Dogs have legs. Humans have legs. Dogs and humans are the same thing.on page 3
11/9/2007 11:26:11 PM
11/9/2007 11:26:14 PM
11/9/2007 11:26:59 PM
11/9/2007 11:27:53 PM
11/9/2007 11:31:48 PM
11/9/2007 11:34:10 PM
11/9/2007 11:37:17 PM
11/9/2007 11:39:03 PM
11/9/2007 11:39:27 PM
11/9/2007 11:45:37 PM
11/9/2007 11:48:49 PM
11/9/2007 11:50:37 PM
and the best part is, you don't need that list because you have science, right? Well, others would say they don't need that list because they have Jesus.Please. Keep proving my point.
11/9/2007 11:51:52 PM
11/9/2007 11:53:09 PM
more justifiable for what? Are we making a claim of value now? You know, kind of like religion does? Or are you making a claim of truth again? Please, show me how that isn't indicative of a religion.
11/9/2007 11:58:00 PM
11/10/2007 12:01:54 AM
11/10/2007 12:15:42 AM
11/10/2007 12:23:30 AM
11/10/2007 12:56:45 AM
11/10/2007 2:30:35 AM
11/10/2007 2:31:04 AM
Wait wait wait wait waitwait waitwait.There are people...in college...who think ID is science?
11/10/2007 11:45:09 AM
In grad school too, apparently, if you count mathman.Or rather -- I think the argument is going like this: religion and science are no different, therefore ID should be taught in biology class.[Edited on November 10, 2007 at 11:58 AM. Reason : .]
11/10/2007 11:57:51 AM
If ID is being integrated as a science, then why aren't we actively working to reconcile physics and philosophy?
11/10/2007 12:03:37 PM
Yeah man, the world as Hegelian dialectic. It could happen.
11/10/2007 12:19:17 PM
^^^ I think the argument is more about the incessant need of some for God and science to be mutually exclusive. Many great scientists do not share this need.'Science cannot provide all the answers'Why do so many scientists believe in God?http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2003/sep/04/science.research
11/19/2007 1:26:35 AM
This just in: religion not an issue of intelligence, but perhaps a different issue altogether! Oh really?What does that have to do with teaching non-science in a science classroom?
11/19/2007 2:07:11 AM
11/19/2007 2:20:39 AM
^ If you want to believe that, then you must also believe that religion can't provide any answers.
11/19/2007 4:19:16 AM
In reference to the topic of the thread - ID is not science. It is an argument of negation, which is not and never will be considered science. ID relies on the absence of an explanation for the creation of the world, and life in general. We do not have a working theory explaining the steps of macroevolution, if it did in fact occur. Scientists are free to believe in ID for this reason. I have no problem with that.But that does not constitute a reason to include ID in a scientific classroom. ID is a plausible theory, but it is not science. End of discussion.Secondly,
11/19/2007 12:51:05 PM
If you want your kid learning ID take him to a jesus school. Intelligent Design is not based on any scientific fact and makes a mockery of our public education system here in the US to the rest of the world.
11/19/2007 12:55:32 PM
Hey guys science can't provide all the answers (especially to questions that we have no principled way of answering) so let's just make up stuff.This sounds like a great reason to endorse religion.
11/19/2007 6:41:06 PM
^ Good thing nobody is.Congratulations, you're a douchebag
11/19/2007 6:43:48 PM
The argument is that science cannot "provide all the answers."My point is -- to which questions? Usually to ones we have no principled way of answering (involving the "world" we cannot observe at all). What makes statements about things outside of the realm of possible observation meaningful at all? How do we assign a referent to any of the terms we use in these discussions?Furthermore, how do different religions come to decisions about the nature of these things in a principled fashion?
11/19/2007 6:45:22 PM
Oh wait you can't answer any of those questions because you're fucking retarded.Nevermind, let's just move on.
11/19/2007 6:47:09 PM
11/19/2007 9:43:05 PM
11/19/2007 10:59:36 PM
Sigh I see the problem -- you interpreted what I said originally as a response to you (which it wasn't), so I was interpreting your comments as addressing the last available context of the thread.But now that you've annoyed me let's look at your argument (which is 100% shit).
11/19/2007 11:26:50 PM
11/20/2007 1:50:51 AM
11/20/2007 1:56:50 AM
Ah this is fun. Sorry to keep flaming this thread guys but I'm enjoying pissing McDanger off far too much to stop now
11/20/2007 12:30:27 PM
Erios, don't feel bad. McDanger is no different than any other religious zealot. He thinks his shit doesn't stink and that's all that matters to him. That he refuses to accept that he, too, believes in a religion is comical at best and tragic at worst.
11/20/2007 6:50:47 PM
burro I don't think I'll ever get used to the idea of us agreeing on anything, but yeah, Micky-D's shit does in fact stink
11/20/2007 7:41:41 PM
Mmmm, smell that cognitive dissonance- smells like sizzling gray matter.
11/20/2007 8:26:58 PM
11/21/2007 1:32:23 AM
^ You just reconfirmed what I've known about you for a long time.
11/21/2007 2:43:46 AM
11/21/2007 2:49:51 AM
hooksaw -- demonstrating the worth of liberal studies at NCSU on a daily basis.Look dude -- I'm going to put this as bluntly as possible: you don't understand anything in this discussion. You really don't. You have no basis for understanding. You have no foundation of knowledge, no critical thinking skills to expand such a base if you had it, and no desire to actually understand the way things are. You're the saddest case I've seen yet. Look at how stupid you are.Just because some scientists think that philosophical questions are best answered by theology -- what does that have to say about anything? We should be examining why these people think what they do, not just who they are. Who cares if they're scientists? Let's examine the arguments (because when we do, we see that they're obviously crap). Why is there something rather than nothing? This is an interesting question -- one that might be outside of the scope of science, sure. But what about this simple fact suggests that picking any particular religious dogma is a good idea? This is another example of "Science can't address everything therefore Jesus QED" argumentation. You're beyond dense. A stubborn old man with no desire to learn, no capacity to learn, and no talent to apply the learning if you could obtain it. God damn.
11/21/2007 2:58:47 AM
^ I'm not a Christian, you self-absorbed, stereotyping idiot.
11/21/2007 3:01:24 AM
Ahahahaha what did I say that suggested you were?What the fuck is your master's degree in, internet trolling???You're just making the way for these arguments. I know you're not a Christian -- but seeing how you just love swinging off of GOP cock (yes, I know you're "not a Republican" either), you have to tow the party line. This means defending Christians and their ability to make these dumb ass arguments at every pass.[Edited on November 21, 2007 at 3:04 AM. Reason : .]
11/21/2007 3:02:50 AM