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| | #46 (permalink) |
| FrogSqrl Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 288
| Re: New Scientist on evolution I would still take a scientist trying to hold onto a pet theory over a person holding onto religious dogma. Mainly due to the fact that I haven't read about scientists burning people at the stake or stoning people who act in a way different than their view. Although global warming is starting to take on some of the aspects of religion. Any opposing view or point made is being shouted down or discarded without evaluation. And soon we will be tithing to the religion of global warming as our government takes more control over our lives or diverts more taxes to the religion. As in California where the government seeks to regulate power usage in the home using monitored power meters which can be turned off at the governments discretion. Won't that be fun in 100 degree weather with your Grandparents or children at home. (google: San Francisco chronicle government power meter) When I hear a scientist state that he/she knows what the climate will be in 10-20 years then I know they are lying. No one knows and, if they claim they do, then they have taken on the mantle of proselytizing rather than science. |
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| | #48 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 1,343
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Some religious figures (the vast majority, I'd guess) would rather Mass was not even disrupted, let alone destroyed, Teresa. Seriously, though.... Originally, the weapons were invented for one reason: the belief not only that these weapons could be built, but that the enemy (in this case Nazi Germany) was capable of doing it, would do it if they could and was, in fact, already doing it: hence the Manhattan Project. (As we've seen more recently, intelligence regarding WND production is not always perfect, but they could hardly take the risk that Hitler might develop the Bomb in the middle of the most destructive war this world has ever seen without arming themselves.) |
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| | #49 (permalink) | |
| Prehistoric Irish Cynic Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: California
Posts: 315
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Quote:
Quoth J.D. a few posts ago: "It isn't only the U.S. -- look at how religion and mysticism have made such a resurgence all around the world in recent decades; the more fundamentally superstitious and counter to scientifically observable reality, the better." I would have to say that the U.S. goes it one better by having politics accommodate if not dictate religious expedients. Why else is it okay to reject the Kyoto accords and make big business and the oil empires untouchable? While I agree that some sort of scientific-religious compromise/collaboration is neither likely nor desirable, I find myself harking back to the final scene in the film, Inherit the Wind, in which Spencer tracy as the Clarence Darrow character places The Bible and a copy of The Origin of Species together before walking out of the final scene. Perhaps no synthesis possible, but not altogether mutually exclusive either. Last edited by clovis-man : 6th May 2008 at 11:02 PM. | |
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| | #50 (permalink) | |||
| Wherever I Am, I'm There Join Date: Jan 2001 Location: Greater London
Posts: 11,310
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
"X-rays will prove to be a hoax." -- Lord Kelvin, president, Royal Society, 1895 "Radio has no future." -- Lord Kelvin "Heavier than air flying machines are impossible." -- Lord Kelvin All were proved differently within 10-20 years. | |||
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| | #51 (permalink) | |
| purveyor of tall tales Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Antrim
Posts: 103
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Quote:
Good job power was wrestled away from religious leaders, as nothing with power involved escapes corruption (as history testifies), neither could a proper democracy exist. If power had of remained with religious leaders I strongly believe we would still be in the dark ages. Religious leaders love censorship. Are we talking about the Minds behind science and religion, I believe anyone that is taught natural science, and then left to choose a religion/belief is better equipped to do so, at least they will have choice, opposed to being brain washed as a kid. I know people that have veered away from religion due to disillusionment among other reasons, I don't know of anyone that has done so with science, from what ever background. Arrogance is a human trait found in scientists, policemen and your next door neighbour (if your unlucky), But peers and ombudsmen keep them in check, however your neighbour can be ignored...hopefully ![]() Last edited by TorrnT : 7th May 2008 at 01:04 AM. | |
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| | #53 (permalink) |
| Greybeard Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 401
| Re: New Scientist on evolution The problem about discussing "religion" is that it means very different things to different people. Even ignoring the fact that there are numerous religions and cults (and have been many more in the past), all offering their own conflicting "certainties", there are currently various interpretations of Christianity. Not only in terms of formal organisations with different doctrines - Orthodox (x2), Catholic, Protestant (various) such as Methodist, Baptist, Seventh Day Adventist etc etc - but also within them. So you can get two people nominally of the same variety of Christian faith, one of whom firmly believes that every word of the Bible is true, 6,000 year old Earth and all, while another believes that the Old Testament is largely metaphor and that the true message is in the moral teaching of Jesus. It is noticable that the debate within Christianity tends to polarise opinion. So the fundamentalists may claim it's a choice between "Darwin or Jesus", but of course there is no doctrinal support for such a statement, and the great majority of Christians have no problems with accepting evolution (including the last Pope, although the present one seems a bit wobbly...). Another point to ponder concerning the Bible: not only do interpretations of it differ radically, but it was written by many different people, over a long period of time, and its contents were inevitably shaped by the individual interpretations of the writers. Even the contents of the New Testament were decided by a committee which rejected the majority of the works which were potentially eligible for inclusion. So what we have now has been translated, filtered and edited pretty drastically by error-prone people (with various agendas). To believe in its literal truth is indeed an act of faith, in rather more ways than the churches would probably prefer us to think about! |
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| | #55 (permalink) | ||
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,217
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Quote:
Quote:
And I have to question you, Teresa, on your statement about "weapons of mass destruction". Perhaps not in the sense of an atomic bomb, or a weapon that spreads a bacteriological agent, no. But what about the sort of religious propaganda used to mobilize thousands upon thousands (over the years, millions upon millions) to horrific deeds of inhuman butchery? What were the Crusades, if not such a weapon? What of the Thirty Years' War? Or any other of the bloody conflicts between Catholic and Protestant (both Christian)? Suicide bombings? Kamikaze attacks? The list is nigh endless. And all very easily justified by reference to portions of religious texts or doctrine. (Yes, even the kamikazes, where it amounted to a religion surrounding the head of state.) Not to mention the Inquisition, witch-hunts (and let's not forget the Malleus Maleficarum, or Jamie's Demonology), and the like. If religious figures haven't "invented weapons of mass destruction" in the usual sense, from the evidence, I'd say that's more a matter of simply not having the training in the particular fields necessary to design such, not a matter of inclination.... | ||
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| | #56 (permalink) |
| Prehistoric Irish Cynic Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: California
Posts: 315
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Not to trivialize the discussion, but if anyone caught the "Numbers" episode last Friday on U.S. network TV entitled "Atomic No. 33", there was actually some interesting discussion about the relationship of science & religion in between the chase scenes. Now back to our previously scheduled program. |
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| | #57 (permalink) |
| purveyor of tall tales Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Antrim
Posts: 103
| Re: New Scientist on evolution The Malleus Maleficarum... utter sadism...written by monks no less. (must of got tired of flaying themselves) I had to check up on the creationist side of things.... so I ventured to www.creationism.org and checked up on dinosaurs. At first I thought it was a joke....these people must be terrified of realising there is no divine ultimate purpose to life. Dragons.... I wish. Talk about "clutching at straws". PS. upon further investigation through the site and links, I see quotes from leading scientists and recently released papers by leading scientists....yet where are the names of these credible scientists. If any one reading that web site buys that bunkum, they do not deserve the technical piece of wizardry they are viewing it with. (I will retract this statement if anyone can find a leading scientist that supports dragons lived 2,000 years ago) Last edited by TorrnT : 7th May 2008 at 04:20 PM. |
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| | #58 (permalink) |
| FrogSqrl Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 288
| Re: New Scientist on evolution [quote=Dave;1115593]I think this is spot on. Scientists can themselves be arrogant, of course, just as any human can be. I can give you better examples: "X-rays will prove to be a hoax." -- Lord Kelvin, president, Royal Society, 1895 "Radio has no future." -- Lord Kelvin "Heavier than air flying machines are impossible." -- Lord Kelvin Hmmm.. quoting the same fool three times doesn't really apply. I differentiate between predicting the progress of invention and science and our understanding of nature, climate and the universe. The climate is changing all the time. It never stays the same. We have been on a warming trend since the last ice age. Are we contributing to an accelerated warming? Probably. A 0.5% change in the suns output will affect global temps. A medium sized Volcanic eruption will affect global temps for years. My point is that we are sending kids home from school afraid and depressed about global warming and how we are all going to die, "We have only got 10 years"- Ted Danson 1988. I agree that we should always conserve, develop new technologies to lessen our impact on the environment, and clean up after ourselves. But it is also true that we could do everything right, change our way of life completely, and still have global warming. Do we bankrupt ourselves to do it? Thats the question. It approaches a religion when you cannot consider conflicting evidence and when you make decisions about things without fundamental understanding of possible real world effects. |
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| | #59 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 8,217
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Having read the Malleus Maleficarum, I'd say there's more to it than that; but I did have to grit my teeth to get through large chunks of it, and the rationalizations (even given the period) were amazing examples of cloud-architecture. The most interesting section of the book, for me, is the second, where it deals with the folklore beliefs and legendry -- that is some very interesting stuff. The religiolegalistic rigamarole simply made my head ache.... Believe me, in comparison, I'll take Cotton Mather any time! Incidentally, for anyone interested, both of these little historical tomes are easily available these days; and they do give a great deal of insight into the mindset of the times.... |
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| | #60 (permalink) | |
| Wherever I Am, I'm There Join Date: Jan 2001 Location: Greater London
Posts: 11,310
| Re: New Scientist on evolution Quote:
The fact that there is disagreement among scientists is not a bad thing. It is how science works and progresses. I have noticed that those Creationist websites fail to understand this. They will pick up on the fact that some small elements of modern evolutionary theory are disputed and hold those up to say that since the scientists cannot agree, this is proof the Evolution itself is disputed. | |
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