To: Soliton
Intelligent Design is of no scientific value in determining the origins of life in the universe. A designer would have to be supernatural (i.e. not subject to the laws of physics) or natural and subject to those laws."
Then the Big Bang theory has no scientific value either because once you follow it back to the singularity all known laws of physics fall apart and we are dealing with the supernatural. Should we quit teaching that also?
10 posted on
04/20/2008 9:11:01 AM PDT by
joebuck
(Finitum non capax infinitum!)
To: joebuck
This is an ID thread. Big Bang theory does not suggest supernatural beings and is therefore not religion. It is then legal to teach it in school (but the hardly do).
78 posted on
04/20/2008 10:36:37 AM PDT by
Soliton
(McCain couldn't even win a McCain look-alike contest)
To: joebuck
Then the Big Bang theory has no scientific value either because once you follow it back to the singularity all known laws of physics fall apart and we are dealing with the supernatural. Should we quit teaching that also?It shouldn't be taught in high school biology, and generally isn't. Wit until the students get to astrophysics class.
To: joebuck
No because of Quantum Physcics which state on the sub atomic level anything can happen even something coming from nothing
169 posted on
04/20/2008 2:29:57 PM PDT by
LukeL
(Yasser Arafat: "I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize")
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