6/5/2008 1:16:15 AM
i feel uncomfortable around really religious people
6/5/2008 1:19:00 AM
^^^ Does anyone other than you use [sic] on the internets?As for evolution, it's fairly straightforward. We've got plenty of evidence for the theory. We've seen natural selection at work. Microevolution is scientifically indisputable. Macroevolution is merely the same process acting over a greater timespan. Less certain, I guess, but the best current theory.[Edited on June 5, 2008 at 1:20 AM. Reason : ^^]
6/5/2008 1:20:26 AM
(i use it every now and then if i want to be an asshole to a real dunce. i don't use it for typos and stuff.)
6/5/2008 1:36:53 AM
^^ Wow. You totally missed both points.Let me break it down for you:1. If one is going to imply that someone is not "well equipped" with "background knowledge" or any other kind of knowledge, for that matter, one should probably do so in a grammatically correct way.2. The implication concerning mathman in the post at issue is easily turned about--and turnabout is fair play. Concerning my use of [sic], did you ever consider that all those not using it could be wrong? Argumentum ad numerum much?You really shouldn't present me with such target-rich posts, GoldenViper. If you do, your positions will continue to be easily swatted to the ground.[Edited on June 5, 2008 at 1:41 AM. Reason : .]
6/5/2008 1:41:07 AM
The grammatical error in agentlion's post was a simple repeated word. A typo. It in no way suggests ignorance. Why point it out, especially in such a pretentious fashion? Yes, typos exists in the tubes. I think we're all aware of that. Are you pushing for better proofreading on the internets?Using [sic] in a copy-and-paste environment makes little sense. Traditionally, the point's to show the reader you didn't make a transcription error. Computers don't make transcription errors.[Edited on June 5, 2008 at 2:08 AM. Reason : sick]
6/5/2008 2:02:22 AM
6/5/2008 8:32:12 AM
^ There's some truth in that, but I'm not willing to completely yield to expert opinion. Note that he practical applications of science have more than experts supporting them. You can learn the effects of vaccines and such from normal folks with personal experience. You don't have to truth academics. With most theories, you can understand the basics without a degrees. For example, it doesn't take much to refute the common arguments against evolution.
6/5/2008 11:04:12 AM
6/5/2008 11:13:33 AM
Science doesn't know a "monopoly on knowledge". There are plenty of fields of knowledge that science doesn't directly touch. It is, however, the best method we have to explain the natural world and universe. What other methods would you suggest to explain natural phenomena? Theists cannot "play at that game" because "god did it" is not an acceptable answer to anyone who requires a shred of evidence. Of course "evidence" is just one of those crazy "scientific ideas" that perpetuates the monopoly on knowledge, right?
6/5/2008 12:54:18 PM
6/5/2008 1:08:02 PM
you have yet to articulate what exactly these other sources of knowledge of our world are supposed to be. So, when examining and trying to explain the natural world, what additional source(s) of knowledge do you suggest we should supplement science with?
6/5/2008 1:12:54 PM
6/5/2008 1:21:04 PM
I am not a Christian but I give little credence to the argument that 75 million Americans believe something essentially because there are stupid.My guess is that there are more evangelicals in the traditional Academy but that they are afriad to come out because of social pressure. Still more probably avoid the Academy because of this fear. This is unfortunate. I am not sure what can be done about it but at least there should be awareness. The Academy is hyper-sensitive to offending many groups but is markedly less sensitive to offending Christianity and that should change.
6/5/2008 1:38:46 PM
6/5/2008 1:55:54 PM
^^ So what Academy are you referring to? Do they teach there/their there?
6/5/2008 3:04:48 PM
6/5/2008 4:40:41 PM
quotes from agentlion below,
6/5/2008 5:57:50 PM
^ Some of those problems may be legitimate, but what's the alternative to evolution? Pure uncertainty? Positing a creator doesn't seem suitably naturalistic, unless he's some super-intelligent alien.
6/5/2008 6:20:59 PM
the thing that makes me most uncomfortable about being near really religious people is trying to eat a mealsecond most is that i say "god" a lot...like "god dammit" or "god dangit"...or "god go in"(if i were trying to plug in a socket to the receptical etc)...or "swear to god etc etc etc"....[Edited on June 5, 2008 at 6:27 PM. Reason : .]
6/5/2008 6:24:03 PM
6/6/2008 12:31:16 PM
6/6/2008 12:37:55 PM
6/6/2008 1:37:24 PM
^ I still think you missed my point. You've confined yourself to the scientific box, like so many in academia.
6/7/2008 11:23:32 PM
yes, i'm "stuck" in the scientific mindset, because again, i see no alternative. think of it this way. Imagine you start with (somehow) a blank slate. No knowledge of the world - you're just dropped down here as an intelligent being, but you have no idea what you're looking at. Essentially you're starting with zero assumptions. When you begin to describe what you see around you, describing what you observe and what you measure does not require any assumptions. You makes your observations, you take your measurements, and you attempt to make conclusions on what you see. (arronburro would argue that "seeing is believing" is an assumption, but then again, he's an idiot). At no point have you made an assumption beyond "what i see is real. i can describe what I see"If something cannot be explained, that's OK. It's just an area of knowledge that has yet to be filled. Christians or religious folk would call that a "gap", and try to insert God into it, creating a God of the Gaps. That is when the assumptions start piling on. Up until now, we've been fine with describing the physical world by means of observations, and leaving for future explorations areas that we cannot describe. But then as soon as anyone says "God must have made ____ happen" simply because we can't describe it 100% right now, that's why you're really breaking with reality.
6/8/2008 9:26:21 AM
^Yes, our world has order. I see no need for a God of the Gaps. God much bigger than that. I believe He gives the world order. Yes, science can evaluate so much of the world around us, but why does this world have order in the first place?
6/9/2008 8:47:15 AM
6/9/2008 10:21:20 AM
6/9/2008 10:33:29 AM
6/9/2008 10:38:32 AM
I've been meaning to read this thread in it's entirety.i'll post here now, so i remember to do it.
6/9/2008 2:41:49 PM
6/9/2008 3:05:57 PM
6/10/2008 12:40:30 PM