Posted on 09/11/2008 9:55:10 AM PDT by GodGunsGuts
Sept 10, 2008 Astrobiologist David Deamer believes that life can spontaneously emerge without design, but he thinks lay people are too uneducated to understand how this is possible, so he gives them the watered-down version of Darwins natural selection instead, which he knows is inadequate to explain the complexity of life. Thats what he seemed to be telling reporter Susan Mazur in an interview for the Scoop (New Zealand). Is the lay public really too dense for the deeper knowledge of how evolution works?...
(Excerpt) Read more at creationsafaris.com ...
This is getting silly. My point, as I've made clear, is that you accept the testimony of people you haven't met about things you haven't seen in lots of fields, from astronomy to history to medicine. And then you pretend that evolution is somehow unique in asking you to do that. (Although I agree the broken leg may not have been the best example.)
Seriously, if someone said to you "There are thousands of well educated PhD Bible Scholars who have studied the Bible for years who are definitely "experts" and all say that it's true -- all you have to do is believe it " -- would you say that was scientific? Nope. And how is having to believe in ASBE/AFN any different?
Because the people studying evolution (I'm not accepting your attempt to yoke it to "AFN," by the way) can tell me what independently verifiable and verified evidence they base their conclusion on. Let me know when the Bible scholars can do that.
Just why do you think this idea -- of widespread less-then-full-honesty-among-scientists is so unlikely?
At least two reasons: first, no one has ever made a deathbed confession or had an attack of conscience and confessed to being part of this vast conspiracy. No one has described how the High Priests of the Temple of Darwin came to them in the middle of the night and made them swear their oath of fealty. Conspiracies don't generally keep their secrets for 150 years. Second, because of a different aspect of human nature: the desire for recognition. You realize that the scientist who comes up with the replacement for the theory of evolution will be as famous as Darwin, right? You don't think that would ever outweigh their desire to keep the secret?
- if you're trying to say my assumptions about your theological beliefs are wrong then for pitty's sake say so!
Why? They're irrelevant to what we're discussing, and none of your business. You're the one who made the claim that evolutionists are atheists devoted to a belief that everything happened by itself. It's not up to me to prove you wrong.
The WP entry is pretty clear that the moths are an example of how natural selection works, not an example of speciation. "Such changes" refers to changes in color, which can lead to speciation. But as that entry says,
This might lead to the erroneous belief that speciation was involved in the observed evolution of the peppered moth. This is not the case; individuals of each morph interbreed and produce fertile offspring with individuals of all other morphs; hence there is only one peppered moth species.There is no doubt in my mind that there is an agenda to push a worldview.By contrast, different subspecies of the same species can theoretically interbreed with one another and will produce fully fertile and healthy offspring but in practice do not, as they live in different regions or reproduce in different seasons. Full-fledged species are either unable to produce fertile and healthy offspring, or do not recognize each other's courtship signals, or both.
That is your prejudice and your assumption. Don't cite the three obvious examples of people who do have an agenda to push a worldview--you're claiming this to be true of thousands of people, in different countries, speaking different languages, following different religions. The only evidence for this vast conspiracy is in your own head.
when you look at the Sun, you are seeing it about 7 minutes behind where it actually is, but if you had a sensitive gravity sensor where would it point? At the sun you see or 7 minutes ahead of the sun you see?And he said:
The suns actual position and gravitational position do line up. The apparent position doesn't though, it is off by 2.1 degrees like you indicated.and said:
LOL The 2.1 degrees is is exactly related to the light-time correction and the distance of the earth from the the sun. If the Sun was closer the angle would be smaller, and if the sun was further away the angle would be larger.Now it is true that in the beginning I did not know about the ~20 arcseconds of stellar aberration. My point was that LeGrande's claim of 2.1 degrees was wrong, as were his claimed reason for the 2.1 degrees.
Now the discussion has morphed almost beyond recognition.
Are you asserting that if you go out at Noon and point a transit directly at the center of the Suns light that the Sun is exactly where it appears to be i.e. in other words could you draw a straight line from the center of the earth through you to the center of the sun? Or in other words if you shot a rifle (that fired an instantaneous bullet) that it would hit the center of the Sun? Or would you have to lead the Sun a little to compensate for the fact that it took the light about 8.3 minutes to get from the Sun to your eyes?
Do you understand that you are under constant acceleration?
I think that’s a fairly good summary though I haven’t read through this entire sub-thread.
Threre is displacement of the measured position of the sun due to rotation of the earth (Diurnal aberration) but apparently it’s much smaller than the effect due to the earth’s orbit around the sun (Annual aberration).
” Its effect is much smaller than that of annual aberration, and is only 0”.32 in the case of an observer at the equator, where the rotational velocity is greatest.”
mrjesse: I think and certainly hope that neither you nor LeGrande are crazy in the true clinical sense of that term ;)>
As far as the arguments going back and forth between you two (and Fichori) about the apparent position and the actual position of the Sun, 2.1, stellar aberration, etc., Im going with TrevorSnowsraps answer :)> *
As far as this being relevant to the topic of the original post Are You Too Dumb to Understand Evolution?; it isnt!
I have a background in corporate accounting specializing in payroll, payroll taxation, accounts payable and more recently in HR and benefits database design, integration and in data audit and data analysis.
My previous employer was a pharmaceutical company working on cutting edge treatments for a deadly form of brain cancer Glioblastoma multiforme.
In my accounting capacity I worked on a daily basis with many brilliant scientists recruited from all around the world for their expertise; biologists, biochemists, chemists and manufacturing and QA engineers. I often had to help these highly educated folks with their payroll, payroll tax, time sheets, purchase orders, requisitions forms and budget questions. It was sometimes frustrating to me how people so brilliant seemed so stupid to me (in my opinion) about things that just came second nature to me.
But just because they needed my help as an expert in my area of expertise, didnt mean that they were not experts in theirs or that they could have stepped into my job any more than I could have took their place in the lab. Heck, even my immediate and higher up supervisors in the Finance department including all the way up to the CFO; folks with CPAs and MBAs didnt understand and didnt have the knowledge that I did about payroll and accounts payable. None of them could have run a payroll, filed all the various returns, made the correct journal entries or knew how to match an invoice to a purchase order and cut a check. But then again I didnt know or have the expertise or background in SEC rules and the higher level accounting principals to be qualified to be the CFO.
Before working at the pharmaceutical company, I worked with a CPA and IT consultant who helped small business and self employed individuals with their tax returns, day to day accounting and computer needs. I worked with some small business clients; auto mechanics, construction contractors, restaurateurs and doctors in private practice, who didnt know a debit from a credit or anything about basic accounting, how to file a tax return or how to upgrade a computer or install, setup and maintain a simple accounting system, but just because I did, that didnt make me able to repair my own car, build my own house, run a restaurant or diagnose and treat illnesses.
So what is my point you may ask?
Glad to answer.
Im not a physicist, an astronomer, a mathematician, a biologist, a geologist nor am I an auto mechanic or a theology major or pastor or priest.
But I am by my nature and training, very analytical.
And in analyzing all the various augments for and against evolution; a young earth (6,000 to 10,000 years old) vs. a 4.5 billion old earth, I have to go with overwhelming consensus of the scientific experts in their fields. So yes, I accept that evolution took place and continues to take place and that YEC is a theological debate and not a scientific one.
In the end, it all comes down to what we choose to believe. I for one believe in the theory of gravity; otherwise I might try to test that theory by taking a leap from the roof of my house.
But if Im injured in that leap of faith, my hope is that Im first taken to a hospital where I can be treated by the medical professionals knowledgeable in their field then my second is to hope is to find someone knowledgeable in theology who can tell me about the spiritual folly of that leap.
LeGrande, You're totally skirting around the issue!
LOL That is precisely the issue. You are simply afraid to answer the question : )
but for those of you who don't know my view on the apparent position of the sun -- it is that the sun's position appears about 20 arcseconds ahead (compared to the direction of transverse velocity of the observer) of where it is due to Stellar Aberration.
Your misnamed Stellar Aberration (Annual aberration) is due to the orbit of the Earth around the Sun and has almost nothing to do with the the original question which is based on the rotation of the Earth, not its orbital velocity. Why won't you answer the question?
Now please -- deal with the issues. If the sun was 12 light hours away, would it's gravitational pull be one way while it's apparent position at an instant to an observer on the earth would be the other way?
Huh? You tell me to deal with the issue and then change the subject? Why are you moving the Sun out twice the radius of the Solar System, when you don't even understand the original point?
Do you agree that an objects apparent position is not the same as its true position? That is what this whole debate is over.
Originally mrjesse and fichori believed that because the light from an object was continuous, its actual and apparent position were exactly the same.
And in analyzing all the various augments for and against evolution; a young earth (6,000 to 10,000 years old) vs. a 4.5 billion old earth, I have to go with overwhelming consensus of the scientific experts in their fields. So yes, I accept that evolution took place and continues to take place and that YEC is a theological debate and not a scientific one. [excerpt]You have chosen to place your Faith in the consensus of people who agree with your opinion.
I think that point was previously conceded and you are/were correct.
Im very glad to hear that you admit finally admit that YEC is a theological subject and not a scientific one. Congratulations!
But you are wrong about evolution vs Creationism as one is a belief based solely on the belief and on a particular interpretation of a spiritual text while the other is a scientific theory based on empirical evidence absent of spiritually or the acceptance of spiritually. Science itself is rather neutral as to the existence of God or the meaning of life, even if some scientists reject God and some other scientists, drawing the very same scientific conclusions are devout believers in God.
Consensus does not make it science.
Consensus among scientists may not make it science in your opinion and according to your belief system but it still makes it more scientific than your particular Biblical interpretation.
I only have to lurk on the FR religion threads to see that many very conservative believers in God and in Jesus often disagree with their interpretations of Scripture.
Please; give me just one Biblical reference that absolutely and irrefutably dates the age of the Earth or the universe at 6,000 or 10,000 years old.
If you can do that in the next 24 hours, empirically and absent of any interpretation, I will donate $20 to the Freep-A-Thon in your name. If you cant then I challenge you to donate $20 dollars in my name.
Thank you. Now I can get on with my life : )
Im very glad to hear that you admit finally admit that YEC is a theological subject and not a scientific one. Congratulations! [excerpt]I've never said otherwise.
But you are wrong about evolution vs Creationism as one is a belief based solely on the belief and on a particular interpretation of a spiritual text while the other is a scientific theory based on empirical evidence absent of spiritually or the acceptance of spiritually. Science itself is rather neutral as to the existence of God or the meaning of life, even if some scientists reject God and some other scientists, drawing the very same scientific conclusions are devout believers in God. [excerpt]While it may be true that Evolution is based on empirical evidence, it in its self is not empirical science because it discards any empirical evidence that does not agree with its philosophical assumptions.
Consensus among scientists may not make it science in your opinion and according to your belief system but it still makes it more scientific than your particular Biblical interpretation. [excerpt]Consensus does equate empirical science.
I only have to lurk on the FR religion threads to see that many very conservative believers in God and in Jesus often disagree with their interpretations of Scripture. [excerpt]This isn't a religion thread in the Religion Forum.
Please; give me just one Biblical reference that absolutely and irrefutably dates the age of the Earth or the universe at 6,000 or 10,000 years old. [excerpt]What does that have to do with empirical science?
If you can do that in the next 24 hours, empirically and absent of any interpretation, I will donate $20 to the Freep-A-Thon in your name. If you cant then I challenge you to donate $20 dollars in my name. [excerpt]You seem to be forgetting what empirical science is all about.
Uh, LeGrande, your forgetting about the other little detail.I think that point was previously conceded and you are/were correct.Thank you. Now I can get on with my life : )
At least you have completely failed to demonstrate otherwise.
Then do this little experiment. Go outside on a sunny day at noon and pound a stake into the ground, so that there is no shadow. Then 8.3 minutes later pound another stake into the ground so that there is no shadow from it either and make it so that the points of the stakes that you drove in the ground meet each other. Measure the angle. If it isn't close to 2.1 degrees, I will publicly and humbly admit that I was wrong.
Will you do the same if it is close to 2.1 degrees?
Can you think of a better demonstration to prove or disprove the assertion?
YEC is both a theological subject and a scientific subject, whereas the neo-Darwinian synthesis is now merely a theological subject, for it has been thoroughly refuted by science. Even the evolutionists are abandoning the HMS Beagle in search of a new theory of evolution.
Your little experiment does not prove where the actual position of the Sun is.While you were right about the apparent and actual positions not being the same, you are dead wrong about them being 2.1° apart.Then do this little experiment. Go outside on a sunny day at noon and pound a stake into the ground, so that there is no shadow. Then 8.3 minutes later pound another stake into the ground so that there is no shadow from it either and make it so that the points of the stakes that you drove in the ground meet each other. Measure the angle. If it isn't close to 2.1 degrees, I will publicly and humbly admit that I was wrong.
At least you have completely failed to demonstrate otherwise.
Will you do the same if it is close to 2.1 degrees?
Can you think of a better demonstration to prove or disprove the assertion?
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