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Ben Stein Exposes Richard Dawkins (Dawkins admits possibility of ID, Just Not God).
Townhall ^ | April 21, 2008 | Dinesh D'Souza

Posted on 04/21/2008 7:23:01 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

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To: tacticalogic
Get me one of those.

I will not ask how it has been determined to be an arrowhead, but I will accept your request. Now you have a known arrowhead. What test(s) and how will you perform it(them) to determine if my hypothesis is correct.

481 posted on 04/28/2008 6:19:10 PM PDT by AndrewC (You should go see "Expelled")
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To: AndrewC
Step 2 does not follow from step 1 since you relate ID to religion then equate ID to religion without proof.

The Wedge Document. It states all the way through a clear religious purpose.

Your third step equates ID with Christians by implication yet the record clearly shows that Muslims believe in ID

Muslims aren't trying to get ID in schools as science.

t is often pointed out by Darwinists that Christians believe in Darwinism.

Most Christians are able to separate their personal religious belief from science. Others apparently think their belief should take the place of science.

Therefore it is erroneous to exclusively equate ID and Christians.

It has been clearly equated by the founders and leaders of the ID movement in this country. The Wedge Document even specifically talks about preaching to the choir (Christians) as an easy way to gain momentum for ID.

482 posted on 04/28/2008 6:22:56 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: AndrewC
but it seems to me that Avalos and others expected some outcome from their petition.

I'm sure they hoped for one. Universities usually don't like being publicly connected to pseudoscience (Baylor and Marks in the movie, but he still has his job), and the professors will usually try to stop it. It doesn't look good to be a serious scientists and go to conventions where the others laugh "So you're from that Intelligent Design university."

483 posted on 04/28/2008 6:25:48 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
I'm sure they hoped for one. Universities usually don't like being publicly connected to pseudoscience (Baylor and Marks in the movie, but he still has his job), and the professors will usually try to stop it. It doesn't look good to be a serious scientists and go to conventions where the others laugh "So you're from that Intelligent Design university."

And yet they use Jackie the Jokemans text in their classes.

Go figure.

484 posted on 04/28/2008 6:27:06 PM PDT by jwalsh07 (El Nino is climate, La Nina is weather.)
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To: jwalsh07
Is 70% low?

Most people have a good idea whether they'll get tenure, and few apply if they're not pretty sure they'll get it. It's better to just look for other employment and not have tenure denial on your record. As I said before, imagine what standardized test scores would look like if only our 4.0 students took them.

485 posted on 04/28/2008 6:28:43 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: antiRepublicrat
I know my number is just about right. I got it from an ISU representative who stated that 8 of the last 12 got tenure. I know that's two thirds but if you go back for ten years the number is about 70%.

You're just handwaving. But I'm willing to be convinced with some numbers.

486 posted on 04/28/2008 6:32:28 PM PDT by jwalsh07 (El Nino is climate, La Nina is weather.)
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To: jwalsh07
If ID is religion, then personal belief in ID outside the classroom is protected by the First Amendment.

Absolutely agree. It should be protected in the classroom too. Of course the relevant place for it would be in a "religious origins" class, not a science class.

The emails sent by some of Gonzalez' colleagues make it clear that they denied him tenure because of beliefs he held, but never brought to the classroom.

They wanted him denied, but we don't know that. We do know his record shows he didn't deserve tenure even if there was no ID issue. Gonzalez is free to ask the university to release his records to prove that he was denied tenure over ID. I wonder why he hasn't done that.

487 posted on 04/28/2008 6:34:08 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: jwalsh07
I know my number is just about right. I got it from an ISU representative who stated that 8 of the last 12 got tenure. I know that's two thirds but if you go back for ten years the number is about 70%.

The site linked by the movie's site claimed 91% across the school, and I'm willing to believe that. I was talking about it being low relative to the school's overall rate.

488 posted on 04/28/2008 6:36:26 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: jwalsh07
And yet they use Jackie the Jokemans text in their classes. Go figure.

See earlier post. He apparently was a rising star in astronomy before he got involved in ID and let his scientific endeavors suffer. Unfortunately for him, schools don't care much about what you did before you got there when deciding tenure. They care about what you've done while at the school, and in his case it wasn't much, especially compared to his previous work.

That makes a very good case against tenure. The school sees a scientists sliding down in his work, the clear reasoning being that he is likely to continue sliding, and you don't want someone like that to have tenure.

489 posted on 04/28/2008 6:41:36 PM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: PeterPrinciple
That is what I heard at the movie, which one did you go to?

I already laid all this out. Stein presses Dawkins, asking him if ID could be considered at all, so Dawkins then comes up with the alien thing, which he presents as a hypothetical possibility.

Dawkins actually talks about this in his book, The Ancestor's Tale, ( I just read this part last night,) so I assume Stein knew about it and was fishing for it.

In the book, Dawkins attributes the idea to Francis Crick, calling it "Crick's fantasy" and states, "Crick himself - whether with regret or relief it is hard to say - finds little good evidence to support his own theory of Directed Panspermia." ( Crick died in 2004, just as the book was coming out. )

In the movie, I am certain that Dawkins never gives any indication that he "believes in it." All his statements about how such a thing "must have occurred" are in the hypothetical, that is they are conditions or stipulations on the hypothesis, not expressions of belief in the hypothesis.

490 posted on 04/28/2008 6:44:06 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: antiRepublicrat
I would suggest you see the earlier posts. The first edition was published in 2001, the second in 2006. BTW, in 2006 GG published more peer reviewed articles than the entirety of his tenured colleagues in the Department of Astronomy. Busy guy. His work is also cited more often than any of his colleagues.

But there could be good reason not to give him tenure. However the emails remove the benefit of the doubt that should normally be given to the University.

This had nothing to do with GG's competence, publishing or grants. It was all about evil ID.

Be honest and acknowledge that. The written record is abundantly clear.

491 posted on 04/28/2008 6:47:55 PM PDT by jwalsh07 (El Nino is climate, La Nina is weather.)
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To: antiRepublicrat
The Wedge Document. It states all the way through a clear religious purpose.

Many hospitals have a clear religious purpose, yet that does not make them or the medicine in them religion.

Muslims aren't trying to get ID in schools as science.

Oh?

Under God or Under Darwin?
Intelligent Design could be a bridge between civilizations.

By Mustafa Akyol

A Discovery Zone

That's why something called the Wedge Document — although horrifying to America's secularist intelligentsia — offers a message of hope for Muslims. The Wedge Document is a 1999 memorandum of the Discovery Institute (DI), the Seattle-based think tank that acts as the main proponent of ID. In this document, the Institute explains that its long-term goal is "to defeat scientific materialism and its destructive moral, cultural, and political legacies." Much of the fuss made about the Document by its opponents is absurd; it does not propose the transformation of the U.S. into a theocracy. But, as official DI documents point out, there is nothing wrong in expecting cultural impact from a scientific theory; Darwinians, after all, revel in the cultural impact of their own doctrines.

Most Christians are able to separate their personal religious belief from science. Others apparently think their belief should take the place of science.

Which makes Christians distinct from ID'ers by your definitions(Since not all ID'ers are Christians and not all Christians are ID'ers). Therefore your step 3 does not apply to ID'ers.

It has been clearly equated by the founders and leaders of the ID movement in this country.

The Muslim I quoted above doesn't think so.

One of your problems is that you are equating the Discovery Institute with ID. They are not. No more than NCSE is Darwinism.

492 posted on 04/28/2008 7:35:18 PM PDT by AndrewC (You should go see "Expelled")
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To: antiRepublicrat
Universities usually don't like being publicly connected to pseudoscience (Baylor and Marks in the movie, but he still has his job)

Well, Baylor did have The Michael Polanyi Center for a while, at the instigation of Baylor's president. This was separated from the "scientific" portions of the university but that was not far enough away from some. So a fight ensued. We know the result. Of course, that was not based upon any tenure decision. And I am not changing the subject. You mentioned Baylor.

493 posted on 04/28/2008 8:22:45 PM PDT by AndrewC (You should go see "Expelled")
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To: tpanther

tpanther said:
When I was 4 years old I nearly hung myself to death, playing on “monkey bars”, jumped and clothing got hung up around my neck and caught on a screw and I couldn’t reach.

I experienced quite vivid and supenatural out of body experiences, able to see myself from some, what looked to be 40-60 feet above, and even the people around me...there was a little girl in shock playing in a sandbox below, and her mohter INSIDE their house, who eventually came and rescued me before I was permanently gone.

I was only 4 but it’s just as real and fresh today some 43 years later, and convinced me irrevocably there’s an after life or at the very least life outside of our current confinement.

Thank you so much for your NDE testimony tpanther.

I’ve been trying to get the stubborn folks to “wake up & realize that THIS life isn’t it”.

I certainly don’t want anyone spending their eternity in Hell...but sadly some just don’t want to listen.

It baffles me that they can believe that they came from goo and over millions & billions of years and got to how they are today.

Yet we have thousands and thousands of folks willing to speak out and tell them about their NDE’s either in Heaven or Hell....and they can’t believe that.

It’s so sad.


494 posted on 04/28/2008 9:24:26 PM PDT by Ready2go (Isa 5:20 Destruction is certain for those who say that evil is good and good is evil;)
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To: AndrewC
I will not ask how it has been determined to be an arrowhead, but I will accept your request. Now you have a known arrowhead. What test(s) and how will you perform it(them) to determine if my hypothesis is correct.

Does it match, functionally and forensically? Is it the proper shape and size, and does it exhibit the same kind of tool marks and patterns that the known arrowhead does?

495 posted on 04/29/2008 4:04:42 AM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: AndrewC
but that was not far enough away from some. So a fight ensued.

What I got from that was "Dembski does not play well with others."

496 posted on 04/29/2008 5:20:29 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: tacticalogic

Arrowheads are a great analogy for the problems of ID. The distinguishing thing about human artifacts is that we have humans to observe and can observe the making of objects similar to artifacts.

From this we can derive information about the methods employed, the motives, the capabilities and limitations of the makers.

My favorite Dembski citation is this:

“... At the same time that research in the Bible Code has taken off, research in a seemingly unrelated field has taken off as well, namely, biological design. These two fields are in fact closely related. Indeed, the same highly improbable, independently given patterns that appear as the equidistant letter sequences in the Bible Code appear in biology as functionally integrated (”irreducibly complex”) biological systems, of the sort Michael Behe discussed in Darwin’s Black Box.

The relevant statistical methodology is identical for both fields. As a result, the two fields stand to profit from each other. ...”

You go, Bill.


497 posted on 04/29/2008 5:30:22 AM PDT by js1138
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To: AndrewC
Many hospitals have a clear religious purpose, yet that does not make them or the medicine in them religion.

Hospitals have helping people as their mission. ID has spreading Christianity and changing culture as its mission.

And it looks like Muslims are riding on the coattails of the Christian ID work.

Which makes Christians distinct from ID'ers by your definitions(Since not all ID'ers are Christians and not all Christians are ID'ers).

The ID movement in this country was started by Christians for Christian purposes. That all Christians aren't in it, or that others believe too is absolutely irrelevant.

You can argue opinion over this, but the fact remains that the logic was solid, it was not a fallacy.

One of your problems is that you are equating the Discovery Institute with ID.

The Discovery Institute founded the ID movement in this country, set its strategies and provides funding. "Teach the Controversy" and the idea of evolution as a theory in crisis and dissent is their invention. I haven't found one of the top-rung ID proponents who doesn't have some connection to the Discovery Institute (Behe, Dembski, Berlinski and Gonzalez from the movie are actually fellows).

498 posted on 04/29/2008 5:30:54 AM PDT by antiRepublicrat
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To: tacticalogic
Does it match, functionally and forensically? Is it the proper shape and size, and does it exhibit the same kind of tool marks and patterns that the known arrowhead does?

Nice words, but it is a rock. Functionality is not a valid test. Forensically? IOW your first sentence is "worthless"(don't take it personally, this is a discussion of hypothesis testing).

Your next statement does have the "look and feel" of a test. But what is the proper shape and size? I contend that what you mean is "Does it look like an arrowhead?" Okay, it does. So the next part of your test asks "does it exhibit the same kind of tool marks and patterns that the known arrowhead does?" Tool marks? It is a rock. Evidently the rock has chips removed by other rocks(or something else hard), since neither arrowhead, the hypothesized arrowhead nor the example arrowhead, display any toolmarks. Patterns, well yeah, they look alike, not exactly but alike. They each have a point. So I guess my hypothesis has passed the test. Has it?

499 posted on 04/29/2008 5:32:05 AM PDT by AndrewC (You should go see "Expelled")
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To: antiRepublicrat
What I got from that was "Dembski does not play well with others."

That is quite a leap since I did not mention Dembski. I guess you blame the little kid the bullies pester for the fight that ensues.

500 posted on 04/29/2008 5:36:02 AM PDT by AndrewC (You should go see "Expelled")
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