So I oppose turning biology class into Church. How is that anti-religious?We should teach Christian views in school -- in a course dedicated to teaching world religions. Right up there alongside other religious views, with no particular advantage or highlighting.
11/9/2007 4:07:43 PM
i'm with McD on this one..... i haven't seen anything hes said as inherently anti-religious
11/9/2007 4:15:14 PM
The issue many conservatives have with evolution being taught in schools is that they consider it to be a form of religion. Many atheists, whether or not they realize it, do tend to use science as a "church" of sorts, devoting to it a fanaticism that rivals that of many religious fundamentalists. Not saying that I think ID should be in schools, and I'm certainly not saying that McDanger (or others in this topic) are using science as their religion... just pointing out the root of this debate in society.
11/9/2007 7:56:16 PM
11/9/2007 8:11:41 PM
^I'd actually like to see just how many people who place their "trust" in the concept of evolution have actually seen the supporting genetics research, and how many are just maintaining "faith" that what all the scientists say is automatically right. I think you'd be surprised how many are amongst the scientific faithful.Even strict adherence to fact is an ideology. Difference between them? Yes. Exclusion of one if the other exists? No."mythology"... I love the assumption that what you believe about religion is auto-right. Hooray for your faith in the idea that nothing spiritual can exist. Because that's what it is, its faith. Since religion can be neither proven nor disproven, everyone is exercising faith in one direction or another.(Disclaimer: I am in no way denying the existence of evolution. I am not advocating religion in science class. I'm just showing you that you obviously don't know your own beliefs very well.)
11/9/2007 8:22:18 PM
It is funny to me that mr. danger continues to simply argue that ID is not science therefore has no place in the science classroom. How about this, we invent a new class, we call it science and creation/evolution myths. Problem solved, no improper demarcation of subject matter.Both ID and evolution seek to answer some of the same questions. Where did humans come from? What is DNA and how does it function? If we expand the discussion to include the broader programs of stellar and cosmological evolution then again ID also seeks to find insights into how those structures arose. Why is there a structure to physical law?Notice that I am not supporting ID as the ultimate answer. I am actually a sceptic, I don't think we can have an affirmative answer to some of these basic questions of historical origins. I think there may well be multiple equally rational viewpoints due to the nature of the problem. I am trying to get you to see that both ID and the traditional mainstream stories about how these questions should be answered are incredibly speculative. All I would say is that it is pure censorship to disallow the ID viewpoint. If ID is so clearly wrong then let the kids decide, we are talking about a middle-highschool type class I assume. I think people are capable of independent thought. If a person wishes to put their faith in the mainstream position then let them, but at least give the teacher the freedom to present both viewpoints.But, label me a conservative Christian, fine, that is of course true. That is more to the point of why you want ID out of the schools, you think it is just creationism and you are antireligious. You don't have to be a graduate student in philosophy to understand that.Good luck tromboner950 if you question the absolute fact of evolution that makes you a conservative Christian, have you not learned this by now?
11/9/2007 8:28:52 PM
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11/9/2007 10:09:13 PM
i think McDanger has covered most of the bases, but anyway....
11/9/2007 10:22:02 PM
science fits practically all the facets of a religion today. Especially the part where it requires unquestioning loyalty and devotion and dissenters are labeled as heretics. The zeal and fervor that many scientists have rivals only the zeal of hardcore religious fundamentalists.
11/9/2007 10:22:42 PM
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11/9/2007 10:34:33 PM
and yet, your "trust" still means that you, yourself, still have not done it yourself. You haven't seen it or known it through your own experiences, which is ultimately the same as faith.
11/9/2007 10:34:34 PM
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11/9/2007 10:41:25 PM
Except I have a firm set of reasons why they should be scoffed at. They claim something fits a definition when it demonstrably does not. Placing this on equal footing as missionaries scoffing at foreign cultural practices is intellectually dishonest. You know this, but that doesn't stop you from saying it. ^^[Edited on November 9, 2007 at 10:42 PM. Reason : .]
11/9/2007 10:42:12 PM
11/9/2007 10:42:15 PM
What's wrong with beliefs? Beliefs can be rational or irrational.My belief that there's a table in front of me is a rationally held belief. Science is made up of beliefs too, but ones that are rationally supported. In the cases where science gets these beliefs right, we might even call what it's made up of "knowledge" instead of belief.^ Wrong again. None of the missionaries' beliefs were rational or defensible. Try again.Edit:^ Wrong yet again. In the interests of conducting scientific inquiry, we have to define what science is. Anything not fitting that definition doesn't fall under the umbrella. This is way different from judging a foreign culture as "godless" or "immoral." Your tactic of trying to paint those interested in rational, revisable inquiry as "no different" than religious fanatics is flawed, intellectually dishonest, and invalid.[Edited on November 9, 2007 at 10:47 PM. Reason : .]
11/9/2007 10:43:46 PM
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11/9/2007 10:57:24 PM
and someone can follow the "trust chain" all the way up until he gets to a divine messenger. You simply choose to go no farther than you do. The believer chooses to go no farther than his minister.^ well, that is effectively what you said. "Hey, don't preach no Christianity, man. Preach against it!"[Edited on November 9, 2007 at 10:58 PM. Reason : ]
11/9/2007 10:57:39 PM
11/9/2007 10:57:53 PM
Right. A contradiction like "3 people went to the tomb" and then somewhere else it says "Mary went to the tomb?" Some things make you uncomfortable, and you accept them. For others, you call them "contradictions"Oh, and how does an observation lead to knowledge?[Edited on November 9, 2007 at 10:59 PM. Reason : ]
11/9/2007 10:58:32 PM
I am touching a table in front of me. I see this table. I can hear it, if I knock it.I know there's a table in front of me.
11/9/2007 10:59:37 PM
why do you KNOW there is a table there? how do you KNOW that you haven't been conditioned to believe there is a table there?[Edited on November 9, 2007 at 11:00 PM. Reason : ]
11/9/2007 11:00:14 PM
Look, if you define knowledge tightly enough that I cannot know there's a table there, then I have to say knowledge is a useless concept.In this case, we go with rational belief. I'm rational in believing there's a table in front of me because I'm awake, and the observations I have are consistent with my past observations. Perception is "forced" in a way -- it's non-inferential. If something agitates one of my sensory receptors, I can't help but have the belief that something is causing the agitation.
11/9/2007 11:02:19 PM
and if you define that there is no God, then I'd say life is pretty uselessand, all of that assumes that you aren't a brain in a jar[Edited on November 9, 2007 at 11:03 PM. Reason : ]
11/9/2007 11:02:46 PM
You're certainly warranted in believing life has no value if God doesn't exist.However, people like me choose to value things anyway. Even if there's no God, I still value life. Things make me happy, and make other people happy. I still love things, and so do other people. Alleviating suffering has a lot of value -- making other people happy has a lot of value. Why? Because it's valuable to me - I make that choice. And just because I create my own value doesn't make it less a value. I still hold values. The fact that you wouldn't in a godless universe makes you a sociopath.
11/9/2007 11:06:24 PM
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11/9/2007 11:15:41 PM
^^ typical way of admitting defeat without saying so. Many Christians do the same thing when their beliefs are questioned.I'll sum it up: Science says it can find truth. Things that we call religions assert that they have the truth. The two, therefor, are synonymous.
11/9/2007 11:17:00 PM
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11/9/2007 11:22:51 PM
Dogs have legs. Humans have legs. Dogs and humans are the same thing.
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