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'Easy to be an atheist if you agnore science' [moved]

Jimmy D

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Have you heard of the Catholic Church?

I think your confusion is arising from the fact that you wrongly equate biology with atheism.
 
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bhsmte

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Is this why when id's prize witness, dr. Behe, had to admit under oath during the dover trial; if id is considered science, than astrology would also be considered science?
 
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Radrook

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Radrook

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Have you heard of the Catholic Church?

I think your confusion is arising from the fact that you wrongly equate biology with atheism.
I don't consider abiogenesis biology.
In fact, it doesn't even qualify as part of nature since it has NEVER been observed to occur in nature and nature cannot be FORCED to obediently display in a lab.

Essentially the problem is this:

You want us to view something that quacks like a duck, waddles like a duck, smells like a duck and flies like a duck and if you cook it even tastes like a duck and in all other essential ways qualifies as a duck and say that it isn't a duck. To which we reply with ""Nuts!""
 
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Jimmy D

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I thought that we were talking about evolution?
 
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DogmaHunter

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Unfortunately that constitutes a false analogy. In short, you are now desperately resorting to mindlessly comparing apples and mangoes with a slab of roasted beef.


Nope. This analogy actually comes from the horse's mouth, namely mr Behe.

On the Dover trial, the guy flat out admitted that if ID is to be considered scientific, then the same goes for astrology.

Q But you are clear, under your definition, the definition that sweeps in intelligent design, astrology is also a scientific theory, correct?

A Yes, that's correct.

This is not me saying it, it is one of the leading ID proponents (also known as cdesign proponentsists ) that said this.

Read carefully: according the Michael Behe, one of the leads in the ID "movement", if ID is a scientific model, then so is astrology.

What you don't resort to is a detailed analyses of why your argument is irrational and why the argument of ID is isn't.

What argument?

From the Dover trial, it is crystal clear that cdesign proponentsists had to redefine what a scientific model is, in such a way that it includes pseudo-science like astrology, in order to be able to call ID a scientific model.

Again, this is not me saying it. It is one of the leads of the ID movement that admitted to it.
 
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Speedwell

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Radrook's position is typical of Creationists generally.

They are indoctrinated with a made-up version of the theory of evolution, the purpose being to convince them that the theory of evolution is obviously false and being knowing promoted as such by wicked atheists for the purpose of denying the Bible.
The problem is, that when they argue against it in forums like this, they are arguing against the made up version, rather than the real thing, and look ridiculous. The derision they experience is then assumed to be directed against God and the Bible, rather than their erroneous understanding of real science.
 
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Radrook

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Radrook

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I really don't care if his name be Behehehe or Behahaha! Or if he is a leading proponent, component, or exponent of the ID. He isn't my representative. His opinion is his and mine is mine.

Also, since there is a persistently pernicious habit of quoting things out of context and otherwise infusing garbled meaning into otherwise perfectly sane statements, I would have to read the original article or hear the original discussion myself in order to ascertain if that is what he actually said or meant. As it stands, that self incriminating interpretation sounds powerful fishy to me. I mean, if you can glibly misquote Saint Paul as you just did a few posts back, then it stands to reason that everyone whom you tag as a believer in an ID is fair game in your book.
 
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Radrook

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Well, there you go again Jimmy! I don't have any version of evolution in mind. Neither am I arguing against any particular version. You are confusing abiogenesis with the evolution theory.
 
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Speedwell

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Well, there you go again Jimmy! I don't have any version of evolution in mind. Neither am I arguing against any particular version.

"Sorry but I cannot fathom complex organic computers, complicated organic cameras, lifelong functional three-chambered and four chambered organic pumps, and all the other intricate organization which shouts planning and mind as merely the result of fortuitous mindlessness dependent on millions of happy highly improbable accidents. No degree in physics is needed to detect fallacious reasoning and reaching that conclusion is fallacious reasoning par excellence.."


That's your version. Not the same as the real thing.



You are confusing abiogenesis with the evolution theory.
At the present time there is no complete and coherent theory of abiogenesis, only speculations, and no real scientist pretends otherwise. In any case, even the speculations are more plausible than anything creationism has to offer.
 
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Radrook

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That was a generic generalization and not any specific criticism of any specific theory of evolution.
If indeed it is flawed, then point out the flaw instead of saying that it is flawed.
Tell me exactly where I am misrepresenting the evolution theory.

Less plausibility, Naaaah! That is just the same ole ""I jist cain't see cuz I refuse to see so there!" chant being conveniently deployed for a pathetic lack of something better. Actually, there are speculations of how life emerged which involve alien intervention that are far more plausible than your pop-goes-the weasel, billions-happy unprovable accidents story. But thanks for being consistently illogical since that means I won't waste my time in fruitless discussion with someone too keen on conveying a self-inflicted lobotomy to be able to engage in any meaningful discussion.

Really, absolutely no theory? Well, if indeed that is the case then the smug posturing, as if it were certain fact, is even more reprehensible because involves a far greater effort to deceive and a far more blatant disregard for the scientific method which condemns such chicanery.
 
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Astrophile

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The problem is that, if our understanding of cosmology, star formation and the origin of the Earth is even approximately correct, there was a time when there was no life anywhere in the universe, and a fortiori no life on Earth, whereas now there certainly is life on Earth. In other words, life must have originated somehow from non-life.

The elements of life were produced in the Big Bang (hydrogen) or by nuclear reactions in stars (everything else), and they combined in interstellar space and elsewhere to form non-living organic compounds, which still exist in comets and some asteroids and meteorites.

If you accept this, how do you think that life originated? Do you think that God put appropriate organic compounds, made by natural processes, together to make the first living organisms? Alternatively, do you think that God created plants, fungi, animals, micro-organisms, viruses, etc., out of nothing and in essentially their present form? Would you like to explain your own ideas on the matter rather than merely denying the possibility of abiogenesis?
 
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DogmaHunter

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I really don't care if his name be Behehehe or Behahaha! Or if he is a leading proponent, component, or exponent of the ID. He isn't my representative. His opinion is his and mine is mine.

His opinion is the very model you are promoting here. ID.


Well... it WAS in court and he WAS under oath.

Here's the transcript. Have fun.

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/dover/day11pm.html

When you have to redefine what a "scientific theory" is to include just about any crazy idea someone's imagination can come up with, just so you can call your own crazy idea a "scientific theory", it's safe to conclude that your idea has a few problems.

I mean, if you can glibly misquote Saint Paul as you just did a few posts back
Please give the link to the post where I supposedly quoted anything from the bible.

, then it stands to reason that everyone whom you tag as a believer in an ID is fair game in your book.

Funny. Behe is one of the people that came up with it.

He's not just "promoter" or "believer" or "follower".
He's the guy behind the "irreducible complexity" nonsense.
 
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Speedwell

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"Millions of happy highly improbable accidents" is not part of the real theory of evolution.

Not my story--but tell me, where did these aliens come from? In fact, you haven't given us your theory of abiogenesis at all.

Indulging in what is clearly identified as speculation is chicanery?
 
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Radrook

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As I clearly pointed out, the chicanery is acting as if it were undeniable fact. Anyone watching the documentaries about possibility of life on other worlds and on how life arose on Earth is immediately aware of that conveyed sense of certainty. It is never "ÏF" it happened" but it is always "How it must have happened". Claiming not to see that certainty as demonstrated in those documentaries itself constitutes chicanery.

 
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