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Cornell president condemns intelligent design
©2005 Syracuse.com ^
| 10/21/2005, 12:03 p.m. ET
| By WILLIAM KATES
Posted on 10/21/2005 10:26:36 AM PDT by Behind Liberal Lines
ITHACA, N.Y. Cornell University Interim President Hunter Rawlings III on Friday condemned the teaching of intelligent design as science, calling it "a religious belief masquerading as a secular idea."
"Intelligent design is not valid science," Rawlings told nearly 700 trustees, faculty and other school officials attending Cornell's annual board meeting.
"It has no ability to develop new knowledge through hypothesis testing, modification of the original theory based on experimental results and renewed testing through more refined experiments that yield still more refinements and insights," Rawlings said.
Rawlings, Cornell's president from 1995 to 2003, is now serving as interim president in the wake of this summer's sudden departure of former Cornell president Jeffrey Lehman.
Intelligent design is a theory that says life is too complex to have developed through evolution, implying a higher power must have had a hand. It has been harshly criticized by The National Academy of Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which have called it repackaged creationism and improper to include in scientific education.
There are brewing disputes involving evolution and intelligent design in at least 20 states and numerous school districts nationwide, including California, New Mexico, Kansas and Pennsylvania. President Bush elevated the controversy in August when he said that schools should teach intelligent design along with evolution.
Many Americans, including some supporters of evolution, believe intelligent design should be taught with evolution. Rawlings said a large minority of Americans nearly 40 percent want creationism taught in public schools instead of evolution.
For those reasons, Rawlings said he felt it "imperative" to use his state-of-the-university address usually a recitation of the school's progress over the last year to speak out against intelligent design, which he said has "put rational thought under attack."
TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: academia; atheist; cityofevil; cornell; crevolist; evolution; hellbound; intelligentdesign; ithaca; scumbag
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To: Bigh4u2
Is man decendended from apes? Possibly.
I just don't find the plausibility of it because apes still exist.
The problem is in two errors of understanding here. The first in the common misconception that "man descended from apes" means that man descended from ape species that exist today. That is not the case. Humans and contemporary ape species descended from a common ancestor ape spcies that does not exist today. The second problem is that you seem to think that once a new species descends from a previous species, the older species must disappear. While this has happened with humans and their ape ancestor spcies, this is not a requirement and it is possible for a "parent" species to remain even after a new species has branched off.
141
posted on
10/21/2005 12:53:38 PM PDT
by
Dimensio
(http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
To: Behind Liberal Lines
Cornell, and the rest of the Ivy League, has been attacking rational thought decades. I agree with you.... I also agree with Cornell University Interim President Hunter Rawlings III and what he said about ID. Thankfully I probably don't agree with him about anything else.....
142
posted on
10/21/2005 12:53:39 PM PDT
by
Vaquero
("An armed society is a polite society" R. A. Heinlein)
To: narby
You have to travel way out into space to find it. Keep watching the Hubbel shots and maybe you'll get to see it.
143
posted on
10/21/2005 12:54:37 PM PDT
by
mlc9852
To: mlc9852
And to keep saying evolution says nothing of how life began is just a silly way of saying you just don't know where it came from or how it started.
Don't lie. Gravity says nothing about how life began, but you don't trumpet the false implications of that as "proof" of your religious beliefs.
144
posted on
10/21/2005 12:54:42 PM PDT
by
Dimensio
(http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
To: RexBeach
And, if Dr. Rawlings is a secular humanist, there is probably no role for God in his life. That's not good. He probably doesn't think there is a God to have a role, so I doubt he agrees.
To: Doc Savage
Always wondered how many drunk, drug-addled, depressed students commit suicide at the Falls each year?My daughter's a student at Cornell. And, you, sir, are a know-nothing idiot, who probably couldn't find employment as a janitor at Cornell.
To: Right Wing Professor
Quite so. And that's a pity.
Has a great name though for a mystery writer!
147
posted on
10/21/2005 1:00:40 PM PDT
by
RexBeach
("The rest of the world is three drinks behind." -Humphrey Bogart)
To: Dimensio
"The second problem is that you seem to think that once a new species descends from a previous species, the older species must disappear."
But doesn't the meaning of 'evolve' mean to 'change from one state to another'?
If something changes from 'one state to another' then how does the 'original' state still exist?
This is the crux of my confusion.
148
posted on
10/21/2005 1:00:57 PM PDT
by
Bigh4u2
(Denial is the first requirement to be a liberal)
To: lilylangtree
Theory of Evolution is pockmarked with holes and unscientific Wrong, but thanks for playing.
149
posted on
10/21/2005 1:01:28 PM PDT
by
Ichneumon
(Certified pedantic coxcomb)
To: mlc9852
He was created out of dust. Adam was created out of the same stuff that biogenisis concepts started with, yet you said this was "nothing".
And to keep saying evolution says nothing of how life began is just a silly way of saying you just don't know where it came from or how it started.
We don't know how life began. And the question is irrelevant to whether evolution brought about species. You know this fact and are being dishonest about it. Or can't remember previous threads, take your pick.
If you have Alzheimer's, I'm sorry, no offense intended.
150
posted on
10/21/2005 1:01:43 PM PDT
by
narby
(Hillary! The Wicked Witch of the Left)
To: Coyoteman
PH -- you have room in your list for this one? [I will never, ever believe humans descended from apes until I see irrefutable proof, which I don't believe exists.] That's good, but we've got better. Besides, there's so many such utterances that I'd run out of bandwidth.
151
posted on
10/21/2005 1:03:52 PM PDT
by
PatrickHenry
(No response to trolls, retards, or lunatics)
To: mlc9852
You have to travel way out into space to find it. Keep watching the Hubbel shots and maybe you'll get to see [heaven]. I'm not the one who thinks it's there to be seen. That's your illusion.
152
posted on
10/21/2005 1:03:56 PM PDT
by
narby
(Hillary! The Wicked Witch of the Left)
To: Doc Savage; Right Wing Professor
Would it strike any conservative (any true conservative - I'm not referring here to Patrick Henry) unusual that a far left CommuDem liberal "educator" who, as a secularist, is a firm believer in social Darwinism and doesn't believe in God, would make a statement like this??? Certainly seems normal to me. Cornell, one of the most evil secularist schools in the world, populated by anti-American socialist maggots, would certainly gravitate towards any theory that promotes randomness versus design. Would it surprise anyone that Doc Savage would attack the statement in a classic ad hominem fashion instead of discussing the statement on its merits?
Whether Cornell is or is not as "evil" as you believe (cue "Church Lady" soundbite here), he happens to be correct on this point.
153
posted on
10/21/2005 1:05:19 PM PDT
by
Ichneumon
(Certified pedantic coxcomb)
To: Bigh4u2
But doesn't the meaning of 'evolve' mean to 'change from one state to another'?
If something changes from 'one state to another' then how does the 'original' state still exist?
Because a subpopulation of one species can become isolated in a different environment wherein selection pressures cause the isolated subpopulation to become a new species, while in the previous environment the original species remains unchanged with no selection pressures leading to evolution.
154
posted on
10/21/2005 1:05:50 PM PDT
by
Dimensio
(http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
To: Bigh4u2
But doesn't the meaning of 'evolve' mean to 'change from one state to another'? If something changes from 'one state to another' then how does the 'original' state still exist? This is the crux of my confusion. The answer to your conundrum lies in geographic isolation. A species will typically inhabit a large area. For lots of possible reasons a sub-group may become geographically isolated. Once this has happened each group can go its own way. For current living examples of this happening right in front of our eyes google "ring species", which is the biological term for one particular very interesting type of geographical isolation leading to speciation.
155
posted on
10/21/2005 1:06:28 PM PDT
by
Thatcherite
(Feminized androgenous automaton euro-weenie blackguard)
To: Paleo Conservative
Hunter Rawlings III has a degree in what?
To: Jimmy Valentine's brother; Behind Liberal Lines
...is God dead at Cornell?Of course not.
He's just laughing himself silly.
To: Sloth; Behind Liberal Lines
God-hating evolutionists misrepresent I.D., ...evolution-hating people misrepresent evolutionists as "God-hating" in an attempt to distract attention when the evolutionists point out the actual flaws in "I.D."...
Clue for the clueless: The majority of American evolutionists are Christians. Sorry if that makes your head explode, and shatters your false and defamatory accusation.
while scientifically illiterate I.D. proponents misrepresent evolution.
You've got *that* one right. I have hundreds of examples.
Same thing as every other Crevo thread.
You forgot the part where the evolutionists provide tons of evidence, and demonstrate that the I.D.ers/creationists demonstrate almost complete ignorance of the actual field of science they're attempting to critique, while posting long-discredited falsehoods with no sense of shame. And yes, I have countless examples of that too, all you need do is ask.
158
posted on
10/21/2005 1:10:36 PM PDT
by
Ichneumon
(Certified pedantic coxcomb)
To: mlc9852
You have to travel way out into space to find it. Keep watching the Hubbel shots and maybe you'll get to see it. Interesting, are you serious, or did you omit the humour tags? In the past I've made the mistake of assuming that remarks like this are jokes.
159
posted on
10/21/2005 1:11:08 PM PDT
by
Thatcherite
(Feminized androgenous automaton euro-weenie blackguard)
To: fortunecookie; mlc9852
I have a feeling that if 'religion' embraced evolution as the best explanation, as a science, Cornell Univ Interim President Rawlings would 'condemn the teaching of evolution as science, calling it "a religious belief masquerading as a secular idea."' You haven't a clue. Most religions *do* embrace evolution as a science. And yet, contrary to your confident-but-empty-headed prediction, no one is rejecting evolution as a result.
It's religion they hate, along with rational thought, and they seem bent on redefining 'rational thought' to suit their needs, especially their need to attack religion.
Paranoid much? Some people never seem happy unless they can stoke a persecution complex.
160
posted on
10/21/2005 1:12:39 PM PDT
by
Ichneumon
(Certified pedantic coxcomb)
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