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15:00 - 17:0017:00 - 21:00

oh my word...
"believe in the big bang theory". that just makes me sad
As a representative of the grand society of smart-assary and big-headedness, I'm disappointed. (:
she's not wrong, but praising her for that is so very poor...
the guy who writes those articles for techie buzz is rather disrespectful too
it's like "yeah I know, like, a squared plus like b squared is, like, c squared" → "oh you are like, smart! like totally!"
15:32
he epitomizes the wrong way to go about it :)
@StefanoPalazzo lolol
@RolandTaylor what do you make of this "if you believe in evolution, you must be smart" business?
I even cringe and fall down to my knees in dispair when ever someone says "believe in [widely accepted theory]"
by the way, @Roland, I'm strongly opposed to teaching anything but evolution in the class room. And, like you would expect, prepared to argue about it all night long
It's easier for me, we don't even have a discussion about it over here. The few creationists we have all seem to keep silent on the matter. Literally nobody of any authority is demanding that something other than evolution be taught.
I don't know what it's like where you are
where I am people just do whatever america does
sad to say but true...
however, if you knew how evolution got into schools in the first place, you would really cringe
15:47
I saw "Inherit the Wind" if you mean that :)
as for "if you believe in evolution, you must be smart" - that just makes me angry
@StefanoPalazzo not familiar with it
I'm referring to something that took place in the early 1900s I think it was...
what ever the time was, it is sad - they used false evidence etc in a court case in the US...
and as you might guess the world followed
now the world is convinced that there is nothing else that can be true (even if you show it to them)
@RolandTaylor you're referring to the famous Scopes 'monkey'-Trials?
if I remember correctly, something along those lines
the "evidence" was a pig's tooth...
I know about the trial, what evidence was false?
it was made into a full hominid D:
of course by now no one talks about that stuff from a truthful standpoint anymore
because it's like the ones who know of those kinds of deception will continue to teach that there was no deception
and the ones like me who continue to hold that there was a deception are painted as idiots and castigated
15:53
that's rhetoric isn't it :)
can you point to some evidence that's false?
(I assume you mean 'fraudulent', not 'obsolete')
if you mean links, then not off the top of my head
but take for instance
almost every dromeosaur is shown as having feathers
and it is now "accepted that birds developed from dromeosaurs, and that many of the dromeosaurs had feathers"
in reality, when I saw the images that supposedly prove this - I was shocked
I think the Scopes trial was a great win for reason, therefore, you'll understand if I hold you to it, when you criticise it :)
one bone from velociraptor
@RolandTaylor how's that relevant?
which was on a far different scale - and actually lacks the knobs for feathers (despite what is claimed)
I have a pdf of it somewhere on my system
now every dromeosaur is illustrated as being feathered, and having a bird like hand
when it is well known that they were not previously illustrated with such features, because they never had them
I guess I should just admit that I can't win with someone like you who is set in their ways...
15:58
be that as it may, what's the relevance?
you don't want to see any problems with it, so you just won't
@StefanoPalazzo you mean relevance to the scopes trial?
I was showing you that as an example of how evolution is demonstrated in general
I'm saying, given that you're right, assuming they were talking total nonsense regarding Domeosaurs, why is that fact relevant?
off the top of my head I cannot give you the properly detailed rebuttals from the scopes trial, but I'm sure I could find them
It wasn't evolution that was on trial, but the teaching of it in schools
and this "both sides" policy
I know, but that also led to evolution being accepted as "the truth"
did you know that in some american schools teachers can lose their job for teaching that there could be another explanation?
that's not a matter of truth vs falsehood
16:00
now, let me put a point to you
that's a matter of removing freedom of choice, whether anyone is right or wrong
it's called discrimination
but when it's done to christians, everyone is silent
we know we can be wrong. given that, why should I not "teach both sides" regarding Astronomy and Astrology?
(many people believe in astrology)
there is actually more to that than you think
astrology as it is believed/taught today is a corruption of an actual, real understanding of the stars
okay, I will take you up on that one later :)
for example, the constellations were used to know when Jesus was born
16:03
for now, should we give equal time to astrology in schools?
similarly Abraham's family (according to extra-biblical writings) knew that he would be a great man in the earth from following signs in the starts
*stars
@StefanoPalazzo of course not, because it would be silly to teach horoscopes; but if you think you can use that one on me, you have another thing coming.
I don't think you should be teaching evolution - period.
And I will never back down from that.
Evolution teaches children that they are an accident with no purpose
okay, should we also stop teaching history?
and that this life is just pointless
(i.e. anything that's earlier than 6000 years)
for all we know, we don't even exist
16:05
@RolandTaylor I forget what it's called now. but you can't make that argument
@StefanoPalazzo contrary to popular lies.... history doesn't go back much further than that approximate time
oh right, it's called an "Appeal to consequences"
If P, then Q will occur.
Q is desirable.
Therefore, P is true.
wow... so atheists just use philosophy as plaster for every wound...
there is one wound you have no plaster for.
the hole in your soul.
wouldn't you say the fallacy of the Appeal to consequences is a basic logical truth?
in a way, I would agree
16:07
in a way?
but I could easily apply that to your own "anti-theist" mindset ;)
Anything else is just wishful thinking, surely
think about it this way...
you want evolution to be true so that there is no God for you to have to deal with at any point.
/me is perched, and watching :)
so, evolution is true because otherwise, you have to admit the existence, and thus relevance of God.
16:09
@RolandTaylor I think that one is called "poisoning the well" ;-)
in the nicest possible way ↑
lol
man... how many of these philosophy books have you read?
"this one is called: plaster, for every sore."
A few :)
poisoning the well is like this: "Before you listen to my opponent, may I remind you that he has been in jail."
(from wikipedia)
well I challenge you, read the Bible.
cover to cover.
like a philosophy book.
use the proverbs.
=)
I don't need to read it entirely to know what I'm talking about, do I?
Is this an open discussion?
16:11
@JonathanSampson ofc
@JonathanSampson sure! join in if you like
so long as you're not attempting to blindly argue :D (like M. Night Shymalan) (jk)
brb
back
@Roland you're making, again in the nicest possible way, a bunch of arguments that don't have much to do with the point. Like, I can't claim you're wrong on X, because I'm wrong on Y, or I can't claim to know X, because I don't know Y
@StefanoPalazzo what is the point, then?
we can start with the question I've asked
16:13
@Stefano Which worldview do you represent in this discussion? Agnosticism, Atheism?
1) should we give equal time to astrology in schools?
2) should we also stop teaching history?
I'm trying to determine if this is a discussion on Evolution, or Theism :)
@JonathanSampson I represent Atheism and I argue for evolutionary biology and the scientific method
@JonathanSampson both
Alright; just trying to catch up :)
So the scientific method ought to be the only means by which we determine truth?
16:15
I think we shouldn't teach astrology (in its current form, as I have said, it is a corruption) - and I'm sure we both agree on that.
We also should teach history. However, we should not teach evolution (this is not history).
@RolandTaylor but we can teach children that King X of Y lived 1200 years before the torah was written, yes?
Roland, Evolution is a historical teaching going back to people like Anaxamander. Surely it should be included in a lesson on historical perspectives of Biology, at the very least, no?
@JonathanSampson well, when it comes to the scientific method I avoid talking about Truth. It sounds like "proof". Which there isn't (ever. nor should there be)
@JonathanSampson no, because history can only be something that has been recorded.
but yeah, basically
16:17
@StefanoPalazzo you tell me, you are a Jew, and the Bible says the Jews have the Oracles of God.
Stefano, as an atheist how do you justify induction?
If you don't have them then something is wrong :)...
I want to pick up the first question. You said we should teach astrology in its current form
@StefanoPalazzo should not...
oh, I'm sorry :D
I was getting ready for a right thunderstorm of argument there :D
16:18
@StefanoPalazzo Are you suggesting Creationism is equivalent to Astrology?
On what grounds?
I hope I didn't seem sneaky about that, I'm absolutely comparing them
wait what?
They are equivalent in that they are both fringe-beliefs rejected by the scientific community, with a sizeable group of people who believe in them
that's about it
16:20
Creationism (from the Judeo-Christian perspective) is backed up by evidence, prophesies fulfilled, and by written history (that can be verified), and Astrology is just a bunch of made up stuff, where is the correlation?
Stefano, would that not include many legitimate sciences in a historical context?
When Pasteur was working, he was considered fringe. No?
@StefanoPalazzo Stefano then evolution should never have been taught, neither should we have accepted that the earth is round, or orbits the sun.
Today we understand the importance of heating consumables.
All of those fall under the same gun.
right, slow down I should explain it better
16:22
Please do, the current description is far too broad historically-speaking :)
In science, we must have a testable hypothesis. This can be taught (in context) to children. A theory can be taught as "the current consensus", the nearest thing we have to "truth".
Astrology is not testable, and the few areas of it that are have been found to be untrue
Stefano, What is the testable hypothesis that life originated by natural means?
this is why it should not be taught as science, of course it may be taught in a historical or anthropological context
@JonathanSampson Evolution doesn't discuss the origin of life
Stefano, Evolution isn't the only item taught.
@StefanoPalazzo yes it does.
16:25
@StefanoPalazzo Most discussions on evolution usually do include some discussion on how life originated.
@JonathanSampson you could easily falsify evolution. Find something that couldn't have come about by natural selection through random mutation
Evolution doesn't simply imply life started from nothing, it directly alludes to the "fact" of life starting from nothing.
That's really an irrelevant thesis though; Evolution may not discuss the origin of life but Sciences classes across the world do, which is on subject.
@StefanoPalazzo You.
You are are that something.
okay, again lets slow down
16:26
It's a huge jump, especially within a context of 200,000 years, to go from apes, to humans.
I can argue about the merits of the current theories about the the origin of life as well, but I think we should put a pin in it for now
@StefanoPalazzo Stefano, you cannot falsify evolution - you can falsify models of evolution. We see this down throughout history with people like Anaximander and Aristotle, up to more modern names like Lamark.
You must develop speech, a level of intelligence that some would call god-like..., and more, to go from apes to man.
let me also clarify the falsification point
to falsify evolution, you must (for example) describe a natural, observable, process that could not have come about by means of natural selection
This has been tried (two famous examples are the eye [early] and the Flagellum [later]) - both attempts failed spectacularly
@StefanoPalazzo And then suffer the title "incredulous"? :)
@StefanoPalazzo Is not the immediate answer, "Just because you don't know how it happened doesn't mean it didn't happen."
16:29
@JonathanSampson well like I said, people have tried. They have been laughed at, but they would be taken seriously the moment their argument had merit
@StefanoPalazzo explain how they failed spectacularly, because obviously when I studied both, I missed something.
@Stefano Can you be more specific? Behe, for example?
@JonathanSampson indeed, you need to find evidence for "why this -> could not <- have come about through natural selection"
Show me how the flagellum, especially, came about naturally, please!
@RolandTaylor do I have to now? that's well documented
16:30
@StefanoPalazzo Are you not also asking that an objector prove a universal negative?
@StefanoPalazzo you should.
there are two competing models for the evolution of the flagellum. Both make the point that something doesn't need to have the same function as it develops (example: mouse trap (complicated) as a tie clip (simple))
@JonathanSampson nope, I'm asking to find a phenomenon that the current theory fails to explain that's all
"well like I said, people have tried. They have been laughed at, but they would be taken seriously the moment their argument had merit" - I've seen a lot of atheists who stopped laughing at us Christians when they realized our arguments have merit.
@StefanoPalazzo Years ago, Microbiologist Dr. Michael Behe suggest we test his theory by placing bacteria lacking a flagellum on a slanted service where food is at the higher altitude to determine whether they would develop a flagellum. To my knowledge, nobody has given him a go.
But I'm yet to see the wider community do it.
16:31
@JonathanSampson I've read his books
Stefano we can't have competing models for the flagellum and call that a definite explanation.
Those are nothing more than models.
They don't verify a thing.
And I'm so bored with it :( Can we not re-hash Behe? There are libraries written about him
@Stefano You brought him up ;)
And the fact that they are still competing means they hold no weight.
I merely asked who conducted his suggested experiment.
16:32
I did, didn't I :)
@RolandTaylor the whole of science is full of competing models.
What I'm curious is how an Atheist can justify induction to begin with.
@RolandTaylor I don't need to say this again I'm sure: Science never has a definitive answer
@dv3500ea Yes, and if that is the case, then you cannot say that science is conclusive, unless what people are doing is not science.
@StefanoPalazzo Avoid the fallacy of reification ;)
16:33
We don't do everlasting truth
Science is a tool, not a person ;)
Science is supposed to be the study (observation) of truth, in its purest form.
Science isn't 'conclusive' it is about finding the most accurate models possible.
Science has become "what ever a bunch of people accept as most likely being somewhat close to true".
@dv3500ea That is not science.
So, are you saying I'm wrong, and that science is really a tool to discover unchangeable and definitive truth?
(reductio ad absurdum there :))
16:35
@StefanoPalazzo science is really based on observation of what already is, so we can then use what we learn.
@StefanoPalazzo Science is a tool by which man studies the intelligible reality around him, employing items such as reason, logic, and induction.
that's beside the point
It is not a matter of "coming up with models and ideas of our own" and calling them "acceptable".
I don't think an Atheist can justifiably do Science.
I just want to make sure we understand this: We don't need to prove anything to anyone
16:35
@StefanoPalazzo how is it beside the point?
(I'm sorry to keep saying this:) let's slow down again
@StefanoPalazzo oh you are very right. I'm not trying to prove God to you, I believe He's done that already.
(If not, you wouldn't exist).
@RolandTaylor right. And I'm saying I don't need to absolutely prove evolution before it's up to the scientific standard of a "Theory"
Newton's laws provide a good model for gravity. Einstein's models are more accurate. There are still inconsistences between the experiments and theory. So we try to use the experimental data to come up with a better model. That is science.
@JonathanSampson justify that if you will
I do it all the time. What difference does it make that I happen to not believe in gods?
16:38
@StefanoPalazzo a theory is just that "theoretical" it cannot be considered as truth.
@StefanoPalazzo Atheists have no basis for assuming the future will be like the past. They may posit that it's always been like that in the past, but this would be begging the question.
In other words, evolution cannot be accepted and taught, because it is something someone formulated, it is an imagination.
@RolandTaylor I know you understand how I use the term Theory
It is not actual science, in other words, observation of reality.
@RolandTaylor that has been supported by lots and lots of evidence
16:39
A theory as in "theory of the sky is blue"
or "theory of gravity"
@dv3500ea no, evidence has been pushed, prodded, and hammered into "supporting" evolution.
@StefanoPalazzo Color is an extended property - the sky isn't actually blue ;)
It is just a matter of using the right bits and pieces (like legos) to make what you want to believe in.
People have observed effects that the theory of evolution has predicted.
Not just once but again and again and again.
@JonathanSampson So you're saying I need to believe in some god before I can use observation, reason and experiment to form models and develop them into theories? Is that so?
16:40
The only reason for it is so you can deny that God is real, and then you think you won't have to deal with Him.
@dv3500ea Be careful not to equivocate.
(also: which god should I pick?)
equivowhat?
Stefano there is one God.
You're a Jew, again, you should be well aware of that.
@StefanoPalazzo I'm speaking of the Atheistic worldview. On what grounds can it justify the act of inductive reasoning, and the assumption the future will be like the past.
16:40
You yourself told me the other day of the way you viewed God when you were younger.
@RolandTaylor there are exactly 3.14 gods
There is no atheist world view
Yes there is.
Atheist simply means "does not think there is a god"
Stefano, and that assumption determines your perspective of the world.
16:41
(btw I'm joking/making a point)
And you described yourself to me as Anti-Theist @StefanoPalazzo...
@JonathanSampson okay, now, why can't I do science?
anyone can do science
:)
@StefanoPalazzo I didn't say you cannot do Science, I'm saying you cannot justify the 'doing' of Science.
@JonathanSampson what does that mean?
16:42
@StefanoPalazzo You deny that your creator exists, and since you are made in His image, you deny your own existence.
@StefanoPalazzo You believe that light will move about the Universe the same tomorrow as it does today, correct?
you can't be serious?
the justification is the greater understanding of the universe
@JonathanSampson yes
If God isn't real, then neither are you; and that's a fact.
16:42
@StefanoPalazzo On what basis do you believe that?
@RolandTaylor that is an assertion :)
@JonathanSampson I don't believe it "absolutely"
But I subscribe to theories like Quantum electrodynamcis and General Relativity
@StefanoPalazzo Atheism is an assertion.
@StefanoPalazzo You believe it, correct? You believe that Gravity will operate the same tomorrow as it does today, determining how you will go about planning future research, aquiring grants, etc.
from which I know that there is a certain consistency to the universe
If you have a right to an assertion, then I have a right to assert truth.
16:44
@JonathanSampson no I do not
@RolandTaylor it's the rejection of an assertion, not an assertion itself
@StefanoPalazzo What justifies the assumption that the Universe will be consistent in the future?
@JonathanSampson like I said, the field of Physics. it's backed up by evidence
@StefanoPalazzo it is the assertion that there is no God.
@StefanoPalazzo What evidence do you have that the future will be like the past?
@RolandTaylor no, it's the rejection of the assertion that there is one
16:45
@StefanoPalazzo look...
@JonathanSampson Surely I can't teach you physics in this forum?
I have one simple challenge for you.
Read the Bible.
@StefanoPalazzo What evidence do you have that Physics will operate tomorrow as it did today and yesterday?
Then, take your time and try to find a way to prove that it is false
okay I'll answer those one at a time
16:46
@JonathanSampson it worked today as it did yesterday and the day before and the day before so it is a reasonable assumption that it will work the same way tomorrow
@dv3500ea You're making the probability argument, which assumes the future will be like the past - providing the basis for your argument from probability. This is begging the question.
@JonathanSampson We have scientific theories that suggest that the laws of Physics won't change over night. I won't lay out the evidence for them (I'm not a physicist)
@StefanoPalazzo What justification do you have that they won't change over night?
@StefanoPalazzo theories are not facts.
You must stop using theories before you continue.
How did I beg the question?
16:47
@StefanoPalazzo Certainly you're not going to argue from authority? Suggesting that because somebody really smart said it won't, that it won't?
I'm not as fast reading as you guys are typing :)
@JonathanSampson no I will not.
But I won't lay out the whole field of physics in this chat room
@dv3500ea Probability is based on the assumption the future will be like the past. This is begging the question since I'm asking what justification you have for assuming the future will be like the past.
I'm not qualified.
I did not mention probability
@StefanoPalazzo Can you give me anything that you personally use to justify the assumption the future will be like the past?
16:48
@JonathanSampson it feels like you're asking me to prove again
science doesn't prove, as I'm saying far too often
@StefanoPalazzo I'm not asking you to prove the future will be like the past. I'm asking for the justification of the belief that the future will be like the past.
@dv3500ea If you suggest the future will be a certain way, because today and yesterday were also that way, you're speaking of probability. Or, complete static.
@JonathanSampson My justification is that I trust the (popular) scientific literature on this question
@StefanoPalazzo Argumentum ad populum.
For which I have excellent reasons, obviously
I thought you weren't going to make that argument? :)
16:50
@JonathanSampson I knew you were going to say that :)
it's not
Throwing around names of fallacies doesn't mean you're right :P
@StefanoPalazzo Can you, at this time, offer no specific reason for believing the future will be like the past?
no, here's how it works. It's a reasonable a-priory assumtion to thin that the basis of all science is not utterly wrong
via occam's razor
@dv3500ea neither does claiming "lots of evidence".
16:51
@dv3500ea No, but it does mean you're argument is invalid (if I picked the right fallacy to cite) ;)
this is layed out in the literature, which is my only source of information. I.e. I don't need to prove anything myself before I use it
My argument is valid
@StefanoPalazzo we have buried that razor since Sunday ;).
@StefanoPalazzo Occam's razor stands upon a bedrock of presuppositions.
I think it is dull.
16:52
@JonathanSampson okay, you can argue about that later :) let's stay on the point (it works without occam too)
here's the kicker:
@StefanoPalazzo You believe that tomorrow, when you swing your feet over the edge of the bed, your body will move downward to the floor. What is the justification for this?
@StefanoPalazzo If all you are going on is literature, then you are in a sad position.
...
If I ever have reason to believe All of Physics is wrong, I will re-examine all my positions. For now, it's a very reasonable assumption
@RolandTaylor isn't that what you do by basing your beliefs on the Bible (a piece of literature)
@StefanoPalazzo What about Physics tells us how the future will operate?
16:53
@JonathanSampson do you want book-recommendations?
@dv3500ea as I told Stefano (you can read the trasnscripts) I don't only base my beliefs on writings in the Bible. Also, the Bible is not just a piece of literature.
@StefanoPalazzo I'm more interested in an answer ;)
(don't take it the wrong way, my phrasing is kind of terse I know)
@JonathanSampson quantum mechanics tells us how some things will behave, that includes how they'll behave in the future
others are things like the laws of motion (if you're talking about motion)
most branches of physics explain the future, that's an easy way to create a testable hypothesis
@StefanoPalazzo Which principle tells us how the future will operate, without assuming it will operate like the past?
@JonathanSampson many of them. one example would be newtons laws of motion
they tell us what to "expect" of the solar system. We can then make calculations and verify them.
16:55
@StefanoPalazzo That doesn't answer the question. Gravity pulls object together, right?
thus providing a piece of evidence for some formula or equation
@JonathanSampson it can do, yes
@StefanoPalazzo Forumula's and equations assume the universe will operate in the same manner as it does today.
no, they "assert" it will
merriam-webster.com/dictionary/literature - the Bible fits with all of these definitions.
we can test that assertion
and if you do it, you'll find they seem to be true
16:57
e=MC^2 doesn't prescribe how the Universe will operate, it tells us how it does operate.
@StefanoPalazzo You can test the present, not the future. That's my point.
e=MC^2 is valid today. We can test it. How do we know it will be valid tomorrow?
@JonathanSampson okay, slowly
@dv3500ea As I said, "the Bible is not just a piece of literature".
The assumption that the universe will suddenly change its mind is unforgivably unreasonable
even preposterous. wouldn't you say?
@StefanoPalazzo On what basis do you find it unreasonable that the Universe will operate differently tomorrow?
@StefanoPalazzo Without the fallacy of emotional appeal :)
to declare that, therefore, all of physics must be totally wrong is even more unreasonable
16:59
@StefanoPalazzo that's not what he is saying.
@JonathanSampson Please excuse me if I'm wrong. But I'm getting the feeling you're engaging me
@RolandTaylor : does creationism(or any other theory substituting it ) have empirical evidence more than that of evolution?
@StefanoPalazzo No, Physics is correct - today. What justification do we have for assuming what we understand about physics (e=MC^2) will be valid tomorrow?
However, being from the future myself (as you are, Stefano) I know that the universe will remain the same........................
can we all try to stay on one topic at a time?
15:00 - 17:0017:00 - 21:00

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