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Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,20:11   

Charlie is a tard
Quote

Hi Jehu,
Is there another link? The one you gave to the Drug Resistance Paper isn’t working for me.


Which is worse--Jehu's inability to link or Charlie's inability to google?

--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
Zachriel



Posts: 2723
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,21:53   

While Jehu still hasn't read the article he cites, there is a minor panic on another thread concerning Behe's claims on the blood clotting cascade.

dougcampo            
Quote
Seriously though. Could someone more qualified please answer Orion’s question?

Someone? Anyone? The blood clotting cascade is not irreducibly complex even though Behe has claimed it as a prime example.
   
Quote
Kenneth Miller: Let's look at the clotting pathway, this is the way in which blood clots, you call this the Rube Goldberg in the blood, great stuff, and the clotting pathway is extremely complex. It produces a clot around the red blood cell, and what you wrote is, in your book is that none of the cascade proteins, these proteins, are used for anything except controlling the formation of clots, that's very clear. Yet, in the absence of any of the components blood does not clot and the system fails.

Now here's the, the hard part for me. Remember you said, in the absence of any of the components, blood does not clot and the system fails. One of those components that you've talked about is called factor 12 or Hagemann factor, and you'd think, if we take it away, the system should fail, so there shouldn't be any living organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, but it turns out, uh, lo and behold, that there are some organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, I've crossed them off up there, and those organisms turn out to be, dolphins and porpoises, they don't have, um, I assume that statement therefore is incorrect and has to be changed?

Michael Behe: Well, first of all let me express my condolences for the dolphins. Umm... <laughter>

Behe has since shifted his claim slowly over time without admitting he has done so.

Addendum: Kenneth Miller's, The Flagellum Unspun: The Collapse of "Irreducible Complexity"

--------------

You never step on the same tard twice—for it's not the same tard and you're not the same person.

   
hooligans



Posts: 114
Joined: Jan. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,22:23   

Just picked up this old post from miniTARD Gil:

Quote
One must have some sympathy for Darwinists, because they have painted themselves into a corner. They cannot admit that even a single, solitary aspect of biology is the product of design, or their entire thesis collapses catastrophically. ID proponents, on the other hand, can admit that Darwinian mechanisms play a role in biology, and they most certainly do, almost by definition.


Gee Gil-tard, what happened to the concept of falsifibility? You know the whole philosphy of science thingy? You know
Quote
where confirmations are significant only if they are the result of risky predictions; that is, if, unenlightened by the theory, we should have expected an event which was incompatible with the theory — an event which would have refuted the theory. AND HOW
"Good" scientific theories include prohibitions which forbid certain things to happen. The more a theory forbids, the better it is.

source wikipedia

According to Gil-tard Darwinists got it all wrong. But gee, according to the philsophy of science those pesky Darwinists must have a powerful theory.

It must hurt to be so stupid.....

  
Rev. BigDumbChimp



Posts: 185
Joined: June 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,22:26   

Quote (hooligans @ July 01 2007,22:23)
Just picked up this old post from miniTARD Gil:

 
Quote
One must have some sympathy for Darwinists, because they have painted themselves into a corner. They cannot admit that even a single, solitary aspect of biology is the product of design, or their entire thesis collapses catastrophically. ID proponents, on the other hand, can admit that Darwinian mechanisms play a role in biology, and they most certainly do, almost by definition.

*forhead smack.

well needing to admit something would be easier if there were any reason to do so.



  
franky172



Posts: 160
Joined: Jan. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,22:40   

Quote (Zachriel @ July 01 2007,21:53)
While Jehu still hasn't read the article he cites, there is a minor panic on another thread concerning Behe's claims on the blood clotting cascade.

dougcampo            
Quote
Seriously though. Could someone more qualified please answer Orion’s question?

Someone? Anyone? The blood clotting cascade is not irreducibly complex even though Behe has claimed it as a prime example.
   
Quote
Kenneth Miller: Let's look at the clotting pathway, this is the way in which blood clots, you call this the Rube Goldberg in the blood, great stuff, and the clotting pathway is extremely complex. It produces a clot around the red blood cell, and what you wrote is, in your book is that none of the cascade proteins, these proteins, are used for anything except controlling the formation of clots, that's very clear. Yet, in the absence of any of the components blood does not clot and the system fails.

Now here's the, the hard part for me. Remember you said, in the absence of any of the components, blood does not clot and the system fails. One of those components that you've talked about is called factor 12 or Hagemann factor, and you'd think, if we take it away, the system should fail, so there shouldn't be any living organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, but it turns out, uh, lo and behold, that there are some organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, I've crossed them off up there, and those organisms turn out to be, dolphins and porpoises, they don't have, um, I assume that statement therefore is incorrect and has to be changed?

Michael Behe: Well, first of all let me express my condolences for the dolphins. Umm... <laughter>

Behe has since shifted his claim slowly over time without admitting he has done so.

I love this:

Quote
orion: I’ve read this before and have been unable to find an adequate response. Could someone help me out please.

GilDodgen: Some perspective is needed here. The forest is not being seen for the trees. [...] But eventually we’re talking about highly sophisticated information-processing machinery, a complex factory the likes of which human engineers have not even conceived of, coordinated on countless levels of hierarchical subintegration.


No really, I love it; we can do this all day:

ID proponent: I have developed a mathematical proof that evolution cannot account for traits A, B and C and ID therefore is true, and I don't have to resort to subjective statements about how amazing life is to prove it!

Scientist: Well, ignoring the basic logical fallacy in your argument, the "proof" you have provided is no such thing.

ID proponent: But I have used mathematics!  Therefore my proof is true.

Scientist: But you failed to account for X, Y, and Z, didn't include analysis of E, and this here says that 2+2=5.  That's just wrong.  Plus, here's some evidence that A,B, and C evolved from a simpler ancestor.

ID proponent: Some perspective is needed here. The forest is not being seen for the trees. Look how amazing life is!

/sorry for partial repeat...

  
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,22:43   

Quote
Well it looks as if JAM has completely discredited Behe’s argument.


Betting table now open on the date of dougcampo's banning.

--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
Wesley R. Elsberry



Posts: 4991
Joined: May 2002

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,22:51   

Quote

Kenneth Miller: Let's look at the clotting pathway,

[...]

lo and behold, that there are some organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, I've crossed them off up there, and those organisms turn out to be, dolphins and porpoises, they don't have, um, I assume that statement therefore is incorrect and has to be changed?


Ken Miller came to San Diego in late March, 2002 for the National Science Teachers Association meeting there. Diane and I and my friend Mark Todd got to join the evolution panel speakers for dinner one night: Ken Miller, Eugenie Scott, Carl Zimmer and several other people, all of us gathered around a long table at a restaurant in the gaslamp district. Mark Todd and I were across from Ken, and we merrily chatted about the evolution/creation stuff and marine mammal training, since Mark trains whales and dolphins for the Navy. Somewhere in there, Ken talked a bit about Behe and his IC argument and the blood clotting example, and how he was looking for counterexamples. "But," said Mark, "dolphins don't have one of those factors." Both Ken and I immediately were all ears. Ken extracted a promise that Mark send him the paper establishing that. Mark enlisted Sam Ridgway's help, and got the paper into Ken's hands shortly thereafter.

Since I was participating in a workshop on the beaked whale mortality problem in Washington, D.C., I was able to arrange my travel so as to able to attend the April 23rd, 2002 debate on ID and evolution at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. And thus I got to see Ken Miller spring the "dolphins don't have Hagemann factor" fact on Behe, live and in person. Sweet.

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

    
Richardthughes



Posts: 11178
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,23:07   

Quote (Hermagoras @ July 01 2007,22:43)
Quote
Well it looks as if JAM has completely discredited Behe’s argument.


Betting table now open on the date of dougcampo's banning.

I'm sure emails are flying 'round as to the best way of getting rid of him and JAD.

--------------
"Richardthughes, you magnificent bastard, I stand in awe of you..." : Arden Chatfield
"You magnificent bastard! " : Louis
"ATBC poster child", "I have to agree with Rich.." : DaveTard
"I bow to your superior skills" : deadman_932
"...it was Richardthughes making me lie in bed.." : Kristine

  
phonon



Posts: 396
Joined: Nov. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 01 2007,23:25   

Quote (Lou FCD @ July 01 2007,16:24)
Quote
1.  In the beginning, there was this itsy bitsy point called a singularity.  It was a point of zero volume and infinite density, and then it had this quantum instability and went boom.

2.  And Moses sayeth unto the Lord, "WTF are you yammering on about, God??!111??"

3.  And with a loud voice God backeth up and beginneth again, for he messed up the setteth up line.  

4.  Actually that wasn't the beginning.  Before the beginning there was this other universe that wasn't quite fine tuned enough for humans.

5.  I dideth this thing with the dirt, and it didn't hold together so good.  What a mess.

6.  Anyways, where waseth I, Moses?

7.  And Moses questioned the Lord and quizzeth him thusly, "Could I just paraphrase?"

8.  And God smiteth his ass.

Singularity? Eh not so much.

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-07/ps-whb062907.php

 
Quote
New discoveries about another universe whose collapse appears to have given birth to the one we live in today will be announced in the early on-line edition of the journal Nature Physics on 1 July 2007 and will be published in the August 2007 issue of the journal's print edition. "My paper introduces a new mathematical model that we can use to derive new details about the properties of a quantum state as it travels through the Big Bounce, which replaces the classical idea of a Big Bang as the beginning of our universe," said Martin Bojowald, assistant professor of physics at Penn State. Bojowald's research also suggests that, although it is possible to learn about many properties of the earlier universe, we always will be uncertain about some of these properties because his calculations reveal a "cosmic forgetfulness" that results from the extreme quantum forces during the Big Bounce.


Obviously, this is a just-so story conjured up to try to take God, er, intelligent design out of the equation. Ah! But God is still there, lurking in the "free" variables. There's always a gap and there always will be. Look into the gap and the gap looks into you.

(waiting for the day I can use the phrase "singularity ensues" on Fark)

--------------
With most men, unbelief in one thing springs from blind belief in another. - Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

To do just the opposite is also a form of imitation. - Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

  
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,00:39   

Quote (Richardthughes @ July 01 2007,23:07)
 
Quote (Hermagoras @ July 01 2007,22:43)
   
Quote
Well it looks as if JAM has completely discredited Behe’s argument.


Betting table now open on the date of dougcampo's banning.

I'm sure emails are flying 'round as to the best way of getting rid of him and JAD.

HOLY SHIT now he's begging to join the banned:
 
Quote

If ID people don’t find something to discredit Darwinism soon you are going to lose the American people.

I’m sorry, I want to believe and I really support everything you guys are doing but you are against what seems like overwhelming opposition.

Both from the Darwinists and a culture that just doesn’t care anymore. I hope you can develop some type of answer to what JAM and Patrick Caldon are saying. If not, then perhaps they are right and ID is just all wishful thinking.


--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
Stephen Elliott



Posts: 1776
Joined: Oct. 2005

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,00:58   

Quote (Wesley R. Elsberry @ July 01 2007,22:51)
Quote

Kenneth Miller: Let's look at the clotting pathway,

[...]

lo and behold, that there are some organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, I've crossed them off up there, and those organisms turn out to be, dolphins and porpoises, they don't have, um, I assume that statement therefore is incorrect and has to be changed?


Ken Miller came to San Diego in late March, 2002 for the National Science Teachers Association meeting there. Diane and I and my friend Mark Todd got to join the evolution panel speakers for dinner one night: Ken Miller, Eugenie Scott, Carl Zimmer and several other people, all of us gathered around a long table at a restaurant in the gaslamp district. Mark Todd and I were across from Ken, and we merrily chatted about the evolution/creation stuff and marine mammal training, since Mark trains whales and dolphins for the Navy. Somewhere in there, Ken talked a bit about Behe and his IC argument and the blood clotting example, and how he was looking for counterexamples. "But," said Mark, "dolphins don't have one of those factors." Both Ken and I immediately were all ears. Ken extracted a promise that Mark send him the paper establishing that. Mark enlisted Sam Ridgway's help, and got the paper into Ken's hands shortly thereafter.

Since I was participating in a workshop on the beaked whale mortality problem in Washington, D.C., I was able to arrange my travel so as to able to attend the April 23rd, 2002 debate on ID and evolution at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. And thus I got to see Ken Miller spring the "dolphins don't have Hagemann factor" fact on Behe, live and in person. Sweet.

Cool story.
I like Ken Miller's presentations and the gaslamp area is real good fun. :D

  
Kristine



Posts: 3061
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,01:33   

Quote (Wesley R. Elsberry @ July 01 2007,17:20)
First draft of graphic:



Edit: Different font:


:) I feel proud.

--------------
Which came first: the shimmy, or the hip?

AtBC Poet Laureate

"I happen to think that this prerequisite criterion of empirical evidence is itself not empirical." - Clive

"Damn you. This means a trip to the library. Again." -- fnxtr

  
Zachriel



Posts: 2723
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,07:09   

Jehu      
Quote
At first I thought you were being incredibly disingenuous but perhaps you have only failed to logically follow the argument. Let me help you.

JAM      
Quote
Thanks.

What a gracious gentleperson (considering).

JAM      
Quote
What happens to any CQR mutants that originate in the mosquito phases, with no CQ around? They vanish. This is why White uses the terms “arisen” and “developing.” It’s not about mutation rates...

I highly recommend reading the White review {Antimalarial drug resistance }; it is available online.

Whaddaya know. JAM actually read White's paper. What a novel idea.

dougcampo  
Quote
I hope you can develop some type of answer to what JAM and Patrick Caldon are saying. If not, then perhaps they are right and ID is just all wishful thinking.

scordova  
Quote
dougcampo,

You can answer the question I posed to JAM. If you choose not to, I consider your empty boast just that, an empty boast.

If you don’t answer, consider yourself univited to this thread as well.

Well, that settles that. ID wins again. There's no stopping it now!

--------------

You never step on the same tard twice—for it's not the same tard and you're not the same person.

   
Wesley R. Elsberry



Posts: 4991
Joined: May 2002

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,07:19   

Another variant, changing the inter-line spacing:




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

    
Zachriel



Posts: 2723
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,07:41   

Quote (Wesley R. Elsberry @ July 01 2007,22:51)
               
Quote

Kenneth Miller: Let's look at the clotting pathway,

[...]

lo and behold, that there are some organisms that are missing Hagemann factor, I've crossed them off up there, and those organisms turn out to be, dolphins and porpoises, they don't have, um, I assume that statement therefore is incorrect and has to be changed?


Ken Miller came to San Diego in late March, 2002 for the National Science Teachers Association meeting there. Diane and I and my friend Mark Todd got to join the evolution panel speakers for dinner one night: Ken Miller, Eugenie Scott, Carl Zimmer and several other people, all of us gathered around a long table at a restaurant in the gaslamp district....

Sweet.

We are in the presence of the presence of history!

Inherit the Wind, Part Deux.



Great touch with the gaslamp district. Let's keep that.

I'm thinking Mark Todd, the dolphin trainer, could be played by Matt Damon. Hmm. Carl Zimmer looks too young. We need someone older to contrast with the young dolphin trainer. Maybe Fred Thompson if he's not busy.  Eugenie Scott by Sharon Stone. Yeah, definitely. Ken Miller, um. Didn't Eddie Murphy play a professor once? No. I got it. Russell Crow could be the professor. By the way, does anybody know if Flipper is retired?



Now, you might even be able to play yourself in a cameo—assuming you don't have any lines and have to act or anything. You'd be "Scientist #3" at the table. But if you want a speaking line, we could have you asking Matt Damon something like "I thought dolphins were just dumb fish", and Matt could explain to you very slowly that dolphins are like really really smart.

Don't like that idea? Okay. We could rework the story. You could be played by Matt Damon and Brad Pitt could be the dolphin trainer. Your job is to bring Brad Pitt and Russell Crowe George Clooney together. And the Hagemann Factor is coded in dolphin-language in order to stop an epidemic caused by terrorists. It'll be like Oceans 15 meets Inherit the Wind, Part Deux!

But we'll need to get Julia Roberts to play Eugenie Scott. Do you think she'll be okay with that?



Well, it's just an outline. Have your people call my people.

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You never step on the same tard twice—for it's not the same tard and you're not the same person.

   
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,09:16   

DaveScot:

Quote
It’s a proof of concept for intelligent design. . . . What would that prove? It wouldn’t prove it happened that way but it would be a proof of concept - i.e. it proves it *could* have happened that way. In fact it would be the first proof of concept ever for macroevolution.

Intelligent design has been proven in concept by accomplishments in genetic engineering. . . .

This is why it’s so anti-science to exclude ID from hypothetical mechanisms underlying organic evolution - ID is a proven concept. . . .


I can only respond in the voice of Inigo Montoya: "You keep using that word.  I do not think it means what you think it means."

--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
Zachriel



Posts: 2723
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,09:30   

Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,09:16)
DaveScot:

 
Quote
It’s a proof of concept for intelligent design. . . . What would that prove? It wouldn’t prove it happened that way but it would be a proof of concept - i.e. it proves it *could* have happened that way. In fact it would be the first proof of concept ever for macroevolution.

Intelligent design has been proven in concept by accomplishments in genetic engineering. . . .

This is why it’s so anti-science to exclude ID from hypothetical mechanisms underlying organic evolution - ID is a proven concept. . . .


I can only respond in the voice of Inigo Montoya: "You keep using that word.  I do not think it means what you think it means."

DaveScot
Quote
Imagine that someone in a lab somewhere were able to apply selective pressure to bacteria that caused them evolve a nucleus and become a prokaryote.

Um, bacteria *are* prokaryotes.

(Bacteria are highly optimized for their present function, so evolving entirely new structures by simple selection is unlikely. Some sort of endosymbiotic process probably resulted in the first eukaryotes, and those component organisms no longer exist.)

--------------

You never step on the same tard twice—for it's not the same tard and you're not the same person.

   
argystokes



Posts: 766
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,09:48   

Eww, I think I just threw up a little in my mouth. Looks like DaveScot has found a new denialism to take up the cause for (brace yourself, Kristine):
Quote
...That said it’s not wholly unlikely that HIV is a symptom rather than a cause of AIDS. From my POV 23 years of considering it the cause of AIDS has not moved us any closer to a vaccine.

2 more UD contributors, Sal and PaV, are putting one foot on the bandwagon. I suspect we'll see this as a front page topic on UD within the next week.

--------------
"Why waste time learning, when ignorance is instantaneous?" -Calvin

  
carlsonjok



Posts: 3326
Joined: May 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,09:54   

Quote (argystokes @ July 02 2007,09:48)
Eww, I think I just threw up a little in my mouth. Looks like DaveScot has found a new denialism to take up the cause for (brace yourself, Kristine):
 
Quote
...That said it’s not wholly unlikely that HIV is a symptom rather than a cause of AIDS. From my POV 23 years of considering it the cause of AIDS has not moved us any closer to a vaccine.

2 more UD contributors, Sal and PaV, are putting one foot on the bandwagon. I suspect we'll see this as a front page topic on UD within the next week.

Just wait until he embraces common cold denialism.  Years of "research" hasn't gotten us any closer to a cure.  Clearly, the scientists are in league with the vap-o-rub-anistas at Proctor and Gamble.

--------------
It's natural to be curious about our world, but the scientific method is just one theory about how to best understand it.  We live in a democracy, which means we should treat every theory equally. - Steven Colbert, I Am America (and So Can You!)

  
Louis



Posts: 6436
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,10:18   

Who is this?

Answers on a postcard to the usual address.



Louis

--------------
Bye.

  
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,11:34   

Cordova:

Quote
Sadly, the life of George Price came to a tragic end. I think upon the words of Seneca, “there is no great genius without a tinge of insanity.”


George Price?  Talk about your God delusions.  Here was a super-brilliant guy whose conversion is virtually indistinguishable from his obvious mental illness.  He's not a person whose conversion should be pointed to as an, er, example.

--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,11:47   

Hold on, here's
Paul Nelson:
Quote
There must be more to macroevolution — e.g., the origin of chimpanzees and humans from a common ancestor — than site-by-site amino acid changes in proteins, which was largely the picture drawn in textbook neo-Darwinism at the time (1975). Chimp hemoglobin is pretty much human hemoglobin, and so on, yet it’s always the chimps behind the bars, gazing out, when one visits the zoo:

(Side note: caged apes make me sad.)  Anyway, a bit of bloviating later:  
Quote
What genetic changes have caused the manifold organismal differences between chimps and humans? After all, that’s really what we want evolution to explain.
Somebody help me out here.  Aside from the obvious misunderstandings, what is Nelson really saying about the relationship between genes and organisms?  Is he saying that there's some magical fairy dust that makes chimps chimps and humans humans, and so we have to quit looking at silly things like genes?

--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
carlsonjok



Posts: 3326
Joined: May 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,11:57   

Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,11:47)
Somebody help me out here.  Aside from the obvious misunderstandings, what is Nelson really saying about the relationship between genes and organisms?  Is he saying that there's some magical fairy dust that makes chimps chimps and humans humans, and so we have to quit looking at silly things like genes?

While I think you probably already know the answer, let me drop a hint on you.



--------------
It's natural to be curious about our world, but the scientific method is just one theory about how to best understand it.  We live in a democracy, which means we should treat every theory equally. - Steven Colbert, I Am America (and So Can You!)

  
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,12:20   

Quote (carlsonjok @ July 02 2007,11:57)
 
Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,11:47)
Somebody help me out here.  Aside from the obvious misunderstandings, what is Nelson really saying about the relationship between genes and organisms?  Is he saying that there's some magical fairy dust that makes chimps chimps and humans humans, and so we have to quit looking at silly things like genes?

While I think you probably already know the answer, let me drop a hint on you.


You're quite wrong: it's actually



--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
carlsonjok



Posts: 3326
Joined: May 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,12:26   

Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,12:20)
Quote (carlsonjok @ July 02 2007,11:57)
  While I think you probably already know the answer, let me drop a hint on you.


You're quite wrong: it's actually


Perhaps for you.  But, given the group we are dealing with, this is the most accurate.


--------------
It's natural to be curious about our world, but the scientific method is just one theory about how to best understand it.  We live in a democracy, which means we should treat every theory equally. - Steven Colbert, I Am America (and So Can You!)

  
jeannot



Posts: 1201
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,12:38   

Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,09:16)
I can only respond in the voice of Inigo Montoya: "You keep using that word.  I do not think it means what you think it means."

These words are from Wesley, actually (not Elsberry).  ;)

Oh, you may be right after all. I don't remember in which scene they are spoken.

  
Hermagoras



Posts: 1260
Joined: June 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,12:45   

Quote (jeannot @ July 02 2007,12:38)
Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,09:16)
I can only respond in the voice of Inigo Montoya: "You keep using that word.  I do not think it means what you think it means."

These words are from Wesley, actually (not Elsberry).  ;)

I'm pretty sure it's Inigo.  At least on the IMDB:

Quote
[Vizzini has just cut the rope The Dread Pirate Roberts is climbing up]
Vizzini: HE DIDN'T FALL? INCONCEIVABLE.
Inigo Montoya: You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.


--------------
"I am not currently proving that objective morality is true. I did that a long time ago and you missed it." -- StephenB

http://paralepsis.blogspot.com/....pot.com

   
franky172



Posts: 160
Joined: Jan. 2007

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,12:46   

Quote (jeannot @ July 02 2007,12:38)
Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,09:16)
I can only respond in the voice of Inigo Montoya: "You keep using that word.  I do not think it means what you think it means."

These words are from Wesley, actually (not Elsberry).  ;)

No way. :)

  
Zachriel



Posts: 2723
Joined: Sep. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,12:51   

Quote (Hermagoras @ July 02 2007,11:47)
Hold on, here's
Paul Nelson:
 
Quote
There must be more to macroevolution — e.g., the origin of chimpanzees and humans from a common ancestor — than site-by-site amino acid changes in proteins, which was largely the picture drawn in textbook neo-Darwinism at the time (1975). Chimp hemoglobin is pretty much human hemoglobin, and so on, yet it’s always the chimps behind the bars, gazing out, when one visits the zoo:

(Side note: caged apes make me sad.)  Anyway, a bit of bloviating later:      
Quote
What genetic changes have caused the manifold organismal differences between chimps and humans? After all, that’s really what we want evolution to explain.
Somebody help me out here.  Aside from the obvious misunderstandings, what is Nelson really saying about the relationship between genes and organisms?  Is he saying that there's some magical fairy dust that makes chimps chimps and humans humans, and so we have to quit looking at silly things like genes?

It means that evolutionary biologists in the 1970's made predictions firmly grounded in evolutionary theory that have been vindicated by modern experimental data.

Meanwhile, Jehu still can't read, but compensates with other skills.  
Quote
When I called you on your pitiful lies you changed your story.


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You never step on the same tard twice—for it's not the same tard and you're not the same person.

   
Richardthughes



Posts: 11178
Joined: Jan. 2006

(Permalink) Posted: July 02 2007,13:07   



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