When I started asking my parents questions is right around the time they decided I was evil.

Your sorrow isn't necessary. If you don't see the validity of science, I don't feel sorry, I just assume you see what you want to see, not necessarily what is. You're entitled to your faith, and so are Muslims. It's when you attempt to enforce it, in science class and elsewhere, that one should be sorry. I don't think you're forcing your faith, Jasaoke, but I choose freewill, and tangible evidence. Faith is the evidence of things not seen, and I think intelligent design (which is really a modern way of saying Christian Creationism) is simply the faithful's way of squaring what he's been told by his religion, with what science has confirmed to the contrary.Jasaoke wrote:and if you don't see the validity of intelligent design, I feel sorry for you.
You can call it faith, but it's a qualitatively different type of faith than religious or spiritual faith. It's a faith based upon probabilism due to empirically verifiable phenomenon. If a scientist conducts a controlled study, reports those findings, and then other scientists are able to replicate said findings, then I can reasonble have faith that the phenomenon is real. It's something that's falsifiable. Faith in an afterlife or deity is not falsfiable nor empirically verifiable...at least until we pass over...and then only if we were right along can we contemplate that.Jasaoke wrote:
And faith is already enforced in science class, it's just faith in science.
So you're saying that just because principles of reductionism cannot be applied, then ergo, evolutionary theory is invalid? I've never been a fan of The Watchmaker's Argument, because it's largely been invalidated by systems theory that state complex systems do have a "natural" tendency to self-align. Of course, we get into the issue of first causes, which I know some physics that I can't even begin to wrap my head around is dealing with.The basic structures of life are irreducibly complex: they cannot be simplified without being useless. The basic idea is that you need a WHOLE cell in order for it to live and reproduce.
This is the best I have ever heard this summed up. Excellent Mr. Rainey!bassist_25 wrote: You can call it faith, but it's a qualitatively different type of faith than religious or spiritual faith. It's a faith based upon probabilism due to empirically verifiable phenomenon. If a scientist conducts a controlled study, reports those findings, and then other scientists are able to replicate said findings, then I can reasonble have faith that the phenomenon is real. It's something that's falsifiable. Faith in an afterlife or deity is not falsfiable nor empirically verifiable...at least until we pass over...and then only if we were right along can we contemplate that.
I don't know if I quite understand your argument. You originally said that science is based on faith, and I said that faith is informed by empiricism and probabalism. Probability is statistical. High correlations are needed to get published in physical science journals. Social science journals generally require p values of .05 or lower. Random events like rain making a tree into a plane is not something scientists are going to be interested in as far as controlled studies are concerned. It may be of interest as a post-hoc investigation.Jasaoke wrote:Have you ever made a paper airplane?
Even with a bit of trial and error, and step-by-step instructions from the World Champion Paper Airplane Engineer, you might get a few hundred feet of flight. If you're really good, you could probably set a controlled turn. Now, to make that happen, you need paper (which is a whole design set unto itself), you need to methodically and accurately fold (design) it, and you need to add energy (appropriately). I could design controlled scientific experiments to show that naturally occurring phenomenon can produce any of these elements necessary for the plane to fly, and others could verify this. It is quite possible that strong winds and flying debris could slice a tree paper-thin. Rain could soak the slice and make it plyable. Given enough time, one of these paper slices COULD be formed into a working airplane. But possibility coupled with possibility does not make probability.
I quote these two parts together because I think you may be assuming that everything has a teleological purpose. The plane does have a teleological purpose. Is was built and designed to be a flying machine. Natural selection doesn't work on a teleological framework. Organisms don't evolve with the purpose of survival. They survive because they have adaptations that make them fit for their environments. I do agree that there are issues with evolution - but I think those issues are tautological in nature, not necessarily teleological.If I brought the plane before the scientists and claimed that it had been produced through random, natural phenomenon...um...
But then evolution would have us believe that birds did just that. Birds can fly much better than our paper airplane, find their own food, they can self-replicate, they know when to migrate, can navigate over tremendous distances, they are wonderful living machines of highly specialized parts that would be quick meals if all of these things didn't come together just as they are.
If you gave me a self-replicating, self-preserving airplane and a billion years, I bet it could evolve to do all those things. You have your faith, and it's creation-story... all faiths have a creation story. You can no more prove yours than they can theirs. That's what faith is, the belief in something that can't be known, not the rationalization of it. It doesn't need reckoning against what is really observed... but science does. Teaching faith in science class makes no more sense than teaching science in Sunday School. You can describe the world as "flat in a very circular way," but science says otherwise.Jasaoke wrote:Have you ever made a paper airplane?
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