No, that's completely false.Scientists are following the truth wherever it goes. If the research does not back up the claims, then it will have no legitimacy in the scientific community. This is why creation science has no legitimacy.This is the same reason people do not believe in Bigfoot. It's not that scientists "see the evidence for Bigfoot and then ignore it due to their own biases," it's that there just simply isn't any proof or research to back up claims that Bigfoot exists.
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CREATION SCIENCE IS SERIOUS BUSINESS.
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^i won't give you a link, because that would hijack this thread, ad i trust you know how to use google. that's for another debate. (but not an entirely separate one at all, because we have just seen how this- evolution, creationism, science, metaphysics, philosophy, and even the (in?)validity of the Bible- is all connected).
4/20/2008 2:51:42 PM
Because all those links are very short on science and very long on mythology.
4/20/2008 2:56:39 PM
wrong.it's because your presupposition is that the Bible isn't true.
4/20/2008 3:02:06 PM
You can't just make ANY working assumption. The working assumptions have to (1) be justified inductively by experience and (2) work.
4/20/2008 3:09:51 PM
I've said nothing of the sort and you've immediately made an assumption and discounted my opinion.Which is an ironic way of proving the point of every person in this thread arguing for science.
4/20/2008 3:10:32 PM
So I'm looking at the "answers" page.Have you noticed that they refer to scientific findings that contradict a literal interpretation of the Bible as "problems?"As in they're impediments to the Truth, and must be undone.If you don't see the flaw in this type of thinking, then it's no wonder you're failing so badly at this.
4/20/2008 3:12:48 PM
^^well the "your" was more towards Walter, so don't be offended. and i guess i should have said "it's likely because your presupposition is that the Bible isn't true."there are plenty of terrible sites that indeed are short on science and very long on mythology, but there are plenty of very valid ones as well.and to ^....well if the "problems" are undone, then what's the problem with treating them so badly? and again...your justified to an extent...but you fail to see the exact same thing happening on the other side. many many evolutionists and secular scientists see "literal" translations of the Bible as "problems" that too must be undone. which goes to say....once again! that it's all about the presuppositions you form before entering the debate. and based on those, most any finding can be interpreted to form support for most any reasonable presupposition.[Edited on April 20, 2008 at 3:21 PM. Reason : ]
4/20/2008 3:15:12 PM
I like how you haven't addressed anything I've said. Your argument is falling out from under you.
4/20/2008 3:17:31 PM
I have yet to find and scientific data on http://www.answersingenesis.com
4/20/2008 3:18:12 PM
4/20/2008 3:20:34 PM
The scientific part is that the op ed's are written by PH'D's you see
4/20/2008 3:20:42 PM
ohmy God, quit posting links to Answers in Genesis. It's just making you look dumber.
4/20/2008 3:21:56 PM
I really, really hope that ohmy is just trolling us.
4/20/2008 3:27:21 PM
The bible was written by God you see.err wait.
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4/20/2008 3:42:18 PM
Look, you can believe whatever you want.However, none of this is going anywhere near any classroom or textbook until scientific studies and research has been done to support your findings.
4/20/2008 3:45:07 PM
well, like i've said, there is plenty that supports these findings and nothing yet that has disproved them.but you're probably right about them never making it to the textbooks again, because the majority of those responsible for deciding what does make it to the books are strict materialists.i think we've come full circle to page 1, where hooksaw said
4/20/2008 3:51:41 PM
Hard science pisses off lots of philosophers and theologians because it makes people realize that the Emperor has no clothes.
4/20/2008 3:57:41 PM
the only thing that any of the links you have posted support is the fact that their "research"(still haven't seen any scientific data) is blinded by the assumption that the bible is 100% true
4/20/2008 3:57:50 PM
^i just looked at the carbon dating one and there was tons of data given in there.
4/20/2008 4:01:27 PM
Creationist "science" might be able to cobble together a vaguely coherent picture of the current data, but where are the predictions?
4/20/2008 4:02:12 PM
what do you mean
4/20/2008 4:03:41 PM
"giving" data and "throwing around" data are two very different things.
4/20/2008 4:06:46 PM
Science makes predictions. It's one of the main ways it's verified or refuted.
4/20/2008 4:06:57 PM
yeah i guess i'm confused on what you want exactly. like...are y'all saying there are no scientists who have made amazing discoveries and introduced solid scientific data who have also been christians?or are you asking that since evolution predicts that we evolve into another species or mankind becomes extinct or whatever they predict, then what is the creationist's prediction?btw most creationists, if they're Christians, make the prediction that Jesus is coming back...I guess if that happens then we'll just have this whole debate settled won't we. [Edited on April 20, 2008 at 4:16 PM. Reason : ]
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thanks for verifying how moronic that is. i thought it was.
4/20/2008 4:37:27 PM
http://www.answersingenesis.org/assets/pdf/v2i4/coloringLiger.pdfAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAAHHA
4/20/2008 4:52:20 PM
Jesus Christ, this is the best site ever.
4/20/2008 5:00:34 PM
i really want to believe that it's a joke site
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4/20/2008 6:16:40 PM
you misunderstood me (and i may be misunderstanding you)...your question made it sound like creationism is a field...as in someone can go to school and major in creationism, study creationism and come up with some giant prediction that in and of itself will prove or disprove the theory of creationism...which would be absurd of course (and i think you would agree). but you seem to be doing the same thing with predictions and evolution. it's not like a biologist tests THE HYPOTHESIS OF EVOLUTION. he tests hypotheses related to his field, which if proven true, can support the larger theory of evolution. (and we've already discussed how evidence can be interpreted to fit different theories)there's creationists in the field of biology, geology, and archeology, etc. they all have their own predictions i'm sure (that when proven true don't prove creationism in and of themselves, but can be interpreted to support it). but i'm neither a biologist, creationist, or an archaeologist, so i don't know of any specific ones. i guess i would ask you to do the same with evolution. if all those things you mentioned above are your predictions, then the absence of a true transitional form is a prediction a creationist would make. and for that debate, refer back to earlier in this thread (evolutionists can explain why Archaeopteryx is, and creationists explain why it isn't, for example.)your last paragraph above is a bit confusing as well. you say it's stood up for 150 years, but to act like evolution has withstood all its criticisms over 150 years is ignorant. it has been modified time and time again to accommodate current observations, which you even acknowledge since you addressed it as the "revised" theory of evolution.btw i love how you guys keep mentioning how creationists argue "against science," which is a major part of the problem, with you guys perpetuating the idea that science and religion/creationism/God/ any-acknowledgment-of-the-possibility-of-the-existence-of-something-immaterial are mutually exclusive.[Edited on April 20, 2008 at 7:09 PM. Reason : ][Edited on April 20, 2008 at 7:14 PM. Reason : ]
4/20/2008 7:01:05 PM
Maybe because you're saying that facts of science, with hundreds of thousands of written articles and studies behind them, aren't true.
4/20/2008 7:49:03 PM
ohmy your main point seems to be "butbutbut creationists can just INTERPRET the data their own way"why yes they can simply make shit up this is insightful
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^clearly you all have gathered by now that the website attempts to make very complicated subject matter accessible to the non-scientist (like myself and most of you all on here). in doing so, it runs the danger of being disregarded for not directly citing sound scientific data. the article you mention is a very comprehensive article attempting to explain a whole lot in a very small article. it's naturally going to leave out the scientific data that probably neither you nor i would understand. so what this one does is cite other creationist articles that have already done the work. if you follow those sources that you just listed, many of them cite secular sources and studies. it can all be traced back to sound data. if it was a research paper that the author of that article was writing (instead of a quick comprehensive summary for the common person), he would have included the primary sources. i clicked on some of those sources and they listed works like.... 6. Campbell. H. and Bauer. W.C., 1966. Chemical Engineering, 73:179–185. 7. Gall, J.C.,1971. Mem. Serv. Carte geol. Als. Lorr., 34:126–128. This piece of original research was presented to the French Academy of Sciences in Paris on November 3, 1986, and was subsequently published in the Academy’s proceedings—C.R. Acad.Sc.Paris, t. 303, Serie II, no.17, 1986, pp.1569–1574. We are grateful for permission from Guy Berthault to publish this English translation.Lombard. A.. 1972. Series sédimentaires—Genèse—Evolution. Masson et Cie-Edit. Paris. p.147.Julien, P. Y., LAN, Y. Q. and Berthault, G., 1993. Experiments on stratification of heterogeneous sand mixtures. Bulletin of the Geological Society of France, 164(5):649–660. Return to Text.# Makse, H. A., Havlin, S., King, P. R. and Stanley, H. E., 1997. Spontaneous stratification in granular mixtures. Nature, 386:379–382. Return to Text.# Fineberg, J., 1997. From Cinderella’s dilemma to rock slides. Nature, 386:323–324. Return to Text.R. Zangerl and E.S. Richardson,‘The paleoecological history of two Pennsylvanian black shales‘, Fieldiana: Geology Memoirs 4, 1963. Return to Text.# M.M. Ball, E.A. Shinn and K.W. Stockman,‘The geologic effects of Hurricane Donna in South Florida’, Journal of Geology 75:583–597, 1967. Return to Text.# A. Lambert and K. Hsü,‘Non-annual cycles of varve-like sedimentation in Walensee, Switzerland’, Sedimentology 26:453–461, 1979. Return to Text.etc
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