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On 24 Jan 2004 17:32:48 -0800, in a place far, far away,
(Donald L Ferrt) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: However, I have my doubts about the President's motivations. He has not been exactly a big supporter of science (read about his stance on creationism, for example). And his "stance on creationism" would be? |
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#4
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#5
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Len Lekx wrote in message . ..
On 25 Jan 2004 01:35:25 -0800, (Donald L Ferrt) wrote: Texas Gov. George W. Bush, the GOP front-runner, believes both evolution and creationism are valid educational subjects. "He believes it is a question for states and local school boards to decide but believes both ought to be taught," a spokeswoman said. Ummm... this isn't his opinion on Creationism itself, but whether it should be introduced to young minds as a *theory*. How can allowing people to make up their own minds about the subject be BAD? :-) Creationism is a disproved theory. Evolution is a proved theory. Nobody teaches the phlogiston theory in schools, except as an example of wrong headed theories which can be disproved. |
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On 25 Jan 2004 10:48:09 -0800, in a place far, far away,
(Christopher M. Jones) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Len Lekx wrote in message . .. On 25 Jan 2004 01:35:25 -0800, (Donald L Ferrt) wrote: Texas Gov. George W. Bush, the GOP front-runner, believes both evolution and creationism are valid educational subjects. "He believes it is a question for states and local school boards to decide but believes both ought to be taught," a spokeswoman said. Ummm... this isn't his opinion on Creationism itself, but whether it should be introduced to young minds as a *theory*. How can allowing people to make up their own minds about the subject be BAD? :-) Creationism is a disproved theory. No, Creationism is a non-disprovable theory, which is why it doesn't belong in science classes (which is not to say that it doesn't necessarily belong in schools). |
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#8
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![]() "Christopher M. Jones" wrote: Len Lekx wrote in message . .. On 25 Jan 2004 01:35:25 -0800, (Donald L Ferrt) wrote: Texas Gov. George W. Bush, the GOP front-runner, believes both evolution and creationism are valid educational subjects. "He believes it is a question for states and local school boards to decide but believes both ought to be taught," a spokeswoman said. Ummm... this isn't his opinion on Creationism itself, but whether it should be introduced to young minds as a *theory*. How can allowing people to make up their own minds about the subject be BAD? :-) Creationism is a disproved theory. Yes, and can you cite the laboratory work and tests that disproved Creationism? The last things that I read about Creationism lead me to believe that it is internally consistent. I don't believe it can be disproved. Note that this is not the same thing as scientifically proving it. Evolution is a proved theory. There is a lot of consistent scientific evidence that points to evolution as the process by which life was developed. If it was complete and irrefutable it would be described as The Law of Evolution. Nobody teaches the phlogiston theory in schools, except as an example of wrong headed theories which can be disproved. I believe we know quite a bit more about combustion than we do about the origin of the species. President Bush is trying to tap dance around the problem so that he can avoid offending any of his fundamentalish Christian supporters and also not get labeled as anti-science. Mike Walsh |
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... On 25 Jan 2004 10:48:09 -0800, in a place far, far away, (Christopher M. Jones) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Creationism is a disproved theory. No, Creationism is a non-disprovable theory, which is why it doesn't belong in science classes (which is not to say that it doesn't necessarily belong in schools). Creationism has both empirical aspects and non-empirical aspects. The empirical aspects are disprovable and have been done so beyond a reasonable doubt - sufficiently to remove creationism from the realm of viable empirical scientific theories. The non-empirical aspects can't be either "proven" or "disproven" - and certainly have no place in a biology class. All this, however, is entirely off-topic for sci.space.policy and should really be followed up elsewhere. |
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On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 19:25:22 -0800, in a place far, far away, "Chosp"
made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Creationism is a disproved theory. No, Creationism is a non-disprovable theory, which is why it doesn't belong in science classes (which is not to say that it doesn't necessarily belong in schools). Creationism has both empirical aspects and non-empirical aspects. The empirical aspects are disprovable They are not. I have a theory that the entire universe was created ten minutes ago, complete with memories. Disprove it. |
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