Why do people reject evolution?

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BrassButtons

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Dijkstra said:
AMMO Kid said:
If you are going to refute a viewpoint you shouldn't try to disprove the weakest link in the chain.
Yes, you do. Why wouldn't you? If it's proven wrong then it's proven wrong whether you did it the easy or hard way.

It's not a very good use of time to search through crap from people who have shown they make weak, biased, and poorly researched papers just in case they might have said something useful. It'd be like giving a monkey a typewriter and searching pages of gibberish in case there's a brilliant novel in there.
To be fair, it can be worthwhile to examine arguments you know are wrong. There's a guy in paleontology (forget his name--Dinwatr would be able to give better details than I can) who was (in)famous for making arguments that everyone knew were wrong (including the guy making them). But PROVING them wrong required a lot of work, and advanced the science quite a bit. So even bad arguments can have value.

The problem is that most Creationist arguments were thoroughly dealt with over a century ago. Anything useful that could be taken from them already has been.
 

wulf3n

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Zachary Amaranth said:
wulf3n said:
Yet is was a specific response to a specific quoted portion. Please don't do that then say it wasn't your intent to address me.
It was in another paragraph after my direct response to you.


Doesn't make it any less valid.
Apparently you not only have a personal definition of "evolution," but also "glib."
According to google "Fluent and voluble but insincere and shallow"

How non-beneficial (but not detrimental) mutations propagate through a species?
If they're not detrimental, why wouldn't they? Hell, only certain detriments impact the chance of propagating, so even they don't open a question here.

Seriously, I'm confused by this question. How does heredity not answer this by default?
This has already been explained better in previous posts.

I don't know how to explain it any better, though I'll try and give an example.

If there were 100 couples, 1 with a mutation that isn't beneficial yet, but may be in the future.
If each couple gave birth to 3 offspring we now have 297 entities without the mutation and 3 with. With each new generation the number without the mutation grows faster than those with the mutation. Sure it's still there but it's prominence within the species diminishes with each new generation.

Again, not really you, you, just in general and a reactionary statement.
Then perhaps you can avoid quoting me in certain contexts where they look like accusations specific to me, rather than the more generic form of "you."
[/quote]

It seemed obvious to me, I'll endeavour to be more specific in the future.
 

Tanis

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Aug 30, 2010
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GildaTheGriffin said:
Tanis said:
Because it's easier to believe in a LIE then to face the TRUTH.
What truth may that be?
That, even if there IS a god, or gods, the way the world works doesn't NEED one to function.

We are NOT special pets of some sky daddy.

Our existence is NOT part of some super complex plan.

The universe does NOT revolve around the humanity.

We are merely a piece of existence, not the center of it.
 

FriedRicer

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Sep 19, 2010
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Quaxar said:
FriedRicer said:
My friend,a satanist,tells me to just ignore uneducated people and take advantage of them.

<youtube=IaDOkMEK4uk>

I don't know how to imbed. Skip to 3 hours in.
"<youtube=", then the numbers and letter part that follows the "v=" but not including anything with "&" in the Youtube url.
Quoting any post with an embed will also show you the relevant code.

What are you trying to say with this video?
I watched a few minutes into your 3h mark and so far it's the assertion that the legend of atlantis is true despite being called a story by the author himself, that the mayan calendar somehow is "the most advanced calendar ever" and 3 minutes in we're suddenly at the secret illuminati society.
Is there a specific point you are trying to make that I missed? Because firstly I can't really see any connection to the topic at hand and secondly I'm pretty sure I could disprove the whole thing point-per-point if it weren't so long I can't be bothered to watch all four hours.

For example: ~3:11:30
"Science found in the 50s that silicon shows the same principles of life as carbon. [...] Sponges deep in the ocean made from a hundret percent silicon were also discovered, which shows that silicon life doesn't just work in theory but they actually exist right here on this planet."
To say that sponges are made from silicon is like saying that humans are made from calcium. Sponges may USE silicon as a building material for their skeleton, that doesn't mean that that on a cellular level every C is replaced with Si. Silicon does have similar properties but as far as I know carbon is still far better at spontaneously forming organic compounds.
I know the video is nonsense-that was the context it was brought up in.My friend says to take advantage of people who actually believe that stuff.
 

FriedRicer

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Sep 19, 2010
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Ragsnstitches said:
FriedRicer said:
Ragsnstitches said:
Nimzabaat said:
Ragsnstitches said:
It doesn't break down.

*You can't see oxygen, but you CAN verify its presence. You can't see evolution happening, but you can observe its results. You can't see gravity but you can pretty accurately and reliably predict its affects.

You can't see god and you CAN'T verify his presence either. He has no verifiable properties, nor means of measurement.

They are fundamentally different things, faith and science, as is Creationism and Evolution.
See and if I WAS a creationist (and i'm not) you left yourself wide open with that;

You can't SEE god but you can walk on the earth he created, eat the fruits of his labours etc. If the earth exists because god created it, then there is your measurement right there. You're either floating in a featureless void or god exists. So you can verify his existence by breathing the air he created, eating the animals he put there for you and walking on the ground he made.

So the evidence for both sides is equally flimsy is what you've proven there. Which is the point I was trying to make at the beginning before the evolutionists got all embarrassed and had to prove how closed-minded they could be. And you know what? Success.

I give up. "You can lead a person to knowledge but you can't make them think." I have failed completely in that endeavor so hat's off to you all.
That's not proof of god. That's circular logic.

"Prove that god exists."
"You are standing within his creation *gestures to the world around*"
"Prove that god created the world"
"The Bible says so."
"How does the bible saying so make it true?"
"Because God himself arbitrated it."

Rinse and repeat.

Heck, let's take that even further:

"Prove that god exists."
"You are standing within his creation *gestures to the world around*"
"Prove that god created the world"
"How else other then a intelligent design, could such complexity be created"
"By immeasurable scales and forces of time, energy and movement, how does complexity prove gods handiwork?"
...

Yeah I don't know where to take this reasoning. Eventually every argument directed at Faith boils down to God is unknowable and all powerful, therefore he did it. The only physically quantifiable source of his existence are Religious Texts and, besides the internal contradictions observable within those texts, virtually every major event that counts as "proof of god" can be disproved by scientific evidence and testing.

The Irony of your final remark is not lost on anyone debating with you I'm sure.

Look. Here is an analogy so you can visualise how I, and others, see this topic:

The universe is a puzzle. For ease of visualisation, let's call it a jigsaw. This jigsaw is not like other jigsaws in that we can't truly know what the final image is until the last piece is in place. What's more, the jigsaw does not get easier the further you progress, it actually gets harder.

Religion saw this puzzle first. They used the power of observation to put the simplest and most basic pieces together, giving them a really rough outline of this immense puzzle. They then, in all their excitement, guessed as to what the final image was. From this point on they started directing their solution towards this suspected finished image. Eventually their guess started to show signs of fallibility. This resulted in schisms among the problem solvers, creating a variety of alternative outcomes as to what the final image was. The problem still being that they are still guessing based off of very little.

Eventually things got so muddled and confused that they started to jam pieces in spots they didn't fit in and even threw away pieces that appeared to not fit anywhere. Long before they even finished a fraction of the puzzle, they started joining their "established" sections together and then decided to paint their vision of the finished image over the gaps. Then proceeded to frame the image and claim it was finished and that no one should touch it... or look too closely... or pretty much inquire about anything related to it other then to talk about the finished image and how amazing it is.

Of course you had multiple finished images all saying they were the "true" finished image and shit just got confusing and nasty as a result.

Then some young buck named science looked at this finished image a bit closer then religion would have wanted and saw all the flaws. The pieces that don't fit, the pieces that were missing (discarded) and the fact that a big gaping hole in the puzzle was just painted over.

Science though thatt was odd and decided to reconstruct the identifiable pieces in his own time. He was methodical, only taking small leaps of guess work to help focus his efforts, sometimes getting the run of himself and trying to solve pieces beyond his current comprehension, but always corrected himself when pieces stopped fitting. Eventually he had surpassed religion with a more complete image, though still far from being truly complete. From this point on his guesswork was more clever and calculated, basing his next actions off of observable patterns in the image. Even large gaps between chunks of finished segments were starting to show form trough these patterns. His guesswork started to become more detailed and defined, capable of predicting where the next piece would sit with frightening accuracy.

This is where science is now. The puzzle is far from complete and progress is slow... but it is certain. He acknowledges that the puzzle is not complete and that his guess work might not be accurate, so is willing to go back on segments he once though were correct if the patterns start to fall apart. But fortunately due to his methodical nature, this mistakes are few and when they do appear the damage is only minute, only requiring the reshuffling of minor pieces.

People are now interested in this Science guys attempt at the puzzle, not just because the image is coming out differently from all the past assumed outcomes, but that he willingly allows people to look at the image, question his reasoning and even help out if they want to. Science involves the admirers... he doesn't expect anything of them other then to respect the process of solving the puzzle and not to get too excited about the outcome as that can lead to misdirection.

Finally, Science also doesn't punish people for prodding at his logic, since to Science it's a win-win. Either he's right and the true image keeps taking shape over time, or he's wrong, changes his approach and the true image takes shape over time. At this point he knows enough to see what is working, the patterns all add up and fit nicely, the only pieces that he questions are the newest placed pieces, since they are still placed on hunches and assumptions based off of patterns, but he is not afraid to dismantle segments who's patterns are just falling apart.

Religion gave up on the goal of solving the puzzle, discarded the pieces that didn't fit his assumptions, jammed others into places they didn't fit and then painted the final image of what they envisioned long ago. They then framed it and put it up on the wall and said, "This is the answer to the puzzle!".

Science, young and ambitious, disagreed and started from scratch, this time without fooling himself into imagining what it would be, but rather let it organically show itself as he pieced it together. He developed processes and studied patterns all in the aim of finishing the puzzle, not achieving a desired result.

Religion started it but was too arrogant to see past his own vision. Science is now taking the helm and is determined to see the true finished puzzle. That is his only goal and he does it slowly and methodically.
You sir(and many others)have made it impossible to post without feeling redundant!That analogy is so condescending-I am ashamed to not have thought of it myself!Do you find it ironic that some people will only understand science when you explain it using a completely made-up story that has some real parts to it?
My friend,a satanist,tells me to just ignore uneducated people and take advantage of them.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaDOkMEK4uk

I don't know how to imbed. Skip to 3 hours in.
Thanks for the recognition. I was afraid that analogy would fade away unnoticed /vanity

To be honest, my goal isn't to look down on their viewpoints, but considering how fundamentalist Faith based viewpoints stem from indoctrination and pressure from childhood (I recommend watching this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Eam-z1bwrk) means you are trying to target logic and reasoning's that stemmed from those early impressionable days. The only way to approach these topics is to drastically simplify it (which has a catch, since simplifying the complex leads to logical gaps, which causes a retort to turn around and become fuel to the fire).

Also to embed you type youtube=*insert the garbled code after watch?v=* within the square bracket parenthesis

So for example, the video I linked would be youtube=8Eam-z1bwrk then close the whole thing within the "[]" parenthesis. So you get this:


Finally... I wouldn't agree with your friends opinion, nor his life choice (or at least, how he identifies himself).

What was the video meant to illustrate?
The video was nonsense.Yet because there are some facts in it,it is swallowed whole.
You disagree with what life choice?
Satanism?Why?Based on your posts,I know you won't mind explaining.
I'm atheist-but I think there is a god-like-thing.
Stoicism/piety and all that jazz.
 

mitchell271

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Dijkstra said:
mitchell271 said:
It's as ridiculous as people decrying gay marriage. Let people believe what they want to believe and if they don't agree with you, who cares? How is what they believe interfering with your everyday life (unless it's about changing the school system)?
It's sad how some people don't actually look at the substance of what they're talking about and equate two very different things willy nilly because it was too much for them to actually check whether they actually compare on anything but a superficial level.
I know exactly what I'm talking about here. I know a lot about both of these topics and while the comparison may be a very simple one without much depth, it serves its purpose. While they may be different, both the evolution/creationism and the gay-marriage things are related to the Bible and Catholicism. The point was that you can believe whatever you want, just don't try to tell people what they can or can't do/believe in but it probably won't ever affect you.

Quaxar said:
I'm interested in what this "atheist channel" is because from that description it could be more than one. And even more if I assume you are ignorant about the actual purpose of the channel. Not saying you are but if you were the possibilities of what channel you talk about would rise.
There's a lot of dumb channels on youtube. 9/11 conspiracies, spirit pseudo-science, ghosthunters, Ray Comfort, ... I'm always curious about finding new ones to watch.
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheAtheistExperience
There it is if you want it. They do debates among other things but it seems to be that the majority of their material is equal rights for atheism (e.g. if there's a manger outside a city hall then also putting up a giant atom) and getting religion out of the classroom. Some of it is anti-theism though so be forewarned.
 

Vigormortis

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tautologico said:
The Lunatic said:
Just one of those things.

Evolution is quite simply, a fact.
That's one side of the discussion I really don't like: when people start saying that evolution is a fact. It's not. It's a scientific model, a particular scientific model which is backed by a huge pile of evidence, but it's not a "fact" and never will be, unless the hypothetical creator of the universe itself suddenly appears and tells us "yes, this is exactly how it works" :)
Mmm...not really. The process of evolution is "fact". It happens. We've, as a species, gathered more than enough evidence; new and old; to show that the process does, indeed, occur.

The particulars of how it occurs, why it occurs, and what factors determine the prevalence of one genetic mutation over another, are the parts in question. As in, the "theory" portion of the Theory of Evolution.

To put it simply: We know evolution occurs, we just don't know exactly how and why (entirely).

Same as with gravity.

The Theory of Gravity isn't questioning whether gravity is real, but rather how it works and why it's present in our universe.

Lugbzurg said:
Let's look at a few things. One moment, Evolution says that little cells slowly evolved into complex lifeforms. Next, it says that these complex lifeforms start devolving into simpler lifeforms.

You can't have a slowly-developing heart, brain, lung or any of that. There are several important parts that must all be there right from the get-go, or the creature will die.

Considering that these lifeforms are supposed to evolve into some better creature, how is it at all likely that two lifeforms could end up being compatible after evolution has taken place for any number of generations?

I'd recommend looking up Incredible Creatures that Defy Evolution. There's blatant proof that there is indeed a grand creator. You've just gotta pay attention, putting two and two together. Then, it becomes obvious.
I watched that film. It was hilarious. The leaps (and failings) of logic and lack of understanding, misinterpretations, and complete denials of real, scientific truths almost literally had me rolling on the floor laughing.

By minute 10 I couldn't believe the amount of ludicrous bullshit I was hearing. Every claim made was tenuous at best and down-right idiotic at worst.

Blatant proof? It sure was. It was blatant proof of how ignorant the filmmaker(s) were.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Look, I don't care what religious belief you hold. That's irrelevant to me. What I DO care about is people spreading untruths and denying vast oceans of evidence that show the validity of certain scientific claims. Often simply because someone told those people a book written thousands of years ago (and rewritten and altered an untold number of times since then) says that science is "wrong".

The fact of the matter is, evolution is a real, quantifiable, natural process that virtually all organisms experience. The only; and I do mean only; thing that is up for debate is how and why evolution occurs.
 

Vigormortis

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FriedRicer said:
The video was nonsense.Yet because there are some facts in it,it is swallowed whole.
You disagree with what life choice?
Satanism?Why?Based on your posts,I know you won't mind explaining.
I'm atheist-but I think there is a god-like-thing.
Stoicism/piety and all that jazz.
Nonsense? That video was one of the most rational, level-headed, and informative videos I've ever seen on Youtube.

There was virtually no word that man spoke that didn't ring true in one form or another. He may have taken a few 'examples' to a level one might consider approaching extreme, but all-in-all, he made a lot of sense.

In fact, I think it bares reposting the video for more people to see:


Also, the sentence: "I'm atheist-but I think there is a god-like-thing.", is the very definition oxymoronical. You are not an atheist if you believe there is or are a deity or deities. That makes you a theist.
 

Dinwatr

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Dijkstra said:
Well okay, fair enough. But the difference is he no doubt put careful thought into them. I imagine it's more like what Schrödinger intended with his cat thought experiment. Whereas Creationists arguments aren't intended to answer anything or provoke thought, it's biased stuff that's meant to prove their religious views. If any of them are honest in what they think they're doing I think they have some big biases that would make it not so useful to listen to them.
The guy's name is Dolf Seilacher. A famous example of his type of questions is to present a typical Paleozoic fauna--you know, bryozoans, crinoids, brachiopods, a few cephalopods--and ask "What does this represent?" Obviously, it's a shallow marine system we all say. "How do you know?" That one took me a week to work out in grad school.

There have been some useful Creationist criticisms in the past--up until 1925 or so. Unfortunately, that's about it. The field no longer presents even entertaining criticisms of evolution.

Lugbzurg said:
Evolution says that little cells slowly evolved into complex lifeforms. Next, it says that these complex lifeforms start devolving into simpler lifeforms.
This is an over-simplification, to the point where it's nearly dishonest. Evolution more or less says that every line of organism is attempting multiple solutions to the problems presented in fitness space simultaneously. Some of these, yes, include simple organisms becoming more complex, and complex organisms becoming simpler (good luck quantifying that--I've seen attempts, and they've ALL failed). But that's not even half the picture. The ONLY way to build the model you've presented is to pick one twig at the most distal (recent) end of the evolution of life on Earth and say that it's evolution as such--a ridiculous notion, though a pervasive one.

You can't have a slowly-developing heart, brain, lung or any of that. There are several important parts that must all be there right from the get-go, or the creature will die.
Not even close to true. There are many types of circulatory systems, representing a fairly gradual transition from no circulatory system (Platihelmenti, for example) to open circulatory systems (Moluska) to the mammalian system. Seems to me I recall seeing snails meandering down my front porch earlier this week. As for brains, again, we've got quite a number of various types along a continuum, from neural nets (Cnideria) to ganglia (decapoda) to actual brains (vertebrates). Lungs are similar. And those are LIVING organisms--things that have retained the more primitive structures. You go deeper into the past and things get weird. The concept of "tissue" breaks down at a certain point.

This is nothing more than Irreducible Complexity in a cheap suit, and it fails for the same reasons.

Considering that these lifeforms are supposed to evolve into some better creature
No. POPULATIONS evolve such that their members are better suited for their LOCAL, CHANGING environments. "Better" is a constantly shifting target--that's what I meant when I described fitness space as boiling.

how is it at all likely that two lifeforms could end up being compatible after evolution has taken place for any number of generations?
Simple: organisms don't evolve. Populations do. So there would never be a problem with this.

You've just gotta pay attention, putting two and two together. Then, it becomes obvious.
This isn't even close to true. A detailed study of biology is required, and easily demonstrates the errors in this argument. And if someone's not willing to do that work, I have to wonder why they're engaging in this discussion in the first place.
 

McMullen

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Quaxar said:
Also, boo for religion thread in offtopic!
And that there just kinda sums up how ridiculous the situation is, that an evolution thread is seen as a religion thread. It should be possible to discuss it without any religious connotations.
 

EclipseoftheDarkSun

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Because they don't like evolution's implications and how they don't fit in well with their world view (which is often informed with a religious creation story that doesn't match the known facts particularly well - which is no surprise given that our scientific knowledge about the world has grown exponentially as a species since the original people laid down their thoughts in paper).
 

Quaxar

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McMullen said:
Quaxar said:
Also, boo for religion thread in offtopic!
And that there just kinda sums up how ridiculous the situation is, that an evolution thread is seen as a religion thread. It should be possible to discuss it without any religious connotations.
I totally agree with you. And just to clarify I have now crossed out that sentence in my first post since I changed my mind on that about 15 pages ago when it got clear that the thread wasn't mainly anti-religious as these things might turn out but a proper discussion about scientific theories.

mitchell271 said:
Quaxar said:
I'm interested in what this "atheist channel" is because from that description it could be more than one. And even more if I assume you are ignorant about the actual purpose of the channel. Not saying you are but if you were the possibilities of what channel you talk about would rise.
There's a lot of dumb channels on youtube. 9/11 conspiracies, spirit pseudo-science, ghosthunters, Ray Comfort, ... I'm always curious about finding new ones to watch.
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheAtheistExperience
There it is if you want it. They do debates among other things but it seems to be that the majority of their material is equal rights for atheism (e.g. if there's a manger outside a city hall then also putting up a giant atom) and getting religion out of the classroom. Some of it is anti-theism though so be forewarned.
Uh, I know those guys pretty well and they are in no way religion-bashing.
You realize that this is made in Austin, TX, one of the big creationist and fundamentalist areas in the US? Hell, this is exactly the area where they try to force religious views into science and politics. Also, Austin/Texas as a whole has TWO 24h channels JUST for religious stuff and even more programs spilling out from there to more stations while the Atheist Experience on the other hand is one 1-1,5h show per week.
And I don't see what the problem is with having civilised discussions with Christians, 95% of the time if anyone snaps it's the callers who get their religious texts handed to them by a former minister student. Yes, some of them are anti-theists but they have arguments for their stance and I don't see why you'd have issues with equal rights for atheists... after all, this is an area where friends and family will cut all ties with you for turning atheist and even a lot of companies discriminate against non-Christians.
 

Ragsnstitches

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FriedRicer said:
Ragsnstitches said:
FriedRicer said:
Ragsnstitches said:
Nimzabaat said:
Ragsnstitches said:
It doesn't break down.

*You can't see oxygen, but you CAN verify its presence. You can't see evolution happening, but you can observe its results. You can't see gravity but you can pretty accurately and reliably predict its affects.

You can't see god and you CAN'T verify his presence either. He has no verifiable properties, nor means of measurement.

They are fundamentally different things, faith and science, as is Creationism and Evolution.
See and if I WAS a creationist (and i'm not) you left yourself wide open with that;

You can't SEE god but you can walk on the earth he created, eat the fruits of his labours etc. If the earth exists because god created it, then there is your measurement right there. You're either floating in a featureless void or god exists. So you can verify his existence by breathing the air he created, eating the animals he put there for you and walking on the ground he made.

So the evidence for both sides is equally flimsy is what you've proven there. Which is the point I was trying to make at the beginning before the evolutionists got all embarrassed and had to prove how closed-minded they could be. And you know what? Success.

I give up. "You can lead a person to knowledge but you can't make them think." I have failed completely in that endeavor so hat's off to you all.
That's not proof of god. That's circular logic.

"Prove that god exists."
"You are standing within his creation *gestures to the world around*"
"Prove that god created the world"
"The Bible says so."
"How does the bible saying so make it true?"
"Because God himself arbitrated it."

Rinse and repeat.

Heck, let's take that even further:

"Prove that god exists."
"You are standing within his creation *gestures to the world around*"
"Prove that god created the world"
"How else other then a intelligent design, could such complexity be created"
"By immeasurable scales and forces of time, energy and movement, how does complexity prove gods handiwork?"
...

Yeah I don't know where to take this reasoning. Eventually every argument directed at Faith boils down to God is unknowable and all powerful, therefore he did it. The only physically quantifiable source of his existence are Religious Texts and, besides the internal contradictions observable within those texts, virtually every major event that counts as "proof of god" can be disproved by scientific evidence and testing.

The Irony of your final remark is not lost on anyone debating with you I'm sure.

Look. Here is an analogy so you can visualise how I, and others, see this topic:

The universe is a puzzle. For ease of visualisation, let's call it a jigsaw. This jigsaw is not like other jigsaws in that we can't truly know what the final image is until the last piece is in place. What's more, the jigsaw does not get easier the further you progress, it actually gets harder.

Religion saw this puzzle first. They used the power of observation to put the simplest and most basic pieces together, giving them a really rough outline of this immense puzzle. They then, in all their excitement, guessed as to what the final image was. From this point on they started directing their solution towards this suspected finished image. Eventually their guess started to show signs of fallibility. This resulted in schisms among the problem solvers, creating a variety of alternative outcomes as to what the final image was. The problem still being that they are still guessing based off of very little.

Eventually things got so muddled and confused that they started to jam pieces in spots they didn't fit in and even threw away pieces that appeared to not fit anywhere. Long before they even finished a fraction of the puzzle, they started joining their "established" sections together and then decided to paint their vision of the finished image over the gaps. Then proceeded to frame the image and claim it was finished and that no one should touch it... or look too closely... or pretty much inquire about anything related to it other then to talk about the finished image and how amazing it is.

Of course you had multiple finished images all saying they were the "true" finished image and shit just got confusing and nasty as a result.

Then some young buck named science looked at this finished image a bit closer then religion would have wanted and saw all the flaws. The pieces that don't fit, the pieces that were missing (discarded) and the fact that a big gaping hole in the puzzle was just painted over.

Science though thatt was odd and decided to reconstruct the identifiable pieces in his own time. He was methodical, only taking small leaps of guess work to help focus his efforts, sometimes getting the run of himself and trying to solve pieces beyond his current comprehension, but always corrected himself when pieces stopped fitting. Eventually he had surpassed religion with a more complete image, though still far from being truly complete. From this point on his guesswork was more clever and calculated, basing his next actions off of observable patterns in the image. Even large gaps between chunks of finished segments were starting to show form trough these patterns. His guesswork started to become more detailed and defined, capable of predicting where the next piece would sit with frightening accuracy.

This is where science is now. The puzzle is far from complete and progress is slow... but it is certain. He acknowledges that the puzzle is not complete and that his guess work might not be accurate, so is willing to go back on segments he once though were correct if the patterns start to fall apart. But fortunately due to his methodical nature, this mistakes are few and when they do appear the damage is only minute, only requiring the reshuffling of minor pieces.

People are now interested in this Science guys attempt at the puzzle, not just because the image is coming out differently from all the past assumed outcomes, but that he willingly allows people to look at the image, question his reasoning and even help out if they want to. Science involves the admirers... he doesn't expect anything of them other then to respect the process of solving the puzzle and not to get too excited about the outcome as that can lead to misdirection.

Finally, Science also doesn't punish people for prodding at his logic, since to Science it's a win-win. Either he's right and the true image keeps taking shape over time, or he's wrong, changes his approach and the true image takes shape over time. At this point he knows enough to see what is working, the patterns all add up and fit nicely, the only pieces that he questions are the newest placed pieces, since they are still placed on hunches and assumptions based off of patterns, but he is not afraid to dismantle segments who's patterns are just falling apart.

Religion gave up on the goal of solving the puzzle, discarded the pieces that didn't fit his assumptions, jammed others into places they didn't fit and then painted the final image of what they envisioned long ago. They then framed it and put it up on the wall and said, "This is the answer to the puzzle!".

Science, young and ambitious, disagreed and started from scratch, this time without fooling himself into imagining what it would be, but rather let it organically show itself as he pieced it together. He developed processes and studied patterns all in the aim of finishing the puzzle, not achieving a desired result.

Religion started it but was too arrogant to see past his own vision. Science is now taking the helm and is determined to see the true finished puzzle. That is his only goal and he does it slowly and methodically.
You sir(and many others)have made it impossible to post without feeling redundant!That analogy is so condescending-I am ashamed to not have thought of it myself!Do you find it ironic that some people will only understand science when you explain it using a completely made-up story that has some real parts to it?
My friend,a satanist,tells me to just ignore uneducated people and take advantage of them.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaDOkMEK4uk

I don't know how to imbed. Skip to 3 hours in.
Thanks for the recognition. I was afraid that analogy would fade away unnoticed /vanity

To be honest, my goal isn't to look down on their viewpoints, but considering how fundamentalist Faith based viewpoints stem from indoctrination and pressure from childhood (I recommend watching this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Eam-z1bwrk) means you are trying to target logic and reasoning's that stemmed from those early impressionable days. The only way to approach these topics is to drastically simplify it (which has a catch, since simplifying the complex leads to logical gaps, which causes a retort to turn around and become fuel to the fire).

Also to embed you type youtube=*insert the garbled code after watch?v=* within the square bracket parenthesis

So for example, the video I linked would be youtube=8Eam-z1bwrk then close the whole thing within the "[]" parenthesis. So you get this:


Finally... I wouldn't agree with your friends opinion, nor his life choice (or at least, how he identifies himself).

What was the video meant to illustrate?
The video was nonsense.Yet because there are some facts in it,it is swallowed whole.
You disagree with what life choice?
Satanism?Why?Based on your posts,I know you won't mind explaining.
I'm atheist-but I think there is a god-like-thing.
Stoicism/piety and all that jazz.
Well I see your point about that video. Aside from the shameless extra credits rip off, the guy is just going full blown soap box, regurgitating shit he heard haphazardly. But rather then taking his ramblings with a pinch of salt a lot of the comments are claiming "life changing experiences". I tried watching a few minutes but felt seething anger rise as I started hearing about conspiracies, supernatural entities and fucking lost civilisations. It reminds me of that "Zeitgeist" series of films. Interesting facts framing total bullshit topped off with idealism and pure fantasy. Wonderful nonsense, but nonsense none the less.

I denounced my faith years ago as it did it not satisfy my curiosity. I was Catholic, in a Catholic community, in a Catholic state. The Arrogance and sheer rejection of scrutiny offended me, especially after all the crap involving paedophile priests and all the lives they ruined in their wake.

I didn't convert to another faith because I hate the concept of blind faith. I have seen and currently still see the impact of indoctrination (the only way to make someone believe in something intangible and unknowable in this day and age of information is to either subvert their thoughts or subjugate them with fear... Catholicism and many World religions do this). It stunts intellectual development and retards our development as a species.

Currently the means to which people have tried to make me believe in a God or Gods is to tell me we don't know how the universe works. I say we know quite a bit and still have not seen proof of an intelligent or benevolent power. But besides that, the rationale of people arguing this point is that the absence of knowledge proves god (since god is unknowable) or that the fact we exist in such a complex universe proves god (Intelligent Design). These are unsubstantial fillers to blank spots in science, not solid evidence as to the existence of a God.

Now again, I don't know your friend, but claiming to be Satanic can only mean a few things.
1, He is young and immature, feeling this counter culture to mass religion is cooler and edgy (not saying he is, but it is possible... there were a lot of "Satanists" around my age in school).
2, He really believes that Satan is a deity and follows the principles set forward by texts and worships him in some way or form. (The principles are not inherently evil, despite what Christians would claim).
or
3, he does not believe satan is real, but subscribes to the philosophies and practices of Satanism. In essence he is agnostic, or atheistic, and follows this organisation for the sense of community.

Ultimately there seems to be a rebellious aspect to Satanism. Either it's to shocking and edgy, or to directly oppose the oppressive teachings of other faiths, or it's a symbolic rejection of mass religion and only half heartedly pursued.

None of these are particularly encouraging reasons for me. The first one is obviously childish and immature. The 2nd is no better then following a mass faith which I already reject, and finally the last one is counter intuitive... Atheists and Agnostics can't distinguish themselves as such within an established faith based system.

It also doesn't help that Satan is only a bogeyman conjured up to make people follow the principles of a faith more closely, for fear of eternal reprisals. In that sense, even God seems like a better alternative. Satan is fiction within fiction...

Finally your friends "opinion" on how to deal with ignorants is no better then mass faith. Mass faith prospers off of the ignorance of the many... and your friend encourages that. Being an Atheist who prefers knowledge over blind belief I think it would be more prudent to support those who have been starved of knowledge and filled with fantasy, and give them intellectual nourishment to abolish the fiction.

But I'm not arrogant either. I won't force people to change as that just creates tension and conflict. The beauty if science is that all knowledge is recorded and easily traced, so anyone who suddenly finds themselves questioning their faith, may find fulfilment in knowledge. I also don't think personal faith conflicts with Scientific pursuits, only mass organised religion seems to be actively (even deliberately) resisting scientific progress. The more secular our societies become, separating faith from politics and education, the more everyone can get along. Meanwhile the more these factors mingle together the more conflicts of interest pop up.

Oh, and I think you would be classified as Agnostic. Agnostics believe that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God or of anything beyond material phenomena. Essentially, there COULD be a god, or there might not be, we simply don't know.

Only complete rejection of the concept of god and equivalent beliefs are Atheistic.

Vigormortis said:
FriedRicer said:
The video was nonsense.Yet because there are some facts in it,it is swallowed whole.
You disagree with what life choice?
Satanism?Why?Based on your posts,I know you won't mind explaining.
I'm atheist-but I think there is a god-like-thing.
Stoicism/piety and all that jazz.
Nonsense? That video was one of the most rational, level-headed, and informative videos I've ever seen on Youtube.

There was virtually no word that man spoke that didn't ring true in one form or another. He may have taken a few 'examples' to a level one might consider approaching extreme, but all-in-all, he made a lot of sense.

In fact, I think it bares reposting the video for more people to see:


Also, the sentence: "I'm atheist-but I think there is a god-like-thing.", is the very definition oxymoronical. You are not an atheist if you believe there is or are a deity or deities. That makes you a theist.
I think he was referring to the video HE posted, not me. The 3 hour one involving conspiracies, lost civilisations and other bullshit.
 

Quaxar

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Sep 21, 2009
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wulf3n said:
How non-beneficial (but not detrimental) mutations propagate through a species?
If they're not detrimental, why wouldn't they? Hell, only certain detriments impact the chance of propagating, so even they don't open a question here.

Seriously, I'm confused by this question. How does heredity not answer this by default?
This has already been explained better in previous posts.

I don't know how to explain it any better, though I'll try and give an example.

If there were 100 couples, 1 with a mutation that isn't beneficial yet, but may be in the future.
If each couple gave birth to 3 offspring we now have 297 entities without the mutation and 3 with. With each new generation the number without the mutation grows faster than those with the mutation. Sure it's still there but it's prominence within the species diminishes with each new generation.
You still seem to misunderstand something. Or I do of course.
"Beneficial in the future" isn't a viable option. Either it is an advantage or a disadvantage in the current environment or it is useless but not harmful. It doesn't matter if in 50 generations that change might provide useful until that point is reached and the surviving members with the trait begin to have an advantage.

Take different eye colours, they don't have particular advantages for survival but they also don't hinder with anything unless females culturally decide to prefer one eye colour over the rest.
If there simplys is no need or pressure towards a certain colour a possible mutation from hazel to green has neither advantage nor disadvantage from it and thus the same chances at mating as the others with hazel eyes. Over time the trait might mix with the other or it might get extinct because early in the smaller population with this different colour gets killed off for unrelated reasons.
Another possibility is blue eyes which is an recessive trait so it can mix in without getting noticed until an individual experiences a failure in the dominant allele and the recessive one can get into action.
And even bad mutations can stay present in a population, just look at how haemophilia works.

Your example with the 100 couples is the same misargument Kent Hovind uses when he says that the moon recedes from the earth by 3cm per year and then goes and counts back 3cm/year times 4,5 billion years until the moon is partly inside the earth. You can't just always assume a steady rate.
 

ImperialSunlight

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From an empirical standpoint, I agree that anyone who disputes evolution (barring intelligent design, which is a different area altogether), has to be pretty insane/fundamentalist/stupid/whatever ugly word you want to use. From a skeptical perspective (which is what I usually go by, in this case, that neither rational nor empirical evidence has any value), I have no idea. I can't know that humans even exist, so what's the point of arguing about whether they evolved from something or not?
 

Vault101

I'm in your mind fuzz
Sep 26, 2010
18,855
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see kids...this is what happens when R&P breaks free and wreaks havoc in the off-topic

because thats all it comes down too really...R part mostly
 

xdiesp

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"People", heh. Lesson number one of your coming into being as a normal, non-brainwashed person: do not generalize to f*****g everyone, what is limited to the USA only.
 

Quaxar

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xdiesp said:
"People", heh. Lesson number one of your coming into being as a normal, non-brainwashed person: do not generalize to f*****g everyone, what is limited to the USA only.
Lesson number two: check your data before making claims.

Public Acceptance of Evolution
http://s3-ak.buzzfed.com/static/imagebuzz/terminal01/2009/3/13/16/acceptance-of-evolution-by-country-17573-1236974861-5.jpg
 

Reece Stevens

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If you were taught all of your life by people you have every reason to trust then I'm sure you would ignore some stranger telling you everything they taught you was a lie and that they are right, you have to consider a different perspective
 

TopQuark

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Quaxar said:
xdiesp said:
"People", heh. Lesson number one of your coming into being as a normal, non-brainwashed person: do not generalize to f*****g everyone, what is limited to the USA only.
Lesson number two: check your data before making claims.

Public Acceptance of Evolution
http://s3-ak.buzzfed.com/static/imagebuzz/terminal01/2009/3/13/16/acceptance-of-evolution-by-country-17573-1236974861-5.jpg
Can I ask for the source of the graph, is it wiki? Anyways wow, my country is even below US, I'm kinda ashamed. Weirdly antievolutionary movement got adopted into Islam in the last decade even though Islam doesn't have fundamental incompatibility with evolution (well except the general problematics that arise from godlike being creating a batch of living organisms). Their general strategy is pamphlets, street exhibitions and internet propaganda. The weird thing is they either have direct relations with the movement in US or they are taking after them, because every argument they come up with is a derivation of the evangelical antievolutionaries. One of the forerunners is Adnan Oktar who blends his ridicule with popularism. Almost every video of his is shared by immense amount of people as mockery, but that only further butters his bread. Get a bite http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFshyFDB8cA

Edit: Got it. https://athena.cci.utk.edu/content/relatedmedia/2009/03/03/Science_evolution_2006.pdf