Bill Nye Guy Posted October 29, 2005 Posted October 29, 2005 What way do you think the Judge will rule on the case? I heard so far that the decision will be made around Nov. 8. From what i also heard, the judge seems to be well informed on evolution and the definition of theory. I would be delighted to hear your guys views on how this and maybe future cases may turn out. BTW: here is a really interesting link that i found concerning evolution and science. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051028/sc_nm/science_usa_dc;_ylt=ApyC3CW2LMYi..IPj_.7FwxxieAA;_ylu=X3oDMTA4NmhocGZ1BHNlYwMxNzAw
ecoli Posted October 29, 2005 Posted October 29, 2005 This article is pretty good, in that is reveals several truths about Americans IN GENERAL. We're ignorant, we believe in the lies people tell us, we suck at math, and its never our fault. I've seen my country do some pretty stupid things in the last few years, but I must say, this is the first time I'm actually ashamed that I am American. We have some serious issues. Americans think we're the best, when we are actually probably the most ignorant people in the world. We are so blinded by our self-prophesized greatness that we don't realize that the rest of the world is surpassing us, and hates us. I really need to move ....maybe to Japan, they seem to be on top of things.
Hailstorm Posted October 29, 2005 Posted October 29, 2005 The fact that the school board was even allowed to do that in the first place astounds me. Perhaps if they read it next to "there is absolutely nothing other than a book we think is a few thousand years old (and that we've revised as was seen fit) in it to support intelligent design. Also, you should be aware that if any of the "claims" made by the people in the bible were "claimed" today, we would institutionalize whoever was making them."
Mokele Posted October 30, 2005 Posted October 30, 2005 I've found in quite amusing. I actually just read a court transcript from the witness testimony of Michael "Irreducible Complexity" Behe in which he explicitly admits that any definition of "science" which includes ID also includes *Astrology*. I guess if the loonies win, "what's your sign?" will be a future SAT question. Mokele
ecoli Posted October 30, 2005 Posted October 30, 2005 I've found in quite amusing. I actually just read a court transcript from the witness testimony of Michael "Irreducible Complexity" Behe in which he explicitly admits that any definition of "science" which includes ID also includes *Astrology*. I guess if the loonies win' date=' "what's your sign?" will be a future SAT question. Mokele[/quote'] in this great country? I wouldn't put it passed us.
insane_alien Posted October 30, 2005 Posted October 30, 2005 why has this even gone to court? at the first oppurtunity i'm getting off this damn rock and going to mars. might find a rock that has more intelligence than all the ID'ists and creationists combined.
Tigerbeam Posted November 2, 2005 Posted November 2, 2005 i think religion always tries to strike at science whenever science doesn't have an immediate massive positive effect. when it leads to a new everday technological neccesity, the arguments against science seem to die out pretty quickly. when it's just some theory explaining out past, who needs that kind of heresy around? its nothing more than religion trying to hang scientist in a more civilized manner, and the case should get kicked out
Mokele Posted November 2, 2005 Posted November 2, 2005 the case should get kicked out Actually, no, the case occuring is very valuable. The worst thing to happen to creationism was when a court case made it to the Supreme Court, who decided that it violated church and state (and that's why ID was invented). If this court does make the correct decision, it'll give legal basis for future judges to automatically rule against ID proponents without these bothersome show trials. If this case is appealed, and I'm positive it will be, then the decision will immediately apply to a wider area. If it makes it to the Supremes, it could kill ID across the whole country. I'm actually unsure whether the Supreme Court refusing to hear it because they think a lower court's decision was right makes it apply to the whole country or just that lower court's area. Anyone know? Mokele
bascule Posted November 2, 2005 Posted November 2, 2005 ...who decided that it violated church and state You might want to refer to this as the Establishment Clause to prevent any IDiots from asking where it says "seperation of church and state" in the Constitution (since they're too dumb to find the Everson v. Ewing decision)
AL Posted November 2, 2005 Posted November 2, 2005 I've found in quite amusing. I actually just read a court transcript from the witness testimony of Michael "Irreducible Complexity" Behe in which he explicitly admits that any definition of "science" which includes ID also includes *Astrology*. Yes, that was pretty funny. Other highlights include his claim that the "peer review" his book supposedly underwent was more rigorous than that undergone by mainstream scientific literature. From the PA ACLU blog: http://aclupa.blogspot.com/2005/10/all-part-of-scientific-process-part-1.html It has been stated here before that Behe has not submitted his own work on intelligent design for peer review. At the same time, Behe agreed, when asked by plaintiff's counsel Eric Rothschild if the "peer review for Darwin's Black Box was analogous to peer review in the [scientific] literature." It was, according to Behe, even more rigorous. There were more than twice standard the number of reviewers and "they read [the book'] more carefully... because this was a controversial topic." Turns out though, that one of the "peer reviewers" Behe cited (Dr. Michael Atchison) never actually read the book.
zyncod Posted November 2, 2005 Posted November 2, 2005 Turns out though, that one of the "peer reviewers" Behe cited (Dr. Michael Atchison) never actually read the book. That's actually not that unusual. In actual science, everybody that gets in the position of being able to review a manuscript is likely too busy to review a manuscript. Many, many papers that I've read have glaring errors that should have been caught in peer review but somehow weren't. I'm not saying that reviewers aren't reading the paper; they're just skimming through it. But I would think that any paper (or a book that presents no original research) that purports to turn a 150-year old scientific theory on its head should be at least fairly carefully reviewed.
ydoaPs Posted November 5, 2005 Posted November 5, 2005 why doesn't someone just show the obvious---ID isn't science; it's religion?......too bad there isn't an amendment or something preventing the gov't from forcing religion of people...
Mokele Posted November 5, 2005 Posted November 5, 2005 why doesn't someone just show the obvious---ID isn't science; it's religion?...... From the court notes I've read of the case, that's a large part of what the prosecution is doing, and they're doing a very good job of it. They've basically made Behe look like a total idiot (not that hard), and trapped him into numerous admissions that are pretty damning. The other IDiot witnesses have been pretty thoroughly disassembled, and one was even force to admit perjury on stand. Mokele
rakuenso Posted November 5, 2005 Posted November 5, 2005 I'm actually unsure whether the Supreme Court refusing to hear it because they think a lower court's decision was right makes it apply to the whole country or just that lower court's area. Anyone know? Mokele The supreme court is soon to be filled with conservatives, why do think the republican party is workin his butt off to get another evangelist on the board?
Glider Posted November 6, 2005 Posted November 6, 2005 Turns out though, that one of the "peer reviewers" Behe cited (Dr. Michael Atchison) never actually read the book. People have the wrong idea about peer review. When a book or article is submitted, a reviewing editor and several referees read it, but this isn't peer review. This is just to ensure that it's of a sufficient standard (and of an appropriate topic) for publication by that particular journal or publisher. Peer review begins after publication, when the book or article is read by the author's peers. That's when all the rebuttals and death-threats and stuff start pouring in.
Mokele Posted November 6, 2005 Posted November 6, 2005 Perhaps it works differently in psychology, but in bio, it seems to be more like "reviewers get the first crack at it", and reviews include all the picky stuff like why the author used this versus that statistical method or why this model species and whether conclusions are supported enough, etc. Of course, that might just be specific to JEB and SICB, because some of the journals, even top-tier ones, in other fields have papers that make me go "how the **** did this get past peer review?" Mokele
Aubiegirl Posted November 6, 2005 Posted November 6, 2005 From the court notes I've read of the case' date=' that's a large part of what the prosecution is doing, Mokele[/quote'] Any links or anything on where to access those court notes? I'd be really interested in reading the transcripts also.
PhDP Posted November 6, 2005 Posted November 6, 2005 Dover Trial; http://www.aclupa.org/legal/legaldocket/intelligentdesigncase/dovertrialtranscripts.htm
Aubiegirl Posted November 6, 2005 Posted November 6, 2005 Dover Trial; http://www.aclupa.org/legal/legaldocket/intelligentdesigncase/dovertrialtranscripts.htm Thanks!
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