANT 251 three times
12/20/2005 4:24:17 PM
MICRO AND MACROmicro is 100% factmacro is not 100% factpretty damn simple
12/20/2005 4:35:23 PM
^ ding ding /thread
12/20/2005 4:36:19 PM
hey soapbox, you lost a threadplz to come and get it
12/20/2005 4:49:29 PM
ITS A WAR ON CHRISTMAS
12/20/2005 5:48:55 PM
i didn't read the whole thread, so i may have missed it, but...am i the only one in here who realizes that intelligent design (creationism) and evolution are the same thing? christians who have a problem with evolution are idiots...scientists who dismiss the possibility of intelligent design are also idiots
12/20/2005 6:00:58 PM
^THANK YOUneither science nor religion can answer every question fully, we need both. But both camps are so entrenched right now that they have a hard time working together. Not much has changed since the Enlightenment on that front...[Edited on December 20, 2005 at 6:04 PM. Reason : ]
12/20/2005 6:04:27 PM
Einstein also said"I refuse to believe that God plays dice with the universe"
12/20/2005 6:08:29 PM
Science, religion, same shit different johns.
12/20/2005 6:14:42 PM
^^ true...but that was to niels bohr in reference to quantum mechanics concerning probability...completely different subject, and i don't really see how anyone could see evolution as God playing dice (the issue of quantum mechanics was about laws of nature and the fundamental construction of the universe as a whole...see the difference?)btw, i'm not trying to be sarcastic or condescending[Edited on December 20, 2005 at 6:14 PM. Reason : arrows]
12/20/2005 6:14:44 PM
12/20/2005 6:18:33 PM
faith + grace take you to godreason takes you to scienceone can be taught in church, the other in school, no reason to claim that they are mutually exclusive.
12/20/2005 6:19:56 PM
^^ wow...you told me...i guess you win, then? oh, wait, no, you've contributed nothing[Edited on December 20, 2005 at 6:20 PM. Reason : arrows]
12/20/2005 6:20:17 PM
My Philosophy of Science class taught theories of intelligent design tooOMG no!I'm sure some of you have taken that class. He spends the first half of it bashing Creationism and all the atheists are all like "Fuck yes, damn religion" and then the last part of the class arguing intelligent design theories like "Argument by Design" and the camera shit. Anyway, I don't think banning any theory like that is being intellectually open-minded. Sure you should ban stuff that's outright wrong like teaching that natural selection doesn't exist, but there's nothing wrong with noting the fact that many people believe it is a process divinely inspired by a higher, omnibenevolent, omniscient being.
12/20/2005 6:24:49 PM
BUT NOT IN A SCIENCE CLASSchrist jesus
12/20/2005 6:27:07 PM
Take the class, its a mix of science and philosophy douchebagbtw, turn off the caps, we all know you're speaking loudly...because you're an asshole[Edited on December 20, 2005 at 6:28 PM. Reason : .]
12/20/2005 6:27:32 PM
do you have any idea what the case was about??it wasnt about "philosophy of science" classesgo read
12/20/2005 6:29:23 PM
^^ dr. austin? phi340?[Edited on December 20, 2005 at 6:30 PM. Reason : arrows]
12/20/2005 6:29:47 PM
YesAnd btw, it is about taking the theory of intelligent design out of the classroom. Granted, most primary education facilities don't teach any philosophy. And also granted, this law is basically aimed to prevent some backwoods teachers from teaching that evolution is an incorrect theory and Genesis is fact, which is a noble goal. But the slippery slope (which is in this case, most likely inevitable) is to rid education of any remnant of God or religion. Next thing to go is Paradise Lost, to be replaced with Harry Potter.
12/20/2005 6:32:25 PM
Philosophy of Science is one of the few philosophy classes I've chosen not to take as a philosophy major going to gradschool for philosophy. Most philosophy classes seemed focused on philosopy whereas at a surface glance Phi of Sci seems like its a philosophy class designed for people with no interest in philosophy.
12/20/2005 6:34:30 PM
12/20/2005 6:36:14 PM
Your surface investigation failed you,Whereas I may have implied otherwise, only about 1/2 the course is on ID/Creationism/Evolution.The other half is on the differences between science and pseudoscience and also theories of what makes you you.Like the problem of Thesius' ship and some other arguments about when a machine becomes alive.There is some deep philosophy involved in the class, but presented in an approachable way.
12/20/2005 6:37:20 PM
i loved doc austin's phi of sci class...i'm just kind of disappointed that mine was the first semester (a few semesters ago) that he quit doing the cartesian dualism paper, i would rocked that sucker
12/20/2005 6:41:22 PM
So you say to fuck off with the slope arguments rather than address them, fine.The problem is that those slopes are highly likely to be gone upon. I'm not arguing that this law, in and of itself, is bad, because it isn't. The argument I'm making is that you can't blanket say "Go to church for God" and "Go to school to learn" because in many disciplines, such as history and literature, the two are unable to be divided. Trust me, I was at a school where some "progressives" tried to ban our singing of religious material in chorus, which is utterly ridiculous. Some great works of art and some of the major events in history cannot be taught by removing God or religion from them. Siddhartha and Paradise Lost and Da Vinci's Madonna are all wiped out when you take a church v. school attitude.This law is fine, in and of itself, but there eventually needs to be drawn a line.
12/20/2005 6:41:29 PM
^^Agreed, I wished I could have written a Dualism paper instead of the test.
12/20/2005 6:43:06 PM
12/20/2005 6:43:53 PM
Yeah, we're on the same page here, I guess.But some people don't see it that way. Some wouldn't be happy until none of our subjects can contain divine references and in today's litigious society, they have a climate that might actually favor their cause.
12/20/2005 6:46:07 PM
The denial of science is ignorance not religious faith.Evolution as a scientific theory is no way contradicts creationism or the christian doctrine. But of course maybe 1 in a million religious nut jobs will actually READ the judgement and realize that the Judge pointed out that ID could very well be true, there might surely be God, and evolution may just be a part of the plan, but that is supernatural and therefore not a part of the scientific process by definition.Biology and Science is about science, natural occurances and the scientific process. ANY inclusion of the supernatural immediately removes it from science.The rest of the developed nations have realized years ago that science and religion are not at odds. In fact they are great assets to one another. Why the hell can't the leading economic power in the world get with the fucking times?I was listening to NPR this evening on this topic and one of the speakers mentioned a recent nationwide poll that showed only about HALF of our citizens even know that the Earth revolves around the Sun once per year. So does that mean we should TEACH alternate theories of planetary orbit? Should be teach that the Earth is the center of the universe and the sun revolves around it? For God's sake, please get some sense.
12/20/2005 6:51:11 PM
^ i agree completely...which doesn't happen often
12/20/2005 6:57:26 PM
12/20/2005 7:00:08 PM
I'm enjoying that you all are like these two theories, each trying to prove the fitter, but neither able to accept eachother.
12/20/2005 7:30:20 PM
uh, evolution has never tried to invalidate religious belief, neither has science in general.
12/20/2005 7:37:10 PM
no, the biggest problem is that most people assume that science attempts to invalidate religious beliefs
12/20/2005 7:43:26 PM
12/21/2005 2:47:09 AM
If anybody is interested in this topic on an academic level, take BO295 with Dr. Van Dyke and do the research on this topic. You dig deep (as others have pointed out), you'll find a lot of holes in each of the differing viewpoints.
12/21/2005 5:52:54 AM
12/22/2005 3:36:04 AM
12/22/2005 3:42:23 AM
12/22/2005 9:13:07 AM
12/22/2005 11:18:42 AM
Pad.
12/22/2005 11:27:38 AM
It's not evolution that is theorized but the origin of species, which is clumped into the theory of evolution, along with natural selection, because it was all the same person that came up with them. It is a fact that nature evolves, therefore evolution in that sense is scientific fact. It is the origin of species that people disagree with. I don't see anything wrong with at least mentioning Intelligent Design in a textbook that mentions the Big Bang theory and Origin of Species, but I think it would be best if biology courses just left all that stuff out and a separate science/philosophy course was created for the purpose to learn about origin theories. Of course that exists in college, but high schools won't do that. Because of this, since ID is a theory, I don't see anything wrong with merely mentioning it as a theory that is believed by some, just as some believe Origin of Species, and some the Big Bang.
12/22/2005 11:40:32 AM
12/22/2005 11:43:13 AM
There is also a wealth of evidence to support the Big Bang theory. And I don't think there's anything wrong with having an incomplete theory about something so huge as the beginning of what we consider the universe.
12/22/2005 12:04:44 PM