Thank you TMT, long time no hear. How are you? How was/is your book?
It was very good. I followed it up with
Radium Girls, a book about the radium dial painters in the early 20th century and how it related to industrial hygiene movements and the interplay with women's movements around the time.
I think this is good advice. Just one small disagreement. Perhaps, it might be a little off the mark suggesting that creationists on the forum think that if they learn one or two words or phrases they are going to make a big tsunami in the field.
I'd say overturning a couple centuries of solid steady scientific work by countless individuals would be tsunami-like.
I only expect to be able to state my point of view and in turn hear that of others.
But don't be surprised when someone points out, quite brusquely, errors. While your "correlation" discussion wasn't an "error", many times creationists post errors and scientists are often hard-nosed on things like this.
The constant posts from YEC's about the Second Law of Thermodynamics is a good example. It is posted with poor understanding and when the scientists
repeatedly correct the poster, it finally gets frustrating enough to bring out the big guns.
So are you suggesting that until people have the educational knowledge that you have that they should not post on this forum?
Not at all. What I fail to understand is how creationists can repeatedly come to the table, ignorance proudly on display, be corrected over and over and over again, and fail to ever take any
new information away from the discussion.
But more importantly, something we all learn in science is that you will make mistakes and not every time will you land on soft-fluffy pillows.
Everyone of us who've gone on for advanced degrees have stood in front of senior faculty and put our foots firmly in our mouths and many many times we've had the faculty
laugh at us, or literally
rip us a new one.
As I've said before, it's a fire you have to be forged in. You may have put yourself through other, equally difficult situations, but when it comes to science many creationists don't understand that for us, we have been forged in this particular fire. We've made the same
rookie mistakes you all are actively making.
And sadly we are probably treating you as we were treated, but it bears fruit if you bother to learn from the experience.
Unfortunately in a debate forum creationists can run away to their secret hiding places to lick their wounds instead of staying with the fire.
My wife's advisor in grad school was a prime-grade A jerk. He was a monster to her and all his grad students. I took a few of his classes and he was a jerk in the classes.
The thing was, he was brilliant. He was one of the smartest scientists I've met. In his classes if you didn't know your stuff when you went into class you
rued that day. You were eviscerated and made fun of. The thing you learned was
not to run away, but to come to class the next day
prepared for the fight.
I learned more in some of his classes than I had in many many other classes.
I don't like the guy but I respect the guy. I realized then that I have to have the discipline imposed on me.
Expect when arguing science that a scientist is going to push back and push back hard.
Maybe not all of them, but you will get more than fluffy bunnies thrown at you in a science debate.