Posted on 09/22/2005 8:25:42 PM PDT by Crackingham
Let's see, your computer analogy proven false, you use bad data, and you try to ignore it when it is pointed out.
A true scientist.
LOL
DK
Talk with each other if you like.
I'm perfectly happy to point out when you are disasterously wrong! It seems to happen most often when you delve into philosophy. A little rusty, eh?
There are many counter examples, face and voice recognition being two of them.
Humans aren't behind machines yet. Although I agree with Stephen Hawking that modifications to humans may be important WRT the electronic revolution. Weird times my friend!
Some people worship the clock cycle and come out with a zero.
Of course, computers are:
Intelligently Designed.
LOL
DK
I did notice that the argument was reductionist and left out so much data on what the body does, in order to fit the bias of the arguers. Things like balance, vision, tactile information, etc. Why do you think they did that?
It appears the reductionists' argument is that higher tiers (such as meaning and universals) are merely epiphenomenons of "matter in all its motions".
Concerning the brain as the governor of the body, here are a few points for your correspondents and Lurkers:
2. As the McConnell experiments have shown - there is more at work than the brain: take a flatworm, teach him to react to stimulus and then chop him into two parts. Both parts will regenerate into a flatworm, but only one of them had the half with the original brain. But use the same stimulus on both flatworms, and they will react with the same memory.
3. Put a hundred army ants on a flat surface and they will walk in a circle until they die of exhaustion. But gather up a million of them and they will form a colony, conduct raids, keep a geometry, a calendar and a stable temperature in the nest.
But, as the RWP has pointed me to (indirectly of course), what is the heart of this controversy.
What is the suit about?
>>In October 2004, the Dover board voted 6-3 to require teachers to read a brief statement about intelligent design to students before classes on evolution. The statement says Darwins theory is not a fact and has inexplicable gaps, and refers students to an intelligent-design textbook for more information.<<
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9503392/
The teacher has to say Darwin's theory is a theory. If you want to know about intelligent design, there's the book, have at it outside class. They don't have to teach intelligent design. Just that Darwin's theory has warts.
If that can cause the downfall of Darwinism, it is not a very good theory.
Thanks Perfessor!
DK
The establishment clause does not concern the contemporary drama of secular humanism enthusiasts trying to remove religion in general or the mere discussion of religious themes and topics from the public realm. This case represents an idiotic misunderstanding of law.
I, too, am hopeful that Roberts will be a conservative voice on the Court ... with one caveat. I would have preferred that the President nominate Scalia to be Chief Justice, if only to reward his absolutely unfailing loyalty to original intent.
Either Ker Than is an incompetent who doesn't do his homework, or he thinks people are unaware that Darwin, himself, dragged science into the supernatural. Who does he think he's kidding?
"Origin of man now proved. -- Metaphysics must flourish. - He who understands baboon would do more toward Metaphysics than Locke." --- [Charles] Darwin, Notebook M, August 16, 1838 As quoted front and center by Michael T Ghiselin in his book Metaphysics and the Origin of Species
The textbook the publicly funded school is endorsing is "Of Pandas and People" and there exists testimony from prior litigation that the author of that particular book used "creationism" and "intelligent design" interchangeably. In the testimony, the author asserts only agency as intelligent cause.
Reading between the lines here (since I haven't read the book), that means the author did not present phenomenon along with agent as alternative types of intelligent cause. Without that, the court is most likely (IMHO) to consider the endorsement of the textbook as prohibited under prior Supreme Court decisions vis-a-vis the Establishment clause, especially Lemon in not serving a secular purpose.
Looking at it from the Supreme Court level (should it be appealed) - there is a possibility that Dover would prevail since the Supremes need to clarify their own conflicting decisions on the First Amendment. The consensus of the court is that Lemon causes confusion.
The decision in the 7th Kaufman v McCaughtry finds that atheism is a religion (see especially page 8) - based on previous Supreme Court rulings including Lemon.
Should this Dover case be appealed (and/or Kaufman) - then the Supremes will be faced with defining when atheism is religion and thus whether refusing the referral to a textbook such as this one would constitute the endorsement of atheism as the state religion.
IOW, the court will need to clarify what it meant by secular purpose if it keeps Lemon or establish a new test for "what is religion" and what actions constitute the establishment of one v. what actions would prevent the free exercise of one.
Whew, that was a mouthful before 7:30.
Thanks for outlining the actual case stuff, the media is so lame about that!
DK
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