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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: MRMEAN

It is SO past time for an INTELLIGENT debate on this issue. Why is it so hard to accept the idea that we just don't know for SURE how life began? And do those who refuse to accept anything but Darwinian evolution truly believe that any proof of evolution- if there should ever BE any- somehow "rains on the Christian parade"? I certainly hate to disabuse any "true believers" in the crowd (no I don't), but evolution as a implement of God is also quite acceptable to those who live in faith.
I do not believe that there is anything but an agenda at work in any rejection of ID...
See the following for some insight:
Dan Peterson, "What's the Big Deal About Intelligent Design". American Spectator, Dec.2005-Jan.2006.
http://www.discovery.org/csc/topQuestions.php
http://actionbioscience.org/evolution/nhmag.html
The fight over this issue, by the evolutionists, has only ONE purpose- and it ain't about "science".


2,761 posted on 12/27/2005 8:36:00 AM PST by 13Sisters76
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To: xzins
The CDC says that total abstinence is the only method that when fully practiced results in zero infection and zero pregnancy.

Off-topic, but what does the CDC say is the typical failure rate for those using abstinence as the only form of birth control/STD prevention?

2,762 posted on 12/27/2005 8:44:21 AM PST by Condorman (Prefer infinitely the company of those seeking the truth to those who believe they have found it.)
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To: Condorman

The study I saw compared each form of birth control WHEN PERFECTLY PRACTICED.

It didn't address the question of when any form was the only method practiced.


2,763 posted on 12/27/2005 8:48:34 AM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and Proud of It!)
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To: Luis Gonzalez

They also did not include Native Americans, who lived on the continent.

If I only count the members of my household, we have a 100% literacy rate. And every member was educated in a public school. Pretty good results from those incompetent public schools, huh?

;-)


2,764 posted on 12/27/2005 9:15:13 AM PST by 2nsdammit (By definition it's hard to get suicide bombers with experience.)
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To: balrog666

"Are you implicitly invoking a god or gods for the inherent contradiction in that hypothesis? Or time travel?"

There is no inherent contradiction. As I have repeatedly pointed out, my hypothesis concerns the PROCESS of life originating and is not about one particular historical event.

It applies whether an event occurred yesterday, or thousands or billions of years ago.

A supposed event of ages past cannot be falsified and would be very difficult to verify.


2,765 posted on 12/27/2005 9:18:18 AM PST by unlearner (You will never come to know that which you do not know until you first know that you do not know it.)
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To: snarks_when_bored

"A teacher of an empirical science ought to continually remind her students that what they're being taught is (ideally) the current best account of the phenomena they're studying...not that it's the final word or the gospel truth."

Exactly correct. And that is why I object so strongly to the teaching of ID:

Scenario 1, wherein ID is not taught:

Scientist 1: "We don't understand this particular element of this theory. It doesn't make sense."

Scientist 2: "No, we don't. Therefore, we must study the problem, experiment, and try to formulate a hypothesis which will start us on the path to understanding it."

Scenario 2, wherein ID is taught:

Scientist 1: "We don't understand this particular element of this theory. It doesn't make sense."

"Scientist" 2: "Goddidit! Problem solved, next issue!"

No incentive to actually advance.....


2,766 posted on 12/27/2005 9:25:58 AM PST by 2nsdammit (By definition it's hard to get suicide bombers with experience.)
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To: Virginia-American

Of course he does! They speak out against ID, therefore they are athiests! It's a self-proving "fact"! [/sarcasm]

(Come to think of it, that's sort of the way the whole "theory" of ID works, isn't it?)


2,767 posted on 12/27/2005 10:11:17 AM PST by 2nsdammit (By definition it's hard to get suicide bombers with experience.)
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To: jwalsh07

Of course not. Check with Professor Milecki.

Assuming you refer to University of Kansas religious studies professor Paul Mirecki, his course was not one of religious instruction.

What sort of curriculum do you propose for your religion course, and how will you ensure that the instructor is qualified to teach it?

2,768 posted on 12/27/2005 11:14:29 AM PST by Condorman (Prefer infinitely the company of those seeking the truth to those who believe they have found it.)
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To: VadeRetro
"Your so-called test plans absolutely do not address your stated hypothesis."

The tests serve the essential purposes of verification and falsification. You apparently do not understand demarcation enough to recognize that the tests do serve their intended function. It is you who keeps confusing falsification with the need to prove, in your words, an "infinite negative."

"You have to prove a negative to prove that statement."

If you were objective, you would see that your position would require the law of gravity to prove that nothing ever falls up.

"Incrementally, cumulatively, and GRADUALLY over long periods of time the way mainstream science postulates."

Mainstream science includes assertions which are not falsifiable or verifiable?

"the law of gravity is a mathematical approximation of something readily observed."

Nice try, and at least I must give you credit for finally attempting to address the issue. But you failed. Your claims against my hypothesis have nothing to do with whether we can observe the origination of life. I already admitted that it lacks supporting evidence to make it a theory. You have not argued against it on a statistical basis either.

You have been saying my statement is logically flawed rather than lacking in supporting evidence, so your comparison does not identify why the law of gravity meets your requirement, but mine does not.

Simply defining or describing the law of gravity does not sufficiently address the question. You claim my statement fails because I cannot prove that something never happened.

My reply has been you are confusing verification with falsification. I gave the law of gravity as an example. By your standard, without regard to the abundance of supporting evidence, the law of gravity would be invalidated because it is not possible to disprove that things may sometimes fall up.

How does the law of gravity succeed in meeting your definition of falsifiability?

You dug yourself a very deep hole. I think at this point you are probably too embarrassed to admit your argument is flawed even if you can see it plainly. You can't afford to back down now, no matter how wrong headed your argument is.

A hypothesis is an attempted explanation of observable phenomena which must be falsifiable and preferably verifiable. Falsifiable means that the hypothesis makes predictions in which some potential outcome could result in disproving it. Verifiable means that the hypothesis makes predictions which, if true, tend to support it.

Your standard would disqualify all theories and laws as well as hypotheses. You demand that the tests for my hypothesis be able to prove that no other explanation is possible. That is not how science works, period. For all the ranting about my unwillingness to admit error, I should expect your admission to be forthcoming.
2,769 posted on 12/27/2005 11:15:17 AM PST by unlearner (You will never come to know that which you do not know until you first know that you do not know it.)
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To: VadeRetro
"Your premise denies that it could have happened. If it did, you're wrong. Are you capable of recognizing this? More importantly, are you capable of admitting it?"

Of course that is true. If an instance of life self organizing occurred at any time, today, tomorrow, or billions of years ago, it would mean my hypothesis is incorrect. But where is the evidence? Saying something might have happened is not observable or verifiable in such a way to disprove my hypothesis. Your burden of proof is greater.

My premise asserts that there is an exclusive explanation for life originating. Until some other hypothesis can make a falsifiable assertion, mine is better.

"We only know that all the life we see betrays evidence of common ancestry with the rest of it."

You are trying to switch the debate to be about evolution. Again, evolution has nothing to do with the origin of life.

"Why isn't new life forming from scratch in some warm mud puddle right now?"

Because it can't, in my opinion. If abiogenesis can happen, it might be happening somewhere. But unless we observe it or make a testable model for it, then it is not science.

"There is no particular poof moment in real models of abiogenesis... All gradual all the way. If you don't know anything about real thinking in abiogenesis, you don't even know what to address."

Smoke and mirrors. Either something meets the minimum qualifications, the essential definition for life, or it does not. I don't care whether the process takes billions of years. Either it results in life originating or it does not. I don't care how many special, new types of transitional matter there are, transitional matter is not life. If there is not a point at which at least one distinct living cell exists, then it is a failure. Your argument really boils down to the idea that life cannot be defined, but it can, and I think you know it too.

"So it wouldn't mean anything if something was forming in your backyard right now, anyway? At least, not until it went all the way?"

If something was forming in my backyard I would be curious about what was happening, but the last thing I would assume is that some new life was going to come popping out at some point. So yes, I would not believe it until it actually happened "all the way."

"I need and expect less [than a single living cell]. Did you know that?"

Then you believe in abiogenesis without evidence.

"Nothing is as challenging and difficult as showing life will never form from non-life in any amount of time by any means, unless it's getting an honest admission of same out of you."

I have been honest. Showing life will never form from non-life is more than challenging and difficult, it is impossible. That is why abiogenesis is not falsifiable. You can assert that it might have happened, and no one can ever prove you wrong. How convenient.
2,770 posted on 12/27/2005 11:15:27 AM PST by unlearner (You will never come to know that which you do not know until you first know that you do not know it.)
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To: Quark2005

I would love to hear how the 2nd law of thermo does not conflict with evolution . You say basically it doesnt matter. How so? Your explanation is not based on any science; instead you ignore one of the most thoroughly tested laws in all science. The classical interpretation reads them at face value to mean the universe is winding-down irreversibly toward a heat death where all the mass=energy is still present but unavailable to perform work. These laws indicate the universe is not a perpetual motion machine.
Although , as you know, in the origins debate we typically hear of it as the universal tendency toward disorder or entrophy. There is another aspect of this law. The Second Law says that in a closed system, energy always distributes itself so it is no longer available to do useful work, and this will happen irreversibly.
Imagine a closed system of 2 rooms; a cold empty room next to a room full of hot steam. The non-uniform distribution of mass-energy - known as disequilibrium provides energy that is available to do work. This is called the available energy or free energy.
Imagine a steam engine in one of the rooms with pipes connected so that the hot steam powers the engine and the exhaust is then expelled into the cold room. The engine can then drive many devices to accomplish useful tasks. As the steam engine runs, the hot room gets colder and the cold room hotter. When the two rooms reach the same temperature the engine can no longer run, no matter what temperature the rooms or how efficient it may be. The system has reached equilibrium. All the mass-energy is still present. It has merely distributed itself so it can no longer do work. That available energy is now gone from the system forever. Process irreversible.

Look at Hawking's book on cosmology Brief History of Time. He gives us a fine example of evolutionary distortions.

He misinterprets the probablities involved in the Second Law of Therm. He has the reader imagine 2 boxes: one containing oxygen and the other nitrogen. These boxes are joined together and the intervening wall is removed. As predicted by the second law, the gases will mix throughout the box. What is the probablility the oxygen gas will randomly move back to its half the box? Hawking claims it can happen. Do you?


2,771 posted on 12/27/2005 12:18:31 PM PST by caffe (D)
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To: unlearner
You have been saying my statement is logically flawed rather than lacking in supporting evidence, so your comparison does not identify why the law of gravity meets your requirement, but mine does not.

Good grief. The law of gravity gets use-tested every day, with a high potential for failure, if it is incorrect. It, in fact, failed the perehelion of mercury test, and was replaced with a better theory early in this century, and continues to fail interesting tests every day, that await explanation at the present moment. The law of gravity is fecund with tests that can and do fail, right now.

Experimentation is not a draconian boolean function as you seem to think. We call things sciences where we have a practical window of observation that allows us to run many tests, or make field predictions, some of which fail and some of which succeed. Our task is to put together a picture from this rich source of information. It is extremely rare (as far as I know, unknown) that one single test makes a definitive cut. ID fails to be a science, on the level that evolutionary theory or the theory of gravity is a science simply because there's no practical, routine way for us to examine it.

Trying as hard as I could to even make out what your contention is, for the last half-hour has yielded me nothing but a headache, from trying to gobble a 90 cent bag of words to get at a 1 cent idea. If ID were a significant science, you could tell me what test I could run tomorrow, with a reasonable budget, to see how good a predictor of events it is. If you cannot meet this challenge, you do not have a science worthy of being mentioned in high school textbooks.

2,772 posted on 12/27/2005 12:21:13 PM PST by donh
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To: unlearner
So much spew. So driven. No one is reading all that, you know. The silly dumb-dumb dance goes on.

Your premise is not the law of gravity. It contains no useful approximation of anything observable. It's about something that supposedly never ever happens, even over untestable amounts of parallel recombination on the early Earth. You want to claim proof of something you aren't even thinking of testing but you also don't want to admit that. You are STILL pretending not to see. This is the creationist dummy dance, the endless brazen pretense that the obvious is not.

You have been saying my statement is logically flawed rather than lacking in supporting evidence, so your comparison does not identify why the law of gravity meets your requirement, but mine does not.

More dishonesty. Your premise is not an attempt at reasoning at all and cannot be evaluated as sound versus unsound. It can only be evaluated as practically testable.

Every law of physics is potentially limited in scope and may fail someday. It has already happened to most of Newton's Laws. The Law of Gravity is getting a hard look after some disturbing cosmological data emerged a few years back.

But Newton's LOG, like his first three laws, will always be useful over a huge scope, just as it has been from the first. Your law of formations of life has a tiny domain just now. All the life we know of now traces to a single origin and we don't know for sure what that was. You have basically formulated your law to argue that that very data point was a "Goddidit" miracle, i.e, to beg the question.

You have openly hoped that science will create life in a lab, thus providing a second data point. You will then extrapolate back to the first point and yell, "Intelligent Design!"

What's funny about this is I can post two rows of skulls which appear for all the world to morph from chimpanzee to man and one creationist after another will attack me for interpolating evolution between the data points. Creationist make a science of refusing to infer. No interpolation allowed. No extrapolation allowed. Not, that is, until they need it to yell, "Goddidit!"

Newton, working on his LOG, was uniting Galileo and Kepler's laws, which separately were based on lots of observations. He basically knew the behavior was there and reliable, it just needed a more comprehensive and basic explanation than had been separately provided by the earlier laws. When he described the underlying lawfulness, that was an increase in human understanding.

Your law is an attempt to say, "Forget understanding this. God did it." That is not an increase in human understanding as most people see science.

You dug yourself a very deep hole. I think at this point you are probably too embarrassed to admit your argument is flawed even if you can see it plainly.

Look up the logical fallacy of tu quoque sometime. You made your premise that life never forms in an unguided fashion from nonlife. You will never test it. You know you won't. You don't have the integrity to say you won't. I'm confident that the lurkers are not idiots.

2,773 posted on 12/27/2005 12:33:41 PM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: unlearner
If an instance of life self organizing occurred at any time, today, tomorrow, or billions of years ago, it would mean my hypothesis is incorrect. But where is the evidence? Saying something might have happened is not observable or verifiable in such a way to disprove my hypothesis. Your burden of proof is greater.

I've told you before: your hypothesis is falsifiable but not testable. You do not intend to test it other than to periodically yell that it has not been falsified.

VadeRetro: "Why isn't new life forming from scratch in some warm mud puddle right now?"

unlearner: Because it can't, in my opinion. If abiogenesis can happen, it might be happening somewhere. But unless we observe it or make a testable model for it, then it is not science.

There is a pressing reason which you at least superficially do not appear to know. This is important, really. This is a bad place to play dumb.

If you are that pig-ignorant of abiogenesis theory, you have no business announcing that it will be falsified by some non-test of your devising. You don't know what you are talking about, if you're telling the truth. However, I think you are a holy warrior liar for the Lord and are not telling the truth about what you know. Prove me wrong and say the words.

Here's a hint. You're going to do an experiment to try to form a certain organic from inorganics in the lab. You've got some beakers, tubing, etc. sitting out ready to be set up. Which of the following do you do?


2,774 posted on 12/27/2005 12:46:15 PM PST by VadeRetro (Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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To: caffe
Although , as you know, in the origins debate we typically hear of it as the universal tendency toward disorder or entrophy. There is another aspect of this law. The Second Law says that in a closed system, energy always distributes itself so it is no longer available to do useful work, and this will happen irreversibly.

Hasn't this been answered repeatedly on this thread? The earth/sun energy exchange is not a closed system. Someday the entropic piper will have to be paid, since the entire universe is presumably a closed system, but we are not talking about the entire universe, we are talking about a tiny piece of it, for a very small slice of time, so entropy can run uphill within it, just like eddy currents can briefly travel in the opposite direction from the flow of the river that produces them.

Usable energy is being pumped onto the earth by the sun all the time, which produces highly usable energy gradients that do work to produce highly regular, differentiated effects such as hurricane weather cells, ocean currents, whirlpools, bubbles, snowflakes, crystal lattices, and life.

2,775 posted on 12/27/2005 12:52:01 PM PST by donh
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To: caffe
What is the probablility the oxygen gas will randomly move back to its half the box? Hawking claims it can happen. Do you?

It is a fundamental point of quantum theory that, in fact, it can happen. Just not with a very high probability. On a subnuclear scale, where events are occuring at an extremely high rate compared to rate at which you can perform your test with two rooms full of gas, it happens frequently enough that the transistors that allow you to communicate on this medium make use of the phenomenon.

2,776 posted on 12/27/2005 1:06:32 PM PST by donh
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To: caffe
I would love to hear how the 2nd law of thermo does not conflict with evolution .

I already did that.

Your explanation is not based on any science; instead you ignore one of the most thoroughly tested laws in all science.

No, I just explained how the 2nd Law works. You are the one attempting to apply it to an abstract realm with shoddy reasoning. You can't hand-wave thermodynamics in that way. I'm not ignoring it at all - it doesn't look to me like you're paying any attention at all to the definitions of entropy and a closed system are, in the first place.

The Second Law says that in a closed system, energy always distributes itself so it is no longer available to do useful work, and this will happen irreversibly.

Okay. The sun hasn't finished distributing all its energy yet. Hence it can still do useful work on Earth.

All the mass-energy is still present. It has merely distributed itself so it can no longer do work. That available energy is now gone from the system forever. Process irreversible.

And this will eventually happen on Earth (practically) when the sun has exhausted its available energy and the core of the earth has cooled. Till then, thermal exchange still applies, and also the ability of localized systems to decrease in entropy. I agree, without the sun or geothermal heat, evolution couldn't occur. Then again, neither could life.

Look at Hawking's book on cosmology Brief History of Time. He gives us a fine example of evolutionary distortions. He misinterprets the probablities involved in the Second Law of Therm.

You understand thermodynamics better than Hawking? I don't think so.

The laws of thermodynamics always apply (to systems with large numbers of particles anyway), but not in the ways you are thinking. The article from the Institute for Creation Research that you (apparently) cite most of your 'information' from makes several key mistakes in the application of this concept. It makes the point that direct application of energy to system tends not to order a system (i.e. the old tornado in the junkyard argument. It ignores the fact that complex organic molecules, living organisms etc. act as an intermediate system for the absorption, processing and releasing of energy - the concept of the increasing order (decreasing entropy) of intermediaries of heat/energy flow is a commonly observed process in thermodynamic systems. As I said, a global increase in entropy is necessary for a localized decrease. The laws of thermodynamics are indeed present in evolution, and in fact, evolution occurs in concordance with these laws, not in spite of them.

He has the reader imagine 2 boxes: one containing oxygen and the other nitrogen. These boxes are joined together and the intervening wall is removed. As predicted by the second law, the gases will mix throughout the box. What is the probablility the oxygen gas will randomly move back to its half the box? Hawking claims it can happen. Do you?

You distort Hawking's statement. Given a probabiblity of an infinite number of years, it could happen, but not under any practical circumstances (not in the multibillion year age of the universe would this occurrence be even remotely likely to occur). His point was that thermodynamic laws are statistical in nature, not that this is something one would observe in reality.

I'm not sure what it is you're trying to say that the 2nd Law really tells us - is it that no system can ever have a local decrease in entropy? You're wrong. The creationist 'definition' of the 2nd law would hold that plants can't grow, embryos can't form, a hurricane can't form due to natural weather, and an endothermic chemical reaction can't even occur. The only thermodynamic conditions that are necessary for evolution to occur are the same as those required for life to exist and reproduce.

There's a good and simple reason why scientists don't take groups like the Institute for Creation Research seriously: their science is wrong on a multiple number of levels. Their blatant distortion of the meaning of basic physics principles is not a point that scores well for this organization's favor.

2,777 posted on 12/27/2005 1:31:27 PM PST by Quark2005 (Divination is NOT science.)
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To: donh
The ID label has many disinterested and disagreeing proponents. There is no cohesive, singular ID proposition other than that design of a particular object is recognizable by distinguishing attributes.

What I have been discussing is my simple, ID based hypothesis concerning the possible mechanisms that result in life originating. I am not describing a historical event. I am describing a process. There is little to describe because life has never been observed originating whether naturally or by being assembled.

My hypothetical statement is "due to complexity and interdependence new living things can only arise from nonliving matter via intentional (i.e. intelligent) assembly."

Not every view in the ID camp is verifiable or falsifiable. But my assertion is both.

When scientists are finally able to find any way of creating life, they will be putting my hypothesis to the test, whether intentionally or not. If they discover a mechanism of self assembly, it will falsify my statement. If they intelligently assemble a living organism, it will support (not prove) my hypothesis.

Abiogenesis is not falsifiable. It might be verifiable. The difficulty of verification is unpredictable. Either way, abiogenesis does not qualify as a scientific hypothesis by the most commonly accepted standard of demarcation.
2,778 posted on 12/27/2005 1:52:25 PM PST by unlearner (You will never come to know that which you do not know until you first know that you do not know it.)
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To: 2nsdammit

Shhhh...

You'll wake up the comatose, and break their daydreams of the halcyon days of slavery, infant deaths of 200+ per thousand per annum, and life expectancy of less than 40 years.

Those beautiful days before suffrage, emancipation, women's liberation and equal representation.

The literacy rate in America SUCKED prior to the creation of the public school system.

Period.


2,779 posted on 12/27/2005 2:05:05 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (Some people see the world as they would want it to be, effective people see the world as it is.)
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To: Quark2005; caffe; donh
This is an approach to the two boxes of gas problem:

First, assume there is one molecule of O2 and one of H2. Calculate the odds that one will be in one box whilst the other is in the other one.

Now assume there are two O2 molecules and two H2. Calculate the odds again. They won't be zero.

Now find the formula for the odds as a function of N, the number of molecules. This formula will never equal zero, but will be very small, as soon as N is at all large.

2,780 posted on 12/27/2005 2:11:55 PM PST by Virginia-American
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