Are you referring to the laughter I was mentioning? You must have misinterpreted, this would be laughter of surprise at the absurdity of someone thinking that these ordinary people, who turn up each morning to melt some ice, extract some samples and run some isotopes in a mass spectrometer are part of some global conspiracy to lie to the public. I don't know how you could possibly get to 'cheapening' from that, or the 'kids' (who are they, this time?) beginning to doubt. Beginning to doubt what? And what question don't scientists want to field?
Ahem "idiocy" is left then. Whenever you use language trying to address science speculation and hypothesis, you stop the inquiry process of science and thus, yes, cheapen it. It stops the very thing you'd foster. You aren't a teacher so it doesn't matter, but again, I've seen this from professors. They ruined scientific inquiry by squelching it as 'idiocy.' As far as the laughter, again, imho premature. If one has a slight grasp, immature questions are to be expected. I suppose I'd laugh if a kid without Algebra asked if 3n + 4 = 7 but I haven't to date, not even as a teacher, that I'd seen it that often, but it did occasionally come up with grade school kids, looking on.
Have you ever met a scientist? They are ordinary human beings with mortgages and blocked drains to deal with.
I'm not really sure how to answer your question meaningfully. Do you know of many people who have never met a scientist? :idunno:
I don't understand how it is equivocation, or flawed. I don't think it is a matter of me not being about to see them, either.
Forensics is about what is known. We have viable DNA. We have current fingerprints. If you wait for even 10 years, those may no longer be viable. A thousand years? Less. We still cannot find out who Jack the Ripper was or see the DNA on the bullets that killed JFK.
So no, I'm not questioning forensics because it is genuinely removed from age extrapolations. We know the age of trees by their rings, for instance. O
r do we? If you can't do it with a tree that is only hundreds of years old....
Yes. But Bill Nye talking generally on TV is not science. It is science communication, and that is a specialist skill which demands the audience be taken with the communicator in the limited time available. It should be accurate, but cannot be detailed if it is going to be effective.
Agreed. It was but for example of the mention. I still enjoy the show.
And all children are atheist at birth. The belief that a possibly real man who lived 2000 years ago was killed on their behalf because a god got angry at something it had made and decided it needed to be punished vicariously, is not something children are born with. And I'd add that the subject material of christianity is unsuitable for those under the age of 18 due to the adult themes, and that actually no human really needs to be bothered with such complete fiction at all. There are better works of fiction to read. And that works fine in most of India and China, and increasingly in Scandinavia and other Western countries, to give a few examples.
No, I'd call that 'pre-theist' not a-theist. The "a" means 'against' as well as without, so it isn't as accurate. That is why I often tell atheists to adopt a more appropriate moniker. "Atheist" is terrible, although you certainly express yourself as 'against' Christianity so it may best apply to you in particular.
Atheism is only a rejection of gods. So it depends which god is being rejected at the time, as to whether rejection of that god is better than acceptance of it. I can't think of an example where god acceptance is the higher ground.
There you go, "Atheist" is an apt moniker for you in particular.
Right. Well, I didn't say 80% atheist, it was 80% old earth acceptance.
Not a problem, just a bit nebulous in initial expression. Nothing lingering at this point. Thanks.
No, this is just a desperate grasp for anything that might get them off the hook of the reality of an impossible contradiction in scripture. I'm not sure what their god would think about them doing that. If it is a just god, then it should not be very impressed.
You are just prognosticating off your own platform. I disagree with you. ALL good thinking starts with speculation. ALL good science begins with speculation. A flat-earth isn't bad science, it is just 'beginning' science. It is bad when evidence points away and the evidence is not followed. Same with all things. As a teacher 'there is no such thing as a bad question.' There are such things as ignorant questions, but those aren't to be trounced. That said, I do appreciate that it is exasperating when the class clown that never pays attention asks a question that you covered yesterday.
Well clearly learning requires engagement, and there are definitely ways to do that. I think DTF Dave and Patrick Janes threads on the flat earth conspiracy have some educational value, because it is an engaging challenge to come up with an explanation for why it is wrong, in terms of observations that any person could make for themselves. And there is probably value in students of science playing with the ideas of the flat earthers to work out where their stronger points and weaker points lie (the latter dominate, of course).
Agreed. The space program is so dependent upon so few, that I at least understand where the conspiracy theory is coming from (always does with government).
I don't think the same can be done with evolution by natural selection. That well has already been poisoned by liars. When students in the US are turning up to class with no interest in learning because their churches have already made up their minds for them, it is futile to try and accommodate or consider their nonsense because that will make no difference to their engagement.
I've done so, meaningfully. I don't tend to excuse teacher who have very good instruction for 'how' to stimulate inquiry. I have no patience, myself, for that inept teacher.
In the thread about Moses's staff, there has been earnest discussion about chariot remains in the Red Sea, covered in coral. Of course it's just coral plus suggestive graphics, but it is interesting to note that there is not very much debunking on the internet on this claim. It looks like people have moved on and forgotten about it, and it is just assumed to be a hoax. The Sasquatches have a bit more of an internet presence, but the same think seems to apply. Not enough evidence, probably not enough reason to go out and specifically investigate the claim; we know there are many undiscovered species; a large mammal is less likely to have remained undiscovered.
I wouldn't even know how to start investigating bigfoot. Seems a lot like luck for those who eyewitnesses of even the hoaxters.
I think that is just the state of mind of the entitled. Because christianity has dominated Western civilisation for so long, those who have become comfortable with its fancies recoil a bit when atheists are audacious enough to challenge that privilege and its arrogant assumptions (to take back general ownership of that language on behalf of the non-deluded). So I could have sympathy on some level, but I think the arrogance and audaciousness of atheists are in the minds of the christian beholders. There are obviously no gods, that is clear to everyone, but you would like the world to see your invisible friends as believable. Not all christians do that. Some agree that it is bonkers but say they believe it despite the absurdities.
:nono: Some of these statements of yours are just wrong. I KNOW God exists. You can ask me how, but these blanket statements disallow even the presentation of counterfactuals. In a nutshell, I am either magic, or there is a God. I'm not magic. Not even remotely. Therefore, somebody than me did some incredible things. They are anecdotal for you, undeniable for me. At the very least, you need to augment your statements to include 'most of us.' I'm not one of you. "There are no gods." I know no such thing. :nono: Clear evidence points exactly to its contrary.
Why didn't you say it's like a sighted person claiming you can't see ultraviolet? That's a much better analogy for your point. Clearly atheists can see the same you can see.
Not if that evidence that was presented to me, was never presented to you. Scriptures talk about 'faith' as a sensory perception that is missing from your possession. It is more like 'red' to a blind man.
From my point of view god belief is like a sighted person saying to another sighted person 'hey, did you see that giant pink eagle that landed just behind you? Oh dear you must have missed it. I see it all the time.'
It certainly can be, but when you have 20 or 30 seemingly rational people telling you the same thing, it is you, the one in 99 that might want to recheck yourself.
It doesn't matter. Between us, love is an intangible commodity. You cannot touch love. You cannot taste love. You cannot see something an call it 'love' just the action as attributed to it. You cannot hear love or smell it. You see but the effects of it. You cannot quantify or qualify it, because what isn't love in my home, may be in yours.
Stuu: I see, you mean like Stripe when he accuses others with the word evidence because he has none of his own.
How is it? I'm always stumping up with references from reliable sources. Stripe never does, he just accuses others of not doing it.
Yes, but again the projection is to cast what was said to you, upon another. We cannot help projection, but we can work to understand how another is different from us and in so doing, be a bit less projecting of our own being. It isn't easy because we have to listen a lot more, and pay attention a lot more, and try to assimilate their viewpoint a lot more.
With you, I know you are an atheist, and that more than many others, the term does apply to you. You don't always seem to be an 'angry' atheist, although at times that does come out. You aren't as snarky, which is why I don't ignore you. I have other atheists on ignore simply because there is never any discussion, just posturing and snarky/mean comments and stabs. That isn't my idea of productive or worth my time. I'm more people oriented. If I can make a connection, it is worth my time, even if a bit frustrating at times. That vaguely summarizes my interactions with you. We don't see eye to eye, but you do address the material where I can see meaningful dialogue that does interact with what the other says without disdaining it too untowardly. Obviously as an atheist/Christian, some of it cannot be helped.
-Lon