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  Topic: Philo 4483: Christian Faith and Science, Honest questions from Dembski's students< Next Oldest | Next Newest >  
Doc Bill



Posts: 1039
Joined: April 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 16 2010,10:48   

bjray wrote:

Quote
we know (today) that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems on the cellular level.


"We" know, do "we?"

PLENTY of IC systems at the cellular level.

Really, "we" know this, do "we."

OK, I'm game.  List 100 of them.  Should be a piece of cake given "we" know there are plenty.

Tell you what, since I'm a nice guy, list 50 and just point me to a reference where 50 more are documented.  Save you the typing.

  
Paul Flocken



Posts: 290
Joined: Dec. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: April 16 2010,12:16   

Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
What I'm interested in is going back to Darwin and his thought of evolution.
Relevance?
Darwin is no longer anymore necessary for the theory of evolution to stand on its own than William Harvey is for modern surgical theory to stand on its own.
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
For instance, what was his purpose in thinking up his theory of evolution
I smell a fallacy coming...
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
(and survival of the fittest)? I think he was trying to make sense of the world (in essence a "theological" framework).
...ok, no fallacy.

This is roughly apt but too broad.  Darwin was trying to come up with an explanation for the observations about species diversity and location that he had made over his, and his predecessors*, years of observations.  All science is in a sense trying to make sense of the world, Darwin was just working in that corner called BIOLOGY.
A theological framework is necessarily a god framework, since the root of the word is theos.  Darwin was, at a minimum, a deist and most likely a full blown theist so to Darwin this would have seemed a fair assessment.
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
Maybe I have not read as much as I should, but it appears that he did not have much to say about things like how the earth was created using his theory of evolution, etc.
Quite correct, Darwin had nothing to say about how the earth was created.  And this is a problem because?
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
Rather, it seems to me that he was instead, trying to put the pieces of science together based on his findings of fossils, etc spread around the globe.
Not quite wrong, but not right either.  Again Darwin was working in his piece of science.  I don't know what other pieces you are referring to.  I told you above what his goal was.  The fossils he had were just one part of his evidence.  If you have a rudimentary understanding of Darwin's efforts what is the problem?
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
What I am getting at/what I am working out in my head is how can evolutionary proponents praise the man for starting something that he (Charles Darwin) never intended for his "theory" to do? Now, I obviously cannot tell his intentions, but it he was not even so sure about everything he said!
What I am hearing you say is that every scientist must develop his own theories, wholly and completely, from scratch.  When they become obsolete they must be abandoned.  This is hardly true.  One of Darwin's geniuses was in doing something that could work as a firm foundation for the further development of the theory of evolution.  Newton referred to it as standing on the shoulders of giants.  That Darwin didn't know the directions his theory would take after he passed it on to the future is hardly a strike against the theory.
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
For example (and back to Behe and his irreducible complexity), we know (today) that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems on the cellular level. Such that without one of the pieces, it would fail to operate as it was designed. It's just what has been discovered, that's all.
Irreducible complexity is real.  Again, this is a problem for evolution because?
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
My opinion on it is that ID'ers are not merely trying to provide answers to question like

someone, somewhere, did something...

but are also attempting to show the stepping stones of how to get to those answers.

These are the same thing, finding one is the same as finding the other and since ID'ists are pointedly refusing to say anything about the first they are, ipso facto, not saying anything about the second.
     
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,01:57)
For example: the thought that maybe intelligent design is a feasible option with supporting evidence. (you may say, what supporting evidence...but I would submit that they have provided it, people just don't accept it as "good" evidence, or what they think is "evidence.")
You left out a possibility.  Demonstrated-to-be-wrong-evidence.  ID'ists are completely welcome to bring up any evidence they like.  Once.  When that evidence is shown to be wrong, but they keep bringing it up anyway, they exit the institution of science.  And that is what creationists of all stripes, ID'ists included, keep doing with new marks like you.  They just don't bother to let you know they have left the road of science for the road of charlantry.  You are also being misled as to what evidence is.  99.99% of what ID'ists have are arguments not evidence.  But again, their arguments have been shown to be wrong as well.

*This is important.  Species diversity and spread was a hot topic of the first half of the 19th century.  Darwin was not the only scientist working on it and even he was nearly scooped.  Evolution(Change over geologic time) HAD BEEN discovered.  Prior to 1859 it would not have been regarded as anything but an indisputable fact.  The only thing needed was the theory that explained it.

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"The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie--deliberate, contrived, and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.  Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."-John F. Kennedy

  
OgreMkV



Posts: 3668
Joined: Oct. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,09:58   

1) If no one knows how to calculate CSI... does that mean there's no freaking point?  People blather on about it, but no one... no one can calculate it... including Dembski.  So what's the point?

2) Remember most religious students can't understand that some things (namely science) can exist without dogma.  Unfortunately, most high school science courses reinforce that with repetitive memorization of facts.

I dare any student of Demsbki... or Dembski himself to come on this board and present a testable, falsifiable ID-based hypothesis and a single experiment done by a 'creation scientist' that supports their hypothesis.

Would you like a list of things that ID must do to be considered science.  I have one and to date, not a single question has been answered.

If you keep ignoring these things, then we're going to have to assume that ID has no basis for science and is, instead, a socio-political movement to force the indoctrination of all students into a Judeo-Christian faith... which of course, is true and why ID hasn't won a court case... ever.

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Badger3k



Posts: 861
Joined: Mar. 2008

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,11:22   

Quote (OgreMkV @ April 17 2010,09:58)
1) If no one knows how to calculate CSI... does that mean there's no freaking point?  People blather on about it, but no one... no one can calculate it... including Dembski.  So what's the point?

2) Remember most religious students can't understand that some things (namely science) can exist without dogma.  Unfortunately, most high school science courses reinforce that with repetitive memorization of facts.

I dare any student of Demsbki... or Dembski himself to come on this board and present a testable, falsifiable ID-based hypothesis and a single experiment done by a 'creation scientist' that supports their hypothesis.

Would you like a list of things that ID must do to be considered science.  I have one and to date, not a single question has been answered.

If you keep ignoring these things, then we're going to have to assume that ID has no basis for science and is, instead, a socio-political movement to force the indoctrination of all students into a Judeo-Christian faith... which of course, is true and why ID hasn't won a court case... ever.

There is a point - they can use sciencey sounding words to soothe the fears of the faithful and attract the gullible, and line their pockets.

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"Just think if every species had a different genetic code We would have to eat other humans to survive.." : Joe G

  
OgreMkV



Posts: 3668
Joined: Oct. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,16:27   

Oh right.  The self-serving, anti-Christian point.  But no actual scientific point.

Sometimes I really wish I was as immoral as these guys.  Image getting paid for 4 years to do nothing.  Getting a book advance and not having to write a book.  Wow... must be nice.

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Ignored by those who can't provide evidence for their claims.

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Cubist



Posts: 558
Joined: Oct. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,20:25   

Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)
Quote (Cubist @ Mar. 18 2010,19:35)
Quote (bjray @ Mar. 16 2010,13:58)
I thought I'd make a quick post this afternoon just as a way of letting those who care to know that I have read all of the posts up until now and will work to respond in a timely fashion. However, you must realize that to my (somewhat) surprise, my inbox was filled with about 25 alerts from this forum regarding your replies. So, I have my work cut out for me.
Emphasis added, and timestamp noted without comment...

Hello my fellow acquaintances. My has it been a while. I could continue to give my rationale for it, but it's of no consequence.
Thanks for coming back, bjray. In truth, I didn't expect you to show up again, and I definitely didn't expect that you'd even attempt to address any of the points that had been raised in the many responses to your posts here; these expectations of mine have nothing to do with you, personally, but with my past online encounters with other Creationists. It's altogether too damned common for Creationists to come on strong with an opening salvo of unsupported anti-evolution assertions, and then, after receiving the customary volley of "oh, yeah? how 'bout you support your assertions?" and "actually, your statement that [insert Creationist statement here] is flatly wrong -- see [insert scientific paper here] for details" responses, to either ( a ) softly and suddenly vanish away, or else ( b ) continue the 'conversation' with however-many responses that never actually get around to addressing the points that the non-Creationists raised. It is not at all rare that Creationists who go the latter, evasive, route, make noise about how they "don't have time" to formulate a proper response to their critics... which tends to invoke, in me at least, the incredulous reaction, Hey, jackass, you had plenty of time to post that 2,000-word lump of Creationist propaganda in the first place, so where do you get off whining about how you're too busy now to actually, like, support your assertions with evidence and valid reasoning and like that? Apparently, Creationists expect their assertions to be accepted on first contact, and they can't quite figure out what to do when they fail to receive the instant acceptance they expect... or maybe they just figure the initial bout of testimony/preaching is sufficient for their purposes, and therefore further interaction with those godless evilutionists would serve no useful purpose. I dunno.
The point of the above BIG CHUNK OF TEXT... and it has a point... is that you are not exploring virgin territory here. Most/all of the regulars hereabouts have had extensive previous interactions with Creationists, and those previous interactions will tend to influence the way we respond to Creationists in the present. So when a Creationist replies to a bunch of "support your position"/"such-and-such proves you wrong" messages with anything in the general vicinity of "I don't have time to for a proper reply right now, but I'll get back to you as soon as I can," we look at that and think, Yeah, right. The last 57 Creationists who made noise about 'no time to reply now' just plain didn't reply, but this Creationist is gonna be different. SUUURE he is, uh-huh, you betcha, and we respond accordingly.
Quote
So where were we...I think it was something along the lines of people expressing their honest feelings about Dembski and also wanting proof for how to calculate CSI for things.
Right. If this CSI stuff really is the sure-fire Design Detector which Dembski claims it is, you should be able to use it to actually, like, detect Design. And that's why some ID critics like to ask ID-pushers how much CSI there is in known-to-be-Designed entities like bowling balls and chocolate cake and so on. If the CSI thingie is everything ID-pushers claim it is, then it should be possible to determine how much CSI a bowling ball has, and there should no more be different CSI values for any one (Designed) object than there are different mass values for any one object. If CSI lives up to ID-pushers' press releases, then it should be very possible, perhaps even easy, for ID-pushers to answer questions like "what's the CSI of this bowling ball here?" But if CSI is actually a pile of crap -- if there is, in fact, no way to determine how much CSI an object has -- then it should be impossible for ID-pushers to answer questions like "what's the CSI of this bowling ball here?"
If CSI is the genuine article, ID-pushers should have real answers to questions about the CSI of arbitrary objects, and when asked for CSI values of arbitrary objects, they should therefore have little reluctance to share that information. Is that how Dembski acts when asked how much CSI such-and-such object has?
Quote
Well, unfortunately, I can offer you no good advice on how to calculate such readings of an object using his CSI theory (if you will). Thing is, I have not in my spare time (the little there is), nor as a part of class, actually read his work on CSI.
Why not?
Seriously: Why haven't you read Dembski's work on CSI? If he's teaching ID, surely his own work on CSI would be very relevant to what you guys are supposed to be learning in class, wouldn't it? So how come Dembski hasn't assigned any CSI-related classwork? Why is he leaving it out?

later edit: After posting this, it occurred to me that since the class you're taking is "Christian Faith and Science" rather than, say, "Intelligent Design 101", it actually could make sense for Dembski to leave CSI out of the course syllabus, if he's not actually teaching about ID in the course. So... does this course cover ID, or not?
Quote
At any rate, I've been reading more material, etc. I think I have more questions now than before. But what I've read from your response are things about Dembski and things about how Behe and other ID'ers offer no "real" theories worth looking into.
This is mostly because Behe, and ID-pushers in general, don't have any real theories worth looking into. If you disagree, feel free to bring up any one of those "real theories" which you believe any ID-pusher to have, and let's see how well that 'real theory' stands up on its own.
Quote
Well, I think that ID'ers, evolutionists, old earth, young earth, all have some interesting points worth taking into consideration (some more than others, yes).
That's nice. If you ever get the urge to discuss any of those "interesting points" you think Creationists have, by all means bring up that point here and we'll see if it's got anything resembling scientific validity.
Quote
What I'm interested in is going back to Darwin and his thought of evolution. For instance, what was his purpose in thinking up his theory of evolution (and survival of the fittest)?
That's easy: He was trying to explain the diversity of Life on Earth. Creationists do tend to assume that Darwin's theory of evolution is supposed to cover all kinds of shit which have nothing to do with the diversity of life on Earth, but they're just wrong.
Quote
I think he was trying to make sense of the world (in essence a "theological" framework).
Not the whole world, but, rather, that subset of the world which has to do with the diversity of Life on Earth. Since Darwin was only trying to make sense of part of the world, are you sure "theological" is an appropriate word to apply to what he was doing?
Quote
Maybe I have not read as much as I should, but it appears that he did not have much to say about things like how the earth was created using his theory of evolution, etc.
Dude. Darwin wasn't even trying to explain how the Earth was created. His theory of evolution is all about the diversity of Life on Earth, not where the Earth came from. I have no idea where you're getting your ideas about Darwin, but if this is any indication, you really need some better sources, because the sources you got this stuff from are pretty much total garbage.
Quote
Rather, it seems to me that he was instead, trying to put the pieces of science together based on his findings of fossils, etc spread around the globe.
No shit, Sherlock. What's your point?
Quote
What I am getting at/what I am working out in my head is how can evolutionary proponents praise the man for starting something that he (Charles Darwin) never intended for his "theory" to do?
They don't. Next question?
Quote
Now, I obviously cannot tell his intentions, but it he was not even so sure about everything he said!
First: Says who, and how do they know? If you're getting this from the same sources which told you that the theory of evolution is somehow supposed to have something to do with the formation of the Earth, well, it's just one more piece of evidence that those sources are full of bullshit.
Second: It doesn't matter what Darwin's opinion of his theory may have been. What does matter is ( a ) the theory itself, and ( b ) how well said theory is supported by the empirical data. If your sources are telling you that "look! Darwin doubted himself!" is a valid reason to dismiss his theory, that's one more piece of evidence to support the proposition that your sources are full of shit.
Quote
Another thing I'm working on trying to understand from my evolutionary friends is their rationale for recent developments in molecular biology. My best friend has a Ph.D in molecular biology for Cornell U. and he too wonders similar things.

For example (and back to Behe and his irreducible complexity), we know (today) that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems on the cellular level. Such that without one of the pieces, it would fail to operate as it was designed. It's just what has been discovered, that's all.
That's IC according to Behe. Dembski came up with his own version of 'irreducible complexity' which is rather different from Behe's; you might want to ask Dembski about his version of IC. His response could be interesting.
First: "Plenty" of IC systems? Fine: Name five of those "plenty" of systems. I ask because I want to know if you're actually familiar with the specifics of this claim, or if you are, instead, just parroting a claim that someone else put in your head. Also, I'm curious to know if you're going to cite any of the anointed-as-IC-by-Behe systems which have, in fact, been demonstrated to not be IC...
Second: "Recent"? Wrong. A gent named Muller came up with the concept of irreducible complexity -- he named that concept "interlocking complexity", but under either name, it's still it stops working if any one of the parts ain't there -- back in 1918. If you're interesting in getting it 'straight from the horse's mouth', try Genetic Variablity, Twin Hybrids and Constant Hybrids, in a Case of Balanced Lethal Factors, by Hermann J Muller, in Genetics, Vol 3, No 5, Sept 1918, pp 422-499.
Third: Engineers have a term for a part of a system whose absence or breakage causes the entire system to stop working. This term is "critical failure point", and the more of them a system has, the less robust it is. We puny humans try to avoid putting critical failure points into our systems... but an IC system is one for which every part is a critical failure point! What sort of Designer would do that?
Fourth: Behe argues that IC systems cannot evolve, on the grounds that there is no possible evolutionary precursor to a system which requires all of its parts to be present and functional in order for the system itself to work. Behe's argument has a big, screaming, ugly hole in it, and that hole is his implicit assumption that every step in an evolutionary process must necessarily be 'add a new part to what was already there'. In reality, evolutionary processes can and do include two other kinds of steps, those being 'remove a part that was already in place', and 'modify a part that was already in place'. Therefore, the evolutionary precursor to an IC system can fall into one of three classes, depending on the last step of that evolutionary process:
If the last step was 'add a new part', the evolutionary precursor is the IC system, minus one part. This, of course, would necessarily have to be nonfunctional, by the definition of IC.
If the last step was 'remove an existing part', the evolutionary precursor is the IC system, plus an additional part. Is there anything in the definition of IC which requires that as IC system fail to work when a new part is added? No. Therefore, Behe's 'there cannot be any evolutionary precursor' argument crashes and burns here.
If the last step was 'modify an existing part', the evolutionary precursor is the IC system, except with one of its parts modified. Now, it must be admitted that in some cases, modifying one part of an IC system will end up breaking the system... but Behe is making a universal argument, which cannot be valid unless all physically possible modifications, to any of the IC system's parts, must necessarily break the system.
See any problems with Behe's argument?
Quote
Cubist, I think your post here is a little too reductionistic (if you will).
That's nice. It's a cop-out, but it's nice. What the hell is "reductionistic' about asking IDists to bloody well define that bleeding 'theory' they keep on claiming to bloody have?
Quote
My opinion on it is that ID'ers are not merely trying to provide answers to question like someone, somewhere, did something...
And my opinion is that ID-pushers are not trying to provide answers, period. They're not trying to provide answers to questions of how much CSI [insert Designed object here] has; they're not trying to provide answers to questions of what the hell this "theory of Intelligent Design" actually is and actually says; they're not trying to provide any answers. Feel free to bring up anything you regard as a counterexample to my assertion here.
Quote
...but are also attempting to show the stepping stones of how to get to those answers. For example: the thought that maybe intelligent design is a feasible option with supporting evidence.
Oh, please. Dude, you do not get to play the 'dem eevil Darwinismists HATE TEH IJNTELLIJINT DEEZYNE!!1!" card. It may come as a shock to you, but there are entire fields of scientific study -- archaeology and forensics are the first two which come to mind -- which are all about 'intelligent design'. The difference between 'intelligent design' as practiced by real scientists, and Intelligent Design as practiced by the likes of Dembski and Behe, is that real scientists think somehow, somewhere, somewhen, somebody intelligent did something is a mindlessly vague chunk of verbiage rather than a cutting-edge hypothesis. And if you think somehow, somewhere, somewhen, somebody intelligent did something is not an accurate summary of Intelligent Design 'theory', by all means feel free to clue us all in to how real ID 'theory' differs from my seven-word summary.
Or, you know, whine about "eeew, reductionism!" and avoid the question.
Quote
(you may say, what supporting evidence...but I would submit that they have provided it, people just don't accept it as "good" evidence, or what they think is "evidence.")
And I would submit that somehow, somewhere, somewhen, somebody intelligent did something is so damned vague that it isn't even possible for ID-pushers to have evidence for it.
Quote
p.s. "I think" many people miss the two words at the top left of this picture...
Yes, Darwin wrote "I think" in one of his notebooks. What's your point (if any)?

  
rhmc



Posts: 340
Joined: Dec. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,20:39   

Quote (Cubist @ April 17 2010,21:25)
Yes, Darwin wrote "I think" in one of his notebooks. What's your point (if any)?

the point is that IDiots can't.

  
OgreMkV



Posts: 3668
Joined: Oct. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,20:45   

Well said Cubist.

bj, if you are a truly honest seeker of information, then you will get more than could ever imagine from the folks here.  Everyone from the humble high school teacher to the Ph.D. (several actually) who work with evolutionary principles on a daily basis.

Something to keep in mind is that the strength of a theory (remember, not the cop-show definition of theory, but the science definition) is how well it answers other questions.  Evolutionary principles have been used to do things from finding fairly specific fossils (look up: Tiktaalik) to things like how to defeat HIV and why superbugs (heavily anti-biotic resistant bacteria) exist.

What, in the last 15 or so years, has ID actually done that improves the understanding that humans have of the natural world?

If you are truly honest with yourself and willing to really test your dogma, then this is the place.  But if you want to argue about science, then you have to use science's rules.  That's the way it works.

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Ignored by those who can't provide evidence for their claims.

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Dr.GH



Posts: 2333
Joined: May 2002

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,20:59   

Quote (OgreMkV @ April 17 2010,18:45)
bj, if you are a truly honest seeker of information, then you will get more than could ever imagine from the folks here.  Everyone from the humble high school teacher to the Ph.D. (several actually) who work with evolutionary principles on a daily basis.

Heh heh, compared to Dembski's 2 PhDs (in very very similar topics for very similar work), we AtBTers can show up with how many PhDs? At least 8. Several more nearing completion.

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"Science is the horse that pulls the cart of philosophy."

L. Susskind, 2004 "SMOLIN VS. SUSSKIND: THE ANTHROPIC PRINCIPLE"

   
OgreMkV



Posts: 3668
Joined: Oct. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: April 17 2010,22:12   

Quote (Dr.GH @ April 17 2010,20:59)
Quote (OgreMkV @ April 17 2010,18:45)
bj, if you are a truly honest seeker of information, then you will get more than could ever imagine from the folks here.  Everyone from the humble high school teacher to the Ph.D. (several actually) who work with evolutionary principles on a daily basis.

Heh heh, compared to Dembski's 2 PhDs (in very very similar topics for very similar work), we AtBTers can show up with how many PhDs? At least 8. Several more nearing completion.

I have over 200 college credit hours... but no degree beyond a bachelors... sigh.

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Ignored by those who can't provide evidence for their claims.

http://skepticink.com/smilodo....retreat

   
fnxtr



Posts: 3504
Joined: June 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 18 2010,02:18   

Quote (OgreMkV @ April 17 2010,20:12)
Quote (Dr.GH @ April 17 2010,20:59)
Quote (OgreMkV @ April 17 2010,18:45)
bj, if you are a truly honest seeker of information, then you will get more than could ever imagine from the folks here.  Everyone from the humble high school teacher to the Ph.D. (several actually) who work with evolutionary principles on a daily basis.

Heh heh, compared to Dembski's 2 PhDs (in very very similar topics for very similar work), we AtBTers can show up with how many PhDs? At least 8. Several more nearing completion.

I have over 200 college credit hours... but no degree beyond a bachelors... sigh.

Heh. And if questions come up about music, broadcasting, the history of the English language, or entry-level astronomy, I'm your man. :-)

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"[A] book said there were 5 trillion witnesses. Who am I supposed to believe, 5 trillion witnesses or you? That shit's, like, ironclad. " -- stevestory

"Wow, you must be retarded. I said that CO2 does not trap heat. If it did then it would not cool down at night."  Joe G

  
Wesley R. Elsberry



Posts: 4991
Joined: May 2002

(Permalink) Posted: April 18 2010,07:14   

Dembski has particular issues with credentialism. On the one hand, it is commonplace for Dembski to dismiss criticism by sneering at the mathematical background of the critic. On the other, he has advocated the general validity of criticism of "Darwinism" by the lay public (see his article, "Shamelessly Doubting Darwin"), explicitly saying that no expertise is necessary to launch a critique on a concept offered to the general public.

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"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker

    
Louis



Posts: 6436
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 18 2010,07:53   

Quote (OgreMkV @ April 18 2010,03:12)
Quote (Dr.GH @ April 17 2010,20:59)
Quote (OgreMkV @ April 17 2010,18:45)
bj, if you are a truly honest seeker of information, then you will get more than could ever imagine from the folks here.  Everyone from the humble high school teacher to the Ph.D. (several actually) who work with evolutionary principles on a daily basis.

Heh heh, compared to Dembski's 2 PhDs (in very very similar topics for very similar work), we AtBTers can show up with how many PhDs? At least 8. Several more nearing completion.

I have over 200 college credit hours... but no degree beyond a bachelors... sigh.

I have some pamplets on sexual health and a ticket for the night bus between Stepney and Covent Garden, will that help?

Since the last post by our new(ish) chum seems to be written by an old lady wagging her finger at naughty scientists with their research and knowing stuff, I feel that mockery may well ensue. Of course I shall restrain myself as far as possible, but more comments about Darwin writing "I think", or treating science like a religion and I may be forced to take the piss somewhat.

I know, I know, it's terrible and I am a meanie, but what's a boy to do? Oh I know, back to the pub.*

Louis

*I have been given a rare Weekend Pass** by my beloved wife so yesterday I spent two hours in a secluded, old man's pub where people drink in surly silence, and no alcopops were available nor music played. I sat, sipping a pint or three of very nicely kept Double Dropped, eating the occasional pig snack, and reading a pile of papers on organocatalysis that I'd been meaning to get to for ages. Now, I don't know if there is a heaven or not, but surely there has to be a section in nirvana with a quiet pub, decent beer and suitable reading materials?

**Which, to be fair to both her and me, I'd earned by the judicious application of candlelit baths, foot massage, housework and breakfast in bed. The currencies of any healthy relationship.

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Bye.

  
Erasmus, FCD



Posts: 6349
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 18 2010,09:00   

you forgot to mention dear Louis that whilst you enjoyed such pleasantries you were tightly restrained with the strops, hemp rope and ball gag.  accuracy matters!

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You're obviously illiterate as hell. Peach, bro.-FtK

Finding something hard to believe based on the evidence, is science.-JoeG

the odds of getting some loathsome taint are low-- Gordon E Mullings Manjack Heights Montserrat

I work on molecular systems with pathway charts and such.-Giggles

  
Wesley R. Elsberry



Posts: 4991
Joined: May 2002

(Permalink) Posted: April 18 2010,09:05   

Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)
   
Quote (Cubist @ Mar. 18 2010,19:35)
       
Quote (bjray @ Mar. 16 2010,13:58)
I thought I'd make a quick post this afternoon just as a way of letting those who care to know that I have read all of the posts up until now and will work to respond in a timely fashion. However, you must realize that to my (somewhat) surprise, my inbox was filled with about 25 alerts from this forum regarding your replies. So, I have my work cut out for me.
Emphasis added, and timestamp noted without comment...

Hello my fellow acquaintances. My has it been a while. I could continue to give my rationale for it, but it's of no consequence.

So where were we...I think it was something along the lines of people expressing their honest feelings about Dembski and also wanting proof for how to calculate CSI for things.


Some of us have done the work of analyzing what's been offered about CSI and concluded that there will be no such thing coming, given that CSI is incoherent and inconsistent.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Well, unfortunately, I can offer you no good advice on how to calculate such readings of an object using his CSI theory (if you will). Thing is, I have not in my spare time (the little there is), nor as a part of class, actually read his work on CSI.


Given that Dembski's philosophical work on CSI was supposed to give the warrant for the entire "intelligent design" enterprise, don't you think that it is a bit more than blase' to act as if ID can be justified without knowing whether CSI stands up to scrutiny?

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

At any rate, I've been reading more material, etc. I think I have more questions now than before. But what I've read from your response are things about Dembski and things about how Behe and other ID'ers offer no "real" theories worth looking into.


Given that Dembski and Behe are considered the intellectual heavyweights in the IDC movement, isn't that sort of a problem for the movement?

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Well, I think that ID'ers, evolutionists, old earth, young earth, all have some interesting points worth taking into consideration (some more than others, yes).


I'm afraid I have to call shenanigans. I've seen no evidence of a thought process on your side of this conversation. As William James said, "A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices." You could mend this in part by providing some support for the claim above. I'll stipulate that evolutionary biologists make interesting points worth taking into consideration; I have read many instances of this myself in the primary literature. As to the remainder, you are redundant. The concepts offered as "intelligent design" were previously offered as "creation science", and those were previously offered as creationism. That is, religious antievolution in the USA sequentially presents subsets of argumentation made previously, hoping that the excluded parts of the superset are the ones that led to legal defeat in the courts.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

What I'm interested in is going back to Darwin and his thought of evolution. For instance, what was his purpose in thinking up his theory of evolution (and survival of the fittest)? I think he was trying to make sense of the world (in essence a "theological" framework).


Again, thought involves more than randomly inventing stuff out of whole cloth. "Making sense of the world" doesn't support the notion that the result must be a "theological framework".

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Maybe I have not read as much as I should,


We can be more definite about that. You haven't.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

but it appears that he did not have much to say about things like how the earth was created using his theory of evolution, etc.


Much as spiffy spinach-artichoke dip recipes are hard to find in Newton's Principia Mathematica. Hint: that wasn't part of the topic of discussion.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Rather, it seems to me that he was instead, trying to put the pieces of science together based on his findings of fossils, etc spread around the globe.


Have you ever bothered to read Darwin's Origin of Species? If not, why are you attempting to even speculate about the reasons for its existence? Doesn't it seem odd to you if someone reviews a movie, and blithely says somewhere along the way that they didn't bother to go watch it? The case is rather the worse for you, since mass media entertainment is largely ephemera of no lasting consequence, but Darwin's Origin of Species is a pivotal scientific work that is part of everyone's intellectual heritage.

It is available online, for free, here.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

What I am getting at/what I am working out in my head is how can evolutionary proponents praise the man for starting something that he (Charles Darwin) never intended for his "theory" to do?


This question doesn't make any sense to me, other than if it were intended to be a question along the lines of, "Have you stopped beating your wife?" sort of thing. You'll need to be specific, I'm afraid. Provide an instance of someone (1) praising Darwin where the reason for the praise (2) isn't part of what Darwin's work touched upon. Then, and only then, will there be a point to making a rejoinder.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Now, I obviously cannot tell his intentions, but it he was not even so sure about everything he said!


Scientists quite commonly discuss potential problems and areas of concern regarding the ideas that they advocate. Darwin is no different in that regard than any other competent worker in the natural sciences.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Another thing I'm working on trying to understand from my evolutionary friends is their rationale for recent developments in molecular biology. My best friend has a Ph.D in molecular biology for Cornell U. and he too wonders similar things.


I hope that you aren't expecting to get a pass on this by citing to the imaginary authority of an anonymous friend? Feel free to swap the adjectives and nouns in the above if you like.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

For example (and back to Behe and his irreducible complexity), we know (today) that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems on the cellular level.


No, we know that certain people with an ax to grind assert that "irreducibly complex" systems exist that could not have evolved. Nobody has bothered to demonstrate that such is the case for even one such instance.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Such that without one of the pieces, it would fail to operate as it was designed. It's just what has been discovered, that's all.


As others have already pointed out, this isn't evidence of "design". It is a consequence of the expected operation of evolutionary processes, that systems can become brittle and dependent upon key parts. This was termed "interlocking complexity" way before Behe was born. Maybe he should have done a better literature search.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

I know know, I'm jumping around. It's just the way I think sometimes.


Random neural spiking, again, isn't thinking. If you want to claim "thinking", provide your premises, your inferences, and the conclusions that follow, along with at least example evidence. This has been conspicuous by its absence in your posts.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

Cubist, I think your post here is a little too reductionistic (if you will). My opinion on it is that ID'ers are not merely trying to provide answers to question like someone, somewhere, did something...but are also attempting to show the stepping stones of how to get to those answers. For example: the thought that maybe intelligent design is a feasible option with supporting evidence. (you may say, what supporting evidence...but I would submit that they have provided it, people just don't accept it as "good" evidence, or what they think is "evidence.")


Again, "thought" is not appropriately used in this context. "Wish" comes somewhat closer to the mark.

In 2005, the Kitzmiller v. DASD trial involved courtroom testimony where Dr. Behe and Dr. Minnich each had to agree that where ideas could be tested, it was due to evolution being a testable concept, not that "intelligent design" could be put to the test. There are transcripts that you can read if you doubt me. Where IDC advocates claim to have evidence and there is something that looks like evidence, it invariably involves a "evolution can't do X" sort of claim, not a "this is what must be true if ID is true" sort of claim. What we are saying is that "evolution can't do X" is not support for "ID is true". You have to actually get to where someone can produce evidence of ID, and not merely attempt to besmirch other concepts.

 
Quote (bjray @ April 16 2010,00:57)

All right, good to be back.

p.s. "I think" many people miss the two words at the top left of this picture...


No, we didn't miss them. And we didn't miss the 160+ years of work that has passed between the penning of those words and today's understanding of common descent. It is unfortunate that it appears that you have and will continue to remain ignorant of it.

--------------
"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." - Dorothy Parker

    
bjray



Posts: 13
Joined: Mar. 2010

(Permalink) Posted: April 22 2010,23:41   

Quote (Badger3k @ April 16 2010,01:37)
[quote=Wow - very confused is what I would say.  For instance - what does Darwin's purpose for putting together the theory of evolution matter for anything?  Just curiosity?  What does "how can evolutionary proponents praise the man for starting something something that he...never intended for his "theory" to do" even mean?  Despite the scare quotes, evolutionary theory is a real one - it's been tested, verified, supported - all the stuff real science requires.  Your use of scare quotes tells me you are not well informed.  People "praise Darwin" - if you will - because he was the one who first formulated what would become the cornerstone of modern biology.  A very noteworthy accomplishment.

If a man named Yeshua ben Yoseph (if I've written the Hebrew down correctly - it's been a while since I tried it) existed and was a messianic prophet (to borrow Bart Ehrmans hypothesis), why would you praise him for starting something that became far more than he ever intended?  But I bet you do.  Why?

I'd like to know this name of this best friend at Cornell who is an ID advocate - if that is the intent.  The wording you use is pretty much mush.  What the hell is "their rationale for recent developments in molecular biology"?  Are you asking about the motivations of scientists?  Their philosophical or religious beliefs?  Questions about their curiosity?  It sounds a lot like "Dude, did you ever look at your hand?  I mean, really look at it?" to me.

Finally, since I need to stop, if you think that we "know that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems", then you really haven't been paying attention.  Too much of Behe, not enough actual science.  Try a biology class instead of philosophy, and try real scientists, not hacks whose ideas have been torn to shreds by people who work in the fields he's trying to pervert.  

The "argument" (such as it is) of "it would fail to operate as it was designed" is (I believe) question begging, or circular reasoning.  The implication is that the system was designed and has a purpose - which implies intelligence - most systems have functions, not purposes.  The "design hypothesis" has to show, with evidence, not just handwaving and god-of-the-gaps and arguments from ignorance, that there is design.  Then you can make the claim that things fail to operate as they were designed.  You can wish all you want that the "evidence" provided by the IDiots is good, but it fails every test and at every point.  Pretty piss-poor (or feces-rich) "evidence" to me.  Science is based on evidence that stands up to everything, not fold like Troy Aikman before a tackle (I've never seen a quarterback collapse so fast when rushed, sorry Cowboy fans, if there are any reading).
[/quote]
So after reading your post, I think I smiled the most.

Here's the deal. I like to ask questions and get responses because quite frankly I'm not an expert in any of the areas mentioned thus far in this discussion. However, it does not mean that I do not have an idea of what I am talking about.

I like what sledgehammer said when he noted that no one praises Darwin on his theory regarding creation because his theory was not about that.

But you are proving exactly what I am trying to understand about your perspective. Let me explain further.

You use harsh language about how ID'ers show poor evidence, ID'ers cannot stand up to real biology, ID'ers promote god-of-the-gaps arguments, ID'ers..you know what you say. But you, yourself, said that "science is based on evidence that stands up to everything." Are you telling me that evolution has passed this test? I'm not telling you that God's actions in science/creation (what have you) can be fully explained. (Ie: now you accuse me of OH "god-of-the-gaps" right there...) It would seem to me that evolution does not stand to every "evidence" it provides. Furthermore, evolution has attempted to attribute cause to creation, of which Darwin never intended to do (as noted by Sledgehammer). One cannot provide evidence for some "big bang" or "primordial soup" or whatever the new story is this time around. So I submit to you that evolution also fails in many areas.

It just so happens that at present I'm in a philosophy course. I've taken the biology (albeit, my degree does not have that major listed). All I'm saying is that evolution does not do all that you say and praise it for. A few that I always pondered were: the "gene for everything" idea, explanation of morality, explanation for self-preservation, failure to explain gene similarities among humans, failure to explain how pure randomness can account for "social insects" ie: ants, bees. My measly list could go on.

So I'll end this post with a question based on some of the further posts I've read. Is it simply that because Creationists attribute what might be a scientifically explainable event to an Intelligent Designer the primary issue? Or, is it t because Creationists do not use evolution to help explain their work? Or, is it that Creationists use a "get out of jail free" by attributing God to various things that science can explain? I desire to know what the underlying issue is. I've heard from Elsberry in some of my initial posts. Thank you for that.

Btw, I will comment that I did read that the Dover case "proved" along with some other work that IC has already been proved that it COULD happen through natural causes. (ok, interesting stuff, I'll look more into that. Thanks.) This is not something earth-shattering to me. Matter a fact, I already knew that evolutionary proponents had written material attempting to explain their side. It's interesting stuff.

oldmanintheskydidntdoit - the facts do matter. :)

Ah, so many more to comment on. I'll do another tomorrow.

Oh, but one more - Albatrosity (nice name btw). Ok, I hear everyone. Don't get hung up on Darwin. His intentions are of no consequence. And I agree with your third point. Science is an ever-changing field of study. I'd like to point out though that the only thing I know of that is immutable is God. I don't think my science is or what have you. (if that's what you were trying to point out..)

Lastly, my whole point of bringing up Darwin's intentions were simply my attempt to understand the basis for his life's work.

Thanks for all your responses.

  
Reed



Posts: 274
Joined: Feb. 2008

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,00:46   

Quote (bjray @ April 22 2010,21:41)
But you, yourself, said that "science is based on evidence that stands up to everything." Are you telling me that evolution has passed this test?

Thus far, yes. Next question ?
     
Quote
One cannot provide evidence for some "big bang"

Big bang is cosmology, not evolution. It's also the best fit to the available evidence by far. (Astronomers and cosmologists do talk about "stellar evolution" and such, but this is not related to Theory Of Evolution in biology.)
     
Quote

or "primordial soup" or whatever the new story is this time around.

Abiogenesis is closely related, but it's not evolution. The distinction is important because evolution works regardless of how the first reproducing organisms appeared. There's good reason to believe that chemical abiogenesis is possible, but common descent would be well support even if life appeared through some other means.
     
Quote

So I submit to you that evolution also fails in many areas.

I submit, based on the glaring errors above, that you don't have any idea what evolution is. I'd also submit that evolution is as well supported as pretty much any other widely accepted science, while creationism is not.
     
Quote

Is it simply that because Creationists attribute what might be a scientifically explainable event to an Intelligent Designer the primary issue? Or, is it t because Creationists do not use evolution to help explain their work?

Nope. Do you even read the replies to your posts ? This has been explained to you several times.
   
Quote

Or, is it that Creationists use a "get out of jail free" by attributing God to various things that science can explain?

Now you are getting closer. You can insert "god did it" anywhere, but it doesn't actually explain anything, precisely because you can insert it anywhere. God, by most popular definitions, can do anything. So there is no possible observation that is more compatible with "god did it" than any other, and "god did it" provides no predictions about what else you should observe.

Even you could say "god did it" was true in some abstract philosophical sense, it would be useless as an explanation.

  
Badger3k



Posts: 861
Joined: Mar. 2008

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,00:58   

Quote (bjray @ April 22 2010,23:41)
Quote (Badger3k @ April 16 2010,01:37)
[quote=Wow - very confused is what I would say.  For instance - what does Darwin's purpose for putting together the theory of evolution matter for anything?  Just curiosity?  What does "how can evolutionary proponents praise the man for starting something something that he...never intended for his "theory" to do" even mean?  Despite the scare quotes, evolutionary theory is a real one - it's been tested, verified, supported - all the stuff real science requires.  Your use of scare quotes tells me you are not well informed.  People "praise Darwin" - if you will - because he was the one who first formulated what would become the cornerstone of modern biology.  A very noteworthy accomplishment.

If a man named Yeshua ben Yoseph (if I've written the Hebrew down correctly - it's been a while since I tried it) existed and was a messianic prophet (to borrow Bart Ehrmans hypothesis), why would you praise him for starting something that became far more than he ever intended?  But I bet you do.  Why?

I'd like to know this name of this best friend at Cornell who is an ID advocate - if that is the intent.  The wording you use is pretty much mush.  What the hell is "their rationale for recent developments in molecular biology"?  Are you asking about the motivations of scientists?  Their philosophical or religious beliefs?  Questions about their curiosity?  It sounds a lot like "Dude, did you ever look at your hand?  I mean, really look at it?" to me.

Finally, since I need to stop, if you think that we "know that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems", then you really haven't been paying attention.  Too much of Behe, not enough actual science.  Try a biology class instead of philosophy, and try real scientists, not hacks whose ideas have been torn to shreds by people who work in the fields he's trying to pervert.  

The "argument" (such as it is) of "it would fail to operate as it was designed" is (I believe) question begging, or circular reasoning.  The implication is that the system was designed and has a purpose - which implies intelligence - most systems have functions, not purposes.  The "design hypothesis" has to show, with evidence, not just handwaving and god-of-the-gaps and arguments from ignorance, that there is design.  Then you can make the claim that things fail to operate as they were designed.  You can wish all you want that the "evidence" provided by the IDiots is good, but it fails every test and at every point.  Pretty piss-poor (or feces-rich) "evidence" to me.  Science is based on evidence that stands up to everything, not fold like Troy Aikman before a tackle (I've never seen a quarterback collapse so fast when rushed, sorry Cowboy fans, if there are any reading).
[/quote]
So after reading your post, I think I smiled the most.

Here's the deal. I like to ask questions and get responses because quite frankly I'm not an expert in any of the areas mentioned thus far in this discussion. However, it does not mean that I do not have an idea of what I am talking about.

I like what sledgehammer said when he noted that no one praises Darwin on his theory regarding creation because his theory was not about that.

But you are proving exactly what I am trying to understand about your perspective. Let me explain further.

You use harsh language about how ID'ers show poor evidence, ID'ers cannot stand up to real biology, ID'ers promote god-of-the-gaps arguments, ID'ers..you know what you say. But you, yourself, said that "science is based on evidence that stands up to everything." Are you telling me that evolution has passed this test? I'm not telling you that God's actions in science/creation (what have you) can be fully explained. (Ie: now you accuse me of OH "god-of-the-gaps" right there...) It would seem to me that evolution does not stand to every "evidence" it provides. Furthermore, evolution has attempted to attribute cause to creation, of which Darwin never intended to do (as noted by Sledgehammer). One cannot provide evidence for some "big bang" or "primordial soup" or whatever the new story is this time around. So I submit to you that evolution also fails in many areas.

It just so happens that at present I'm in a philosophy course. I've taken the biology (albeit, my degree does not have that major listed). All I'm saying is that evolution does not do all that you say and praise it for. A few that I always pondered were: the "gene for everything" idea, explanation of morality, explanation for self-preservation, failure to explain gene similarities among humans, failure to explain how pure randomness can account for "social insects" ie: ants, bees. My measly list could go on.

So I'll end this post with a question based on some of the further posts I've read. Is it simply that because Creationists attribute what might be a scientifically explainable event to an Intelligent Designer the primary issue? Or, is it t because Creationists do not use evolution to help explain their work? Or, is it that Creationists use a "get out of jail free" by attributing God to various things that science can explain? I desire to know what the underlying issue is. I've heard from Elsberry in some of my initial posts. Thank you for that.

Btw, I will comment that I did read that the Dover case "proved" along with some other work that IC has already been proved that it COULD happen through natural causes. (ok, interesting stuff, I'll look more into that. Thanks.) This is not something earth-shattering to me. Matter a fact, I already knew that evolutionary proponents had written material attempting to explain their side. It's interesting stuff.

oldmanintheskydidntdoit - the facts do matter. :)

Ah, so many more to comment on. I'll do another tomorrow.

Oh, but one more - Albatrosity (nice name btw). Ok, I hear everyone. Don't get hung up on Darwin. His intentions are of no consequence. And I agree with your third point. Science is an ever-changing field of study. I'd like to point out though that the only thing I know of that is immutable is God. I don't think my science is or what have you. (if that's what you were trying to point out..)

Lastly, my whole point of bringing up Darwin's intentions were simply my attempt to understand the basis for his life's work.

Thanks for all your responses.

So far, it stills shows me that you have a piss-poor understanding of evolution, science, and probably life in general.  Evolution has stood up to all tests that are scientific, and everything we know about biology, and everything we learn, gives further support (as well as modifications to the theory as we learn more).  

Your next bit (sorry, I can't figure out how to quote like I think I used to) about "evolution has attempted to attribute cause to creation" shows (as I said) a piss-poor understanding of evolution.  Evolution is, basically, descent with modification.  That's it.  The origin of life is a related (it is chemistry and biology, after all) but separate area of research.  Your misguided belief that evolution attributes cause, whatever that means, to "creation" (since as a materialist I have no evidence of a creator, I try to avoid using metaphors/popular phrases in discussions like this).  The idea of "creation" implies a creator, which is a separate issue for which there is also no evidence in the scientific sense, just wishes and feelings.

One can indeed provide evidence for the big bang, and all you need to do is crack open google and do a little research into cosmic microwave background radiation, for a start.  I've found astronomycast to be a very informative podcast.  Try it for a bit.  A very common creationist and/or ignorant (in the sense of lack of knowledge) claim is that evolution deals with the big bang or the origin of the universe.  It doesn't.  When we talk of stellar evolution and the like, it's a completely different sense and completely unrelated to the theory of evolution in biology (well, except for the idea of change, but that's pretty much it).

The "primordial soup"/RNA world/etc areas of abiogenesis are interesting and have varying degrees of evidence and scientific support.  That involves (as I said) chemistry, but also physics and geology.  Robert Hazen's book "Genesis - the scientific quest for life's origins" is a good place to start, but I think OgreMkV posted a few links in the Floyd Lee thread here on the site today dealing with this subject.  Search for it, and you'll find links to stories and papers that provide evidence.

Your ideas that you ponder are a bit of a hodgepodge, and a philosophy course is the wrong path to take to discover the actual facts.  Try to take some biology courses.  Look into such books as Marc Hauser's "Moral Minds" for a speculative (although there is evidence) look at the possible origins of morality as an evolved trait.  The arguments for that are not that hard to grasp, and there are both biological and psychological/anthropological studies that give support to the idea.  For such things as "pure randomness" - start with the actual theory and the varies meanings of terms, through the scientific realm, instead of relying on preachers and incredibly poor teachers with religious agendas.  Ignorance is curable, and it helps to ponder if you know the real facts.  I can ponder about the Incredible Hulk all I want, but I also know he doesn't exist, so any pondering does not reflect reality.

Your "end this post" bit doesn't address the various other aspects - that Creationists (including the IDCreationists) ignore factual evidence in favor of an ancient dogma, often misrepresenting or outright lying about, well, pretty much everything.  They claim to want to do science without actually doing any.  They want their mythology to be taught as science, when it isn't, especially when they ignore the thousands of other mythologies taught by their compatriots across the world.  They often (and they aren't alone in this) fail to use any kind of skepticism and critical thinking into claims that are easily amenable to investigation.  They settle for a story they were often taught to believe as kids, while ignoring the wonders of the real world.  As some creationists believe, we are made from mud and were cursed for something we never did by a being that knew it was going to happen.  Using science, we can see, as Carl Sagan put it, that we are star-stuff.  They want to stifle that sense of wonder with their pre-packaged answers.  The combination of dishonesty, manipulation, willful ignorance...just some of the reasons Creationists get no respect.

(all the quote mining, censorship, etc that are exposed here and elsewhere do not help matters either).

Btw - do you have a coherent definition of "God" or even "spiritual"?  I've yet to hear one that doesn't break down on examination.  What are your definitions, if you don't mind.  Given that we have TAKS testing coming up and I'm getting problems from my boss, I may not have much time to comment, but this is the most I've written in a long time and it's intellectually stimulating to get back into the trenches (even if it is online).

--------------
"Just think if every species had a different genetic code We would have to eat other humans to survive.." : Joe G

  
oldmanintheskydidntdoit



Posts: 4999
Joined: July 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,03:02   

Quote (bjray @ April 22 2010,23:41)
oldmanintheskydidntdoit - the facts do matter. :)

What do you make of Walt Brown and his Hydroplate idea?

http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/HydroplateOverview.html

Fact or fiction? Supported by empirical evidence or not?

--------------
I also mentioned that He'd have to give me a thorough explanation as to *why* I must "eat human babies".
FTK

if there are even critical flaws in Gauger’s work, the evo mat narrative cannot stand
Gordon Mullings

  
Cubist



Posts: 558
Joined: Oct. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,03:25   

Quote (bjray @ April 22 2010,23:41)
You use harsh language about how ID'ers show poor evidence, ID'ers cannot stand up to real biology, ID'ers promote god-of-the-gaps arguments, ID'ers..you know what you say.
Yes, we do say those things. We say them because we believe they're true. Would you like to try to demonstrate that any of those things we say are not true... or would you rather (continue to) whine about how mean those nasty evilutionismustistas are to say those terribly, terribly hurtful things?
 
Quote
But you, yourself, said that "science is based on evidence that stands up to everything." Are you telling me that evolution has passed this test?
Yes. That's exactly what we're telling you. Would you like to learn about any of the tests which evolution has stood up to thus far?
 
Quote
I'm not telling you that God's actions in science/creation (what have you) can be fully explained. (Ie: now you accuse me of OH "god-of-the-gaps" right there...) It would seem to me that evolution does not stand to every "evidence" it provides.
What does "stand to every 'evidence'" mean? I've never encountered that phrase before, and it's not immediately obvious to me what you're tryna say... could you translate that from the original English, please?
 
Quote
Furthermore, evolution has attempted to attribute cause to creation, of which Darwin never intended to do (as noted by Sledgehammer).
Hold it. What the fuck does "attempted to attribute cause to creation" even mean? Again: Can you translate this from the original English?
 
Quote
One cannot provide evidence for some "big bang" or "primordial soup" or whatever the new story is this time around.
I begin to suspect that you have no idea whatsoever what 'scientific evidence' is. And given that you cite "big bang" and "primordial soup" as if these two very different notions were both instances of one single "new story", I also begin to suspect that you haven't fucking read any of the replies to you which pointed out that abiogenesis (see also: "primordial soup") is not the same fucking theory as the big bang -- or, if you did indeed manage to read any of those replies, you damn sure didn't understand them. Because if you did read and understand those replies, you wouldn't have repeated the same fucking "big bang = abiogenesis" mistake for which those replies corrected you in the first place!
Then again, perhaps you did read and understand the replies which corrected you. But if that's the case, your insistence on repeating your earlier error, in spite of having been corrected on it, would not reflect well upon your intellectual capacities.
 
Quote
So I submit to you that evolution also fails in many areas.

It just so happens that at present I'm in a philosophy course. I've taken the biology (albeit, my degree does not have that major listed). All I'm saying is that evolution does not do all that you say and praise it for.
Yes, that is indeed what you are saying. Since you were apparently under the impression that evolution has something to do with how the Earth originally formed... who fucking cares what you have to say about evolution? Yes, you have a right to your own opinion. But being taken seriously by other people... now, that is not a right. Rather, being taken seriously by other people is a privilege which must be earned, and the way one earns that priviligege is by demonstrating that one knows what the fuck one is talking about. Which you don't, at present.
 
Quote
A few that I always pondered were: the "gene for everything" idea, explanation of morality...
What's wrong with the existing evolutionary explanations for morality?
Do you even know what the existing evolutionary explanations for morality are? Or are you (still) working with bullshit distortions rather than the actual science?
Quote
...explanation for self-preservation...
What's wrong with the existing evolutionary explanations for self-preservation?
Do you even know what the existing evolutionary explanations for self-preservation are? Or are you (still) working with bullshit distortions rather than the actual science?
Quote
...failure to explain gene similarities among humans...
Hold it. Given that all humans share common ancestors, what the heck needs to be explained about "gene similarities among humans"? Is there something wrong with the explanation that similar genes were inherited from commmon ancestors?
Quote
...failure to explain how pure randomness can account for "social insects" ie: ants, bees.
Guess what? Evolution does not say that "pure randomness" accounts for social insects. In fact, evolution doesn't say that "pure randomness" can, or does, account for anything whatsoever. Those sources you're depending on for your knowledge of evolution... well, they fucking suck. In fact, those sources suck great green rocks with a Dixie straw. Hint: Any putative "theory of evolution" which leaves out selection is a bogus caricature of the genuine article. And once you throw selection into the mix, well, whatever "randomness" may be involved becomes, at the very least, decidedly impure, ennit?
Quote
My measly list could go on.
I'm sure it could. And if the rest of this list is anything like the items you cited here, said list is strongly persuasive, if not downright conclusive, evidence that you have no fucking clue whatsoever when it comes to evolution.
Quote
So I'll end this post with a question based on some of the further posts I've read. Is it simply that because Creationists attribute what might be a scientifically explainable event to an Intelligent Designer the primary issue?
Oh, please. Dude, you do not get to play the 'dem eevil Darwinismists HATE TEH IJNTELLIJINT DEEZYNE!!1!" card. It may come as a shock to you, but there are entire fields of scientific study -- archaeology and forensics are the first two which come to mind -- which are all about 'intelligent design'. The difference between 'intelligent design' as practiced by real scientists, and Intelligent Design as practiced by the likes of Dembski and Behe, is that real scientists think somehow, somewhere, somewhen, somebody intelligent did something is a mindlessly vague chunk of verbiage rather than a cutting-edge hypothesis. And if you think somehow, somewhere, somewhen, somebody intelligent did something is not an accurate summary of Intelligent Design 'theory', by all means feel free to clue us all in to how real ID 'theory' differs from my seven-word summary.
 
Quote
Or, is it because Creationists do not use evolution to help explain their work?
No. It's because Creationists don't fucking explain anything -- and then they piss and moan about how real scientists laugh at Creationists' and-then-a-miracle-occured not-an-explanation verbiage.
 
Quote
Or, is it that Creationists use a "get out of jail free" by attributing God to various things that science can explain? I desire to know what the underlying issue is.
I'm not sure there is any 1 (one) single underlying issue behind real scientists' rejection of Creationism; rather, I believe there are lots of underlying issues, not all of which are equally important to all real scientists.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' insistence on miseducating innocent children with lies and pre-refuted old garbage.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' flagrant ignorance of the scientific literature -- as in Behe's resurrection of Muller's "interlocking complexity" under the new name "irreducible complexity", without any discernable indication that Behe was aware of Muller's earlier work.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' habit of leaping to conclusions which simply are not supported by whichever data the Creationists were allegedly basing their conclusions on -- as in Behe's argument that a limited subset of Darwinian processes cannot produce an IC system, therefore no evolutionary processes whatsoever can produce an IC system, therefore any IC system must necessarily have been produced by an Intelligent Designer.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' habit of twisting scientists' words so that the (mis-)quoted scientists appear to be saying that evolution is Teh Suxxors, when, in reality, the (mis-)quoted scientists were not saying anything of the kind.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' incessant drumbeat of slanderous lies about evolution is evil, the Nazis were evolutionists, evolution is evil, Darwin was a racist, evolution = eugenics, yada yada yada.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' habit of using literary criticism in place of scientific argument.
For some scientists, it could be the massive, unrelenting, top-to-bottom dishonesty of the entire Creationist enterprise.
For some scientists, it could be the fact that Creationists' deceitful behavior is a massive stumbling block which prevents honest unbelievers from accepting Christ.
For some scientists, it could be Creationists' reflexive habit of re-using old, refuted arguments as if those arguments had never been refuted in the first place.
 
Quote
Btw, I will comment that I did read that the Dover case "proved" along with some other work that IC has already been proved that it COULD happen through natural causes. (ok, interesting stuff, I'll look more into that. Thanks.) This is not something earth-shattering to me. Matter a fact, I already knew that evolutionary proponents had written material attempting to explain their side. It's interesting stuff.

oldmanintheskydidntdoit - the facts do matter. :)

Ah, so many more to comment on. I'll do another tomorrow.

Oh, but one more - Albatrosity (nice name btw). Ok, I hear everyone. Don't get hung up on Darwin. His intentions are of no consequence. And I agree with your third point. Science is an ever-changing field of study. I'd like to point out though that the only thing I know of that is immutable is God. I don't think my science is or what have you. (if that's what you were trying to point out..)
No; I think he was trying to point out that science and religion are very different games, and if you approach science as if it was just another religion, you will crash and burn. Like, just for grins, if you think "well, Christianity stands or falls on its personal source, Jesus Christ. therefore, evolution must necessarily also stand or fall on its personal source, Charles Darwin."
 
Quote
Lastly, my whole point of bringing up Darwin's intentions were simply my attempt to understand the basis for his life's work.
That's fine, but again: The scientific validity (or lack thereof) of Darwin's work has nothing whatsoever to do with Darwin's intentions, and everything to do with, like, the work itself.

  
Albatrossity2



Posts: 2780
Joined: Mar. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,06:43   

Quote (bjray @ April 22 2010,23:41)
But you, yourself, said that "science is based on evidence that stands up to everything." Are you telling me that evolution has passed this test?

Yes, that is the case so far. And it is worth pointing out, for the nth time, that even if it wasn't the case, and even if evolutionary theory proves to be wrong, neither ID nor creationism will be any closer to being an acceptable explanation. Picking apart a rival theory doesn't make your notions right; you have to do the work and provide the evidence and make predictions and do more work etc.

Finally, I can accept that you believe your god is immutable. What I can't accept is the extension of that belief to think that he wrote a science book and that the words in there are infallible. Do you believe that? If so, there is no sense in further discussions about the science, because, as you acknowledged, scientific conclusions are tentative.

--------------
Flesh of the sky, child of the sky, the mind
Has been obligated from the beginning
To create an ordered universe
As the only possible proof of its own inheritance.
                        - Pattiann Rogers

   
lkeithlu



Posts: 321
Joined: Feb. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,07:03   

bjray, may I make a suggestion, as a science educator? I came to this site several years ago, when ID was making the news. I had to educate myself (as I am not a biologist) so when parents asked about ID, I'd be able to answer. I started with talkorigins.org, which was referred to often. Since I am not a biologist, I simply did not know how much evidence was out there. I read the site (yes it is huge-it took weeks) and read as many books as I could. What I found was this:

Laypeople, including scientists from other fields, really have no idea of the extent of evidence in a science discipline. My area, Chemistry (with a smattering of Geology) is enormous. However, no one outside the area seems too interested in challenging chemists with injecting supernatural; there is little in the subject to challenge anyone's belief in God. Of course, there is much debate on the cutting edge of the discipline: new evidence must be explained and evidence is gathered at a fearsome rate. However, no one suggests non-material explanations in Chemistry.

Of course, I've been to museums and read National Geographic. My spouse teaches elementary human evolution, so I have resources at my disposal, but they are only glimpses, drawn together in popular media for the likes of myself. It wasn't until I started digging that I found that there was so much out there.

So, my suggestion: I found two books that give a sort of snapshot of what is known in a narrow part of evolutionary theory. I now know that books like these could be written about most known organisms. The evidence included in these two books is a better glimpse of what scientists have gathered. One is by Neil Shubin, called Your Inner Fish, the other is my Carl Zimmer and is called By The Water's Edge.

My point in doing this: Creationists and ID proponents seem to be unaware of how much the natural world is observed, cataloged, measured, compared and collected by countless scientists. They seem to assume that all of human evolution comes out of a couple of dusty bones, or a skull here and there. Their claims are insulting to the thousands or even millions of scientists who put in the hard work decade after decade. I think in part this is why people get kind of short (and yes, profane) on a site like this.

  
ppb



Posts: 325
Joined: Dec. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,08:37   

Quote (bjray @ April 23 2010,00:41)
Is it simply that because Creationists attribute what might be a scientifically explainable event to an Intelligent Designer the primary issue? Or, is it t because Creationists do not use evolution to help explain their work?

bjray,
Science is all about the evidence.  Attributing anything to God (what you really mean when you say "Intelligent Designer") is as useful as attributing it to Santa Clause, if you have no supporting evidence.  Biological evolution has a tremendous amount of supporting evidence.

ID, on the other hand, does not.  If you can point us to any, we would all like to see it.  Without that evidence it is, as you said, just god-of-the-gaps.  If it has merit, it will be useful to any scientist regardless of their religious or philosophical leanings.  So far we haven't seen Dembski or Behe use any of their ideas for anything useful.

The primary issue as I see it is people using ID or Creation Science or "Teach the Controversy" or whatever as a means to force their religions notions into science classrooms.  This violates the religious freedom of those who do not share your notions of an "intelligent designer", and it interferes with good science education.  I don't want my kids taught ID/Creationism as if it were a legitimate scientific theory.  It is very clearly religious thinking, and it has no place in a science classroom.

Lastly, you continue to mix cosmology with biology.  Creationists do this all the time.  Real scientists do not.  Evolution is a theory about the diversity of life on this planet.  How can you not get this?

--------------
"[A scientific theory] describes Nature as absurd from the point of view of common sense. And it agrees fully with experiment. So I hope you can accept Nature as She is - absurd."
- Richard P. Feynman

  
J-Dog



Posts: 4402
Joined: Dec. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,08:49   

I WANT TO GIVE A HUGE SHOUT-OUT AND START A NEW AWARD -

POST FOR THE WEAK
for

Albatrossity
Cubist
oldman
Badger3K
Reed
Louis
Wes
ppb
ikeithlu
Doc Bill
Ogre
Dr. G H

and any and all I missed!

Your outstanding posts in response to bjray have me in awe, and should all be published and/or saved as how to respond to IDC / Creationists.

bjray - you owe them - BIG TIME - IMHO - for making the effort to help you, and others like you.  




--------------
Come on Tough Guy, do the little dance of ID impotence you do so well. - Louis to Joe G 2/10

Gullibility is not a virtue - Quidam on Dembski's belief in the Bible Code Faith Healers & ID 7/08

UD is an Unnatural Douchemagnet. - richardthughes 7/11

  
OgreMkV



Posts: 3668
Joined: Oct. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,09:09   

One thing that I continually notice (and bj, you're no exception) is that you keep using words and those words don't mean what you think they mean.

Let's play a little game (this in one I used to do in my classes, when I was a teacher and it helped a lot).

Let's put up some words and then everyone defines them in their own words without any reference materials.  Then, we compare the definitions to see who is in the majority, who is in the minority, who is confused, etc.  Finally, we compare those definitions that everyone wrote out with some reliable textbooks on the subject (meaning peer-reviewed and/or written by acknowledged experts on the subject in question).

Admittedly, this is a simplistic pedalogical exercise and not meant to be the end-all-be-all definitions of the words in question, but it is very valuable for finding some common misconceptions.  For example, if you include 'big bang' in your definition of evolution and no one else does, then it is much more probable that you have a misconception rather than everyone else.  [Note, that's not to slight you.  It is merely a fact based on what has been presented so far.]

The other part of this exercise, as I believe has been pointed out by Cubist, is that it is very difficult to 'pin' creationists (of any flavor) down on the definition of some common words.  Most of the words, as used in science, has a very different definition than used in the common vernacular ('theory' being a prime example).

Shall we play a game?
Let's start with:
1) Evidence
2) Evolution
3) Fact
4) Intelligent Design
5) Irreducible Complexity
6) Theory


A final note, you have made some very specific claims and have yet to back those claims up.  That's an argument by assertion and is a logical fallacy.  If you have a claim, then you'd better provide evidence for it.  Don't think that we won't bring this up until you provide the evidence of the claims or retract your claim.  The one that comes to mind is the many examples of irreducible complexity.

--------------
Ignored by those who can't provide evidence for their claims.

http://skepticink.com/smilodo....retreat

   
Doc Bill



Posts: 1039
Joined: April 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,11:49   

Hello BJ, welcome back!

Let's change the subject and talk about Moral Theology.  You know about Moral Theology, don't you?

Do you know what the #2 book on Moral Theology is on Amazon dot Com?

Hmmmmmmmmm?

Here's a hint:  small book, 67 pages, EZ 2 Read.

Hardcover: 67 pages
Publisher: Princeton University Press; 1 edition (January 10, 2005)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0691122946
ISBN-13: 978-0691122946
Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 4.1 x 0.5 inches

It's called "On Bullshit" by Princeton professor of philosophy Harry Frankfurt.  It's only 10 bucks.  I suggest you get a copy.  It's a serious book that focuses on the difference between bullshit and lying, and the moral and ethical considerations therein.

Having read the book myself and since I'm an expert on the subject I can declare with confidence that you, BJ, are a bullshitter, although you have a lot to learn.

You wrote in your own words "we know (today) that the cell has plenty of irreducibly complex systems on the cellular level."

You wrote that although you have no clue whatsoever what "we" know.  That's what a bullshitter does.  He throws out some bullshit hoping that his audience doesn't recognize it as bullshit.  Maybe they think it's a bouquet of roses which by any other name smells as sweet.

But, I called you on your bullshit and asked you for a list of those systems.  You ignored me, which hurt.  That wasn't nice.  I would argue that it was not moral of you to leave me hanging like that.

Now, a better bullshitter would have tried to throw me off the scent by tossing out a bogus reference with something like

"Check out Appendix D of Protozoology by Kudo.  Long list."

It would be a good bet that a random person would not have that particular book (however, it's on MY bookshelf!) to discover that you were tossing more bullshit on your original pile.  You see, a good bullshitter knows how to mix bullshit and fact in just the right proportion that the audience is never too sure to believe it or not, and often they err on the nice side;  give the benefit of a doubt.

Alas, BJ, what you have spread on this site is 100% Grade A bullshit, uncut by fact.

This is the learning point and I hope you take it to heart.  Even an Expert Bullshitter who knows sod all about a subject will not ply his trade on a forum populated by subject experts and Field Marshal grade Bullshitters.  No percentage in that.  Thus, to date all of your bullshit has been cut to ribbons;  your score is zero.

All is not lost, however.  You have a choice.  Do you gather your losses and content yourself to hang around bible forums where your bullshit is Oh So Rosey, or do you take this golden opportunity, drop the guise, engage in honest dialog and actually learn something?

What's it going to be?

  
JLT



Posts: 740
Joined: Jan. 2008

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,14:22   

Quote (OgreMkV @ April 23 2010,15:09)
Shall we play a game?
Let's start with:
1) Evidence
2) Evolution
3) Fact
4) Intelligent Design
5) Irreducible Complexity
6) Theory

Ok, I'll give it a shot:

1) evidence: collection of data that pertain to a specific hypothesis and distinguish this specific hypothesis from the null hypothesis

2) evolution: change in allel frequencies over time, descent with modification

3) fact: observation that is repeated so often that it is shown to be true beyond a reasonable doubt

4) intelligent design: Somehow somewhere somebody did something once or repeatedly that explains everything. And I mean everything. Don't you argue with me you heathen atheist.

5) irreducible complexity: a multi-part system that looses its present function if one part is removed.
The ID definition: A multi-part system that could not have evolved because it looses its present function if one part is removed.
Unfortunately, it hasn't been shown that being IC necessarily means that it could not have evolved, to the contrary, there are examples of IC systems that did evolve, and therefore, the ID definition is useless because it includes what has to be proven.

6) theory: A scientific theory explains a large body of data and observations in mechanistical terms, formulates general rules, and combines multiple hypothesis and laws into an overarching explanatory framework for one class of phenomena.

--------------
"Random mutations, if they are truly random, will affect, and potentially damage, any aspect of the organism, [...]
Thus, a realistic [computer] simulation [of evolution] would allow the program, OS, and hardware to be affected in a random fashion." GilDodgen, Frilly shirt owner

  
OgreMkV



Posts: 3668
Joined: Oct. 2009

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,14:49   

Quote (JLT @ April 23 2010,14:22)
Quote (OgreMkV @ April 23 2010,15:09)
Shall we play a game?
Let's start with:
1) Evidence
2) Evolution
3) Fact
4) Intelligent Design
5) Irreducible Complexity
6) Theory

yeah, I'll do mine too.

1) Evidence - a factual, unambiguous observation that supports a particular statement.

2) Evolution - a) The fact that organisms change over time  b) The theory that shows how organisms change over time (i.e. natural selection and common descent)

3) Fact - A statement that is universally true.

4) Intelligent Design - A proposition that an unknown 'designer' has interfered with life on this planet at some point in time and in some unknown fashion.

5) Irreducible Complexity - A proposition that certain structures cannot be dissasembled in any way and still have a structure that functions in the original fashion.  Also implies that the structure cannot come into being without an intelligent agent.

6) Theory - a statement about how the physical universe (or something in it) works that has significant evidentual and factual support.


BTW: I generally talk in analogies and this was very difficult to do this time.

--------------
Ignored by those who can't provide evidence for their claims.

http://skepticink.com/smilodo....retreat

   
rhmc



Posts: 340
Joined: Dec. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,19:05   

Cubist gets my vote for POTY.

I will poach parts of that.

spacibo.

:)

  
lkeithlu



Posts: 321
Joined: Feb. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: April 23 2010,19:26   

Quote (OgreMkV @ April 23 2010,09:09)
Shall we play a game?
Let's start with:
1) Evidence
2) Evolution
3) Fact
4) Intelligent Design
5) Irreducible Complexity
6) Theory

Ooooo! Pick me!

1) Evidence: an object, event or location whose characteristics can be counted, quantified or described
2) Evolution: Descent with modification or the theory that describes and explains it
3) Fact: Something that is falsifiable
4) Intelligent Design: a hypothesis that states that evidence for an intelligent intervention can be found in the natural world
5) Irreducible Complexity: a state of complexity that cannot be simplified without loss of function
6) Theory: an explanation of evidence (origin, mechanism and/or interrelationship)

Can I have my gold star now?

  
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