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Just came across this refreshingly unbiased documentary:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2xyrel-2vI
Some interesting stuff in there that surprised me myself, re how
well-tested Darwin's theory of evolution actually is - and also why it's
so poorly accepted in the US.
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From: Orchid Win7 v1
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 09:57:50
Message: <52da966e$1@news.povray.org>
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On 18/01/2014 03:15 AM, clipka wrote:
> Just came across this refreshingly unbiased documentary:
Although "we requested comment, but they stipulated conditions
incompatible with normal journalistic practise"... yeah, that sounds
nicely vague, doesn't it?
I mean, I'm sure what they *actually* said is "we will only talk to you
if we get to edit out the questions we don't want to answer". But this
authoritative "incompatible with normal journalistic practise" still
sounds slightly creepy.
> Some interesting stuff in there that surprised me myself, re how
> well-tested Darwin's theory of evolution actually is
Looking at the crumbling remains of some barely recognisable bones is
one thing. But when you look at DNA sequences and see how utterly
identical some of them are, and watch how they gradually change as you
move from species to species, and from continent... it's really quite
hard to deny that there's something going on here. It's roughly the
equivalent of *insisting* that the Earth is flat, and that there's no
evidence to the contrary.
> and also why it's so poorly accepted in the US.
This is the thing that gets me. I'm less interested in watching a 2-hour
documentary about "he said, she said, they said", and more interested in
"why the hell do 50% of the population ACTUALLY BELIEVE something which
is obviously ridiculous?"
That, to me, is the issue here. As long as there are unbelievers, there
will be legal battles, there will be death threats, there will be
conspiracies and underhanded tactics to force evolution out. This is not
surprising. The question is, WHY ARE THERE UNBELIEVERS?? Why do people
have these weird beliefs in the first place?
Quantum mechanics makes utterly bizarre claims that defy belief... and
nobody is receiving death threats over teaching quantum mechanics.
Evolution states the obvious, and the entire country is in uproar... WTF?
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From: clipka
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 11:19:03
Message: <52daa977@news.povray.org>
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Am 18.01.2014 15:57, schrieb Orchid Win7 v1:
> On 18/01/2014 03:15 AM, clipka wrote:
>> Just came across this refreshingly unbiased documentary:
>
> Although "we requested comment, but they stipulated conditions
> incompatible with normal journalistic practise"... yeah, that sounds
> nicely vague, doesn't it?
>
> I mean, I'm sure what they *actually* said is "we will only talk to you
> if we get to edit out the questions we don't want to answer". But this
> authoritative "incompatible with normal journalistic practise" still
> sounds slightly creepy.
I interpret it as a means to concentrate on the ID vs evolution thing
and the trial, rather than getting sidetracked on the ID proponents'
behaviour (except where subject of the trial).
>> Some interesting stuff in there that surprised me myself, re how
>> well-tested Darwin's theory of evolution actually is
>
> Looking at the crumbling remains of some barely recognisable bones is
> one thing. But when you look at DNA sequences and see how utterly
> identical some of them are, and watch how they gradually change as you
> move from species to species, and from continent... it's really quite
> hard to deny that there's something going on here. It's roughly the
> equivalent of *insisting* that the Earth is flat, and that there's no
> evidence to the contrary.
I particularly like the 24 vs 23 chromosome thing in apes vs humans.
Perfect case for a testable prediction made by evolution.
>> and also why it's so poorly accepted in the US.
>
> This is the thing that gets me. I'm less interested in watching a 2-hour
> documentary about "he said, she said, they said", and more interested in
> "why the hell do 50% of the population ACTUALLY BELIEVE something which
> is obviously ridiculous?"
In case you haven't noticed, the documentary does mention that hadn't
been taught at US schools until a few decades ago. Which explains a lot.
(According to Wikipedia, in the early 20th century, multiple US states
passed legislation making it outright /illegal/ to teach evolution at
publich schools, and in a provoked test case the legislation was ruled
constitutional; according to the Nova documentary, this caused biology
textbook publishers to remove evolution from the books entirely. Again
according to Wikipedia, it was only until the late 1960's that said
legislation was challegned again, this time with success.)
With that in mind, the utter misunderstanding of the mechanisms of
evolution among older generations of US residents isn't really that
surprising at all.
What makes me optimistic about the issue is that in various recent cases
where US school boards or boards of education had made decisions in
favor of creationism (aka ID, aka Critical Analysis of Evolution, aka
whatever label they'll come up with after that), the next elections of
those bodies have seen proponents of ID lose their seats to outspoken
opponents of ID.
> Quantum mechanics makes utterly bizarre claims that defy belief... and
> nobody is receiving death threats over teaching quantum mechanics.
> Evolution states the obvious, and the entire country is in uproar... WTF?
QM has the advantage of not being inconsistent with the Bible in any
ways (to the contrary, it does open up the door again for the
metaphysical, which had been closed by Newton), so no need to fight a
holy war over it.
And as for Evolution stating the obvious, that's only true in Europe,
because we have been exposed to the idea to such an extent that we're
intimately familiar with the concept.
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From: Orchid Win7 v1
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 11:50:07
Message: <52dab0bf$1@news.povray.org>
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>> This is the thing that gets me. I'm less interested in watching a 2-hour
>> documentary about "he said, she said, they said", and more interested in
>> "why the hell do 50% of the population ACTUALLY BELIEVE something which
>> is obviously ridiculous?"
>
> In case you haven't noticed, the documentary does mention that hadn't
> been taught at US schools until a few decades ago. Which explains a lot.
>
> (According to Wikipedia, in the early 20th century, multiple US states
> passed legislation making it outright /illegal/ to teach evolution at
> publich schools, and in a provoked test case the legislation was ruled
> constitutional; according to the Nova documentary, this caused biology
> textbook publishers to remove evolution from the books entirely. Again
> according to Wikipedia, it was only until the late 1960's that said
> legislation was challegned again, this time with success.)
>
> With that in mind, the utter misunderstanding of the mechanisms of
> evolution among older generations of US residents isn't really that
> surprising at all.
Seriously? They made it illegal to teach people evolution? For 40 years??
Huh. Well, I suppose that explains it all then... o_O
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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 13:08:43
Message: <52dac32b@news.povray.org>
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On Sat, 18 Jan 2014 14:57:39 +0000, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> The question is, WHY ARE THERE UNBELIEVERS?? Why do people
> have these weird beliefs in the first place?
See "The Believing Brain" by Michael Schermer. Or, as I recall, he wrote
a book titled "Why People Believe Weird Things" (or something close to
that.)
Jim
--
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and
besides, the pig likes it." - George Bernard Shaw
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From: Warp
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 14:11:49
Message: <52dad1f5@news.povray.org>
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clipka <ano### [at] anonymousorg> wrote:
> Just came across this refreshingly unbiased documentary:
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2xyrel-2vI
I like this part of the wikipedia article on the Dover trial:
After the trial, there were calls for the defendants accused of not
presenting their case honestly to be put on trial for committing
perjury. "Witnesses either testified inconsistently, or lied
outright under oath on several occasions," Jones wrote. "The
inescapable truth is that both [Alan] Bonsell and [William]
Buckingham lied at their January 3, 2005 depositions. ... Bonsell
repeatedly failed to testify in a truthful manner. ... Defendants
have unceasingly attempted in vain to distance themselves from their
own actions and statements, which culminated in repetitious,
untruthful testimony."
"Honest creationist" really is an oxymoron. I have had discussions with
creationists, and it's incredible how much they are ready to lie, distort
and fabricate, even though honesty ought to be one of the core principles
of Christianity.
I think creationism (especially young-earth creationism), when instilled
enough into a brain, causes a cognitive dissonance where the person just
cannot comprehend that they are willfully lying and distorting, and have
this notion that they are still being honest even though they obviously
are not.
--
- Warp
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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 14:44:35
Message: <52dad9a3@news.povray.org>
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On Sat, 18 Jan 2014 14:11:49 -0500, Warp wrote:
> "Honest creationist" really is an oxymoron.
Something we agree on.
My younger brother, who has a degree in philosophy and religion, has a
good friend who's a young earth creationist, but who has enough of a
science background that he has built some of the most dishonest circular
arguments I've ever seen. If you don't know science, you'll get sucked
into his explanations and citations from "Answers in Genesis" (the people
who brought you - and I'm not making this up - the "Creation Mueseum",
which more or less depicts the time of the dinosaurs as if The
Flintstones were a documentary).
Debating with him is one of the most pointless exercises I've ever
engaged in. It got so bad, that for my own health, I blocked him on
Facebook so I wouldn't have to read his drivel, because it drove my blood
pressure up trying to reason with him.
My premise being this: I disagree with him, he believes his god is
infallible. So, I'm arguing against his god, whom he absolutely believes
in.
Nothing I can say will *ever* change his mind. Hence, no point in
debating with him about it. He's never going to see the reality of the
situation, because it contradicts his deeply held belief that the bible
is never wrong. In his mind, the only way he agrees is if I agree with
him that everything I know to be factual is wrong.
A perfect demonstration of how not to debate a topic.
Jim
--
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and
besides, the pig likes it." - George Bernard Shaw
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From: Warp
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 18:09:12
Message: <52db0998@news.povray.org>
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Jim Henderson <nos### [at] nospamcom> wrote:
> Nothing I can say will *ever* change his mind. Hence, no point in
> debating with him about it. He's never going to see the reality of the
> situation, because it contradicts his deeply held belief that the bible
> is never wrong. In his mind, the only way he agrees is if I agree with
> him that everything I know to be factual is wrong.
This wouldn't be so bad if they just kept to themselves with their
world view. After all, everybody's free to believe whatever they want.
However, the problem is that many of them are trying to *force* their
belief system onto others, especially children, by lobbying the
government and other means. This is not something that we can just
ignore, like we can eg. with the Moon landing conspiracy theorists
(who are obnoxious but at least aren't trying to pass laws to enforce
their beliefs on others.)
I once had a long email conversation with a young-earth creationist
about the subject of honesty, and why most creationist arguments and
tactics are not. For example, I tried to explain to him why quote-mining
is a really dishonest tactic.
(The intellectually honest thing to do when you see an isolated quote
from eg. an evolutionary biologist that seems to go completely against
the theory of evolution is to ask yourself questions like: "Why is this
known biologist seemingly saying something against evolution? Is this
quote possibly taken out of context? What did this person mean by this?
Has he explained what he meant in the rest of the text, or in other texts?
Has he been asked about this and responded, and if so, what did he say
about it?" Then the honest person would try to find out and draw
conclusions only *after* he has all the facts. But no, this is not what
a creationist does. Instead, a creationist is extremely opportunistic:
The isolated quote seems to say something against evolution, and it's made
by a known scientist. To hell what he really meant by it and what else he
has said on the subject, just take the quote and use it as a weapon.
Intended meaning is not important, only the impression that the isolated
quote gives.)
However, no matter how I tried to explain this, it didn't seem to register.
--
- Warp
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From: Patrick Elliott
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 20:03:25
Message: <52db245d$1@news.povray.org>
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On 1/18/2014 11:08 AM, Jim Henderson wrote:
> On Sat, 18 Jan 2014 14:57:39 +0000, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
>
>> The question is, WHY ARE THERE UNBELIEVERS?? Why do people
>> have these weird beliefs in the first place?
>
> See "The Believing Brain" by Michael Schermer. Or, as I recall, he wrote
> a book titled "Why People Believe Weird Things" (or something close to
> that.)
>
> Jim
>
>
>
Hmm. Thought I had that one. But, the one I have is "Paranormality: Why
we see what isn't there.", by Richard Wiseman, but yeah, you're only
missing the extended part of the title.
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From: Patrick Elliott
Subject: Re: should-see for both evolution skeptics and adherents
Date: 18 Jan 2014 20:09:14
Message: <52db25ba$1@news.povray.org>
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On 1/18/2014 12:44 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
> On Sat, 18 Jan 2014 14:11:49 -0500, Warp wrote:
>
>> "Honest creationist" really is an oxymoron.
>
> Something we agree on.
>
> My younger brother, who has a degree in philosophy and religion, has a
> good friend who's a young earth creationist, but who has enough of a
> science background that he has built some of the most dishonest circular
> arguments I've ever seen. If you don't know science, you'll get sucked
> into his explanations and citations from "Answers in Genesis" (the people
> who brought you - and I'm not making this up - the "Creation Mueseum",
> which more or less depicts the time of the dinosaurs as if The
> Flintstones were a documentary).
>
> Debating with him is one of the most pointless exercises I've ever
> engaged in. It got so bad, that for my own health, I blocked him on
> Facebook so I wouldn't have to read his drivel, because it drove my blood
> pressure up trying to reason with him.
>
> My premise being this: I disagree with him, he believes his god is
> infallible. So, I'm arguing against his god, whom he absolutely believes
> in.
>
Yeah, got one of those calling everyone else fools and claiming that
they just don't "see the truth", and quoting Ray Comfort, and AIG, etc.,
while never coming up with anything other than Bible quotes to support
his claims of the infallibility of the Bible, and the truth of god, over
here:
http://yearwithoutgod.com/2014/01/02/am-i-doing-it-wrong
What started out as a fairly sane discussion about someone "trying out"
atheism, and his comment on people telling him that doing so was a bit..
odd, if nor absurd, has turned into nothing but a back and forth between
a few ex-believers, and a full blown creationist. Unfortunately, I
decided to get involved as well, and.. haven't quite gotten around to
getting so completely fed up as to nuke the email updates for the
discussion, and let the rest just go at him.
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