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extropalopakettle
No offense, but....
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casinopete
Emergency Backup Antrax
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 2:30 am Post subject: 2 |
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| the article wrote: |
| In addition, the board rewrote the definition of science, so that it is no longer limited to the search for natural explanations of phenomena. |
*is frozen between numerous kinds of reaction* |
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Leptonn
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 3:41 am Post subject: 3 |
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Neo and statemates, my deepest sympathies. May we all take your loss as motivation to campaign against similar inept decisions in our own geographical regions.
Fortunately, The Vatican seems to be quite firmly on the side of science in this issue. |
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Courk
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 3:45 am Post subject: 4 |
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| Umm... Wow. |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 4:07 am Post subject: 5 |
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| I have a feeling my science teacher might be a little appalled. |
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Leptonn
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 5:04 am Post subject: 6 |
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| I have an appalling feeling, myself. Almost as if I threw up inside my mouth. |
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alphatango
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 5:38 am Post subject: 7 |
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This is all a bad dream, right? *pinches self* _________________ "Hanging is too good for a man who makes puns; he should be drawn and quoted." -- Fred Allen
Keeper of the Eternal Flame of the Inner Geek. |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 5:56 am Post subject: 8 |
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i'm more surprised the vatican defended evolution. am glad, too...maybe i'm not such a heretic after all 
Last edited by worm on Wed Nov 09, 2005 6:55 am; edited 1 time in total |
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extro...
Guest
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Samadhi
+1
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 9:50 am Post subject: 10 |
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| worm wrote: |
i'm more surprised the vatican defended evolution. am glad, too...maybe i'm not such a heretic after all  |
Don't worry, if you use a rubber you're still a heathen. _________________ And he lived happily ever after. Except for the dieing at the end and the heartbreak in between. |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 10:00 am Post subject: 11 |
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yeah i know, that's why i'm one of eight
hasn't been much of an issue for me lately  |
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Mackay
Saviour of Spiders
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Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 11:12 am Post subject: 12 |
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*blames the knee*  |
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extro...
Guest
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extro...
Guest
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Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 12:44 am Post subject: 14 |
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| Now, we all know that "Intelligent Design" is supposed to be science, and not religion, and that it's been quite careful to avoid claiming God is the designer. And yet, after the people of Dover, Pennsylvania voted out the incumbent school board that supported addressing intelligent design in science classes, televangelist Pat Robertson announced that they rejected God from their city. All because they voted against the teaching of an alleged scientific theory? |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 12:51 am Post subject: 15 |
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| i thought he normally waits to claim that until after a natural disaster has struck. |
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Leptonn
Guest
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Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 2:47 am Post subject: 16 |
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| Nah, Pat Robertson is on the inside track with G-Man. It was Robertson's influence that opened up the two recently-vacated Supreme Court seats. |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2005 2:57 am Post subject: 17 |
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any condolences to us virginians for having pat?
not that we claim him or anything. |
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Guest
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Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 6:03 pm Post subject: 18 |
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| worm wrote: |
i'm more surprised the vatican defended evolution. am glad, too...maybe i'm not such a heretic after all  |
They kinda have been since Pope John Paul II wrote a letter about it many years ago. |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 6:26 pm Post subject: 19 |
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didn't know that. am i a heretic for not keeping up with papal communications?
guess it makes sense (to me, anyway) that teaching evolution vs. creationism in catholic schools would've come up long before intelligent design became an issue. since they taught us evolution in both of my bio classes, i should've known the Vatican wasn't against it.
will the private schools in kansas teach intelligent design? |
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Guest
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Posted: Sun Nov 13, 2005 9:06 pm Post subject: 20 |
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| Governments have much less control over private schools. |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Tue Nov 15, 2005 11:48 pm Post subject: 21 |
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I've been researching evolution for a speech that I have to give, and I'm a little confused. Could someone help me out?
My main thing is Occam's Razor. 'Given two equally predictive theories, choose the simpler.' Now, that is used by evolutionists to reject intelligent design because it is more complex. (That's how I understand it.) However, I myself see that I could use that to reject evolution by saying it is simpler to believe a single entity created everything rather than millions of chance occurences brought us to where we are now. Am I misunderstanding Occam? Does that even make sense? (It probably doesn't. ) |
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extro...
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 12:45 am Post subject: 22 |
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I think "God did it" fails as an explanation because it attempts to explain something we don't yet fully understand by proposing a cause we understand even less. If we accept the "intelligent designer" as a cause, this makes the problem of truly understanding the matter a bigger one, not a smaller one. Evolution attempts to explain the diversity of life on earth, and the patterns observed in the fossil record, by proposing an explanation built on simpler concepts that we understand.
You can't measure the simplicity of "God did it" as an explanation by the apparent simplicity of the sentence "God did it". You may as well say "X did it". What is "X"? Well, in the name of simplicity, don't ask. Just accept. That is simplest.
Furthermore, it goes beyond whether or not "God did it" is a simpler explanation, or simpler predictive theory. Is "God did it" an explanation, or a predictive theory, at all? If so, why constrain it to biology? We have laws of physics that tell us how celestial objects move relative to one another. Occassionally we will observe some object in space with an unexplained "wobble" or other odd motion that isn't explained by the laws, unless we conjecture that some other object exists nearby, which we can not see. And then later, usually, we will find some other evidence of that object. Wouldn't it be simpler to just say "God did it" whenever we see anything we don't understand, and leave it at that? Drop an apple, it falls to the ground. "God did it." But wait, you say - it happens every time - I see a pattern. But remember: KISS - Keep It Simple, Stupid! Pattern, shmattern - God did it! Why would we ever spend more than a millisecond trying to understand anything we observe, when we have immediately at hand a much simpler explanation than anything else that could possibly be hoped for: God did it. But, in fact, "God did it" does not explain anything, and does not constitute a predictive theory. |
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extro...
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 12:54 am Post subject: 23 |
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| Perhaps a simple answer: Intelligent Design proposes the existence of an intelligent designer. Evolution proposes only mechanisms and processes which we already know occur (mutation, genetic inheritance, natural selection). |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 12:55 am Post subject: 24 |
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I get it. I think.
So, technically, Occam's Razor cannot be used to dispel Intelligent Design, just as Intelligent Design cannot be used to explain life. Is that correct? |
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extro...
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 1:31 am Post subject: 25 |
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| Jedo the Jedi wrote: |
| So, technically, Occam's Razor cannot be used to dispel Intelligent Design ... |
I think it can.
We know genes exist. We know they determine the nature of the organism. We know some random subset of them are passed on to offspring, mixing with a random subset of genes from the other parent in sexual organisms. We know mutations occur, and randomly occuring mutations is a simplest assumption. We know such mutations will occassionally create individuals that are more likely to produce more offspring, and most will create individuals that are less likely to produce many offspring. These are all things we know exist or occur. These are wgat evolution uses in it's explanation. They don't go away under "intelligent design" - ID just adds something unseen an undetected to the known universe to make it's explanation. |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 4:37 am Post subject: 26 |
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| My point in saying that was if ID is not a predictive theory, and Occam's Razor can only apply to predictive theories, then Occam's Razor cannot be applied to ID because it is not a predictive theory. |
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Lepton
1:41+ Arse Scratcher
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 8:51 am Post subject: 27 |
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Occam's Razor shouldn't be used, period. It is sometimes entertaining in retrospect, but has never been successfully used as a predictive tool.
For example, consider General Relativity. I can assure you that the equations of GR are much more complicated than those of any Newtonian theory. A naive scientist, applying Occam's Razor, would conclude that GR shouldn't be correct. (for the argumentative, GR at the time didn't predict any new effects, only modifications to currently-understood effects - the precession of Mercury's perihelion, the bending of light rays near massive objects) However, we now believe GR to be correct.
A correct application of Occam's Razor would recognize that GR's explanation of gravity is simpler than the Newtonian explanation, because it provides a theoretical motivation for this action-at-a-distance. However, this is something that wasn't realized at the time. |
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extro...
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 9:46 am Post subject: 28 |
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| Lepton wrote: |
| Occam's Razor shouldn't be used, period. |
But ...
| Quote: |
| A naive scientist, applying Occam's Razor, would conclude that GR shouldn't be correct. |
| Quote: |
| A correct application of Occam's Razor would recognize that GR's explanation of gravity is simpler than the Newtonian explanation ... |
Wouldn't that lead to the conclusion that it shouldn't be applied naively (as opposed to applying it correctly)? |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 7:02 pm Post subject: 29 |
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the opinion page at my school's paper was littered with id discussion today. one caught my attention (emphasis added):
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...The ancient Egyptians understood the principle of entropy, which runs contrary to the theory of evolution. How do scientists explain the repetitive, spontaneous advancement in the complexity of life, when there is a million times more evidence to support entropy than evolution? I agree that organisms can respond to their environments, but why do such responses increase complexity rather than decrease it? Also, I doubt very seriously the ability of anyone to approximate the atmospheric conditions of earth billions of years ago, and therefore spontaneously "create" life. How stable are these complex amino acids formed by the scientific experiments?
Ryan Morris
International relations major
Brigham-Young University |
in my mind, entropy and evolution are intimately intertwined. mutation, so necessary for evolution, seems like a tiny victory for entropy over the time-tested, highly-ordered machinery that replicates genes. the increase in order in organisms may seem contradictory to entropy, but just because something is disfavored entropically doesn't mean it can't happen (that would severely limit the reactions i could run). it just means there has to be some other force driving the process.
in the case of evolution, external pressures and surviving long enough to pass on genes are the driving force. scientists have been doing this artificially in the lab to produce genes and microorganisms with desired properties. certainly, they introduce mutations intentionally and on a faster time scale than nature and their external pressures are more deliberate and often lethal to unobliging individuals. still, coupled with the fossil record, it seems like such a small mental leap from those experiments to the natural process.
i'm just left with the question: what would id'ers accept as proof of evolution? |
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Jedo
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 9:07 pm Post subject: 30 |
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Coupled with the fossil record? You're joking, right?
I'd like an explanation on the validity of these fossil records. As far as I can tell, there is not a single ounce of proof lying in these records. Perhaps I am misunderstanding.
(Sorry about hijacking this thread, but I figured it was the most appropriate place.) |
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Jedo
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 9:12 pm Post subject: 31 |
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| On a side note, though not altogether disconnected, how does Occam's Razor apply to the business of 'dark matter'? I suppose dark matter is the most simple explanation for why our universe does not add up? |
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worm
unregistered
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 10:22 pm Post subject: 32 |
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i wouldn't say you're hijacking. maybe it's a little redundant to have a discussion here and the making monkeys out of us thread in OT, but who cares
| Jedo wrote: |
Coupled with the fossil record? You're joking, right?
I'd like an explanation on the validity of these fossil records. As far as I can tell, there is not a single ounce of proof lying in these records. Perhaps I am misunderstanding. |
uh, no, wasn't joking. are you? is that really jedo?
could you be more specific about your gripe with the fossil record? are you a "natura non facit saltus" fella who just doesn't like the gaps? something else? |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 10:44 pm Post subject: 33 |
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Yes, that was really me.
I assume by 'fossil record' you mean the business about geologic dating. Is that right? If so, then it really proves nothing at all, unless there is of course a method that I am not familiar with. As it stands, the logic behind it is faulty, as far as I can tell. *mutters something about circular reasoning and radioactive dating* |
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Chuck
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 10:56 pm Post subject: 34 |
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Book thrown at proponents of Intelligent Design
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Forrest compared early drafts of Of Pandas and People to a later 1987 copy, and showed how in several instances the word “creationism” had been replaced by “intelligent design”, and “creationist” simply replaced by “intelligent design proponent”.
“Forrest’s testimony showed that ID is not a scientific theory, but a Trojan horse for creationism,” said Eric Rothshild of Pepper Hamilton in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, an attorney for the plaintiffs. |
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extro...
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 10:58 pm Post subject: 35 |
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| Jedo the Jedi wrote: |
| I assume by 'fossil record' you mean the business about geologic dating. |
You don't have to use radioactive dating to notice that around the world there are layers, with older stuff in lower layers, newer stuff in higher layers. You can see what came before what.
Besides, what is wrong with radioactive dating? |
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Leptonn
Guest
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 11:28 pm Post subject: 36 |
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Occam's Razor:
extropalopakettle, you are correct: Occam's razor should not be applied naively. But how does one apply the concept in a non-naive fashion to a physical theory that is not yet understood? It is a hauling-oneself-by-the-bootstraps problem: we almost never know *how* to apply the razor before we know whether the theory is correct from empirical means.
Dark matter is a good example of this: there are lots of ideas (WIMPs, MACHOs, MOND, etc - in other words, dark matter = unseen particles/unseen stars/new physics). However, which one is correct? They all offer a reasonable degree of predictive power, and many of the explanations seem to have comparative simplicity. But I am sure that, in the future, we will look back and say "why did we ever think it could be particles/planets/new physics?" |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 12:26 am Post subject: 37 |
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| extro... wrote: |
| Jedo the Jedi wrote: |
| I assume by 'fossil record' you mean the business about geologic dating. |
You don't have to use radioactive dating to notice that around the world there are layers, with older stuff in lower layers, newer stuff in higher layers. You can see what came before what.
Besides, what is wrong with radioactive dating? |
I have nothing wrong with the fact that older stuff is in lower layers, and newer stuff is in higher layers. My problem comes when they use the fossils to date the rock layers, and then the rock layers to date the fossils. Complete bullshit.
For radioactive dating, I find that it is somewhat fallable. I might misunderstand some of the stuff, but it seems like there would be some problems with it. First, in regards to carbon dating, carbon can only date back so many years until there is no longer any carbon-14 left in the organism. Second, in regards to other radioactive elements used for dating, I understand that some of that is dependent upon the amount of the element in the atmosphere both now and then, so there is some natural fluctuation in the time. That doesn't sound at all consistent and useable as proof. Correct me if I'm wrong, but that's what I have gathered from my non-extensive readings.
That makes sense, Lepton. Basically, Occam's Razor is a retrospective principle that isn't really a proof, but rather a flimsy explanation. How does that sound? My meaning behind that is to say that it has no scientific merit in that it does not prove that something is how it is, but rather decides what we should believe until fact is presented.
Try this example on for size. We are on a playground and see a kid swinging very high in a swing. According to Occam's Razor, we should believe that the kid, through his own force of will, got himself that high. That is the simplest explanation. However, in reality, the parent sitting on the other side of the playground pushed him that high. In this case, Occam's Razor was wrong, but it gave us a plausible explanation, albeit the wrong one. |
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Dread Pirate Westley
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 1:56 am Post subject: 38 |
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| Quote: |
| For radioactive dating, I find that it is somewhat fallable. I might misunderstand some of the stuff, but it seems like there would be some problems with it. First, in regards to carbon dating, carbon can only date back so many years until there is no longer any carbon-14 left in the organism. Second, in regards to other radioactive elements used for dating, I understand that some of that is dependent upon the amount of the element in the atmosphere both now and then, so there is some natural fluctuation in the time. That doesn't sound at all consistent and useable as proof. Correct me if I'm wrong, but that's what I have gathered from my non-extensive readings. |
True. Carbon dating is only accurate for around 10 half lives of the isotpe (Around 5700 years). But for potassium-argon dating, the half life is on the order of 1 billion years. And it's not dependant on the amount of the element in the atmosphere then and now, it's dependant on the amount of the isotope and the decay product now. If I give you a rock and there's the same amount of K-40 and Ar-40 in it, then it's one half life old. The fact that there was more or less K-40 a billion years ago is irrelevant. |
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Leptonn
Guest
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Posted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 2:09 am Post subject: 39 |
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Right, Jedo, good example. In retrospect, we could think about how much work the kid would have had to exert to order to get herself so high on the swing, and it is natural to invoke another participant. However, until we have reason to believe that the parent-pusher hypothesis is reasonable (for example, if we saw the parent pushing other kids or whatnot), this guess is not on equal footing with the self-propelled theory.
I am not sure that you have your facts straight when it comes to radioactive dating. In my view, it is remarkably accurate, and since it is based on a simple and well-understood physical principal, quite robust. |
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Jedo the Jedi
Paragon in Training
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Posted: Thu Nov 17, 2005 3:43 am Post subject: 40 |
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So, you are saying that until we see verifiable evidence of Intelligent Design, we can't believe it to be true, even though it may be? Scientifically speaking, that is.
I love wikipedia.
This business about radioactive dating really seems sketchy to me, regardless of how much sense it might make. How do these rocks absorb these elements? What is this business about "blocking temperatures"? Could someone perhaps summarize this stuff in laymen's terms? |
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