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Bachmann: Schools should teach intelligent design
CNN ^ | June 17, 2011 | Peter Hamby

Posted on 06/17/2011 5:37:57 PM PDT by ejdrapes

Bachmann: Schools should teach intelligent design
By CNN Political Reporter Peter Hamby

New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) – Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann explained her skepticism of evolution on Friday and said students should be taught the theory of intelligent design.

Bachmann, a congresswoman from Minnesota, also proposed a major overhaul of the nation’s education system and said state administrators should be able to decide how they spend money allocated to them by the federal government.

"I support intelligent design," Bachmann told reporters in New Orleans following her speech to the Republican Leadership Conference. "What I support is putting all science on the table and then letting students decide. I don't think it's a good idea for government to come down on one side of scientific issue or another, when there is reasonable doubt on both sides."

(Excerpt) Read more at politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bachmann; intelligentdesign; michelebachmann
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To: LoneRangerMassachusetts

*I* am a proud skeptic of macro-evolution, but I do believe in a universe that has existed for billions of years. However, I think that Michele has touched a subject of faith that will only bring scorn upon her. The American people, at best, will wonder why she unearthed a subject that is not on their radar. This comment will serve as a distraction, and unless she is extremely deft, it will destroy her campaign.


101 posted on 06/17/2011 7:21:31 PM PDT by alstewartfan (When you're fresh out of lawyers, you don't know how good it's gonna feel! Al Stewart)
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To: circlecity

ID proposes that natural selection of genetic variation is not a sufficient mechanism to explain the diversity of life and that God/the designer had to directly intervene to actually accomplish anything complex.

This is exactly a “god of the gaps” argument. The idea that where science (supposedly) cannot explain something - one must ‘fill the gap’ with supernatural forces.

Science depends upon predictable observable and measurable natural forces.

That is why ID isn’t science.

It proposes a supernatural mechanism.


102 posted on 06/17/2011 7:22:10 PM PDT by allmendream (Tea Party did not send the GOP to D.C. to negotiate the terms of our surrender to socialism.)
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To: circlecity; MNJohnnie
"To be termed scientific, a method of inquiry must be based on gathering empirical and measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning"

A little ad hoc as well as nebulous because of the use of the word "specific," but it doesn't rule out intelligent design being a valid approach to explaining the observed data.

Both physics (and science as a whole) and history operate in very narrow fields and their practicioners too often make the mistake of assuming that their method of approaching their subjects applies to all other realms of knowledge. Some, such as poor Carl Sagan, even believe that there is nothing else to be known outside the realm open to their own methodology: "The Cosmos, all there is, was, or ever shall be." This is certainly not a proposition that has ever been demonstrated by science.

The myth: The scientist as noble, clear-eyed, dispassionate revealer of truth. The truth is that the intellectual tool of science is designed only to make sure that one's measurements be as accurate as one's technology permits, that one's measurements use the appropriate tool for the quantity to be measured, and that one's conclusions follow logically from one's premises. And it never prevents folks like the chemical apocalyptics of the 1970s such as Rachel Carson and Paul Ehrlich and global warming activists (including Paul Ehrlich) from using "science" as a "this has been proven safe to eat" sticker on their own political agendas.

If one works very diligently, then one may be able to separate what actually is out there from what one hopes or believes is out there. That is, one may be able to systematically eliminate one's misconceptions about what is out there in the world by the practice of science and, as a result, be able to exercise control over it and then use it for one's ends. This is the power of science.

The choice of both premises and ends, though, lies outside the field of science because science is limited to reasoning and experimentation based on measurable quantities. The biggest error of the past three centuries has been the assumption that, since everything that can be measured exists, nothing exists if it cannot be measured. The belief is that since measurement is but the extension of our senses by technical means, there is nothing that exists apart from that which is open, at least in principle, to our senses; ie, "seeing is believing" or, ostrich-like, "If I can't see it, it doesn't exist." Accordingly, personality, thought, love, and free will are just smiley faces we put on biochemical processes that are irrevocably part of a chain of cause and effect that we only think we control.

The funny thing is that there are some people who feel comforted in believing this who at the same time ridicule people who use intelligent design as a means of explaining observational data or who believe Jesus rose from the dead because of the testimony of others who witnessed it. In the case of the former they make the unwarranted statement that it cannot be accepted because "it's not science but religion" and in the case of the latter they claim that their witness cannot be trusted because
1. something like that cannot happen,

2. it cannot happen since they've never observed it,* and

3. if it doesn't happen more than once and they haven't witnessed it themselves, then anyone else claiming to have done so must either be insane, mistaken, or a liar.

And then they abuse the word "science" by claiming 1-3 to be scientific. The answer to the above is, of course,
1. that the most they can say is that, given the usual nature of things, it doesn't happen, not that it cannot happen if given sufficient cause, and that if it did happen, that would be, in and of itself, evidence that the cause was outside the usual nature of things. Stating categorically that there can be no sufficient cause "because biology or physics teaches us..." is just naked arrogance trying to use science as a fig leaf;

2. that plenty of things happen that one has never witnessed or had any idea that they could happen,

3. that there are plenty of things that happen only once--the history of one's life, for instance, beginning with one's conception--that are, nonetheless, real.
The retort to 3, because they cannot argue with the first two, would be that 'history' or 'one's life' are not truly 'things,' but simply labels slapped arbitrarily somewhere along the chain of natural events that exist on their own without rhyme or reason and that sticking on these labels is just an attempt by weak people who lack the bravery to see things the way they really are to provide a feeling of meaning where is none--yeah, sort of like the people who use the label of "science" to claim to have the only true way of separating fact from fiction as well as the only means by which to define 'fact' and 'fiction' ?

* or observed by anyone they trust, meaning 'by anyone who believes what they believe', meaning 'if you've claimed to have witnessed this, you're no longer someone I can trust,' meaning, 'only that which I believe is true or can possibly be true,' meaning, 'I, and those like me, are the sole arbiters of truth,' meaning, 'if you don't fit in with the program, then you're an enemy,' meaning, 'if you don't accept the tenets of _____, then you're the enemy of truth and since we accept the tenets of _____ and we are human, then you are also the enemy of mankind." And how is this any different from any other form of tribalism?
103 posted on 06/17/2011 7:23:59 PM PDT by aruanan
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To: allmendream
"Dark matter is a unsupported hypothesis - but it is science."

No it's not. It's merely unsupported speculation as to why the traditional cosmologic constucts don't comply with the observable data. I have as much data to support to the speculation there is an invisible Angel directing the behavior of celestial bodies as science does that "dark matter" performs this phenomenon.

104 posted on 06/17/2011 7:24:37 PM PDT by circlecity
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To: indylindy

What color is the grass in your world? Certainly not green.


105 posted on 06/17/2011 7:26:59 PM PDT by bwc2221
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To: ngat

OH NOOO!!! Only one idea may be taught! If I was a bio teacher, I’d tender dozens of questions which the evos can’t explain. The rubbish which was taught in my biology textbooks about origins and evolution, peppered moths and false similarities of fish, cat and human embryos, for example, would not stand. You need not mention God, just sow seeds of doubt about evolution in young minds. Bob


106 posted on 06/17/2011 7:30:20 PM PDT by alstewartfan (When you're fresh out of lawyers, you don't know how good it's gonna feel! Al Stewart)
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To: bwc2221

I would like for one of these Bachmann cheerleaders to reconcile why it is acceptable for Mrs. Bachmann to have an opinion of the decisions on local school boards, but not have an opinion on state forced purchase of health insurance.


107 posted on 06/17/2011 7:30:27 PM PDT by gov_bean_ counter (JMO but I reserve the right to be wrong...)
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To: allmendream
"ID proposes that natural selection of genetic variation is not a sufficient mechanism to explain the diversity of life and that God/the designer had to directly intervene to actually accomplish anything complex."

That is not even a fraction of ID. ID goes well beyond the biological and genetic and encompasses every aspect of the observable universe from the quantum to the cosmologic. It certainly takes into account the anthoropic principal and the incredible fine tuning of the gravitational, electomagnetic, stong and weak nuclear forces.

108 posted on 06/17/2011 7:31:47 PM PDT by circlecity
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To: circlecity

Aren’t all definitions arbitrary? If science is defined as something, then yes, that is arbitrary. But if everyone uses the same definition, then no matter how arbitrary it is, the term is used in uniformity. So if we decided to call the act of measuring and quantifying empirical data ‘science,’ then any argument over what is ‘science’ must be based on whether it measures and quantifies empirical data.

To say that because the definition of the word ‘science’ doesn’t encompass other ideas, and to use that as a reason to disregard the term all together is disingenuous.

Science is not about measuring thoughts or ideas, because they can not be experimented on. Science is about the physical realm. Science can be used by philosophers and religions, as well as scientists can use ideas as the basis for a hypothesis. But until it is tested (more accurately, until a scientist tries to disprove it) the hypothesis is not science.


109 posted on 06/17/2011 7:32:10 PM PDT by Raider Sam (They're on our left, right, front, and back. They aint gettin away this time!)
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To: Perdogg
I like Michele, but I do not agree. Intelligent design is not science and should not be taught as such.

What are you implying? That there are no assumptions (faith) in "science"? Science is riddled to the core with assumptions. What if the speed of light isn't a constant after all? It takes more faith to believe in "science" than God.

110 posted on 06/17/2011 7:35:17 PM PDT by 3boysdad (The very elect.)
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To: Raider Sam
But until it is tested (more accurately, until a scientist tries to disprove it) the hypothesis is not science.

The hypothesis is never science. Testing it is science.
111 posted on 06/17/2011 7:38:09 PM PDT by aruanan
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To: Raider Sam
"Science is not about measuring thoughts or ideas, because they can not be experimented on. Science is about the physical realm."

Yet the foundation of science is logical inference which is not of the physical relm and cannot quantified "scientifically" - none of the classic logical axioms can. Interesting that until at least the 18th century "natural science" always included metphysical rationalism.

112 posted on 06/17/2011 7:39:36 PM PDT by circlecity
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To: bwc2221; indylindy
It's fun watching her turn herself into a pretzel after the past year.

She can't defend one thing Bachmann says or does, but continues to deify her.

Oh the irony.......

113 posted on 06/17/2011 7:45:36 PM PDT by Lakeshark (Thank a member of the US armed forces for their sacrifice)
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To: aruanan

I know, I was trying to make the point that science was not some all inclusive field but rather the narrow field of testing the hypothesis in the known physical world.


114 posted on 06/17/2011 7:46:04 PM PDT by Raider Sam (They're on our left, right, front, and back. They aint gettin away this time!)
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To: Raider Sam
"I know, I was trying to make the point that science was not some all inclusive field but rather the narrow field of testing the hypothesis in the known physical world."

But that is a relatively recent and unreasonably narrow definition of science. Much of the metaphysical is as well "known" as the physical world. The law of non-contradiction is just as reliable as Einstein's theory of relativity.

115 posted on 06/17/2011 7:52:27 PM PDT by circlecity
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To: LoneRangerMassachusetts
And how well did you “learn” science? Maybe you were indoctrinated.
116 posted on 06/17/2011 7:52:49 PM PDT by 3boysdad (The very elect.)
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To: ejdrapes
Bachmann, a congresswoman from Minnesota, also proposed a major overhaul of the nation’s education system and said state administrators should be able to decide how they spend money allocated to them by the federal government.

The federal government should have NO ROLE in education. Eliminate all federal funding for education, fire the employees, and cut taxes so the states or local communities can decide what to do. Cut the federal taxes allocated to education by 70% and use the rest to pay down the debt. Even at that, the locals schools will have much more money than they do now; not that the community needs to put it all back into schools.

117 posted on 06/17/2011 7:56:27 PM PDT by SeaHawkFan
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To: Perdogg
I like Michele, but I do not agree. Intelligent design is not science and should not be taught as such.

It's a scientific model since it cannot be conclusively proven, but there is evidence for it. Evolution, on the other hand, is not science because it has been proven impossible. Saying it is so doesn't make it so.

118 posted on 06/17/2011 7:58:59 PM PDT by SeaHawkFan
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To: circlecity

You are right. Logic is not science. No one here is saying that it is. But science does exist, and it exists as the definition that has been given to it. In our world, science is the gathering of known facts. Logic is a mathematical way to explain reasoning.

Just because most historical scientists were also philosophers (where most logic comes from), it doesnt mean that logic (in the reasoning function) is the basis for science. People like Descartes used empiricism for scientific study, while focusing more on reasoning for their philosophical studies. Descartes actually separated the philosophical from the physical in his belief that eternal truths can be attained through reasoning skills and from within, while physical truths must be tested. So he separated science from philosophy back in the 17th Century.


119 posted on 06/17/2011 8:01:52 PM PDT by Raider Sam (They're on our left, right, front, and back. They aint gettin away this time!)
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To: Raider Sam
"Just because most historical scientists were also philosophers (where most logic comes from), it doesnt mean that logic (in the reasoning function) is the basis for science"

Really? Please show me how you can apply the scientific without logical inference. The laws of identity, causuality and non-contradiction are just as essential to the scientific method as observable data.

120 posted on 06/17/2011 8:05:00 PM PDT by circlecity
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