Chaos said:
It is exactly "To just fill our brains with tons of stuff" that is taking the fun out of it. Teaching science as a long list of fact will bore even the most enthusiastic kid sooner or later.
Go Kitty Go!!!kittynh said:
and OPPS I DID IT AGAIN! I took on my dental assistant! She always goes on and on about her fundie beliefs. So today I told her, "well, I listened to you for 2 minutes, and today I'd like to ask you to listen to my beliefs for 2 minutes." She said, "I don't have to listen to your beliefs because I know I'm right." I pointed out that I didn't believe in her god as her god believed children should burn in hell for going trick or treating, and that kids having fun wasn't a good enough reason for eternal damnation. She left the room and another assistant came in. So, I lost that round, but I kept my dignity I think. Look out world! I'm on fire!
kittynh said:I pointed out that I didn't believe in her god as her god believed children should burn in hell for going trick or treating, and that kids having fun wasn't a good enough reason for eternal damnation.
I can't tell you anything about your friend's mother, but I believe that Penn's point was about respecting the strength of the other person enough to not hide or sugarcoat an important truth. I find that people in general are a lot stronger than they appear (or indeed than they believe of themselves). It might be that someone in this situation would appreciate the time to take care of unfinished business.El Greco said:It's so obvious that she will collapse if she finds out the truth...
I don't know if you differ much from Penn's position on this. After a few rounds back and forth with The Bad Astronomer on the panel, it seemed to come down to not hiding your opinion for the sake of kowtowing to a majority view. Whether a specific truth is brutal enough to warrant discretion is going to vary in each individual's judgement. Penn's tolerance for brutality may a bit higher than average.I believe total honesty is plain brutal.
It is this sneaky type of approach to which Penn was most strongly objecting. I don't see what might be gained by outright deception. I would instead show genuine sympathy for a position honestly held by another, but would make clear that I did not share it, and why.It might be far more effective to pretend you share his/her beliefs and then gradually try to convert him/her.
This one.frisian said:What god is this?
Electric Monk said:It is this sneaky type of approach to which Penn was most strongly objecting. I don't see what might be gained by outright deception.
Well, I'll say that I have encountered very few people like that personally. This could certainly vary by location and what social groups you participate in.El Greco said:I have the feeling that sometimes this sneaky approach is your only chance for any kind of approach. Many times people will become hostile and totally unreceptive as soon as they realize that you question a belief that they value so highly to have practically based their whole life philosophy on it.
El Greco said:Kitty
Furthermore, if someone wants to convey a skeptical message to a dogmatic believer, I think that the naked truth may have completely undesirable effects. It might be far more effective to pretend you share his/her beliefs and then gradually try to convert him/her. May I ask what is your goal with your dental assistant and how do you plan to achieve it ?
kittynh said:
and OPPS I DID IT AGAIN! I took on my dental assistant! She always goes on and on about her fundie beliefs. So today I told her, "well, I listened to you for 2 minutes, and today I'd like to ask you to listen to my beliefs for 2 minutes." She said, "I don't have to listen to your beliefs because I know I'm right." I pointed out that I didn't believe in her god as her god believed children should burn in hell for going trick or treating, and that kids having fun wasn't a good enough reason for eternal damnation. She left the room and another assistant came in. So, I lost that round, but I kept my dignity I think. Look out world! I'm on fire!
Psychology...but since we are dealing with living organisms, we have to go back to natural selection for a foundation. And the first student I spoke of was an import, from Kansas. The other two were objecting more to the idea that the "human mind" isn't immune from its biological (and evolutionary) roots. Hey, we even get that view here on the forum.roger said:Mercutio, you teach biology in NH and get resistance to teaching evolution?
roger said:Mercutio, you teach biology in NH and get resistance to teaching evolution?...
I wonder if creationism and, more specifically, Creation "Science", being widely discussed/aired, has had a negative impact on student's attitudes to evolution.
Telling Lies For God Professor Ian Plimmerbug_girl said:oh dear, i'm ranting here. some good books:
god's warriors, Wilcox
Conjuring Science, Toumey
God's Own Scientists, Toumey
Huh? I mean...what the...ummm...kittynh said:...but that she wouldn't baby sit next year since she believes in UFOs (she saw one in California) and ghosts. She also hates Penn and Teller! That really set her off.