1000 scientists called Steve affirming the validity of the theory of evolution. EDIT via Hoyden about Town
I will now rant because I am feeling ranty.
1) There are times when an non-expert in a given subject disagrees with an expert, and the non-expert is right. Sometimes even the consensus of experts is wrong. But if you can't find any expert who agrees with you? You are almost certainly wrong on such a deep level there's no chance you could be right.
Any time creationists trot out "scientists" who favour creationism, their background is in mechanical engineering or some such. Having done a Phd in science, there is such a huge gap in understanding between people who have a Phd in that subject and those who don't (whether or not they're an expert in something else) that the latter are almost never in a position to argue with them.
2) I do not have a Phd or any tertiary training in biology. I find the subject interesting, but don't understand it very deeply. I think people like me should avoid biological arguments about creationism, we'll just make mistakes and bring the side down. It also plays into the idea that science is a democracy and every opinion is equal. My response to such arguments is to say "Find me a convincing argument by a creationist with a Phd in biology and maybe I'll listen".
3) This is not a science vs religion thing. It's a science vs anti-science thing, with religious people on both sides. Heck, there are anti-science atheists (see Soviet Russia) I think atheist organisations should get involved to the extent that it's also a separation-of-church-and-state thing, but the argument should, again, be "Our society trusts the consensus of scientists to decide school curriculum, and scientists say evolution is right", it's not our job to get into the biology of it.
Individual non-bioloigists (atheist or not) who want to take the workload off biologists by helping explain/defend evolution to creationists can do so, but I don't think atheist organisations should encourage it in an official capacity.
EDIT 3b) If your religious faith says that creationism is true, I actually don't have a problem with that. You can believe it, and you can teach it in your churches etc. But the logical response to scientific opinion disagreeing with your faith is to either shrug and say "Well, science changes, you'll realise we're right in the end" or become a scientist and prove them wrong scientifically. It is not to use bad science and pretend it's good science. That does a disservice to both science and religion.
Opinion 3 caused me a certain amount of strife on the Brights forum.
I will now rant because I am feeling ranty.
1) There are times when an non-expert in a given subject disagrees with an expert, and the non-expert is right. Sometimes even the consensus of experts is wrong. But if you can't find any expert who agrees with you? You are almost certainly wrong on such a deep level there's no chance you could be right.
Any time creationists trot out "scientists" who favour creationism, their background is in mechanical engineering or some such. Having done a Phd in science, there is such a huge gap in understanding between people who have a Phd in that subject and those who don't (whether or not they're an expert in something else) that the latter are almost never in a position to argue with them.
2) I do not have a Phd or any tertiary training in biology. I find the subject interesting, but don't understand it very deeply. I think people like me should avoid biological arguments about creationism, we'll just make mistakes and bring the side down. It also plays into the idea that science is a democracy and every opinion is equal. My response to such arguments is to say "Find me a convincing argument by a creationist with a Phd in biology and maybe I'll listen".
3) This is not a science vs religion thing. It's a science vs anti-science thing, with religious people on both sides. Heck, there are anti-science atheists (see Soviet Russia) I think atheist organisations should get involved to the extent that it's also a separation-of-church-and-state thing, but the argument should, again, be "Our society trusts the consensus of scientists to decide school curriculum, and scientists say evolution is right", it's not our job to get into the biology of it.
Individual non-bioloigists (atheist or not) who want to take the workload off biologists by helping explain/defend evolution to creationists can do so, but I don't think atheist organisations should encourage it in an official capacity.
EDIT 3b) If your religious faith says that creationism is true, I actually don't have a problem with that. You can believe it, and you can teach it in your churches etc. But the logical response to scientific opinion disagreeing with your faith is to either shrug and say "Well, science changes, you'll realise we're right in the end" or become a scientist and prove them wrong scientifically. It is not to use bad science and pretend it's good science. That does a disservice to both science and religion.
Opinion 3 caused me a certain amount of strife on the Brights forum.
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Politically correct science...
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Have you ever seen an electron?
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Suffice to say they dazzle ordinary people with scientific technobabble that most scientists would dispute (as the YEC ignore anything that they don't like).
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The solution is to teach people to choose what they believe based on evidence, not based on an authority. (In other words, to teach people to approach all things scientifically.) This is fundamentally at odds with the idea of 'having faith'.
Trying to get people to pay attention to 'experts' is pointless, because you're only getting them to put their faith elsewhere.
That's not to suggest that the opinion of an expert isn't valuable - it is. But you should always think critically about anything anybody says, expert or not, and evaluate the merits of their arguments based on the evidence available. "Believing in evolution" because x% of biology PhDs (or other "experts in the field") do is no better than believing in creationism because that's what it says in your religious text of choice.
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I mean faith in experts shouldn't be absolute, they are sometimes wrong, and when experts disagree you have to decide for yourself. But in a case like evolution where all the experts agree I'm not going to argue without a very good reason.
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Most excellent rant BTW.
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People have stopped trying to resolve the universe: the people who think hardest admit they don't or can't have answers, and the people who don't think much admit they can't be bothered committing.
By the way I'm with
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Yes, I find that really interesting, and it does put paid to simplistic, zero-sum ideas about a religion vs atheism "war".
To suggest that in the absence of absolute certainties everything has equal value in the marketplace of ideas is pernicious
And absurd! It's not like they actually want schools teaching ALL the alternative ideas, just their ones.
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Have you ever seen an electron?
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Suffice to say they dazzle ordinary people with scientific technobabble that most scientists would dispute (as the YEC ignore anything that they don't like).
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The solution is to teach people to choose what they believe based on evidence, not based on an authority. (In other words, to teach people to approach all things scientifically.) This is fundamentally at odds with the idea of 'having faith'.
Trying to get people to pay attention to 'experts' is pointless, because you're only getting them to put their faith elsewhere.
That's not to suggest that the opinion of an expert isn't valuable - it is. But you should always think critically about anything anybody says, expert or not, and evaluate the merits of their arguments based on the evidence available. "Believing in evolution" because x% of biology PhDs (or other "experts in the field") do is no better than believing in creationism because that's what it says in your religious text of choice.
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I mean faith in experts shouldn't be absolute, they are sometimes wrong, and when experts disagree you have to decide for yourself. But in a case like evolution where all the experts agree I'm not going to argue without a very good reason.
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Most excellent rant BTW.
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People have stopped trying to resolve the universe: the people who think hardest admit they don't or can't have answers, and the people who don't think much admit they can't be bothered committing.
By the way I'm with
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Yes, I find that really interesting, and it does put paid to simplistic, zero-sum ideas about a religion vs atheism "war".
To suggest that in the absence of absolute certainties everything has equal value in the marketplace of ideas is pernicious
And absurd! It's not like they actually want schools teaching ALL the alternative ideas, just their ones.
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