It was a meaningless question, since the it pre-supposed the existence of a state "before" the big bang.If you were to ask a cosmologist what happened before the big bang they'd probably ask you what religion you believe in as the answer to that question is unknown to scientists beyond a certain point. That was a nice dodge to a probing question.
Quote:
Originally Posted by eskimospy
He actually answers that question in his books, at least as well as it can be answered. Fundamentally he says that while the state of the universe before the big bang is currently unknowable (and may never be knowable), you can still make probability judgments as to how things came to be. You really only have two choices: the eternity of matter as we know it, or some sort of creator. Since a living, thinking sky beardo is hugely more complex than a ball of matter, that god is much less likely to be the cause.
Seems reasonable enough to me.
It sounds reasonable to you because it just reaffirms what you already believe. To believe that science and how we interpret the world/universe shall forever remain static is beyond foolhardy just as much as putting your faith on the interpretation of the work of current scientists and that somehow they won't be revised or proven wrong.
You guys who are arguing about Collins and what Dawkins thinks of him should check out this video. Its Dawkins on the Bill Mahr show last year.
He talks about it about the 3 min mark.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tRp...AC4C68CB1&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=9
Nothing surprising there.
Thank you for the video, it's fascinating when some of these brilliant men can explain what they've discovered in layman's terms.
Nothing surprising there.
Thanks. amazing none of the "believers" that are debating this topic have either watched this video or commented on it. It like people don't want to see.
I'm sorry but Dawkins is correct yet again, the more you look into what Collins actually says, the more you realise that this man is NOT a man of ANY science.
He believes that there are evidence that need not be proven because they cannot be proven.
That's not how science works and anyone who believes that is per definition a kook, not a scientist.
It was a meaningless question, since the it pre-supposed the existence of a state "before" the big bang.
It's postulated that the big bang created space and time. Therefore, no big bang => no time and no "before."
The science community knows that worth is judged by performance. They really don't care about Dawkins. Sucks for him.
Per your definition. If you knew your Godel you'd know there are truths you cannot prove.
I do not know to which evidences John is referring, but I don't really see how Godel's Incompleteness theorem can come to bear against John's claim. Godel Incompleteness pretains to formal systems, and particularly those sufficiently complex to model basic arithmetic. I took John's claim to mean that Collins claims certain empirical hypotheses are to be regarded as true despite their lack of verifiability or falsifiability, which has nothing whatsoever to do with formal systems.
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding John's representation of Collins' position, and as I said before, I'm totally ignorant of exactly which propositions John is describing Collins to have endorsed as true but "unprovable."
As an aside, I strongly dislike when the word "proof" and it's permutations get tossed about in describing scientific facts and hypotheses. It may even be responsible for this very misunderstanding.
Evidently he has a litmus test as to who can be a scientist. Collins research, his job if you will, is science (although as head of the NIH he no doubt does more administrative work). When his work is critiqued there's never been a concern that its been contaminated by his book if that's how one wishes to view things.
At this point he might as well accuse the Curies as frauds.
The work done is either science or its not and you know full well he can't fault him on that. That leaves running around beating ones chest because its so unfair.
You aren't so emotionally involved as some others. Through the ages people have done good work and had faiths or beliefs which are in principle. I'm waiting for someone to round up the villgers to burn them as heretics. Ironic.
Fun fact: Some 10 million people have died at the hands of professing Christians over the last 2000 years.
Over the last 100 years, over 100 million have died at the hands of professing Atheists.
Now who is burning who here?
I do not know to which evidences John is referring, but I don't really see how Godel's Incompleteness theorem can come to bear against John's claim. Godel Incompleteness pretains to formal systems, and particularly those sufficiently complex to model basic arithmetic. I took John's claim to mean that Collins claims certain empirical hypotheses are to be regarded as true despite their lack of verifiability or falsifiability, which has nothing whatsoever to do with formal systems.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JSmtao57MDw&feature=related
The reason people are concerned about Collins is because his personal views run contrary to his professional work.
For instance stating that if science conflicts w/ the bible then science has made a mistake.
Or stating he doesn't see how science can disprove the resurrection because he finds the stories of it so compelling.
If you had actually bothered to watch the videos I linked to you would seen Dawkins and friends discuss this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3-NTHebMzw&feature=related#t=44s
Oh yes, the big meanie Dawkins calls Collins a "very sophisticated biologist and a brilliant expositor of evolution." What a pompus ass!
Watching 2 hours of Dawkins requires more fortitude than I have at the moment.
I don't happen to agree with Collin's views regarding religion. I'm more concerned that he does what he's supposed to do. If you can cite an instance where he's not done that in his work, please correct me. I certainly don't know anyone in the field that has concerns that Dawkins does.
I had a few minutes to listen to Collins who oddly enough hasn't been guilty of picking the Bible over demonstrated science. The question about the Resurrection was a hypothetical. I can ask the opposite question. What if there was undeniable evidence that Christ arose from the dead after three days? Would you automatically accept that? I bet you'd be examining every scrap of data before changing your mind.
Now suppose that he believes in the Resurrection and you don't. The question becomes: What has that done to discredit his work? Nada. James Clerk Maxwell was a Christian. There goes his credibility.
Uh, haven't met any of those Christians. Consistent Christians (ie consistent with the views Jesus taught) are some of the most loving, caring people I've met. To claim all Christians want to burn people at the stake, because you have seen several that did, is just a little biased. But this is Moonbeam, of course.
Fun fact: Some 10 million people have died at the hands of professing Christians over the last 2000 years.
Over the last 100 years, over 100 million have died at the hands of professing Atheists.
Now who is burning who here?
If you want to talk about brutality, a Muslim who converts to another religion is subject to death. I would be far more afraid of them than any Christians. But that's just me.
Sorry to be so nitpicky, but "will never know everything" is not equivalent to "the potential for human knowledge is finite." The potential for human knowledge is conceivably (and likely, IMHO) infinite, with the totality of potential knowledge being more largely infinite.The point is that what we can know is finite. We cannot and never will know everything.
I would say that there is demonstrably no simultaneously complete and consistent formal system which underlies human understanding.You aren't going to understand everything about humans, because we'd have to be more than human to do so. That assumes of course that a Turing machine can in theory duplicate the human mind. If you are Penrose, you don't buy it. If you fall into the camp of many AI scientists, you might say it is. Kleene demonstrated a proof of Godels theorems using computation theory.
In other words, a finite computational machine cannot be complete in itself. We aren't all that.
I think he means scientific research achievements.?
He was awarded a Doctor of Science by the University of Oxford in 1989. He holds honorary doctorates in science from the University of Huddersfield, University of Westminster, Durham University, the University of Hull, and the University of Antwerp, and honorary doctorates from the Open University, the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, and the University of Valencia.[122][123] He holds honorary doctorates of letters from the University of St Andrews and the Australian National University, and was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1997 and the Royal Society in 2001. He is one of the patrons of the Oxford University Scientific Society. In 1987, Dawkins received a Royal Society of Literature award and a Los Angeles Times Literary Prize for his book, The Blind Watchmaker. In the same year, he received a Sci. Tech Prize for Best Television Documentary Science Programme of the Year, for the BBC Horizon episode entitled The Blind Watchmaker. Asteroid 8331 Dawkins is named after Dawkins. His other awards have included the Zoological Society of London Silver Medal (1989), Finlay innovation award (1990), the Michael Faraday Award (1990), the Nakayama Prize (1994), the American Humanist Association's Humanist of the Year Award (1996), the fifth International Cosmos Prize (1997), the Kistler Prize (2001), the Medal of the Presidency of the Italian Republic (2001), the Bicentennial Kelvin Medal of The Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow (2002) and the Nierenberg Prize for Science in the Public Interest (2009). In 2005, the Hamburg-based Alfred Toepfer Foundation awarded him its Shakespeare Prize in recognition of his "concise and accessible presentation of scientific knowledge". He won the Lewis Thomas Prize for Writing about Science for 2006 and the Galaxy British Book Awards Author of the Year Award for 2007.
Good post.huh? Hitler was not an atheist, by all accounts, he was a devout Christian, although not a Catholic nor a Protestant. He frequently expoused a belief in a higher Creator, one that has ordained him to do his work. This belief was not just echoed in speeches but also in his personal writings, meant to viewed by only his closest confidants. I don't know how Hitler = atheist meme got started, but it flies in the face of historical fact.
Now Stalin was a devout atheist, so you can count that towards the ticker if you want.
On the whole, religion in general has been responsible for more human suffering than
atheism. Likewise, religion, in general, has been responsible for more good than atheism. So take that as you will.
The concern Dawkins has as far as I know is that his personal views contradict his scientific work. Cognitive dissonance in other words. Normally, like you I wouldn't really care and I would think it would be none of his business BUT he has written books on his faith, gone on TV and even debated Dawkins in the past. That pretty much opens the floodgates to criticism as far I am concerned. You certainly haven't kept your personal feelings for Dawkins to yourself.
No, he hasn't done it yet (as far as I know) but he said outright if science conflicted w/ his religion then he would assume that there was something wrong. I don't think compare outcome to religious belief is a step of the scientific method.
But yes I would examine the available data to come to a decision. Like I did when I decided agnosticism was the correct choice for me.
I agree, his work hasn't been discredited. I pretty much stated that previously. I also quoted Dawkins for your benefit where he spoke well of Collins as a scientist.

 
				
		