Clarification - Admission is Free (pay at the door)
4/19/2006 3:56:01 PM
4/19/2006 7:04:54 PM
4/19/2006 7:23:29 PM
There are multiple flavors of ID, some of which are just fundies who just renamed their "7000 year old earth theory" and others that have more merit and have interesting points. There is a continuim between ID and evolution, it's not as black and white as everyone thinks.
4/19/2006 7:29:43 PM
everyone knows the entire 7000 year theory is crap. it's bogus. it's a scam. it's not factual. it's make believe. but however I believe evolution is divine.
4/19/2006 7:34:09 PM
4/19/2006 9:08:39 PM
God put all of those fossils deep under that hard rock just to screw with us....the earth was created 7000 years ago, accept it!!
4/20/2006 1:39:39 AM
I don't understand how one sees evolution and the existence of God as opposed to each other. Genesis is poetry and its purpose isn't to be a scientific textbook. It's there to explain the deeper 'why' about creation and yes, there are influences from outside the Hebrew world most definitely.
4/20/2006 1:42:55 AM
^It's because anyone who understands the scientific process and honestly accepts evolution on its scientific merits would see no justification for tacking on some made up bullshit onto real science. You can't accept evolution because it's the most plausible, well-supported, well-researched, well-developed theory on one hand, then accept religion purely on faith and legend. This kind of hypocrite doesn't really accept evolution.The people who believe in both are actually just guilty religious people who feel too embarrassed to admit that they believe in some fantasy shit. Thus, they have to creatively rationalize their backward beliefs with the undeniable science of the time. It's all to make themselves feel better.[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 2:22 AM. Reason : sdfsdf]
4/20/2006 2:15:21 AM
4/20/2006 1:08:52 PM
4/20/2006 1:34:28 PM
I don't think he claimed some sort of eternal "incompatibility" between science and religion. Although currently there most certainly is one IMO. I don't think anyone has claimed that science can explain everything either, although I believe it possibly could (Eventually). I do not see how science being incomplete at this point in time gives any credit to a religiously based "theory." Not only that, but from everything I've observed science HAS pretty much proven evolution to be real, with shittons of evidence to back it up. ID has zero evidence to support it's claims. Well, let me rephraze that, it does have evidence based on lies and misinterpretation of scientific theory.You are claiming that religion is here to explain things that science can't explain. What you mean is that when you can't explain something you just make shit up.I can't see why they don't just call ID "religion." It is non-scientific in nature, and isn't particularly compatible with scientific evidence. There is no real reason for it to be considered as a possibility, other than the fact that many people are convinced that things they read (Which were written by other human fucking beings) are 100% accurate. The fact that a catholic preist supposedly discovered the "basis for the big bang theory" also says NOTHING about the connection between science and religion. Are you implying that his being religious had an effect on his scientific data? If so I'd say the data is likely flawed.[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 1:58 PM. Reason : ]
4/20/2006 1:52:33 PM
If we have to give "equal time" to all theories in Biology class (Intelligent Design),then we will also have to give "equal time" to all theories in Economics (Communism).
4/20/2006 2:02:21 PM
I want equal time for the FSM as well in biology class, because I want my children to learn about EVERY possibility.[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 2:05 PM. Reason : We need to start teaching scientology based theory in psychology classes as well btw.]
4/20/2006 2:03:52 PM
also we need to discuss alternate theories about ZOG in Political Science.
4/20/2006 2:12:02 PM
4/20/2006 2:59:42 PM
Science and religion go hand in hand. Science is about figuring out falsifiable truths, Religion is about figuring out the rest. Each one relies on one another to progress, and neither would be where they are today without the other.
4/20/2006 3:36:06 PM
falsifiability is a stupid way to define science especially considering that it would not allow the theory of evolution to be called science (and Karl Popper pointed that out himself)
4/20/2006 3:43:57 PM
OMFG WORDS!!(Semantics, are we really going to argue semantics now?)
4/20/2006 5:32:12 PM
A few people will go in with the belief that you should reject science and only have faith, the majority will think science is the tool of a supernatural being, and another few people will think science without committing to additional supernatural beliefs is the way to go. Everyone will come out thinking what they thought when they went in. A subsection of that everyone will be ppl who use tdub who use positions or quotes from the debate to try to get other people to see it their way (which is a way that was entirely unaffected by the debate).
4/20/2006 5:51:24 PM
4/20/2006 7:59:39 PM
Do they have Jesseph presenting the ID side?I'd like to see it if he was even though he's an atheist. He's always given things a fair hearing in class despite not being a belieiver.
4/20/2006 8:23:21 PM
did anybody go to this thing?i wore my flying spaghetti monster t-shirt.[Edited on April 20, 2006 at 9:59 PM. Reason : fsm.]
4/20/2006 9:59:22 PM
i was there, but i unfortunately missed it. where were you sitting?
4/20/2006 11:01:15 PM
4/21/2006 12:44:42 AM
4/21/2006 12:50:40 AM
^^got any argument to why its a particularly good way to define science?or are you just going jesus fucking christ and acting like what I said was crazy cause so many people buy into that lame definition?[Edited on April 21, 2006 at 1:32 AM. Reason : Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.]
4/21/2006 1:25:55 AM
god damn itmy source: A FUCKING DICTIONARY AND WIKIPEDIAScience -- the intellectual and practical activity encompassing the systematic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experimentFalsifiability -- In science and the philosophy of science, falsifiability, contingency, and defeasibility are roughly equivalent terms referring to the property of empirical statements that they must admit of logical counterexamples.Science and philosophy of science define falsifiability as, in essence, the ability to answer a question.WHAT YOU'RE SAYING MAKES NO FUCKING SENSE. YOU'RE CLAIMING THAT DEFINING SCIENCE AS A FIELD WHICH ANSWERS FALSIFIABLE QUESTIONS WITH AN EMPIRICAL INQUIRY IS STUPID. ARE YOU SUGGESTING THAT SCIENCE SHOULD ATTEMPT TO ANSWER QUESTIONS WHICH CANNOT BE ANSWERED THROUGH EMPIRICAL METHODS? FURTHERMORE ARE YOU SUGGESTING THAT SCIENCE SHOULD TRY TO ANSWER QUESTIONS WHICH CANNOT BE VERIFIED OR ANSWERED BY ---ANY--- METHOD?YOU CANNOT SERIOUSLY BE A PART OF HIGHER EDUCATIONMotherfuckers like you are the reason I'm so fucking smugI'm a dude of average intelligence who enjoys learningWhen surrounded by willfully ignorant people such as yourself, it makes me look fucking trascendentWhy are you trying to engage in an actual discussion when you obviously have no comprehension of the terms? JESUSI'm on my last fucking nerve with dumb shit like this, especially after spending 7+ pages in the soap box trying to coach idiots into understanding what falsifiability means when they could simply LOOK IT THE FUCK UP[Edited on April 21, 2006 at 2:15 AM. Reason : YOU GUYS ARE GOING TO GIVE ME A FUCKING STROKE]
4/21/2006 2:01:44 AM
lol, this is some funny shityou have no fucking clue what you are talking about and are acting smug about it, Its nice that you can use a fucking dictionary and wiki but maybe you should try actually reading karl popper or learing a few things about the philosophy of scienceHere is a good simple article that is a criticism of the principle of falsifiability so maybe you can get some idea of where Im coming from.
4/21/2006 2:21:25 AM
^^Why don't you take the philosophy of science class that NCSU offers? Popper's theory of falsifiability has problems. There's certainly no consensus on it. A much better definition is the one that says science is a scientific process.I'm sorry you latched on to one philosophy buzz word and think that it's the final word on what science is. (and don't misunderstand, it's important to consider Popper's work when trying to answer the question of "What is science?", but it's not the terminal point of the discussion. Furthermore, you can whip the ID argument, regardless.)[Edited on April 21, 2006 at 2:29 AM. Reason : I guess you chose to ignore all the criticism mentioned on wikipedia, too]
4/21/2006 2:22:52 AM
For some reason you guys have decided that things can only be falsifiable through direct observationThis is untrueNot to mention -- you can never prove something to be true, because of problems with inductionTherefore, you can only prove things false. Anything indicating the correctness of a theory simply corroborates it. If you cannot in any way, theoretically or otherwise in some way physically possible in our universe falsify a theory, then it is not a scientific theory. If you cannot possibly disprove something under any theoretical circumstances, the question becomes meaningless.It's gibberish.
4/21/2006 2:38:51 AM
Look I'm going to cut to the chase, simplify this, and wash my hands of itI've done too much crusading for this, too much ramming of my head against the wall and I shouldn't waste my time on it any longerFalsifiability + common sense = good science.Things can be falsifiable and completely irrelevant. Thus, if science always asks questions that are relevant and produces theories with explanatory power -- and the theories are falsifiable, then it's doing a good job.One thing I fucking hate about philosophy sometimes is the bullshit counter example that breaks up a perfectly good theory/system. "BUT YOU CAN ASK IF A HOT PINK DOG EXISTS AND SURE THAT'S FALSIFIABLE BUT IS THAT GOOD SCIENCE" jesus fucking god shut up
4/21/2006 2:55:57 AM
you cannot purely scientifically disprove creationism.that doesn't mean it belongs in a science classroom, as there is no scientific evidence to support it either.
4/21/2006 3:05:31 AM
hmm, I was expecting to come back to this thread and find something worth responding but for all of your arrogance and love of falsifiability you cant even come up with a silly falsifiable question:
4/21/2006 4:55:44 AM
Yeah, you're right. A better way to have put that would have been like you put it. That's why I retreated to bed, I knew I was about to start making errors like that What I was actually getting at would be something to the extent of "All dogs are not hot pink". General statement, and all you'd have to do is find a dog that's hot pink to prove it wrong. >.< I made a semantic blunder, but I think you were overly harsh and pedantic and I was simultaneously off-base.There are ridiculous cases like that, though. Cases where things are falsifiable but not good science -- but a dash of common sense always redirects the matter back into science. This is the problem with too much theorycrafting in philosophy -- sometimes people get way the fuck out there and believe that every option is of equal weight due to form.Either way you slice it, your claim that defining science by falsifiability hasn't been properly backed up by you. You threw in a cheesy appeal to authority (which didn't work, and was more of a collection of anecdotes explaining why patience and verification of results are important) and have nitpicked some of my points, but where is your point? The only thing stupid here was your point -- even if falsifiability alone is a slightly outdated way of classifying science (for reasons I've already described), claiming that defining it in those bounds is somehow "stupid" is like me claiming that Newton was an idiot for being so far wrong.Edit:-Something exists- is not falsifiable because you need to prove a negative (go around and prove that something does not exist, which would involve scouring the entire universe extremely thoroughly which is functionally impossible). I did fuck that up, and should have said "there is not a dog that is pink". It's not too hard to see how I fucked up and said the other thing though while being careless and desperately wanting to sleep but I do admit that what I said was pretty stupid and obviously wrong, and it's not like I subscribe to that view :-P[Edited on April 21, 2006 at 7:53 AM. Reason : .]
4/21/2006 7:36:47 AM
4/21/2006 8:44:10 AM
so, who won?
4/21/2006 11:43:49 AM
espn.com
4/21/2006 12:05:57 PM
4/21/2006 12:10:54 PM
4/21/2006 12:36:07 PM
4/21/2006 1:42:52 PM
case closed. brilliant.
4/21/2006 8:53:38 PM
case should be closed but we know it isntidiot religious zealots will still try to push this shit into science classroomsfucking bollocks
4/21/2006 9:00:11 PM
4/21/2006 11:57:30 PM
Not true.Color is produced by a wavelength, interpreted by our brains. Even though you might argue that what I see as hot pink might be secretly equivalent to your experience of emerald green, we both agree that the color is "hot pink" because we both interpret the same wavelength.The wavelength of the light reflected by the dog would be the determining factor of whether it is "hot pink" or not. This is a testable, quantifiable property of the dog.
4/22/2006 10:52:28 AM
^however it does take assumptions based on previous ideas such as wavelength and our ability to "test" to see what wavelength it is. Therefore when you "prove" something to be false such as "there are no pink dogs" just because you found a pink dog arent you relying on properties of science that can not be proven. To falsely prove the statement "there are no pink dogs" uses information based on UNPROVEN methods. According to falsifiability wavelength and lights color cannot be proven true, just proven false. Therefore to falsely prove "there are no pink dogs" you would have to prove the properties of wavelength and color of light which according to falsifiability cannot be done.
4/22/2006 11:34:26 AM
I suppose you can argue that all of our perceptions are false, but your argument has no explanatory power. What I do know is that my perceptions are accurate -- accurate AT LEAST in the capacity to ensure my survival.We have ideas and internal structures which represent the outside Universe. We can only provide corroborative evidence that they are accurate indirectly (that is, performing an action and observing the result -- a process once again subject to our perceptions).Sure -- the Universe does not equal our perceptions, but our perceptions equal our reality. Studying this reality through empirical methods is what science is. Science therefore gives us plenty of insight into our reality. It also gives us insight into the intersection of our reality and the actual Universe, though it's beyond our capability to really know how flush the two are.Your argument is against scientific thought itself. In order to undermine scientific thought, you should explain why it lacks explanatory power, and why another methodology would provide better explanations.
4/22/2006 11:43:37 AM
falsifiability leaves no means for anything to be proven because to be disproven you have to rely on something proven, so I dont see its place in "science".My "methodology" is that a sovereign God controls the mechanical and physical properties of the world. Thus putting me on the ID side of the debate.
4/22/2006 12:01:22 PM
4/22/2006 12:12:13 PM
just pm each other and make out already.
4/22/2006 12:28:15 PM