originally posted by BJ:
Remember nuclear winter when we were kids? This is the new nuclear winter. And actually, the thing that's not getting talked about yet is ocean acidification. That should scare the shit out of everyone.
Time to act, people. Just because there isn't enemy doesn't mean there isn't an issue.
The thing to remember is, Scopes lost. He was convicted. Evolution disappeared from classrooms and textbooks for a couple of generations in many places.originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
It's surprising how little credence science gets in the U.S. in general, though - doesn't more than half the population still dispute evolution?
originally posted by SFJoe:
And the fundis are correct. Darwin is a real challenge to their particular cosmology and theology. They can't both be right, IMO. So they are right to fight it, you might say.
Let us also remember that the TN State Supreme Court set the conviction aside, on a technicality, and no retrial was pursued.originally posted by SFJoe:
The thing to remember is, Scopes lost. He was convicted.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
But, to be consistent, they should also protest courses in physics, geology, human anthropology, and, for that matter, basic textual interpretation, which would teach one to distinguish between allegorical and narrative texts.
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
But, to be consistent, they should also protest courses in physics, geology, human anthropology, and, for that matter, basic textual interpretation, which would teach one to distinguish between allegorical and narrative texts.
it's a nice idea. but given what the fuckwit disciples of retard analytic-philosophy (in ze beggink, zer voss ze verdt) and mystical linguistics have done to the public understanding of human communication in the past 50 or so years (and, for that matter, how deeply said bullshit has penetrated into what passes for consciousness in the humanities) i can only shudder to think how any informed reflection on the various "truths" trotted out in same could do anything other than send the god-botherers into a frenzy of self-congratulatory masturbation.
after all, it's in the difference between the more probable things we can establish and the wait-what-do-you-mean-the-shit-that-seemed-to-make-so-much-sense-for-a-second-or-so-there-is-just-a-pack-of-cynical-crap-that-paid-for-noam-chomsky's-summer-home-on-cape-cod that fundis find their food.
fb. (raising a glass to the ghost of claude shannon, even as he types.)
originally posted by SFJoe:
fb can be unpredictable.
JL, I show a methodological yellow card to your peer-pressured show of hands and etc.
But more importantly, how were they taught it? Was it as deeply integrated into their studies as it is into the practice of the science today? They'd heard of it, sure, but did they come away with any real understanding? I think a lot of kids hear it mentioned, but in a very tentative way. I know people with PhDs in the sciences from fancy universities who don't really get it.
Separately, of course you are right, the fundis do have to take on deep time everywhere, and they should have as much of a beef with Hutton or Hubble as with Darwin.
The polling methodology might be improved.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I don't get the yellow card sentence.
Is that anything like The Merchants Lunch?originally posted by Kay Bixler:
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www.truth-out.org
"Their". Please.originally posted by Da Prof:
It's that they don't apply there normal modes...