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Kansas votes for Intelligent Design

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OatMan

Senior member
Aug 2, 2001
677
0
71
This is funny. You have to laugh at how far and influential a loud minority can be. We might be fighting the wrong fundamentalists.

That fox new article is pretty funny too. They must be using these poorly educated Kansas students to write their articles. Now I'm lazy when I post or email, but geesh, if I were sending something to my boss or to publish I'd at least proof read it. That article is awful. I guess in their Zeal to create more sensationalist gossip they didn't have time...
 

imported_Pablo

Diamond Member
Jan 20, 2002
3,714
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Originally posted by: alkemyst
Here is my take on it all. If there was a Creator, wouldn't he have been smart enough to allow of the evolution of his creations as their surroundings changed.

You can still have the debate of Creator or 'Big Bang', but IMHO evolution is scientifically proven, and that proof has nothing to do with or without the existance of a Creator.

Problem is most zealots and fanatics don't even know what they are arguing nor how to facilitate a proper debate.

Instead it's all about why the other is wrong, rather than how they are right.

HOLY HELL I AGREE WITH ALKEMYST SOMEBODY SHOOT ME IN THE FACE

 

flexy

Diamond Member
Sep 28, 2001
8,464
155
106
Originally posted by: aphex
Why is it such a hard thing to teach both and let the children decide which they believe.

If i want to hear tales and BELIEFS and i believe in something and want to hear about it..then i can go to CHURCH or join na cult or whatsoever.

SCHOOL is no place to lay out theories of religious/spiritual origin and sell them as science...or make people believe its on the same level as science.

The term "intelligent" design itself already implies an intelligent entity...which supposedly created us/the universe. It cannot get more religious/spiritual than that.

Again..all fine and good...but for THAT stuff i can go to church and school is the wrong place.

 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
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Originally posted by: flexy
Originally posted by: aphex
Why is it such a hard thing to teach both and let the children decide which they believe.

If i want to hear tales and BELIEFS and i believe in something and want to hear about it..then i can go to CHURCH or join na cult or whatsoever.

SCHOOL is no place to lay out theories of religious/spiritual origin and sell them as science...or make people believe its on the same level as science.

The term "intelligent" design itself already implies an intelligent entity...which supposedly created us/the universe. It cannot get more religious/spiritual than that.

Again..all fine and good...but for THAT stuff i can go to church and school is the wrong place.

i am going to disagree on this. Personally school is a place where you learn socialization until even the late years. Religion is a big part of socialization IMHO. I think all major religions should be taught and they should be practiced together (you do your thing, someone else does their's...this includes atheism and agnostics...).

On another note, who are the idiots above saying nothing in science is proven and it's all theory? That is just ignorant. There is a lot in science that is tested and proven true, it's not always 100% though like anything.

I have studied a lot of religions even took college electives at a non-religious college to learn more...most of the major ones all tell about the same story more or less...too many coincidences...but still it's a matter if you don't have 'HIS' name right you deserve to die.

For the most part (and there are a lot of books on this) a child is taught what their parents believe, even if the parents think they are giving a free rein to their kid. Religion and most of your adult beliefs are learned way before you know what's happening.

I was in a college health class with an older female. She absolutely believed chicken soup cured colds, you can't get pregnant having sex standing up, and if you are cold you will catch cold (among other choices)...she was so bad they had to remove her and her mother from class when they both came in to denounce the health instructor. There are crazy beliefs in the world and religion by proxy is among the top.
 

SMOGZINN

Lifer
Jun 17, 2005
14,359
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Originally posted by: alkemyst
i am going to disagree on this. Personally school is a place where you learn socialization until even the late years. Religion is a big part of socialization IMHO. I think all major religions should be taught and they should be practiced together (you do your thing, someone else does their's...this includes atheism and agnostics...).

While I agree that you do learn to socialize in school even until your late years, I ask you to consider if this should be a primary concern of our schools. Our schools have a limited budget of both time and resources to teach our children, and we must budget those resources the best we can. So the question becomes whether we should teach more sciences, arithmetic, history, and language or should we put more resources into teaching religion. There are over one hundred widely followed religions (twelve with more then 3 million followers) just in North America, and this is not counting the many varied Christian denominations. Seeing as how there are already great institutions that are more then willing to teach religion freely to anyone that asks, and that there are so many of them to teach, I do not think we need to, nor can afford to, put more effort into teaching religion in public schools. This is of course just my opinion.


On another note, who are the idiots above saying nothing in science is proven and it's all theory? That is just ignorant. There is a lot in science that is tested and proven true, it's not always 100% though like anything.

Nothing in science can be proven by the technical definition of proof. For something to be proven it would completely discount the possibility that it might be even slightly wrong. Proof is the exclusive domain of formal logic and mathematics. The entire scientific method is based on the fact that any theory could be wrong, and must therefor be continually be tested, and if it should ever fail even one test, it must be denounced and replaced by a new theory that can withstand that test as well as any other. The more tests that something passes the more accurately that theory fits the actual workings of the universe, but even after millions of tests it might not be perfect, but it should be damn close.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
Nothing in science can be proven by the technical definition of proof. For something to be proven it would completely discount the possibility that it might be even slightly wrong. Proof is the exclusive domain of formal logic and mathematics. The entire scientific method is based on the fact that any theory could be wrong, and must therefor be continually be tested, and if it should ever fail even one test, it must be denounced and replaced by a new theory that can withstand that test as well as any other. The more tests that something passes the more accurately that theory fits the actual workings of the universe, but even after millions of tests it might not be perfect, but it should be damn close.

Science and math are two different disiciplines. I am not sure why there is all this talk about mathematical proofs and scientific theories.

A theory is a pretty solid device in science. However, that hinges on if proper testing was done to come to the conclusions. This is why for most of the important things in the scientific world, many scientist work on the theory concurrently or simulataneously.

However, all this discussion here especially making statements that science is somehow far from concrete is way off base and more than likely spoken by those with little science background. If our science was not solid most of what we do everyday would be chaotic.

The debates that science is based on theory and that theory is not proof and without proof you have nothing factual and therefore science is not real or true, et al were created by pseudo-intellectuals defending their religions.

Now onto the different religions and how I feel they should all be taught in school. Obviously these are going to be a similar 'survey' style method that almost all classes are up until the college level. In high school Biology, you aren't really learning that much in depth on Biology at all...you get a decent understanding of it though and a good preparation for your college level courses should you undertake those.

I don't know where people come up with there are 1000's of major religions or even 100's. Counting every different type of Christianity or Islam or Jewish group may be part of the cause, but in the end they are the same religion.

There are 20 or so top level 'religions' as accepted by most people...teaching 20 or so religions in a general survey type course should not be that problematic and I believe the benefits would outweigh any disadvantages as we approach a world level economy/business market.

I recently heard that Islamic people are truly cannibal and a couple others in the crowd cursed the 'damn arabs' and 'knew that was true'.



 

Aharami

Lifer
Aug 31, 2001
21,205
165
106
so thaaaat's how you build a time machine to go back in the past

seriously...i am convinced that this country is moving backward in time. soon white powdered wigs will be back in fashion
 

SMOGZINN

Lifer
Jun 17, 2005
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Originally posted by: alkemyst
Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
Nothing in science can be proven by the technical definition of proof. For something to be proven it would completely discount the possibility that it might be even slightly wrong. Proof is the exclusive domain of formal logic and mathematics. The entire scientific method is based on the fact that any theory could be wrong, and must therefor be continually be tested, and if it should ever fail even one test, it must be denounced and replaced by a new theory that can withstand that test as well as any other. The more tests that something passes the more accurately that theory fits the actual workings of the universe, but even after millions of tests it might not be perfect, but it should be damn close.

Science and math are two different disiciplines. I am not sure why there is all this talk about mathematical proofs and scientific theories.

Because one of the big arguments that creationists use against scientists is that evolution is not proven in the mathematical sense and therefore is no more valid then ID. You and I can see that argument is like saying that an apple is not blue in the grapefruit sense and therefore is no different then a boat, but they can not because they have the wrong meaning for those words. So instead of arguing using their nonsensical definitions you have to explain that NO scientific theory can be proven in the mathematical sense, and it in fact does not even make sence to try to do so, and then try to explain how science does work.

However, all this discussion here especially making statements that science is somehow far from concrete is way off base and more than likely spoken by those with little science background. If our science was not solid most of what we do everyday would be chaotic.

But it is important to remember that theory is not absolute, because their next argument is going to be about theories that have changed over time. Once again this is their ignorance of the use of the scientific method that leads to this mistake of belief.
Scientific theories have something like mass, the more evidence you collect in favor of it the less likely it is to change. In the rare circumstance that a long held scientific theory does change, the more evidence it had the less it will need to change.
Basically the way it works is that the more evidence you have that a theory is correct the less often and less dramatically it will change. Not because scientists have investiture in it, but because for it to have been able to make all the predictions and pass all the tests to gain that body of evidence it had to be pretty close to right.
It is the concept of diminishing returns.


The debates that science is based on theory and that theory is not proof and without proof you have nothing factual and therefore science is not real or true, et al were created by pseudo-intellectuals defending their religions.

Agreed, and then taught to people who mistakenly accepted their word as coming from a point of authority.
Agreed, and then taught to people who mistakenly accepted their word as coming from a point of authority.
Science is based on theory, but theory does not mean what the creationists think it means.
Theory is not proof, but proof is not what the creationists think it is.
After that the rest of the argument is baseless.

Now onto the different religions and how I feel they should all be taught in school. Obviously these are going to be a similar 'survey' style method that almost all classes are up until the college level. In high school Biology, you aren't really learning that much in depth on Biology at all...you get a decent understanding of it though and a good preparation for your college level courses should you undertake those.

I am not completely opposed to religion being taught in schools. It is a part of any decent social studies curriculum. I just think that we need to be careful about how much emphasis we put on it. It is a subject that can eat up all of your resources because no matter how much of it you teach it will always be a highly controversial subject that people will get upset about, and when dealing with a democratically controlled bureaucracy like the school system they have a really bad tendency kowtow to popular demand.

I don't know where people come up with there are 1000's of major religions or even 100's. Counting every different type of Christianity or Islam or Jewish group may be part of the cause, but in the end they are the same religion.

There are about a dozen major religions in the US not counting all the denominations of Christianity. Below that there are hundreds of religions that have anywhere from a couple hundred to tens of thousands of members. It is really hard to get a good count of how many members some religions have because many people do not wish to disclose their religion out of fear.

There are 20 or so top level 'religions' as accepted by most people...teaching 20 or so religions in a general survey type course should not be that problematic and I believe the benefits would outweigh any disadvantages as we approach a world level economy/business market.

I recently heard that Islamic people are truly cannibal and a couple others in the crowd cursed the 'damn arabs' and 'knew that was true'.

These are the exact people that would protest the most aginst a fair survey class on religion, even if it was an elective. Those willing to take such a class probably don't really need it.

 

biff 24 2000

Senior member
Jun 1, 2005
391
1
0
Originally posted by: eits
Originally posted by: Darien
The students of Kansas lose big on this one...

i completely agree with that assessment

thank GOD, that i am a senior this year at a Kansas highschool and wont be taught this Intelligent Design crap.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
Because one of the big arguments that creationists use against scientists is that evolution is not proven in the mathematical sense and therefore is no more valid then ID. You and I can see that argument is like saying that an apple is not blue in the grapefruit sense and therefore is no different then a boat, but they can not because they have the wrong meaning for those words. So instead of arguing using their nonsensical definitions you have to explain that NO scientific theory can be proven in the mathematical sense, and it in fact does not even make sence to try to do so, and then try to explain how science does work.

Evolution != all science. There are a lot of scientists that don't buy all the data so far. Evolution theory is perhaps some of the most shaky of all science.

Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
But it is important to remember that theory is not absolute, because their next argument is going to be about theories that have changed over time. Once again this is their ignorance of the use of the scientific method that leads to this mistake of belief.
Scientific theories have something like mass, the more evidence you collect in favor of it the less likely it is to change. In the rare circumstance that a long held scientific theory does change, the more evidence it had the less it will need to change.
Basically the way it works is that the more evidence you have that a theory is correct the less often and less dramatically it will change. Not because scientists have investiture in it, but because for it to have been able to make all the predictions and pass all the tests to gain that body of evidence it had to be pretty close to right.
It is the concept of diminishing returns.

I am not sure how far along you are in science, some of the points above are strange in explaination. For my background I have had 7 years of college level science, most of which happening at the Junior level and above.

Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
I am not completely opposed to religion being taught in schools. It is a part of any decent social studies curriculum. I just think that we need to be careful about how much emphasis we put on it. It is a subject that can eat up all of your resources because no matter how much of it you teach it will always be a highly controversial subject that people will get upset about, and when dealing with a democratically controlled bureaucracy like the school system they have a really bad tendency kowtow to popular demand.

Well the education process would not entail acceptance of any religion, these would be surveys and histories of them. Any new cirriculum will meet with adversion.

Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
There are about a dozen major religions in the US not counting all the denominations of Christianity. Below that there are hundreds of religions that have anywhere from a couple hundred to tens of thousands of members. It is really hard to get a good count of how many members some religions have because many people do not wish to disclose their religion out of fear.

I am not sure what you are counting as considered major religions, most of them are probably represented by one of the following, I am not sure where the exact cut off is, but I believe a major religion as those below all have at least a half million practicers, the top 3 are in the billions, in total the major religions combined represent about 98% of the worlds population:

Baha'i
Sikhism
Islam
Judaism
Christianity
Buddism
Hinduism
Confucianism
Shinto
Zoroastrianism
Jainism
Spiritism
Primal / African / Diasporics
Unitarian
Rastafarianism
Tenrikyo
Neo-Pagans
Cao Dai
Then a group considered Secular/Non-Religious
even Scientology is considered on of the major ones...

Things like Taoism are not considered a major religion even though it is usually covered in any World Religion course one would take which usually covers:
Baha'i
Buddhism
Christianity
Confucianism
Hinduism
Islam
Jainism
Judaism
Shinto
Sikhism
Taoism
Zoroastrianism

There are a lot of history factors in those above and as such make great sense for a history type class like World Religions.

Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
These are the exact people that would protest the most aginst a fair survey class on religion, even if it was an elective. Those willing to take such a class probably don't really need it.

Right, and protest is common with education. I would say there are very few people that would not benefit from such a class. Many people think their tolerance of a religion is equal to an understanding. I have done a lot of study into ancient religions. Once you do this you see a lot of the same stories being told from different angles.
 

yosuke188

Platinum Member
Apr 19, 2005
2,726
2
0
My teacher is dying over this issue. He cannot believe that people actually even think about teaching Intelligent Design because it does not fit the scientific method. It is just a thought, just as believing that Zeus made the universe. Something in that line is what my teacher says all day long.
 

SMOGZINN

Lifer
Jun 17, 2005
14,359
4,640
136
Originally posted by: alkemyst
There are a lot of scientists that don't buy all the data so far. Evolution theory is perhaps some of the most shaky of all science.

Any scientist that has studied the data and is not convinced has allowed emotion to cloud his judgment. The evidence for natural selection is as convincing as anyone could expect in any field, and is able to make very accurate predictions and has practical applications. Once you accept natural selection all you need for evolution is evidence of natural selection working cumulatively over long periods of time. Fossil evidence shows exactly what natural selection would predict that would look like in the snapshots we are able to get. And the fossil evidence is just the tip of the iceberg there is still mitochondrial DNA tracking and much more that I am in no way qualified to explain.

I am not sure how far along you are in science, some of the points above are strange in explaination. For my background I have had 7 years of college level science, most of which happening at the Junior level and above.

It is never a good idea to try to make an argument from authority on an internet forum. I do not like discussing my educational background over forums, as it means nothing and only my logic can hold any real meaning here. I agree with you that my metaphors were not very apt, I am afraid that I was never very talented as a creative writer. I should have avoided it.
What I was trying to point out was that as a body of evidence for a theory grows so does the reliability of that theory.
If you do not think that evolution has a strong body of evidence supporting it, I suggest you take some courses in genetics, anthropology, or microbiology (or specifically immunology or parasitology) as these fields is where you will find the application of the theory.

Well the education process would not entail acceptance of any religion, these would be surveys and histories of them. Any new cirriculum will meet with adversion.
Good sentiment but the reason we are talking about this again is that the Kansas school board just voted to change the definition of science so they could teach Christian dogma. Do you really believe that a class set up to teach a basic survey of religious beliefs of the world would not become a major magnet for political manipulation?


I am not sure what you are counting as considered major religions, most of them are probably represented by one of the following, I am not sure where the exact cut off is, but I believe a major religion as those below all have at least a half million practicers, the top 3 are in the billions, in total the major religions combined represent about 98% of the worlds population:
[Long list of religions]

I'm not really sure what you are arguing here, but I do not disagree with your statement, and I think that list would be a decent list for a world religion class, and then add to that list locally popular religions for each district.

Right, and protest is common with education. I would say there are very few people that would not benefit from such a class. Many people think their tolerance of a religion is equal to an understanding. I have done a lot of study into ancient religions. Once you do this you see a lot of the same stories being told from different angles.

Your point on education is well taken, and I retract my statement about people not needing to learn more about religion. I have also studied ancient and modern religions, along with cultural norms and social behavior. You see a lot of the same stories told from different angles because we are all pretty much the same, with the same fears and the same loves, and we all have the same basic hopes and aspirations, so we all come up with similar themes to our stories. The real story is that all of us are human and we all have the same basic emotions.

 

SMOGZINN

Lifer
Jun 17, 2005
14,359
4,640
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dmw16

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 2000
7,608
0
0
Seems like a decent number of people think that ID should be presented to the students and then let them decide on their own. I think there are a few problems with this.

1) a scientific theory isnt just something some guy dreams up and writes down and not all students were paying attention during that lesson.

2) teaching ID in a biology classroom gives it scientific credence which it doesnt really deserve. There is no evidence to support ID. Yes animals are complex, but that doesnt mean there has to be a guiding hand

3) Public school systems (esspecially backassward ones) dont generally encourage free thought by students. The kids who ask questions and show creative thinking are given ritalin and told to be quiet (I was one of those kids).
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
19
81
Originally posted by: SMOGZINN
It is never a good idea to try to make an argument from authority on an internet forum. I do not like discussing my educational background over forums, as it means nothing and only my logic can hold any real meaning here. I agree with you that my metaphors were not very apt, I am afraid that I was never very talented as a creative writer. I should have avoided it.
What I was trying to point out was that as a body of evidence for a theory grows so does the reliability of that theory.
If you do not think that evolution has a strong body of evidence supporting it, I suggest you take some courses in genetics, anthropology, or microbiology (or specifically immunology or parasitology) as these fields is where you will find the application of the theory.

I am not sure why you would say that. Originally 'Internet Forums' were exactly for that purpose, statements from authority.

I have no idea why one would have a problem discussing one's educational background, and logic only answers are exactly why there are most of the problems with the whole science vs. religion debates (as indicated in previous posts above).

Also I never said I didn't think evolution theory did not have a strong body of evidence, however; it is a part of science that has some issues. Also there are some Creationists that still believe in evolution, and some that do, but do not think it applies to man.

One of the main problems is people want to say that by accepting evolution you are accepting the non-existance of God(s), the two arguements are mutually exclusive...but always tend to be lumped together.

I have already had courses in the topics you have suggested...but I didn't hear much on evolution in them. However; in my Comparative Anatomy and Physiology courses the topic was almost entirely on evolution and would have been a better example.

I have no doubt that evolution happens. However; the theory to prove that all things evolve has a lot of room to solidify.

The main problem comes from proving it on more complex animals (including man) as these changes cannot be monitored directly in even the course of several lifetimes.