The Atheist
The Grammar Tyrant
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2006
- Messages
- 36,364
Did anyone suggestion the topic, "What is Science?" If not, I think I just did. (It should come first, by the way.)
Good suggestion - taken ^^^^
Did anyone suggestion the topic, "What is Science?" If not, I think I just did. (It should come first, by the way.)
Well, the SkepticWiki has started doing that too, as in:Good suggestion - taken ^^^^
Well, the SkepticWiki has started doing that too, as in:
Principles of Science.
There's some work that needs doing there, but at least it's a start.
Would anyone like to improve it? I would myself, only I'm busy working on an article about Archaeopteryx.
Well, the SkepticWiki has started doing that too, as in:
Principles of Science.
There's some work that needs doing there, but at least it's a start.
Would anyone like to improve it? I would myself, only I'm busy working on an article about Archaeopteryx.
I like finally knowing how to pronounce the words I read.
Isn't it a weird feeling when you discover you've been pronouncing a word wrong forever?
I'm just learning how to pronounce Archaeopteryx:
http://www.yourdictionary.com/ahd/a/a0404000.html
I like finally knowing how to pronounce the words I read.
Isn't it a weird feeling when you discover you've been pronouncing a word wrong forever?
Out of interest articulett - how were you pronouncing Archaeopteryx? I often end up pronouncing things badly as a result of only having read about them, but seem to have got away with that one. Come to think of it the childhood book I initially picked it up from probably had a pronunciation guide...
It's been my experience that all evolution-deniers do not understand evolution.
I have never, ever once, spoken with a creationist or ID person that has bothered to read Darwin. Most I've come across cannot even quote a book on the subject.
M
I think your criticism is misplaced. After all, most evolutionists have never read Darwin either.I have never, ever once, spoken with a creationist or ID person that has bothered to read Darwin.
Now you're talking sense. It's fine if they don't read Darwin, but most of 'em have also apparently missed out on the sort of science which can be found in basic textbooks about biology which I learnt in school as a teenager.Most I've come across cannot even quote a book on the subject.
Gaps in the fossil record. Missing link. Impossible complexity.
The SkepticWiki is very, very weak on geology, and I'd appeal to people to write some articles on the subject, except that bitter experience has taught me that no-one will do anything, they'll just sit on their fat skeptical arses until I do it.Of the listed items, take for example earth-aging, which was helped along by the discovery of atomic fission and learning that earth's core is still hot because of radioactive decay - this is an example of how discoveries in physics (which are very hard, even for a Creationist, to argue with) may reinforce Darwin.
I have never, ever once, spoken with a creationist or ID person that has bothered to read Darwin. Most I've come across cannot even quote a book on the subject.
I think your criticism is misplaced. After all, most evolutionists have never read Darwin either.
Dr Adequate said:The SkepticWiki is very, very weak on geology, and I'd appeal to people to write some articles on the subject, except that bitter experience has taught me that no-one will do anything, they'll just sit on their fat skeptical arses until I do it.
Since "The Atheist" started this thread, has anyone done anything except me?
[swiki]Intermediate Forms[/swiki]
[swiki]Intermediate Forms Between Classes[/swiki]
[swiki]Irreducible Complexity[/swiki]
The SkepticWiki is very, very weak on geology, and I'd appeal to people to write some articles on the subject, except that bitter experience has taught me that no-one will do anything, they'll just sit on their fat skeptical arses until I do it.
Since "The Atheist" started this thread, has anyone done anything except me?
Watch out for my upcoming article on Archaeopteryx --- I'd nearly finished it, and then it was destroyed by a power cut, so I'm writing it again.
* sighs *
Gaps in the fossil record. Missing link. Impossible complexity.
This post began, I think by proposing some kind of Evo link database? As a lay person, what I find most usefull for understanding evolution and having confidence in it is having enough collateral understanding to see the linkages of knowledge from other disciplines.
Of the listed items, take for example earth-aging, which was helped along by the discovery of atomic fission and learning that earth's core is still hot because of radioactive decay - this is an example of how discoveries in physics (which are very hard, even for a Creationist, to argue with) may reinforce Darwin.
If you wan't to persuade about Evolution the process is made more difficult if the persuadee (?) lacks a basic science background, so that perhaps connecting with far-flung consilient knowledge might be just as usefull as talking about the chimpanzee genome.
M
Since "The Atheist" started this thread, has anyone done anything except me?
Watch out for my upcoming article on Archaeopteryx --- I'd nearly finished it, and then it was destroyed by a power cut, so I'm writing it again.
* sighs *
I posted a number of links on the first page of the thread as well as an explanation of how common phrases are used differently than taxonomic names. I guess I can create an account and see what I can add. Perhaps we should talk to Tricky about doing some of the geology?