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To: Right Wing Professor
***"Americans will need basic understanding of science in order to participate effectively in the 21st century world. It is essential that students on every level learn what science is and how scientific knowledge progresses."***

So "scientific knowledge" require the belief that the universe is the product of random chance and has no intelligent designer behind it?



***That is an untestable belief and, therefore, cannot qualify as a scientific theory."***

Conversely, is it no also an "untestable belief" that there is NO intelligent designer???
16 posted on 08/04/2005 10:38:00 AM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus
So "scientific knowledge" require the belief that the universe is the product of random chance and has no intelligent designer behind it?

No, it doesn't require that.

18 posted on 08/04/2005 10:39:42 AM PDT by Right Wing Professor
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To: PetroniusMaximus
So "scientific knowledge" require the belief that the universe is the product of random chance and has no intelligent designer behind it? Just a couple of things: 1) The theory of evolution makes no claims regarding the origins or development of the universe in general, and especially has no claims pertaining to whether the universe is a "product" of anything at all, specifically "random chance." 2) Current theory of evolution would quite specifically deny that species evolve randomly, although there may be some elements of chance involved. In essence, your point is a non-sequitur. Conversely, is it no also an "untestable belief" that there is NO intelligent designer??? No, because scientifically the burden of proof is on the person making the positive claim. To draw an analogy, if a person proposes that magnetic monopoles exist, the burden is on him to produce the experimental evidence that supports his suggestion; meanwhile the rest of us are entitled to believe his claims lack merit, or to join him in the search for evidence to support magnetic monopoles if we believe there is sufficient theoretical support otherwise. In no case could anybody say "magnetic monopoles exist" and be taken seriously in the scientific sense, unless he had actual hard evidence to back the statement up.
32 posted on 08/04/2005 10:44:22 AM PDT by saFeather
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