Thaumaturgy, skepticism is where the rubber of science meets the road.
GOSH! Ya think??? So you, in your logic classes, learned that merely being skeptical of something for wholly specious reasons (like being skeptical of scientific claims because it goes against someone's interpretation of the Bible) means that if, by accident, you stumble onto something that deserves skepticism that the skeptic is thus
correct in their reasoning?
That's like saying I don't believe in the Higgs Boson because my alien friends from Neptune came to me in a dream last night and told me it was wrong. If the LHC fails to find the Higgs, does that mean I'm somehow reasoning correctly to disbelieve the Higgs?
(I really wonder if your legal training has prepared you to think this deeply on a logic proposition.)
Thaumaturgy, if you accept the Bible, you are importing an entire world view into your philosophy.
Well, there ya go. Error #1: you don't get to just randomly choose
which single pieces of data are unquestionable.
Let’s say that the puzzle of life has 1000 pieces. If you believe the Bible, you are fitting perhaps 100 pieces into the puzzle in a particular way
Based solely on wish.
, and by doing so, you set yourself up to fit the remaining pieces the same way as well.
Called BIASING THE DATA. Hint: that isn't a good way to do science. It may be fine for religious faith, but it ain't science. In fact if you bias the data you have made an unrecoverable error. Your conclusions are automatically called into question.
The Bible doesn’t have much to say on a variety of topics, but the paradigm that comes with belief in the Bible does. For example, belief in the Bible implies skepticism that UFOs are the basis of the weird experiences and sights that people in the United States talk about with some regularity.
Have you read
Demon Haunted World by Carl Sagan? It does a nice bit about the UFO belief phenomenon and its analogues in previous supernatural attack beliefs in eras
before UFO's.
Interesting how the Bible allows some people to think there are malevolent invisible spirits attacking people but would keep them skeptical of malevolent visitors from outside of the earth's atmosphere doing the same.
I hardly see one as superior to another. The only reason some Christians may disbelieve in UFO's is because they think God created life
only on earth or some such limited P.O.V.
In other posts, I’ve made a whole bunch of predictions about a bunch of scientific things, usually regarding things that will NOT happen (like creating a sentient computer program, for example).
I haven't seen your sentient computer prediction, but I can tell you from your abiogenesis thread (which you raised earlier), that you are prone to make predictions in sciences you demonstrably don't understand. Ergo, by your fruits I know you.
Those predictions tend to be unpersuasive.
All I can speak to is the chemistry ones, so I'll just say "unpersuasive" is an understatement.
With respect to UFOs, it is reasonable for the Creationist to predict that human or alien technology will never result in the interaction of a human with an extra-terrestrial form of life.
Why? Is it somewhere in the Bible? Why believe the Bible? Is it part of the "world view" you arbitrarily take and bias your data with?
With respect to Creationist predictions that have come true, I’ve mentioned a few, such as the lack of any shred of evidence that life or even a tiny organic molecule ever existed on Mars.
Well, be fair, Martian soil appears to contain a strong oxidant which would render organic life somewhat difficult or the preservation of said life. That isn't really a prediction on Creationism's part. They didn't say "Life on Mars is impossible because the Bible says here in Genesis 3:18 that 'on the vast plains of arctic Mars one will find that perchlorate, a strong oxidant, exists at levels antithetical to God's organic life forms, selah!'". No, Creationists usually don't appear (at least here) to understand organic chemistry or even basic chemistry enough, and certainly the Bible provides them with a
specious argument against life on Mars.
May as well claim that all paths lead to the same destination. Actually in science it usually matters
how you got to the conclusion, not just that you randomly chose a conclusion and just by dumb luck happened to get it right.
(Oh and just to be clear on this: I don't yet dismiss the possibility of life on Mars past or present or life on Europa or other places in the universe. As has been pointed out to you already in your earlier "abiogenesis thread" the fundamental building blocks of life can be formed abiogenically and organics of some complexity are found in meteorites etc.)
It appears there is no evidence that liquid water ever existed on Mars either.
Please, then address this:
NASA Spacecraft Confirms Martian Water, Mission Extended
Maybe you meant flowing surface water? Has that been proven to have never been the case for Mars in the past? I'd be interested to see the data on that.
I did note that some of the recent thoughts on current "spurts" of water as found by evidence of gullies earlier this decade may not have been liquid water, but I don't see where that says surface water has never existed on mars.
So, again, I see no "Creationist Predictions", just ignorance-based guesses and hopes that somehow the failure to find water on Mars will make the Bible somehow "more true".
My other favorite prediction is related to the moon. Evolutionists predicted that the moon would be covered by meters of dust. That’s why they placed large disks on each of the legs of the lunar lander (Eagle)—to keep it from settling into the dust when it landed, much like snowshoes.
Interesting because I've read that Answers in Genesis says to
definitely NOT use this argument:
AIG said:
“Moon-dust thickness proves a young moon.”
For a long time, creationists claimed that the dust layer on the moon was too thin if dust had truly been falling on it for billions of years. They based this claim on early estimates—by evolutionists—of the influx of moon dust, and worries that the moon landers would sink into this dust layer. But these early estimates were wrong, and by the time of the Apollo landings, NASA was not worried about sinking. So the dust layer thickness can’t be used as proof of a young moon (or of an old one, either). See
Moon-dust argument no longer useful and
Moon dust and the age of the solar system (Technical).
(
SOURCE)
Oh my. Sounds like Creationists don't read their own stuff!
Color me surprised.
We’re in essence arguing over something that we have no data on—none of us were around 6000 years ago.
Humans were.
But more importantly rocks were that were recording what was going on quite fine, thank you.
Just because
you can't understand what the rocks tell scientists doesn't mean
everyone is equally ignorant.
Please don't confuse
your limited knowledge with everyone else.
and meager scraps of data, plus really old books to which a few “quacks” ascribe a divine origin. One of my bases for believing the Bible and disbelieving evolution relates to prophecy, Thaumaturgy.
-yawn-
I would think you would be interested in prophecy on that basis.
I was until I started to learn more about what prophecies are in the Bible and how they are "interpretted".
I used to be similarly fascinated by Nostradamus' "prophecies". Then I started to read more.
I don’t know of any other religion with a good prophetic basis.
Christians say that all the time. But does anyone bother to discount the Islamic "prophecy" that Israel would be re-established?
Some believe that
Sura 17:104 foretells the re-establishment of Israel.
'And we said to the Children of Israel afterwards, "Go live into this land. When the final prophecy comes to pass, we will summon you all in one group."'
Thaumaturgy, with respect to Creationists in the field of science, the university and scientific community is diametrically opposed to Creationism.
I've not read any good science for creationist scientists. I've read simplistic attempts to "poke holes" in standard science in hopes of using an "Excluded Middle" logicl fallacy to get their point pushed into schools. But other than poor science or misunderstood technical details, I've seen no valuable material come out Creationists scientists.
Maybe if they got their game together... And spent a wee less time proclaiming "persecution".
Most of my professional career is in finance.
And that means now I can make wholly uninformed complaints about our economy and blame it on "Mainstream Financial People" for keeping my unique and uninformed ideas on economics out of the main stream?
I happen to believe that the federal reserve system should be abolished because I think it is harmful for the federal government to fix interest rates. Do you think I would succeed and rise through the ranks of the Federal Reserve, given that I think the whole institution should be abolished?
Are we still talking science here? Or are you trying to divert the discussion into something you feel more comfortable in? Why don't you debate financial people over in "Financial Theology" forums?
Absolutely not. I would never join the Federal Reserve, and if I did, I would hate my job, and if I in fact enjoyed my job, I would never get promoted.
Are we still talking persecution here?
In law school, I wrote a paper against the recognition of transsexual sex changes in the law. There were perhaps a 1000 papers written nationwide in favor of legal recognition of sex changes, and zero against, despite the overwhelming scientific data that transsexuals cannot change their sex. My paper would have been the first from this perspective ever published by a law school. My paper was selected for publication, then deselected after a faculty member who litigated in favor of transsexuals got wind of it, and pressured the law review board to deselect my paper.
So you are saying because there are bad people out there who twist things to their own agenda that all of science is engaged in a systemic attack on valid creationist science?
Gee, if the creationists would just publish some good science
somewhere it might make their argument more compelling. Do creationists have access to printing presses? They have access to the Intarwebs and yet all we see from them is poor science like the RATE Group publishes.
Oh well. Maybe the Vast International Interwebs Conspiracy of Atheists (VIICA) is keeping the good stuff of the servers and out of Google.
I learned very quickly that I would never succeed in law school academia, even if I so desired.
OK. I've read quite a few of your posts and...
People who want to be tenured geology professors in main line universities will never do so as long as they try to publish Creationist-oriented articles. Don’t kid yourself, Thaumaturgy.
Has a Creationist ever written a good solid robust scientific paper that was in any way compelling that didn't include a fundamental starting bias (Bible = De Facto Correct data point)? Please post the link! I think we'd all love to see it.
HINT: A person who writes learned articles on the genus and species of magical rainbow unicorns is also unlikely to get tenure in a biology program unless and until they prove such unicorns likely exist.
A person who writes learned articles about how the U.S. Constitution is based on Neptunian Glorzab Legal Systems brought here by Zervenzian the Gas Giant in 920 BC is unlikely to get tenure in a legal department unless and until he or she proves that Neptune was the source of any life that visited earth at any time and that such laws were brought to earth and that the Founding Fathers had access to those laws.
Just because someone wishes it earnestly isn't what earns tenure.
No one is arguing there isn't politics in any academic setting. But again, if Creationists were to start doing science and stop with the persecution complex then maybe they'd be taken seriously, but unfortunately most Creationists start with some serious and significant fundamental flaws and data biases which make their conclusions questionable from the start.
All Hail the VIICA!