RearAdmiral
Platinum Member
- Jun 24, 2004
- 2,280
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Do we have a way to recreate the universe? Do we have a way to create mass from nothing? I have yet to see a scientist create a miniature universe from nothing. Lets see a scientist recreate the "big bang" from nothing.
Can't we test certain theories, such as mass, friction and gravity?
We can do certain test to prove friction exist, and how it works.
Do we have a way to recreate the universe? Do we have a way to create mass from nothing? I have yet to see a scientist create a miniature universe from nothing.
It's England. Don't care.
That said, I don't see a problem with a teacher teaching anything, be it creationism, intelligent design, or evolution. Since none of those are proven, and as long as the teacher states that everything being taught is in fact theory or fairy tale, I don't see a problem.
I remember my teachers doing that all the time: "I'm going to go through this for an alternate viewpoint, even though personally I don't believe it to be true." The more information given to anybody is fine.
Look at it this way. If Creationism was taught, and Evolution as well, which one holds more scientific "weight"? Which ones makes the other one look silly? If both were taught to school kids, don't you think Creationism would fall flat on its face, and kids would be more apt to follow evolution as the one closer to the truth?
Errm no, Evolution has valid science behind it, we have evidence of many different stages of evolution, we have the genetic similarities, we have carbon dating.
Creationism has the bible.
I love how people get so worked into knots defending their little theory as fact. Everything about what we "know" about the beginning of the universe is a theory. There is no empiracle evidence, there is no proof. Until it is validated with 100% unfalterable proof, it's a theorem, and according to this, does not belong in schools.
We don't need anything about God, Buddha, the tree of life, flying spaghetti monsters, evolution, darwinism, or big bang in any public classroom. It is not proven 100% with unfalterable proof.
And before any numbskulls come in here with "well evolution has a substancial amount of proof...we're just still missing things..but we'll find it!" just do like my math teacher told my class. "Shut up, your answer was 99% correct, but in math that's 100% wrong".
How do you test that carbon dating is accurate back 4 billion years? We'd have to create a test which would prove the tests are accurate. We can't, and will never be able to. We assume the scale is linear, when we have no way to know for sure.
Here is what wiki says:
Carbon-14 has a relatively short half-life of 5730 years.
How do we know it is 5730 years? How did they determine this?
But don't you think that public funding should only be given to schools teaching valid theory, I don't think we should be funding schools that teach that the universe was created by a unicorn...
It depends how it's taught, if it's taught that "a supreme being instigated the beginnings of the word in it's present form" and that the alternative theory is "we all used to be monkeys ages ago."
That phrasing makes evolution sound worse.
You can't pop evolution in with flying spaghetti monsters.
True, but when talking about evolution it's important.
I believe the way it should be taught is this: "Nobody will ever know how the universe was formed, because there is not enough information up to this point to determine what happened in the very beginning of time."
Anything else is not valid, and ends up making a leap of faith in some way or another.
Lol wonderful way to side step the answers. It's all bull with no evidence period. We can't know nor will ever know wiht 100% accuracy, so our beginnings will always be a theory.
It is not taken blindly as fact. It is taken as fact because it can be proven to not be incorrect, within the bounds of our current ability to understand and test it. It's not so purely binary as you seem to think it is.Why should we take something that is always changing as fact? If it changes, then its clearly not fact. Since science changes its opinion on the history of the universe and how life began, then it should not be blindly accepted as fact.
No. What can be proven is fact. However, science has very little in the way of absolutes. It does not have the nicety of 2+2=4. It has the ambiguity of, "about 2 plus about 2 comes to about 4, plus or minus some error." Over time, what 2 is, what 4 is, and what the error is, are narrowed down more and more. Your concept of how science works is very different from those that value it, much less those putting their lives into it.2+2 = 4 is fact. We can prove that all day long.
Wait a few months or a few years, and science will change its opinion on the universe. But yet we are supposed to accept it as fact?
Victory in crushing opposing opinions.
Don't like someones opinion, just regulate it out of existence.
I think equal time should be given to different opinions on how the universe and life began. Science has proven itself to be wrong from time to time.
Why should we take something that is always changing as fact? If it changes, then its clearly not fact. Since science changes its opinion on the history of the universe and how life began, then it should not be blindly accepted as fact.
2+2 = 4 is fact. We can prove that all day long.
Wait a few months or a few years, and science will change its opinion on the universe. But yet we are supposed to accept it as fact?
You just lost all credibility, because its clear you have no idea what you are talking about.
Instead of repeating what you have heard others say, do your own research and try posting you own opinions.
I see a problem when one opinion is allowed to oppress other opinions.
I love how people get so worked into knots defending their little theory as fact. Everything about what we "know" about the beginning of the universe is a theory.
There is no empiracle evidence, there is no proof. Until it is validated with 100% unfalterable proof, it's a theorem, and according to this, does not belong in schools.
And before any numbskulls come in here with "well evolution has a substancial amount of proof...we're just still missing things..but we'll find it!" just do like my math teacher told my class. "Shut up, your answer was 99% correct, but in math that's 100% wrong".
It is not taken blindly as fact. It is taken as fact because it can be proven to not be incorrect, within the bounds of our current ability to understand and test it. It's not so purely binary as you seem to think it is.
People are, today, constantly trying to come up with solutions for how the Universe came into being, how to fill in those gaps in evolution theory, how light, electricity, magnetism, and gravity work, etc..
These are not absolutely known things. If you want to sleep at night with the knowledge that everything can be explained, you need religion. Science is only going to show you, with every new provable fact, about 10 new mysteries, that we previously did not even know we did not know. But, what little we do know can get us to the moon, make nuclear reactors, and build binary computers with circuit components merely a few molecules wide.
Now, sadly, science curricula, especially at the low levels, and with bad teachers being the norm, may tend to teach it as a form of faith. That does no one any good, and is flat out wrong.
No. What can be proven is fact. However, science has very little in the way of absolutes. It does not have the nicety of 2+2=4. It has the ambiguity of, "about 2 plus about 2 comes to about 4, plus or minus some error." Over time, what 2 is, what 4 is, and what the error is, are narrowed down more and more. Your concept of how science works is very different from those that value it, much less those putting their lives into it.
Lol wonderful way to side step the answers. It's all bull with no evidence period. We can't know nor will ever know wiht 100% accuracy, so our beginnings will always be a theory.
I think it should be taught in science class...but not for the reasons the close minded would think. There are two reasons:
1. To teach people that Intelligent Design is NOT Creationism. Only idiots believe that...and they believe it because they want to lump them to gether as a mental shortcut rather than address the two seperately as they should.
Not at all. I've never been able to test whether a man will lose strength from getting a haircut, nor have I been able to test whether the Babylonian gods were false or not. I have been able to test how close to a target a projectile will land, given measured inputs.Sounds to me like you have a discomfort in the fields imperfections. It's not proven..it's a faith. Being close to an answer, or closer to what you're saying, believing your close to an answer to only find more questions than when you started, just aids to prove we really know nothing about beginnings...and we'll never know. Unless someone pulls a god move, figures it out, and recreates a scale of life to prove the theorem is correct. Otherwise you're just putting faith into a theorem some men wrote into a book.
Sounds an aweful lot like what alot of what people say about another book huh?
Mentioning it in a science class as an example of what it is not is one thing... teaching it as an alternative theory of equal validity to the theory of evolution is what doesn't belong in a science class.
Not at all. I've never been able to test whether a man will lose strength from getting a haircut...
:hmm: :\That is because you have not bothered to try. You have to use men who have taken a Nazarite Vow, though...and none of them exist today (that I am aware of).
The main reason no one takes Nazarite Vows any longer is because you cannot complete the vow without offering sacrifices at The Temple...and until the Abomination of the Rock is removed, the Temple cannot be rebuilt.
So you cannot do your testing due to a lack of subjects for the test.![]()