Skip to comments.
Creationism to be taught on GCSE science syllabus (you can't keep a good idea down)
The Times of London ^
| 10 March 2006
| Tony Halpin
Posted on 03/09/2006 6:55:14 PM PST by Greg o the Navy
AN EXAMINATIONS board is including references to creationism in a new GCSE science course for schools.
TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: aatheistdarwinites; allahdooditamen; creationism; creationistping; crevo; crevolist; darwin; evolution; idiocy; idjunkscience; ignoranceisstrength; ignoranceonparade; intelligentdesign; scienceeducation; uk; youngearthcultists
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 221-240, 241-260, 261-280 ... 881-892 next last
To: King Prout
Well, a law of unpredictable consequences, like natural selection, can predict dang near anything. And like natural selection, it is far from scientific in nature.
To: jonathanmo
I'm glad you found it of merit.
I think it is one of my better efforts, in all truth :)
242
posted on
03/10/2006 6:43:42 PM PST
by
King Prout
(many accuse me of being overly literal... this would not be a problem if many were not under-precise)
To: Fester Chugabrew
Natural selection certainly is not random.Nor is it scientific. If it were, it could predict the state of species way down the road, especially given millions of years of its so-called "observed" history. Natural selection is an arbitrary determination made after species have performed as they were designed to perform, namely, within their intended limits.
Sure it's scientific. Saying it's not is like a biologist saying that we know a lot about the biology of blunt-force trauma, including how much force, applied where, will kill a person, and then a gadfly piping up and challenging him to predict who's going to die from a blunt-force trauma vs. who's going to die of old age. He can't, but that's irrelevant to whether his specialty is scientific or not. (But the gadfly still walks away feeling trimphant. :-)
243
posted on
03/10/2006 6:45:00 PM PST
by
jennyp
(WHAT I'M READING NOW: Life and Solitude in Easter Island by Verdugo-Binimelis)
To: ml1954
244
posted on
03/10/2006 6:45:56 PM PST
by
Boiler Plate
(Mom always said why be difficult when with just a little more effort you can be impossible.)
To: microgood
One of the problems with evolution theories is there is no possibility to do trial and error testing . . . All of which renders it a vapid, philosophical pursuit, not unlike intelligent design when used as if it is necessary to scientifically prove the existence of God.
To: Heartlander
I disagree with this methodological naturalistic belief so what label should science don me with
Not A Scientist
246
posted on
03/10/2006 6:48:17 PM PST
by
ml1954
(NOT the disruptive troll seen frequently on CREVO threads)
To: Fester Chugabrew
Well, a law of unpredictable consequences, like natural selection, can predict dang near anything.again, error. the law of unpredictable consequences predicts nothing - it stipulates with 100% certainty that there WILL be unpredictable consequences for every action.
247
posted on
03/10/2006 6:48:31 PM PST
by
King Prout
(many accuse me of being overly literal... this would not be a problem if many were not under-precise)
To: King Prout
[Battlestar Galactica 90minute Season Finale] placemarker
248
posted on
03/10/2006 6:49:54 PM PST
by
King Prout
(many accuse me of being overly literal... this would not be a problem if many were not under-precise)
To: Boiler Plate
Yeah, taking negative IQ's seriously is silly.
249
posted on
03/10/2006 6:52:37 PM PST
by
ml1954
(NOT the disruptive troll seen frequently on CREVO threads)
To: ml1954
Not A Scientist So, we are nothing more than chemicals acting upon each other and for no higher reason than any other chemical reaction?
To: Heartlander; Greg o the Navy; All; nmh; ml1954
To paraphrase Berlinski; if we were to replace the word evolution with allah and the label of creationist with infidel - I dont think these discussions would read significantly different. ROFL!!! Hardly. It's the evolutionists, not the creationists, who very routinely get accused of being atheists, infidels, blasphemers, anti-God, God-haters, unChristian, heretics, blah blah blah -- even when they're Christians! Just today, we had creationist "nmh" claim that Catholics aren't "really" Christians because he didn't like that the Catholic church has stated that it finds no contradiction between God and evolutionary biology.
Pull the other leg now.
But hey, let's try out your test, shall we? Here's the last reply I've made to one of your own posts which contains both the word "evolution" and "creationis[t/m]", with the edits you suggest:
So again, can there be any connection into the real world with any intelligent design in physical science -including/extending into biology? If the hypothesis is drawn specifically enough and in a way which allows testable predictions to be made and those predictions are subsequently matched by the totality of the evidence, yes.
As it stands today, though, the "ID movement" has neither a specific hypothesis, testable predictions, nor positive evidence. It hasn't even conducted any original research. Nor does it seem likely to -- the "ID movement" is characterized by its affection for press releases and mass-market books, and by its aversion for making any testable hypotheses, much less actually testing them or doing research.
It's an anti-Allah infidel PR campaign dishonestly masquerading as a science.
Wow, doesn't *that* sound stupid... No, contrary to your false claim, it *does* "read significantly different [sic]".
To: ml1954; Boiler Plate
Yeah, taking negative IQ's seriously is silly. In computing IQs, we should stop at zero, even for creationists. In fact, we should stop before we get to comparisons with the vegetable kingdom in compliance with Moderator-friendly FreepSpeak.
252
posted on
03/10/2006 6:56:45 PM PST
by
VadeRetro
(I have the updated "Your brain on creationism" on my homepage.)
To: Heartlander
So, we are nothing more than chemicals acting upon each other and for no higher reason than any other chemical reaction?
Who said that?
253
posted on
03/10/2006 6:57:05 PM PST
by
ml1954
(NOT the disruptive troll seen frequently on CREVO threads)
To: King Prout
Predictability is ultimately predicated upon the knowledge of the one who assesses a given cause and effect. As such it is subjective by definition and of little, if any, scientific value. Any law of unpredictablility must also necessarily have limits, because physical reality entails an ample supply of predictable phenomena. Lastly, if a law of unpredictability were given full sway by science, then such phenomenon as virgin births could hardly be discounted as "unscientific" in nature.
To: VadeRetro
In fact, we should stop before we get to comparisons with the vegetable kingdom in compliance with Moderator-friendly FreepSpeak.
I agree. There's no need to unnecessarily offend vegetables and cause them distress.
255
posted on
03/10/2006 7:03:45 PM PST
by
ml1954
(NOT the disruptive troll seen frequently on CREVO threads)
To: ahayes
Oh great, that would lead to the death of intellectual inquiry. If a supernatural being tampered with the universe and left evidence that leads to a false conclusion, than nothing true can really be learned by studying the universe. If you can't find Truth that way, why even bother with science? Most scientists on some level or another are driven by the desire to know what happened and why and how the world works.
I am not saying intellectual inquiry should end. What I am saying is that science makes certain assumptions and if those assumptions are wrong for a given field, the science around those assumptions is probably wrong as well. As far as Truth goes, science really is not about "Truth" but an best understanding of a situation given the amount of information we have about that situation. When Einstein developed the theory of general relativity, that did not make Newton a liar, that changed our understanding of how gravity works. Any false conclusions we come to are based on our flaws and not any supernatural being that fooled us.
Many of the things we understand about evolution is because of other theories which also make assumptions. There are quite a few assumptions made in dating rocks because God did not drop us a rock and say: "this rock is 100 million years old and you can use it as a baseline for dating rocks." There is no know baseline for dating rocks and the theories and formulas were derived in nuclear reactors with highly unstable elements with nanosecond half-lives. Are the values evos come up with for ages valid? We hope so but we do not know for certain.
Bottom line is that science about things that are extremely old face challenges that directly testable sciences do not. Evolution claims the process that resulted in all the diversity of life are naturalistic and that no supernatural entity was involved once life started. It also says we all came from the same initial life form, a singularity. These are both assumptions which could be wrong.
Even if evolution was a guided process instead of an unguided one, science should be able to figure out how it works. But it will not even consider the former possibility, and that is a problem related to man, not science.
To: ToryHeartland
If some of your conservatives are like this, I don't want to know what your liberals are like! Same tune, different words. Liberals, by and large, don't understand evolution or science either. They just misunderstand it in a different way.
257
posted on
03/10/2006 7:06:24 PM PST
by
js1138
To: Ichneumon
258
posted on
03/10/2006 7:09:08 PM PST
by
ml1954
(NOT the disruptive troll seen frequently on CREVO threads)
To: trashcanbred
Pretend you are a creationist: what evidence (which you actually reject) would you present that evolutionists reject?
259
posted on
03/10/2006 7:09:10 PM PST
by
LiteKeeper
(Beware the secularization of America; the Islamization of Eurabia)
To: ml1954; Heartlander
So, we are nothing more than chemicals acting upon each other and for no higher reason than any other chemical reaction?
Who said that?
To be fair, Lucretius (99 B.C. to 55 B.C.) said something very much along that line. However no one since then that comes to mind. (Creationists are sooo first century B.C.)
260
posted on
03/10/2006 7:09:45 PM PST
by
Stultis
(I don't worry about the war turning into "Vietnam" in Iraq; I worry about it doing so in Congress.)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 221-240, 241-260, 261-280 ... 881-892 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson