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Intelligent Design case decided - Dover, Pennsylvania, School Board loses [Fox News Alert]
Fox News | 12/20/05

Posted on 12/20/2005 7:54:38 AM PST by snarks_when_bored

Fox News alert a few minutes ago says the Dover School Board lost their bid to have Intelligent Design introduced into high school biology classes. The federal judge ruled that their case was based on the premise that Darwin's Theory of Evolution was incompatible with religion, and that this premise is false.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: biology; creation; crevolist; dover; education; evolution; intelligentdesign; keywordpolice; ruling; scienceeducation
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To: Dimensio

"You're not one of those who ignorantly thinks that evolution supposedly violates the laws of thermodynamics, are you?"



Yes, I am one of those except i'm not ignorant.

Obviously, I believe in microevolution which has nothing in common with Darwin. All creationists and ID theorists have no problem with microevolution. We might have problems with certain extrapolations...

If you look at the number of people who reject Darwin or any other cheap imitations of Darwin, statistically speaking, your going to have tons of physicians, chemists, nurses, etc. who somehow managed to find success without being a "believer" Think about it!

Later, it's late


1,681 posted on 12/20/2005 9:46:04 PM PST by caffe
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To: caffe
Yes, I am one of those except i'm not ignorant.

If you believe that evolution violates the laws of thermodynamics, then you are either ignorant of thermodynamics, ignorant of evolution or you have some special knowledge that you should be sharing with the scientific community because you have a Nobel Prize coming your way. If you really think you've a case to make, then make it.

All creationists and ID theorists have no problem with microevolution.

Except for the creationists who insist that absolutely all mutations are harmful.
1,682 posted on 12/20/2005 9:48:00 PM PST by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: caffe
It seems that some folks will believe almost anything, as long as it doesn’t appear in the Bible.

That does seem a key component does it not Caffe? I agree with you.

Wolf
1,683 posted on 12/20/2005 9:49:04 PM PST by RunningWolf (Vet US Army Air Cav 1975)
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To: PatrickHenry

Though not a surprising result, this is great news.


1,684 posted on 12/20/2005 9:51:09 PM PST by ValenB4 ("Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets." - Isaac Asimov)
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To: caffe
["You're not one of those who ignorantly thinks that evolution supposedly violates the laws of thermodynamics, are you?"] Yes, I am one of those except i'm not ignorant.

LOL.

Later, it's late

Bailing out just in time to avoid answering that I see.

1,685 posted on 12/20/2005 10:00:01 PM PST by narby (Hillary! The Wicked Witch of the Left)
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To: lonestar67
I have presented a clear piece of scientific study differentiating primates and humans but we have quickly returned to the claim that "this is not science."

Yes, you did provide a very good link, though the title was misleading. Surely you remember this very clear statement in your article:

The study didn't generate a new number expressing how similar or different chimpanzee DNA is from human DNA. (emphasis mine)

Your claim that this is somehow a problem for evolutionary theory is false and has already been addressed many times. In reality, the study of chimp DNA has greatly validated evolutionary theory and fulfilled very specific predictions made by the theory, the hallmark of a solid scientific concept.

1,686 posted on 12/20/2005 10:16:09 PM PST by Quark2005 (Divination is NOT science.)
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To: NJ_gent
Since I never advocated teaching it, perhaps you should go talk to someone who has and lecture them.

Government schools are the pits. And they are rife with agenda pushing leftists. Many of whom love ToE because to them it means they can push their secular religion of humanism on unsuspecting children and win recruits for their warped cause.

Abolish government schools, and the debate disappears.

1,687 posted on 12/20/2005 10:24:07 PM PST by Protagoras (Many people teach their children that Jesus is story character but Santa Claus is real.)
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To: jennyp; Antonello

Haven't yet had a chance to read the opinion, but an interesting point came to mind, which is mostly an intellectual exercise.

Since it appears that the 'new' school board is not going to appeal this decision, what would happen if some future school board decided that it was appropriate to make a statement similar to the one the 'old' school board wanted?

Some future school board is not a party to this particular case, especially if all the members are different.

A further interesting factor is that if there is no judicial review of the trial court decision because the 'new' school board declined to appeal, just how binding is this decision on a future board. This may factor in because there is not currently an adversarial relationship between the plaintifs and the current school board.

Since future school board members are not parties to this law suit, res judicata may very well not apply to a future case.

As a practical matter for the near future, it doesn't make a difference. It would be interesting if the current school board authorized the defense attorneys to pursue an appeal that would conclusively determine any future similar case. That would certainly entail some risks for both parties and I think the current school board/plaintiffs would be wise to simply let things stand as they currently are.

If the Cobb County School Board case is decided in favor of the school board and it goes to the USSC, the Dover case could be, as a practical matter, overturned.

While the evolutionists clearly won the battle in the Dover case, the war is far from over.


1,688 posted on 12/20/2005 10:39:27 PM PST by connectthedots
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To: connectthedots
Since it appears that the 'new' school board is not going to appeal this decision, what would happen if some future school board decided that it was appropriate to make a statement similar to the one the 'old' school board wanted?

They would be held in contempt if they persisted, most likely.

Some future school board is not a party to this particular case, especially if all the members are different.

But the school district, as an entity, is a party to the case, and will continue to be bound by the ruling. It has to be that way - if not, school boards, corporations, and all sorts of collective entities could defer some adverse judgement by simply firing their boards of directors or whatever.

1,689 posted on 12/20/2005 10:53:00 PM PST by Senator Bedfellow
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To: Protagoras
"Abolish government schools, and the debate disappears."

And what of the masses upon masses who cannot afford home schooling or private education? Are we to return to the middle ages where we have a vast pool of completely uneducated people who are incapable of bettering themselves due to lack of opportunities?
1,690 posted on 12/20/2005 11:02:12 PM PST by NJ_gent (Modernman should not have been banned.)
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To: Fester Chugabrew
I reckon I could. For now it only matters what you yourself wrote, namely that science is to be strictly about proofs.

Yup. What proofs are being offered to support ID?

It would be better if you did not infer from my own writings that I claim intelligent design to be scientifically provable.

Do you believe ID to be 'science' or 'scientifically provable'?

The only thing obvious is that the notion intelligent design irks evolutionists enough that they want to make a federal case of it.

Since ID could not make it's case in a court of law, why should it be presented in school as something it's not?

1,691 posted on 12/20/2005 11:17:19 PM PST by Ol' Dan Tucker (Karen Ryan reporting...)
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To: NJ_gent
Are we to return to the middle ages where we have a vast pool of completely uneducated people

From what I see on crevo discussion, I think that we already have that.
1,692 posted on 12/20/2005 11:40:03 PM PST by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: All

This thread may not have enough keywords yet...


1,693 posted on 12/20/2005 11:43:18 PM PST by Ichneumon
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To: VadeRetro

Regarding your post #1512...I bet he does not get accused of doing that either...


1,694 posted on 12/20/2005 11:57:18 PM PST by andysandmikesmom
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To: Ichneumon; All
This thread may not have enough keywords yet...

That's just what I was thinking when I woke up and checked it a while ago...so I added another...

Also, to quite a few posters on this thread, including one you responded to at length a little earlier, I proffer this one-sentence parable:

If you glance in the direction of a very distant peak at dusk without your glasses on, you're unlikely to catch sight of either the peak or the mountain beneath it.

Later, bud...

1,695 posted on 12/21/2005 12:25:41 AM PST by snarks_when_bored
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To: Jo Nuvark
Moore calls such doings 'holy fabrication'!

HAHAHAHAHA!!!

Muslims call such doings 'taqiyya'.

1,696 posted on 12/21/2005 1:04:19 AM PST by jennyp (PILTDOWN MAN IS REAL! The evolutionist's story that Piltdown was a hoax is the REAL hoax!)
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To: Dimensio
>How come you aren't out shooting up your high school or something like the rest of your Godless brethern?

Why would you expect anyone to want to do that? Does it really bother you that atheists tend not to behave according to your bogus stereotypes that you have to insult them for not doing so?
My, my. I'm reminded of the line from B. F. Skinner's Walden Two, where the behavioral scientist running the utopian community says:
"I remember the rage I used to feel when a prediction went awry. I could have shouted at the subjects of my experiments, "Behave, d*** you! Behave as you ought!" Eventually I realized that the subjects were always right. They always behaved as they should have behaved. It was I who was wrong. I had made a bad prediction."
(And no, I'm not arguing for behaviorism! :-)
1,697 posted on 12/21/2005 1:21:31 AM PST by jennyp (PILTDOWN MAN IS REAL! The evolutionist's story that Piltdown was a hoax is the REAL hoax!)
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To: narby

The scientific method necessitates an acting on faith - a hunch that is later verified by experiments. That's the sense I meant it in, narb.


1,698 posted on 12/21/2005 2:45:26 AM PST by Ceewrighter (O'er the land of the free and the Home of the brave!)
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To: narby

Your analogy is still weak. But let me take this discussion back to where it belongs. It is a fact that there remains a debate, locally and nationally, that the TofE is not accepted as valid by everyone. Therefore a school board, governed locally, wants to bring up that fact and merely mention an alternative. It takes less than five minutes to bring it up in class, whereas the TofE is taught for 19 full sequential periods in a semester. I don't see where the problem lies.


1,699 posted on 12/21/2005 2:58:09 AM PST by Ceewrighter (O'er the land of the free and the Home of the brave!)
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To: Ceewrighter
"The scientific method necessitates an acting on faith - a hunch that is later verified by experiments. That's the sense I meant it in, narb."

You are wrong. Science is not working on faith. Science is working on concepts. Scientists even mistrust their own concepts but accept them then put on test. To accept results is contradistinctive to have faith.
1,700 posted on 12/21/2005 2:59:17 AM PST by MHalblaub (Tell me in four more years (No, I did not vote for Kerry))
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