Posted on 10/07/2005 7:23:15 AM PDT by PatrickHenry
To keep this all in one daily thread, here are links to two articles in the York Daily Record (with excerpts from each), which has been doing a great job of reporting on the trial:
Forrest cross-examination a rambling wonder.
About the time that Richard Thompson, head law guy at the Thomas More center and chief defender of the Dover Area School Board, started his third year of cross-examination of philosopher Barbara Forrest, it was easy to imagine that at that moment, everyone in the courtroom, including Forrest, who doesnt believe in God, was violating the separation of church and court by appealing to God for it to please, Lord, just stop.It wouldnt have been so bad if there was a point to the ceaseless stream of questions from Thompson designed to elicit Lord knows what. Hed ask her the same question 18 different times, expecting, I guess, a different answer at some point. And he never got it.
Thompson, who said hes a former prosecutor, should have known better. Forrest, a professor at Southeastern Louisiana University and expert on the history of the intelligent design creationist movement, was a lot smarter than, say, some poor, dumb criminal defendant.
Here is a summation of Forrests testimony: She examined the history of the intelligent design movement and concluded that its simply another name for creationism. And what led her to that conclusion? The movement leaders own words. They started out with a religious proposition and sought to clothe it in science. The result was similar to putting a suit on your dog.
[anip]
Thompson was in the midst of asking Forrest whether she had heard a bunch of things that some people had said to indicate, well, to indicate whether shed heard a bunch of things that some people had said, I guess, when the topic came up.
Thompson asked whether she had ever heard a statement by some guy frankly, this one caught me off-guard and I didnt catch the guys name who said that belief in evolution can be used to justify cross-species sex.
This came on the same day that Thompson grilled Forrest about her opposition to the so-called Santorum amendment to the No Child Left Behind Act that seemed to encourage, sort of, the teaching of intelligent design. Our U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum is a friend of the intelligent design people.
He also has a strange obsession with bestiality, commenting that court decisions that uphold the right to privacy would lead to naturally, and you know you were thinking it man-on-dog sex.
Dover science teachers testified that they fought references to intelligent design.
Defense attorney Richard Thompson [he represents the school board] said differing opinions on whether teachers and administration worked in cooperation to create the Dover Area School Districts statement on intelligent design comes down to perspective.
There is no serious debate in the scientific community. The fact that a fraction of one percent of all scientists put their religious beliefs before their job doesn't change the fact that the debate has been settled in any meaningful sense of the word.
Students should only hear the sides for which there is evidence. This is a science class, after all. Science requires evidence.
Once ID has some actual hard evidence to back it up, then we can talk. But I won't hold my breath. It's been a couple thousand years, and still nobody's been able to find any.
I thought you were big on logic? What's with the logical fallacy?
"Which life-forms, that exist today, do you think are transitional?
All.
"Why is a transitional form, simply not a life-form?
Transitionals are organisms. I don't quit get the question.
"Why do evolutionists even have to bother creating the fiction of transitional forms?
Evos didn't, creationists did. Evolutionary scientists simply observed the fossils, noted their relative place in time and came to the conclusion that one fossil leads to another.
Dembski isn't all of intellegent design, perhaps about 25% though.
You've got it exactly backwards. What Evolutionists have tried to do within our Education Establishment is scientifically explain away the supernatural. In so doing they have made science the laughing stock of intellectual endeavors.
We were created as creative beings by a Creator who produced all of the matter in our universe. He also established reasonable laws to regulate the matter making it a predictable environment for His creative beings.
The originators of modern science understood these critical concepts.
You refuse to see the evidence in any other light except that which would bolster your theory. Hardly a scientific approach.
While documentation of a public relations strategy may dispose the jury to doom Dover's attempt to dispense with dogmatic Darwinism, the direction of evolutionary theory is downward due to deficient data. Duh!
That's just backwards.
All new evidence is examined critically, even if it seems to reaffirm previous discoveries. That's what publishing is all about. That's what peer review is all about. That's the scientific method. That's also why, whenever somebody tries to sneak falsified evidence through, it gets caught and exposed. By scientists.
You'll need some evidence for this bizarre conspiracy theory. I don't think that you'll have any more luck with that than finding evidence for an intelligent designer.
ID by its very nature requires that we reject all the evidence we find. ID requires that we deny the vast evidence of the natural world in favor of supernatural explanations. That's why it's profoundly unscientific.
He's been told this before. He's been shown the evidence for higher-taxa transitionals a number of times.
Um, that's not "downward." You're reading that chart upside-down. ;-)
The more we learn about the natural world, the more evidence we have supporting the TOE, the stronger it is.
"ID by its very nature requires that we reject all the evidence we find."
If that's your belief, you probably don't know much about what they are even arguing about in Dover. Some might say the theory of evolution makes the evidence fit the theory.
No surprise. Almost 50% of people have an IQ measured in two digits.
30% believe in astrology
Only those that haven't closely examined the evidence.
Okay, make that below 80.
Evidence is evidence is evidence.
Unless you are the OJ jury. Which is exactly what creationists are. Ignoring obvious evidence (say, the fact that whales walked on land) because it conflicts with your agenda.
Is that how you wish to be characterized?!
I have a challenge for you.
I challenge you to investigate the evidence for the arteriodactyl to cetacean sequence. After you've done so, post a logical alternative to them being transitional. Don't forget to explain the shared diagnostic features, the movement and size change of features, the order of the strata in which the fossils were found, the change in environment that was evidenced in those same strata, the ability to utilize salt water as evidenced in their teeth, and the vestigial pelvis and legs in extant cetaceans.
This is a big challenge. Are you up to addressing it?
And they believe in evolution.
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