By the way, strictly speaking, the study of origins is not science per se because of the lack of observational data.
Blayz, definitely understand the "commercially relevant" comment. There's where true scientists live and where true science is performed [in my view]. more like a crystal or more like a DNA/RNA strand?
True_Blue, why do you insist on saying things like the above quotes? Really? What do
you know about what "science really is"?
What if I told you what "Law" really was? What if I did it after I showed time and again I haven't the slightest idea how any judicial system really works, I just told you what I
felt it should work like?
You have proven time and again you think science is a tool to assist you in making more money. That is fine. It is something that many busines people think. I work in an industry that, like most industries, sees R&D as a "necessary evil" that eats into their precious bottom line. So I'm used to business people's scientifically illiterate attitudes.
But what I find amazing is that you make a variety of sweeping claims about chemistry on this thread, and when you are shown you may be in error in your overgeneralization, you simply ignore or move on. What about
Temperate's Challenge?
I can't help but notice your "expertise" seems to fall apart when you merely have to use
your version of a chemical model to calculate the odds of a reaction and its yield. It is doubly interesting because I suspect you know that Temperate Sea Islander could then
show you how right or wrong you were, and as most Creationists, I sense you are
afraid of that.
I can understand that. You don't know how science is
really done but you
do know what it's like to present a point and then be shown your error in your field. But so many Creationists never put those two things together and they never think they will called on the carpet for a claim in a field outside of their own.
Creationists have a "missing cylinder" of sorts. They know what it's like to be error as all people have experienced that, but they seem incapable of realizing that they could be in error in the sciences despite their not having any real science background! It is as if they think they have God's Shield to protect them.
Well, let's see the power of God's Shield. Use
your model to show us how effectively it is capable of handling a comparatively simple system:
You keep on saying this and people keep on telling you that you are wrong. So lets see how good your probability model is.
Can you use your model to predict the ratios of A, B and C formed in the above reaction.
Use your model to show us what the results are, then we'll have Temperate pull up the actual ratios and we can determine if your model has
even simple merit.
Fair enough?