bascule Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2008/03/expelled.php PZ Myers, the blogger behind Pharyngula, was almost arrested when he tried to attend a showing of Ben Stein's new anti-Evolution movie Expelled. However, they completely missed his guest...
Phi for All Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 What a hoot! Obviously they couldn't see the forest for the trees. It probably never occurred to them that two of the people on their not-wanted list would be together. Thick-skulled, myopic creationists!
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 Now I'm just left wondering why they banned him from the theater in the first place. What were they expecting him to do, lob a grenade at the projector booth?
Phi for All Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 Now I'm just left wondering why they banned him from the theater in the first place. What were they expecting him to do, lob a grenade at the projector booth?Worse. Critical examination and death by blog!
ydoaPs Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 Worse. Critical examination and death by blog! He could host a guest post by Dawkins
ecoli Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 I'm just speechless. My worst fears about Ben Stein have been confirmed. btw.. Is this blogger that famous, that they would have recognized him and not Richard Dawkins?
CDarwin Posted March 21, 2008 Posted March 21, 2008 I'm just speechless. My worst fears about Ben Stein have been confirmed. btw.. Is this blogger that famous, that they would have recognized him and not Richard Dawkins? I've heard of him from Panda's Thumb. My guess is that they knew he was coming to do a story and so someone had a picture.
ydoaPs Posted March 22, 2008 Posted March 22, 2008 I've heard of him from Panda's Thumb. My guess is that they knew he was coming to do a story and so someone had a picture. He was in the movie and even thanked in the credits.
swansont Posted March 22, 2008 Posted March 22, 2008 I'm just speechless. My worst fears about Ben Stein have been confirmed. btw.. Is this blogger that famous, that they would have recognized him and not Richard Dawkins? He has a fairly popular blog and is a professor in the same state. Oh, and the little matter of the American Atheists conference, so his appearance might have been expected.
CDarwin Posted March 22, 2008 Posted March 22, 2008 He was in the movie and even thanked in the credits. Ah, that might be something.
iNow Posted March 25, 2008 Posted March 25, 2008 And for anyone curious to read the response of Dr. Dawkin's after being let in, he sums it up quite nicely here in an article he published yesterday: http://richarddawkins.net/article,2394,Lying-for-Jesus,Richard-Dawkins
antimatter Posted March 25, 2008 Posted March 25, 2008 And for anyone curious to read the response of Dr. Dawkin's after being let in, he sums it up quite nicely here in an article he published yesterday: http://richarddawkins.net/article,2394,Lying-for-Jesus,Richard-Dawkins Now that's funny
K-Kool Posted March 25, 2008 Posted March 25, 2008 Man.. Ben Stein will do anything for money/popularity. I'm going to go read Dawkins response right now... thanks!
5614 Posted March 25, 2008 Posted March 25, 2008 ha, that's just ridiculous! To be expelled, because of your views, from a film that tries to talk-down exclusion based on views. And it's a film that he starred in. And they didn't seem to notice Dawkins! Just stupid! Myers and Dawkins having a chat about the whole thing, here: http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2008/03/myers_and_dawkins_speak_out_on.php although it's pretty much all repeated in blogs and Dawkin's article, so if you've read them you won't gain much from the video.
Animal Posted March 26, 2008 Posted March 26, 2008 Now I'm just left wondering why they banned him from the theater in the first place. What were they expecting him to do, lob a grenade at the projector booth? If I was as paranoid and uneducated as Mathis I wouldn't want Myers there for the Q&A either.
antimatter Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 Richard Dawkins is definitely a fun read. Agreed. Somethings are just plain entertaining.
iNow Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 Agreed.Somethings are just plain entertaining. I find the whole situation rather disturbing, really. While I do chuckle once or twice at our reaction to the intelligent and biting rebuttals we are presented, on a much deeper level I find it rather depressing that such movies are made, and further, that audiences for them still exist in the year 2008. Oh well. Natural selection applies to ideas as well, so perhaps my disheartenment will not be chronic.
antimatter Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 I find the whole situation rather disturbing, really. While I do chuckle once or twice at our reaction to the intelligent and biting rebuttals we are presented, on a much deeper level I find it rather depressing that such movies are made, and further, that audiences for them still exist in the year 2008. Oh well. Natural selection applies to ideas as well, so perhaps my disheartenment will not be chronic. Right, you have to remember, such people are a minority that is slowly yet surely getting smaller. Don't feel disheartened, feel proud you're part of the group that is above Ben Stein and the rest of the intelligent design-ers...
CDarwin Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 Right, you have to remember, such people are a minority that is slowly yet surely getting smaller. Mm, I would take issue with that. In the US the ID sympathetic are at most a majority and at least a strong plurality, as demonstrated by numerous polls. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/11/22/opinion/polls/main657083.shtml http://www.pollingreport.com/science.htm I don't think a global poll has ever been done, but considering the shoddy nature of science education most places outside of Western Europe, I'd say scientifically silly and inaccurate ideas about the origin of the universe analogous to Christian Creationism persist pretty widely. Not that people aren't entitled to their myths (and I even use the term respectfully). If you want to believe some way about the universe in the face of evidence, then that's perfectly fine. I disagree and think that's a crumby way to live but I'm not going to go busting your door down and throwing empiricism in your face. It's the hypocrisy, dishonesty, and total lack of respect for my convictions in the power and worth of science that the Creationism movement displays that 'really grinds my gears,' as it were.
antimatter Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 You're right, so then iNow, a more consoling thought...minority in the SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY! Evolution-95% Flying Spaghetti Monster- 4% I.D.- 1% right? hehe
iNow Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 I'm not exactly crying in my milk, antimatter, but I completely appreciate your desire to help. I know you are not as bitter as I, and recognize that you want the best. I thank you for it. CDarwin raised a great point. Part of the problem is that I'm perfectly willing to respect their views as an individual, but don't sense the reciprocal coming from them. I'm tired of it, frankly. This is the kind of view that would persist in 1008, yet in America, in 2008, this type of thing is not only accepted, it's viral. It makes me throw up a little bit... in my mouth. It's not my intention to be elitest, but when my views are put relative to such ignorance, they cannot help but be anything else.
CDarwin Posted March 27, 2008 Posted March 27, 2008 You're right, so then iNow, a more consoling thought...minority in the SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY!Evolution-95% Flying Spaghetti Monster- 4% I.D.- 1% right? hehe I can actually find that statistic too. http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CA/CA111.html That's an old poll, and I'd be interested to see an update. I'm not sure if that number of non-evolutionists would go up or down. I've been scanning through these polls, and I'd really like to draw attention to this one: Gallup Poll. Nov. 7-10, 2004. N=1,016 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3. "Just your opinion: Do you think that Charles Darwin's theory of evolution is a scientific theory that has been well-supported by evidence, or just one of many theories and one that has not been well-supported by evidence, or don't you know enough about it to say?" 11/04 Well-Supported: 35 Not Well-Supported: 35 Don't Know Enough: 29 No Opinion: 1 2/01 Well-Supported: 35 Not Well-Supported: 39 Don't Know Enough: 25 No Opinion: 1 That 29% is hope. Those are the ones that we can do something about.
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