pitabread
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- Jan 29, 2017
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Yours is the misinterpretation.
And you answer that like others here who say they aren't trying to convince anyone of anything, yet here you are trying to convince us, and often...don't you see what a laugh that statement is?
I've been around these discussions long enough to know that trying to "convince" anyone of anything is generally a waste of time. Like I said, if we can achieve mutual understanding, then I consider that a win in and of itself.
For the most part, I'm generally curious how creationists respond to things relative to contemporary environment around science and evolution (particularly evolutionary applications). That and it's interesting to try to dissect some of the arguments put forth for various things.
Yes, you are going to be pre qualified not to use assumptions.
This is vague and still leaves way too much wiggle room for rejecting anything and everything.
For scientific inquiry to have any real meaning rests on making a few basic assumptions about the very nature of our own universe. A prime assumption is that the universe is inherently objective. If we assume otherwise, then it's impossible to draw any meaningful conclusions from any scientific inquiry.
Likewise, hypotheses testing rests on making assumptions particularly around cause-effect relationships of particular phenomena (i.e. if X, therefore Y). If we can't make basic assumptions to form hypotheses, then we've effectively ruled out using the scientific method as a form of inquiry and knowledge gathering.
Finally, scientific theories and modeling invariably involve simplifications and incomplete knowledge. And with simplifications and incompleteness come unknowns and assumptions about those unknowns.
So when you say "you are going to be pre qualified not to use assumptions" I can't help but wonder if this is a wholesale rejection of the scientific method to begin with.
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