Posted on 06/30/2003 7:04:52 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
Edited on 04/13/2004 3:31:30 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
WASHINGTON - In ``Star Wars,'' Darth Vader rules the ``dark side'' of a fantasy universe. In real life, astronomers are exploring the ``dark side'' of our own universe. They find it a mystifying place.
According to a batch of new reports published in a special ``Welcome to the Dark Side'' issue of the journal Science, most of the cosmos cannot be seen, even with the most powerful telescopes. All but a tiny fraction of creation consists of two exotic, invisible ingredients called ``dark energy'' and ``dark matter.''
(Excerpt) Read more at bayarea.com ...
The clarion call of science is not the triumphant "Eureka!" of Archimedes, but the indignant "Who ordered that?!" of Isidor Isaac Rabi.
Been there, done that, *still* haven't seen the actual behavior you describe.
I can recall one about an ant species simultaneously evolving all around the world. There was a peer-reviewed science article that showed that a particular ant species had not "spread" but had evolved concurrently in multiple locations.
Um, your memory and/or reading comprehension of that study and subsequent discussion are poor.
First, you have the study exactly backwards. Actually, the prior scientific presumption (admitted to be such, for lack of sufficient fossil evidence to make a firm conclusion) for a long time was that "old world" army ants and "new world" army ants had evolved separately on their own continents (through convergent evolution). The recent study actually examined new evidence and made a very good case that in fact, all modern types of army ants instead had descended from a single original army ant species (which itself had split off from earlier non-army ant species). Here's the reconstructed family tree:
The species in bold type are army ant species, the non-bold species are non-army ant species.
This had the Evolutionists scratching their heads (but not questioning their core beliefs).
No, actually, it didn't have the "Evolutionists scratching their heads", because the findings of the recent study are actually an even *better* fit for classic evolutionary theory than was the prior presumption about the origins of army ants.
Thus there was no "head scratching" by evolutionists on the threads which discussed that study, so I'm wondering just how you managed to "remember" some having occurred.
Nor should it have caused any evolutionists to "question their core beliefs", because the discovery itself, *and* the mass of related data uncovered during the study, very nicely *further confirms* evolution. For details, see my lengthy post about that study in post #1703 of that thread.
Ironically, that study was introduced to the thread by a creationist who had read only a poorly written press release about the study and mistakenly believed he could use it to undercut evolution. Wrong again.
Creationists on the thread suggested that perhaps God had something to do with it. You should have read the shouts of derisive laughter!
I find nothing like that in either FR thread which discussed that study. They are here and here. The former thread was begun to discuss a different study, but the army ant study was introduced on the first page and discussed at length in various places in the thread.
If your memory of those threads is as flawed as your memory of the study's results, perhaps that explains things.
This pattern repeats on any Creationist thread on FR (and elsewhere).
You have yet to offer a single example, much less establish a "pattern".
Some fly in the ointment which perhaps does not completely refute Evoltuionary Theory, but which poses a problem for it ... someone says maybe there is a God ... Evos start swearing and laughing at the poor dumb schmuck.
So you say. Care to try again to support it?
I have never once seen anyone on any FR thread "start swearing and laughing at the poor dumb schmuck" for offering God as a possibility. Never. You might want to support that broad accusation, or retract it.
I have seen people get laughed at for offerring goofy "disproofs" of science without knowing enough about it to succeed at the attempt, but that's quite different.
And lord knows I've seen several FR creationists laugh at evolutionists as "poor dumb schmucks" simply *for* their belief in the process of evolution. And yes, I *will* give specific examples if you want to see them.
Sounds like this. ICR finds a few cranks and touts them as brave new pioneers who might, someday, prove ICR right after all.
It would take someone with a lot more knowledge of this sort of thing than me to say whether that study had any credibility.
Let's put it this way -- if any experiment or study concludes that the universe is only a few thousand years old, it's not credible... There's just enormously *too* much evidence, of every conceivable kind, that it's vastly older than that. Concluding that the universe is only a few thousand years old is just as non-credible as today concluding that the Earth is flat after all.
Any "study" which concluded to the contrary (on either point) would rightly be laughed off the stage unless it managed to simultaneously explain why *all* the evidence for the generally accepted conclusion happened to be wrong, and how. Good luck with *that*...
And on top of that, it would be easily detectable. Measurements of the speed of light a few years apart with modern instruments (which can measure the speed *very* precisely) would show measurable changes in the speed, if it were "decaying" as rapidly as some creationists assert. No such change has been detected -- the natural speed of light appears rock-steady by all tests.
With assistance from Newman
and research by Kramer
g3000??
Orbital motions, both within our galaxy (the famous "flat rotation curve") and without (in the Virgo cluster) were the first indications of the existence of dark matter. Gravitational lensing allows us to map the distribution of dark matter, and measurements of the cosmic microwave background allow us to measure the dark matter content of the universe.
Not according to this article and others I have read. It seems the more we learn the more we realize how much there is to learn, yet. Extrapolating that you conclude that the unknown is out stripping the known each day. In fact, taking it to a logical progression, the more we know the less we know.
According to a batch of new reports published in a special ``Welcome to the Dark Side'' issue of the journal Science, most of the cosmos cannot be seen, even with the most powerful telescopes. All but a tiny fraction of creation consists of two exotic, invisible ingredients called ``dark energy'' and ``dark matter.''
Considering that much of what we think we know is unproven conjecture, God does not seem to be shrinking the model as much as expanding it.
Regardless, it is futile to attempt to "know" God except in your heart. Proving God destroys that particular version of God, making it finite rather than infinite.
Yeah, but spend any time around working scientists and you find that sifting can be remarkably arbitrary. It works for the most part, but it's like watching sausage being made.
You do raise the point, however, that there are baryonic components of dark matter. We have two handles on that. First, we can measure the percentage of baryonic matter in the universe by looking at the abundances of light elements. Second, we can search for dark, compact objects (presumed to be baryonic in nature, such as "brown dwarf" stars) by searching for "microlensing" events, where a compact object passes in front of a single distant star, with the gravitational lensing of the object causing the star to brighten temporarily, in a characteristic way.
The upshot is that, while there is a surprising amount of dark, baryonic matter in our galaxy, there isn't nearly enough to account for all the dark matter.
If it's wrong, that will be discovered, too. The same problem is usually attacked by many different people, by many different methods, and any important discovery will be rechecked many times.
In the case of dark matter, however, very little sifting is involved. Its existence is as manifest as the curvature of the Earth.
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