Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 03 Oct 05 - 11:55 AM That's what I said. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Paco Rabanne Date: 03 Oct 05 - 11:55 AM 100. I thank you. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,G Date: 03 Oct 05 - 11:57 AM What Carlin said is probably true. What he forgot to take into account is God made this place and then left it up to mankind to take care of. Yes, I am a Diest. And yes, we are doing our best. (to muck it up) One other thing, I am amazed at how some, particulary an Evolutionist, are so convoluted when it comes to comparing or even thinking about two ideas resulting in a similar outcome. I can do this, not be bothered, and still stay with my original belief. In Dawkins case, his excitability do help to sell books. Wonder if he is, however, a fearful man? What is the adage? Oh yes, "Methinks he doth protest too much". |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Bill D Date: 03 Oct 05 - 12:07 PM " God made this place and then left it up to mankind to take care of." maybe...maybe not. The first part of that is just a claim.....and it makes no difference whether it is true", we still have to be careful of what we have. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,Mrr Date: 03 Oct 05 - 01:52 PM frogprince, why should anything not scientific be mentioned in science class? That to me is like saying that the physics should be mentioned in German classes. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 03 Oct 05 - 02:48 PM All the aforementioned stuff having been said, I fail to see how evolution can be considered heresy. I also fail to see how creationism can be considered heresy either. Or even some not-yet-considered combo of the two. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 03 Oct 05 - 02:54 PM My last thought for this thread (not that I have contributed much anyway): I don't really care what people choose to believe. That has never been an issue with me in real or cyber life. However, it's the suppression of the right to think that grates my petunias. From either 'side' of this issue. I suppose that what gets everyone is the imposition of 'ways to think' being stated from the top--whatever that means--and then folks having to pick one side or the other. I continue to think that God--define that how you will--made it and Darwin explained it. Hope y'all have a good thread. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,TIA Date: 03 Oct 05 - 04:23 PM Here's the rub. Science IS a "way to think". So to do science, you MUST think this way. If you try to insert other ways of thinking, it's no longer science. (Note that the issue is HOW to think, not WHAT to think). Not shouting btw. Just don't know how to do italics or underline. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: robomatic Date: 03 Oct 05 - 06:34 PM Science is indeed a 'way to think'. It involves determining what CAN be known, and using rational means that must be able to be described and repeated. So such 'other' 'ways to think' such as Astrology, Numerology, Extra-Sensory Perception, Necromancy, Communication with the Dead, and late night talk shows find themselves unduly limited when put to the scientific 'limitations' as mentioned above. But since practitioners of the last named arts seem to find their way to the bank right enough, they have not shed bitter tears over the limited way that science would have them think. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: frogprince Date: 03 Oct 05 - 09:06 PM Guest Mrr: I'm not up for spending any real effort grinding an axe over this; my "paragraph or less" of mention is a suggestion, not anything I want written into the required lesson plan. I'm just thinking that a good share of the kids in the class a. have heard some of the stink raised about this, but b. haven't had a chance yet to hear or develop an objective perspective on why they do or don't hear about creationism or "I.D." in class. No one (to my knowledge) has been telling the kids that their foreign language teacher is an un-american-commie-pinko-demon worshiper because he hasn't been teaching physics. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Amos Date: 03 Oct 05 - 10:37 PM I've read two of Dawkins' major works. He protesteth very little in the worls I have read -- he analyzes, presents data, provides a little humor -- not much, especially considering the imbalance in fair speech and careful thought which his antagonists offer. It would upset any normal person to have his words so twisted about. A |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: robomatic Date: 04 Oct 05 - 06:33 AM I've heard Dawkins over the radio. Great voice, great presence, good humor and good science. I believe he knows E.O. Wilson the great ant biographer, as well. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST Date: 04 Oct 05 - 04:03 PM Amos, it must be awesome to know everything about everything, how do you do it? Darwins theory that we evolved from the apes is contested. Modern science now believes we could be a seperate species with similarites to the apes. How many genetic markers seperate us from Orangutangs? two? three? Be open to new ideas. You are sometimes so full of shit it amazes me. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: John Hardly Date: 04 Oct 05 - 04:18 PM "I continue to think that God--define that how you will--made it and Darwin explained it. Hope y'all have a good thread." I could go along with this'n. I might change it a mite to say that I think God created it and Darwin made an interesting, though flawed attempt to explain. I could especially go along with the "Hope y'all have a good thread" part. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Mrrzy Date: 04 Oct 05 - 08:18 PM Ah, frogprince, but one makes as much sense as another! ID is fine to talk to kids about - just not in a science class. How about the parents? Love EOWilson. There is a great "column" on Fresh Air on NPR today about this whole thing - very interesting, go to npr.org and look around for Fresh Air. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 05 Oct 05 - 07:28 AM I don't know how it's done in the US, but over here (UK) if any religious content is included in school activities, Jehovah Witness children are (at the insistence of their parents) not allowed to attend. This removes them from assemblies, Christmas plays, etc. There is a rota for teachers, which includes the duty of looking after JWs during such activities. Imagine the state of THEIR education, if religion were introduced into academic subjects. IMHO, everything has its place, and the place for religion is in a comparative religious class, in a multi-cultural society such as ours. I can't help wondering why Jehovah Witnesses should feel that learning about other religions is wrong, but that is essentially their business. Educators have to deal with what is, not what might, or ought, to be. This would still exclude JWs, but only from that subject. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 05 Oct 05 - 10:00 AM I agree with Don that comparative religion is the way to go. However, parents in most religions do not want their children exposed to other 'truths'. The the religions in schools could fight for their percentage of coverage and slant that is put on it all. Mess if you ask me--which you haven't. I guess this gets us to Dr Jonnson's adage: "Much can be made of a Scotsman--if caught while young." |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,Mrr Date: 05 Oct 05 - 01:41 PM I remember doing a paper on comparative religion, specifically origin myths (creation myths) for a high schol philosophy class (in French school which is mostly Catholic, in a mostly Moslem country); I compared the ancient Greeks, the ancient Egyptians, and the judeo-christian-islamic myths. The paper was very well received by teh teacher, but she then got in trouble for receiving it well, and the non-animists in the class were fine until I got to that last one... *sigh* why is it that only OTHER people's superstitions are silly? |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Amos Date: 05 Oct 05 - 01:57 PM COntested by whom, twerp? On what basis? The issue isnot whether homo sapiens descended from apes, or whethe rboth apes and homo sap (or neanderthalis) descended from as common ancenstor a niche earlier than proto-apes. From what I know so far, which is precious little, it is more likely that we descended from an early ape ancestor, but I think the lines are too fuzzy to define definitely. I don't care; it has little to do with the validity of the mechanism. As for knowing everything,you are being ridiculous. I know how to think with the data that I have and am always open to new data (not mindless assertions about science without references.) But I sure don't know a patch of everything, so I think you must be speaking from your lower GI. A |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,Chief Chaos Date: 05 Oct 05 - 02:02 PM I've always wondered why creationists have such a problem with evolution (Darwinism)and yet most of the time they seem to embrace Social Darwinism. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Bill D Date: 05 Oct 05 - 03:59 PM "Darwins theory that we evolved from the apes is contested. Modern science now believes we could be a seperate species with similarites to the apes." WHO contests it? That guy in Cincinnatti with the anti-evolution musuem? And 'modern science' as a generalization does not believe any such thing! You can find two members of ANY group who will swear to almost anything. Almost ALL reasoned research now accepts that apes and man had common ancestors and is just trying to work out the precise order and placement. If anyone really wants to dig deeply into how evolution fits into the study of the Earth's past, and be astounded at some of the precursors too, try reading "The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History" by Stephen Jay Gould. By focusing on the very most ancient fossils known, the essential arguments of evolution are highlighted. Be warned...this is not something you skim for 30 minutes and dismiss...or accept. It requires thinking and sorting to grasp the relationships being considered. (Note...the Burgess Shale is but a short distance from Bruce (Peace)...on the Alberta/British Columbia border. It is probably the most significant fossil record on the planet: more important than even the primate finds. I wish I had an excuse to go there and just look.) |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 05 Oct 05 - 06:47 PM GUEST, in usual GUEST unwisdom, said: Darwins theory that we evolved from the apes is contested. But Darwin never claimed that we evolved from apes. This canard was dredged up against him in his own day (as a sort of dirty-trick rhetorical gesture), and has never quite died away. What Darwin said was that it appeared that man evolved from some ancient animal which, in a separate but somewhat parallel line, into the other primates, such as the apes. Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Paul Burke Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:02 AM Depends whether he meant ape colloquially or scientifically. Colloquially, 'ape' includes everything from monkeys and lemurs through to orang-utans and gorillas, and we certainly are descended from animals of that sort. Scientifically, it just means Pongidae, and we share an ancestry with them, a fairly recent one too, in geological and evolutionary terms. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Bill D Date: 06 Oct 05 - 10:52 AM thank you, Uncle Dave and Paul, for helping me note the carelessness of 'guests' when they are more concerned with put-downs and sarcasm than truth and clarity. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Amos Date: 06 Oct 05 - 11:05 AM Chief Chaos, you have put your finger on a most perplexing illogic. It's a variant of the NIH (not invented here) syndrome, perhaps -- yet creationists believe the whole universe was NIH!!! Or at least, not "here" in the normal sense of the word. Hmmmmmmm. A |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 11:12 AM There is LOTS of infinity on either side of that equation. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: John Hardly Date: 06 Oct 05 - 12:45 PM Sorry, CC, I don't see creationists embracing "social Darwinism". |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Bill D Date: 06 Oct 05 - 12:51 PM "LOTS of infinity" is a category error..*grin* like 'kinda pregnant'....but I get it... |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,Chief Chaos Date: 06 Oct 05 - 01:14 PM It's an abstract statement I guess. I equate "creationists" to be of a strongly religeous bent. From this I infer (with at least some degree of error to be sure) people like those in the Christian Coalition (or the religeous right if you prefer) which is linked for the most part to the Republicans. Social Darwinism means that the weak of a society which I shall define as the poor, the impaired, the social unfit, etc. will be weeded out so only the fittest survive. The Liberals embrace the touchy feely social programs that help keep the weak of society from going under (barely) and which they believe equalize us all in society. The Republicans are against these types of programs (welfare, food stamps, affirmative action, etc.)preferring to believe that we are all responsible for our own destiny and that if we can't pull ourselves up then we deserve the position we're in. Summing it up: Creationists=Social Darwinism This is my opinion of course and you are quite entitled to disagree! One of the great things about America! |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: beardedbruce Date: 06 Oct 05 - 01:48 PM BillD, "LOTS of infinity" is a category error..*grin* " Actually, I learned calculas using infinitesimals rather than epsilon- deltas. There ARE degrees of infinity- Aleph null, Aleph one, etc... |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:33 PM And, FYI, there are degrees of temperature, too. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:34 PM . . . and adjectives of degree. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:35 PM . . . and the third degree. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:35 PM . . . and the Nth degree. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:38 PM . . . and as written by Jim Hurt and Tim DuBois Love in the First Degree I once thought of love as a prison a place I didn't want to be. So long ago I made a decision to be footloose and fancy free. But you came I was so tempted to gamble on love just one time. I never thought I would get caught. It seemed like the perfect crime. Chorus: Baby, you left me defneseless. I've only got one plea. Lock me away inside of your love and throw away the key. I'm guilty of love in the first degree. I thought it would be so simple, like a thousand times before. I'd take what I wanted and just walk away, but I never made it to the door. Now babe, I'm not beggin' for mercy. Go ahead and throw the book at me. If lovin' you's a crime, I know that I'm as guilty as a man can be. Chorus: Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Chorus: Oh yeah. Love in the first degree. Love in the first degree. Love in the first degree. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:40 PM . . . and university degrees. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Peace Date: 06 Oct 05 - 06:44 PM And then there's this. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Bill D Date: 06 Oct 05 - 07:18 PM Peace...hey! I oughta have a Phd in that "Life Experience" stuff! (you know what Phd means....) bb...better be sure those Alephs are genuine! Nothing worse than fake infinities to confuse the issue. "Aleph my heart, in San Francisco" |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: pdq Date: 06 Oct 05 - 07:23 PM And then there was the poor dog who ate a thermometer and died by degrees. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: John Hardly Date: 07 Oct 05 - 07:00 AM "Social Darwinism means that the weak of a society which I shall define as the poor, the impaired, the social unfit, etc. will be weeded out so only the fittest survive" That may be what "Social Darwinists" believe, but I don't know a creationist who believes that. And the creationists I know are often the ones sacrificing personal comfort to care for "the poor, the impaired, the social unfit". The creationists I know work with the Salvation Army, send their money there, voluteer their time there. The creationists I know work in the local jail teaching literacy to those trapped in poverty by their ignorance. The creationists I know started an in-prison college degree program with professors volunteering their teaching and travelling (the State prison is 90 miles one way from here) time to help inmates get a college degree and be employable when they get out. The creationists I know have started the local soup kitchen(s). The creationists I know teach and believe that all mankind is made in the image of God -- and no one is more valuable than another. The creationists I know don't think that the poor or impaired or unfit are inferior. There is nothing about the creationists that I know that has them believing, as you suggest, that the poor should be "weeded out". Because the creationists I know don't think of the poor or impaired as inferior to them, they do quite often believe in the capacity of those that society has given up on for regaining their sense of self worth and rejoining functioning society. They do quite often believe that charity that contains no means of eventually helping individuals rise above their need, even when given with the best of intentions, though sometimes necessary as a stop-gap measure, will lead, not to aid and comfort for the needy, but to more need. Because they are quite often involved in charity work, they quite often have strong opinions on how charity is most effectively given. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 07 Oct 05 - 08:13 AM John, I read Chief Chaos's comment to mean the kind of creationists that seem to be infesting your government at the moment, whose religious attitudes seem to be directed to justification of their political machinations. Of course the majority of religious people (creationists; call them what you will) are caring, sharing members of society who do their best to help their fellow man. IMHO, this does not apply to the bevy of political hard men whose cynical claims to be Christians are at best dubious, and at worst outright lies. Don T. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 07 Oct 05 - 08:19 AM P.S I strongly suspect that the creationists you know would be too honest ever to make it in politics which is a great pity, as they might otherwise bring about changes that would make this world a better place to live. Don T. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: beardedbruce Date: 07 Oct 05 - 08:23 AM Don, Of course the majority of liberal people (progressives; call them what you will) are caring, sharing members of society who do their best to help their fellow man. IMHO, this does not apply to the bevy of political hard men whose cynical claims to be liberals are at best dubious, and at worst outright lies. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Gervase Date: 07 Oct 05 - 08:24 AM Just because there are creationists who do good works and are nice people doesn't stop them being completely and utterly wrong in their cretinous beliefs. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Auggie Date: 07 Oct 05 - 09:32 AM You Know, that's what I have always thought about those who are gullible enough to believe in macro-evolution. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: beardedbruce Date: 07 Oct 05 - 09:43 AM Just because there are X who do good works and are nice people doesn't stop them being completely and utterly wrong in their cretinous beliefs. Insert your own X |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Bill D Date: 07 Oct 05 - 11:54 AM 'cretinous beliefs' are one's own business and a basic right...until you start manipulating the system to impose those beliefs, or implications of them, on ME! |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: GUEST,Chief Chaos Date: 07 Oct 05 - 12:06 PM Good on them then John! |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 07 Oct 05 - 12:12 PM Yeah Bruce, I would agree with that, since I've never seen or heard of a successful politician who is totally honest. But my post was a direct response to one particular post about one particular group, and was not a comparative assessment of other groups. Don T. |
Subject: RE: BS: Evolution as Heresy? From: frogprince Date: 07 Oct 05 - 03:31 PM "Just because there are creationists who do good works and are nice people doesn't stop them being completely and utterly wrong in their cretinous beliefs." Gervase, you achieved something remarkable here; you elicited a response from Beardedbruce that I agree with completely. In my own "cretinous mind", I am at least very inclined to be a "creationist". I also believe that the "theory" of evolution is so well supported by the actual evidence that is hands down the best general explanation of the "how" of creation. I further believe that my own "cretinous" belief in creation is, in fact, a belief, outside the scope of the scientific process and therefore outside the proper scope of a science class, |