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Ohio's Critical Analysis of Evolution
Critical Evaluation of Evolution ^ | March 2004 | Ohio State Board of Education

Posted on 03/13/2004 11:53:26 AM PST by js1138

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To: Elsie
It's considered proper etiquette to cite your sources. (So says PatrickHenry )

Note that I was making an assertion, not cutting and pasting someone else's words. And there's no reason for you to be unfamiliar with the evo position by now, Elsie.

161 posted on 03/14/2004 7:36:28 AM PST by VadeRetro
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To: js1138; Junior; jennyp; VadeRetro; Nebullis; Virginia-American
Good story on the politics (it certainly wasn't science) behind the Ohio decision:
How state board thinking evolved on biology lesson.
162 posted on 03/14/2004 7:39:08 AM PST by PatrickHenry (A compassionate evolutionist.)
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To: PatrickHenry
Laws, policy, and sausage. If you like them, you may not want to watch them being made.

In this case, it was all about ... call it "zealot placement." Getting Holy Warrior idiots on committees and boards. Now science education in Ohio will be cluttered with Luddite anti-science screeching for years.
163 posted on 03/14/2004 7:47:44 AM PST by VadeRetro
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To: Junior
ID seems to require an infinite chain of turtles. Else one turtle gets special pleading.
164 posted on 03/14/2004 7:53:55 AM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: VadeRetro
No evidence. No science. No rationality. Just stacking the deck with Jack Chick devotees. A serious setback for reason, and thus for Western Civilization. Very serious.
165 posted on 03/14/2004 7:54:59 AM PST by PatrickHenry (A compassionate evolutionist.)
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To: Fester Chugabrew
I could learn the ins and outs of molecular biology very easily without making the assumption there is no god involved...

No you couldn't and that's the whole point.

You may believe that God designed the universe, and you may very well be right. But once the universe is in motion, the only way science can operate is to assume that day to day affairs are not tampered with, and that ordinary processes and phenomena work according to initial laws and conditions.

A lot of IDers like to cite the existence of a modern jetliner, and ask how do you suppose it came into existence. When you answer this question you are drawing on knowledge and experience. Obviously the first time isolated tribes saw an airplane they had no frame of reference from which to answer.

The same is true of how biologists go about answering the question of how species come into existence. Someone with no grounding in molecular biology, or someone who believes that physical processes are tampered with on a regular basis, will have a different conjecture from someone who believes the laws of nature are constant over time.

The assumption that the laws of nature are constant is the heart and soul of science. You can't do science without believing that the phenomena you observe are the result of regular and untampered processes. You might well be the world's greatest lab technician, but as a researcher you will never be able to ask original scientific questions.

166 posted on 03/14/2004 8:02:22 AM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
If you read the article on the speed of light you will find there is no controversy. First, there is no evidence supporting any variation, and second, there is no reluctance to keep testing hypotheses.

As is born out by the following comment from Ned Wright's Cosmology website:

Variable Constants?

9 Jan 2004 - Chand et al. (2004) present data on the time variation of the fine structure constant alpha that contradict previous claimed detections of a variation. The latest result is -0.6+/-0.6 parts per million for the change which is consistent with zero and much more accurate than the claimed -5.4+/-1.2 parts per million variation. So this constant appears to be constant.

Source: http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmolog.htm#News

167 posted on 03/14/2004 8:09:28 AM PST by longshadow
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To: Fester Chugabrew
There is one other thing that simply has to be put on the table. I notice a lot of threads on FR dealing with miracles. One recent example was a thread whose title asked whether President Reagan's life was saved by an angel.

I'm going to ask all the creationistist and ID posters to answer the following: Is it anti-religious to question claims of miracles? Is it anti-religious to investigate phenomena like the now-deceased church window showing an image of Mary?

Assuming it isn't anti-religious to investigate, is it anti-religious to be skeptical when you have no explanation?

In short, is it anti-religious to assume that everyday phenomena are the working out of unchanging laws of nature. Is it anti-religious to formulate hypotheses based on that assumption?
168 posted on 03/14/2004 8:13:32 AM PST by js1138
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To: VadeRetro
Getting Holy Warrior idiots on committees and boards.

I hereby nominate the Tedster for the post of High Commissar of Ohio for Careening Planets & ASCII Bats.....

169 posted on 03/14/2004 8:17:13 AM PST by longshadow
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To: longshadow
the Tedster

Holden! Holden! Holden!
Though the streams are swollen!
...

(Don't know where that came from ...)

170 posted on 03/14/2004 8:23:23 AM PST by VadeRetro
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Else one turtle gets special pleading.

Ah.... "The Turtle of Special Pleading".... catchy phrase; sounds like the name of an obscure avant-garde Jazz/Philosophy band -- I'll have to remember that.

171 posted on 03/14/2004 8:24:00 AM PST by longshadow
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To: VadeRetro
Holden! Holden! Holden!
Though the streams are swollen!

"Holden! Holden! Holden!
Ego big and swollen...."

172 posted on 03/14/2004 8:26:30 AM PST by longshadow
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To: PatrickHenry; VadeRetro
it certainly wasn't science

The absence of scientific arguments against evolution points out the autodeterminacy in the conclusions of a system of thinking. This determinacy began to be a problem in philosophy (after Kant) and proceeded into historical and natural sciences, and, especially in the '20s and on, in physics. This determinacy comes in the form of a limit: the tool finds only what it is designed to find.

When in human thought the starting set of postulates or assumptions are adopted, no refutation to any of its natural conclusions exists, theoretically, because the assumptions stand. No non-Euclidean geometry--it's not geometry. And the irony of the school board's curriculum is that it forecloses criticism from without.

This treats the question foreclosed as to what constitutes scientific knowledge. But more than that that only this kind of scientific knowledge is necessary concerning questions about origins and descent theories.

This is why it is always safe and comforting keep from venturing out of one's own field.

173 posted on 03/14/2004 8:33:31 AM PST by cornelis
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To: js1138
is it anti-religious to assume that everyday phenomena are the working out of unchanging laws of nature

No, I don't think so. I understand Islam is very deterministic.

174 posted on 03/14/2004 8:35:48 AM PST by cornelis
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To: cornelis
Your invocation of determinism is a red herring. There is no scientifically testable formulation of the philosophical problem of free will vs determinism. It isn't an issue in science because it can't be described in a way that can be falsified. It is beside the point in a deeper way. The problem of constancy in natural laws would not be changed by either side of the philosophical problem. If everything is determined, it is of no practical consequence, because quantum indeterminancy, chaos and complexity pose an infinite horizon for our ability to predict. We can never achieve the detailed knowledge needed to see the future, even if it is completely determined.

On the other hand, free will does not grant us the ability to change physical laws.

175 posted on 03/14/2004 8:50:21 AM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
You might well be the world's greatest lab technician, but as a researcher you will never be able to ask original scientific questions.

More than that, you'll either run like hell or grow fangs when threatened by historical conscience and other non-dogmatic features of human existence.

176 posted on 03/14/2004 8:50:38 AM PST by cornelis
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To: cornelis
I have to concede I'm simply not smart enough to understand what you are saying.
177 posted on 03/14/2004 8:53:24 AM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
There is no scientifically testable formulation of the philosophical problem of free will vs determinism

Probably not a red herring, since I suggest this kind of thinking of yours in #173.

178 posted on 03/14/2004 8:54:23 AM PST by cornelis
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To: cornelis
There must be a lively discussion in natural philosophy or in philosophy of science how it came to be that we do science in the way we do, and why it isn't that we use completely different assumptions and goals and make science completely irrelevant.

The trouble with the Ohio situation and others like it is that those convinced of the importance of the IDist assumptions want to change science to include it. It isn't science and the whole point of it is that it isn't science. The scope of science isn't limited in the way you describe. It is sufficiently large to accommodate all sorts of fields.

The IDists are not satisfied with exploring the world with new assumptions and then disseminating the findings. Probably, because they don't have any findings. They made the assumption that an "intelligent designer" designed life as we know it, and conclude that evolution must, then, be wrong and should no longer be taught in the schools. The comparison to non-euclidean geometry is at most premature.

179 posted on 03/14/2004 9:27:39 AM PST by Nebullis
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To: VadeRetro
Ted Holden / Medved memorial ascii bat:



|                    . .                     , ,                               
|                 ____)/                     \(____                            
|        _,--''''',-'/(                       )\`-.`````--._                 
|     ,-'       ,'  |  \       _     _       /  |  `-.      `-.             
|   ,'         /    |   `._   /\\   //\   _,'   |     \        `.            
|  |          |      `.    `-( ,\\_//  )-'    .'       |         |           
| ,' _,----._ |_,----._\  ____`\o'_`o/'____  /_.----._ |_,----._ `.          
| |/'        \'        `\(      \(_)/      )/'        `/        `\|
| `                      `       V V       '                      '            


180 posted on 03/14/2004 9:29:29 AM PST by forsnax5 (The greatest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.)
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