RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid



Message


celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:34:24 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

How about this: talk about "intelligent design" as part of religious education, in the context of religious beliefs, and in comparison to other religions. Then, later, the kids can study the American religious right in politics class. But it has no place in science class: it's not science, it's belief.

Why should Darwin's proposition of a "First Cause" not be included in a scientific discussion of evolution?

If Darwin himself contemplated the possibility of an intelligence not unlike our own as the impetus of evolution, upon what reasoned, logical, and presumably "scientific" basis do you dismiss said possibility?




kittinSol -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:37:24 AM)

Oh go on then, knock yourself out. Teach the whole doctrine of ID as if it were scientific fact, thus playing into the hands of a few political nutters, however? Not in a million years.




FirmhandKY -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:44:14 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: SilverMark

p.s. not really a reply to you Firm, I think that was just were I couldn't keep My mouth shut...and boy, did I mispell and use tense incorrectly...as a long standing member of the "spelling Nazi's" as Fat would refer to Me I apologize.



No problems here, SM, even if it was in reply to me. I agree with the majority of your sentiments.

Firm




celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:52:32 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

Oh go on then, knock yourself out. Teach the whole doctrine of ID as if it were scientific fact, thus playing into the hands of a few political nutters, however? Not in a million years.

You do realize that this does not answer the questions I have asked......

How many of the leading scientific minds of the last 200 years rejected religion as "superstition"?
  • Darwin classified himself as a Theist when he wrote Origin of Species.
  • Einstein dictum quoted above suggests some conceptualization of forces beyond our ken.
  • Heisenberg, when asked if he believed in a personal God, had this to say:
    quote:

    He was once asked by Pauli if he believed in a personal God. This was his reply: "Can you, or anyone else, reach the central order of things, or events, whose existence seems beyond doubt, as directly as you can reach the soul of another human being? I am using the term 'soul' quite deliberately so as not to be misunderstood. If you would put the question like that, the answer is yes."
  • Max Plank: "No matter where and how far we look, nowhere do we find contradiction between religion and science".
Dogmatism in defense of science is a contradiction in terms.




FirmhandKY -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:53:12 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

How about this: talk about "intelligent design" as part of religious education, in the context of religious beliefs, and in comparison to other religions. Then, later, the kids can study the American religious right in politics class. But it has no place in science class: it's not science, it's belief.


Science is a belief system as well.

Firm




meatcleaver -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:55:16 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

How about this: talk about "intelligent design" as part of religious education, in the context of religious beliefs, and in comparison to other religions. Then, later, the kids can study the American religious right in politics class. But it has no place in science class: it's not science, it's belief.


Science is a belief system as well.

Firm


No it isn't. Its based on observation and is provisional.




kittinSol -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:58:39 AM)

Science is built around theories that are built upon factual evidence. A scientist can 'believe', but he or she will not confuse empirical evidence and scientific research with belief.





celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 6:59:33 AM)

quote:

Science is a belief system as well.

Strictly speaking, Firm, I have to disagree:  Science is (or rather, should be) a rational mode of inquiry based upon experimentation, observation, and logical analysis.

However, there is no denying that many have a most dogmatic reliance on "science" as the guiding force in their lives, expressing a most fundamentalist fervor and insistence on the absolute "rightness" of their worldview.[;)]




meatcleaver -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:02:02 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: celticlord2112


However, there is no denying that many have a most dogmatic reliance on "science" as the guiding force in their lives, expressing a most fundamentalist fervor and insistence on the absolute "rightness" of their worldview.[;)]



Of course you know this to be nonsense, inquiry is not belief and can never be.




celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:03:32 AM)

Again, not an answer to the question....to any of the questions, in fact.

  • Why should Darwin's proposition of a "First Cause" not be included in a scientific discussion of evolution? 
  • If Darwin himself contemplated the possibility of an intelligence not unlike our own as the impetus of evolution, upon what reasoned, logical, and presumably "scientific" basis do you dismiss said possibility? 
  • How many of the leading scientific minds of the last 200 years rejected religion as "superstition"?
Do you have answers for any of these questions?




DomKen -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:03:42 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Thadius

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

Abstinence only ed is bad for young people's health and most of the curriculum's contain blatant lies.
http://articles.latimes.com/2008/apr/24/nation/na-abstinence24
http://mediamatters.org/items/200412080002

Creationism and opting out of "offensive" instruction result in poorly educated people. Especially in the sciences and even more especially in the bio sciences. You may have noticed that the bio sciences are a big growth industry now so allowing the US to produce badly educated people is bad for teh future of the economy.

Spousal benefits include such things as being listed on life insurance, receiving medical insurance and receiving survivors benefits. Why is it a good thing to deny these things to same sex couple but not a good thing to deny them to opposite sex couples?

So yes all those positions are extreme and in all cases bad for minors or for people other than the true believer. I'm fine if an adult wants to reject science, reason and doesn't want to be in a same sex relationship. However I'm of the firm belief that that right ends at their own nose. Tood bad you don't.


Look at the question and answer again, she said she would not fund "EXPLICIT SEX ED".

How do you explain the success of kids that are home schooled or in parochial schools (regardless of which faith)?

Notice that even the Dem on that questionaire answered NO to the question, as it is already in their state constitution, therefore nothing is stopping folks from creating legal contracts, which could include power of attorney, and or other benefits,...  It is not the executives position to overturn the constitution it is to uphold it.

Sorry that you feel that the government is the best place to make decisions on what is best for responsible parents and which beliefs they wish to teach their kids.

I for one want less government interference in my life.  I see both extreme sides of the political spectrum trying to tell me how to live, or how much money I am able to earn and spend.  They can all piss off.  How's that for a blunt answer?

First off the myth that home schooled kids do better in higher education needs to be dispelled. Some home schooled kids do very well in college. Many of those who are home schooled for religious reasons either never go on to college or go to places like Bob Jones or Pensacola Christian and we have no idea how they would do in a settting where reality is part of the curriculum.

Let's do look at the Democrats response to that question on the questionaire
Tony Knowles - no response
Eric Croft - no response
Bruce Lemke - no response
So what are you talking about?

One government role I'm a firm believer in is protecting children. That includes making sure a child has the opportunity to live a life different than their parents desire. This bizarre idea that parents should be able to completely destroy their children's futures by denying them a decent education is simply unbelievable. Once again your right to do or believe whatever you want ends at your nose.




kittinSol -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:04:53 AM)

Ah yes, like those that believe it's in the order of things [;)] .




celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:05:37 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

quote:

ORIGINAL: celticlord2112


However, there is no denying that many have a most dogmatic reliance on "science" as the guiding force in their lives, expressing a most fundamentalist fervor and insistence on the absolute "rightness" of their worldview.[;)]



Of course you know this to be nonsense, inquiry is not belief and can never be.

Inquiry is not belief.  Your dogged insistence on "science," however, most definitely is belief. 




celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:07:33 AM)

Still no answer.....why do you evade the question?

Why will you not answer?




meatcleaver -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:11:01 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: celticlord2112

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

quote:

ORIGINAL: celticlord2112


However, there is no denying that many have a most dogmatic reliance on "science" as the guiding force in their lives, expressing a most fundamentalist fervor and insistence on the absolute "rightness" of their worldview.[;)]



Of course you know this to be nonsense, inquiry is not belief and can never be.

Inquiry is not belief.  Your dogged insistence on "science," however, most definitely is belief. 



Its rational inquiry. What would you have me believe in, a man who rose from the dead, walked across water and turned water into wine and to believe in it without a shred of primary evidence?




kittinSol -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:11:06 AM)

Because your question is sophistry, more than genuine enquiry, and you know that very well.




meatcleaver -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:14:39 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: celticlord2112

Again, not an answer to the question....to any of the questions, in fact.
  • Why should Darwin's proposition of a "First Cause" not be included in a scientific discussion of evolution? 
  • If Darwin himself contemplated the possibility of an intelligence not unlike our own as the impetus of evolution, upon what reasoned, logical, and presumably "scientific" basis do you dismiss said possibility? 
  • How many of the leading scientific minds of the last 200 years rejected religion as "superstition"?

Do you have answers for any of these questions?



Darwin was a man of his times. How many quantum leaps does a man have to take?

Its irrelevant how many scientific minds of the last 200 hundred years rejected religion as superstition. Scientists are still part of society and cannot extricate themselves from it. That is why only empirical evidence is valid.




DomKen -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:16:29 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: celticlord2112

Again, not an answer to the question....to any of the questions, in fact.
  • Why should Darwin's proposition of a "First Cause" not be included in a scientific discussion of evolution? 
  • If Darwin himself contemplated the possibility of an intelligence not unlike our own as the impetus of evolution, upon what reasoned, logical, and presumably "scientific" basis do you dismiss said possibility? 
  • How many of the leading scientific minds of the last 200 years rejected religion as "superstition"?

Do you have answers for any of these questions?



First modern evolutionary theory, often called the "modern synthesis," while based on  Darwin's ideas is much different than the ideas put forward in Origin of species.

Second science can make no claims on the supernatural, positive or negative. Science is about what can be observed, measured and repeated. The supernatural is none of those and so science cannot deal with it.

Third lots of scientists of the last 200 years rejected all religions and lots accepted one religion or another. That doesn't change that science does not deal with the supernatural.

Finally ID is not a scientifically valid or useful concept. Kitzmiller v Dover proved quite thoroughly that ID is simply a new name on biblical creationism.




celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:16:34 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

Because your question is sophistry, more than genuine enquiry, and you know that very well.

The questions are questions.  Calling them "sophistry" does not alter the questions, it merely avoids the answers.

Sophistry would be speculating on why you are so reluctant to answer, and doing so in a phrasing that seemingly denies such speculation....[;)]




celticlord2112 -> RE: The fundie agenda,now part of the debate. (9/2/2008 7:22:10 AM)

quote:

Second science can make no claims on the supernatural, positive or negative. Science is about what can be observed, measured and repeated. The supernatural is none of those and so science cannot deal with it.

If there is an intelligent "First Cause" agent behind evolution, such an entity would not be "supernatural" but exceedingly "natural".




Page: <<   < prev  3 4 [5] 6 7   next >   >>

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.046875