I can't say as I agree with you, Stevewv. You talk about challenging the norm. That is how evolution got there in the first place. The old norm was precisely the assumptions that creation-science now makes. So all creation-science does is to try and turn the clock back. But the human quest for knowledge does not work that way. Once an idea is discarded, it stays discarded, no going b backwards. If science were to move beyond evolution, found something better someday, it would be very different from both evolution and creation science.
I find science is very well aware of fringe material and generally has responded to it. When van Daniken published "Chariot of the Gods," a professor published a major critics of it in a book "Crash Go the Chariots." When I was in gad. school, studying the ancient world of teh Bible, we had lectures by archaeologists who were very open to questions about the ancient-alien theory and, of course, Van Daniken. From my experience, is open to hearing fringe theories, then. Also, in science as well as in other academic disciplines, you can get away with anything you want, provided, and this is really important, you are big enough to pull it off and get away with it. The contemporary world of science is loaded with unorthodox ideas. The is rue of other fields. In my field, theology, it has been said, since the early 60's, that there is no orthodoxy. The reason why fringe theories, such as creation science, have been rejected by science is simply because these guys were not big enough.
As far as promoting fringe theories, the mass media almost goes to overkill with that. Look at al the TV programming o n ancient aliens, shows promoting the idea that the moon landing was a fake, we all know that biblical scholars got it all wrong and the Ark was brought to American and buried, possibly at Oak Island, etc. So don't give me this stuff about mainstream science not hearing or responding to fringe theories. We all are continually bombarded with them, 24/7, by the mass media.
I find science is very well aware of fringe material and generally has responded to it. When van Daniken published "Chariot of the Gods," a professor published a major critics of it in a book "Crash Go the Chariots." When I was in gad. school, studying the ancient world of teh Bible, we had lectures by archaeologists who were very open to questions about the ancient-alien theory and, of course, Van Daniken. From my experience, is open to hearing fringe theories, then. Also, in science as well as in other academic disciplines, you can get away with anything you want, provided, and this is really important, you are big enough to pull it off and get away with it. The contemporary world of science is loaded with unorthodox ideas. The is rue of other fields. In my field, theology, it has been said, since the early 60's, that there is no orthodoxy. The reason why fringe theories, such as creation science, have been rejected by science is simply because these guys were not big enough.
As far as promoting fringe theories, the mass media almost goes to overkill with that. Look at al the TV programming o n ancient aliens, shows promoting the idea that the moon landing was a fake, we all know that biblical scholars got it all wrong and the Ark was brought to American and buried, possibly at Oak Island, etc. So don't give me this stuff about mainstream science not hearing or responding to fringe theories. We all are continually bombarded with them, 24/7, by the mass media.
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