Evolution is not a scientific theory
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It's such a fine line between stupid and clever. Random guest posting.
It's such a fine line between stupid and clever. Random guest posting.
- annielaurie
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
FD,
Evolution is the best hypothesis science has today to explain nature and the diversity of life on earth, and how everything got here.
It is backed up by mountains of evidence and an uncountable number of proven facts. Scienctific method has been proven to work, get the same results over and over, things are considered proven facts.
For instance, we know that the speed of light in a vacuum is a cosmological constant, and never changes: by using that universal speed limit cosmologists can determine distances and also measurements of time. That is just one of many things.
Are you religious? Do you have some other belief system preventing you from understanding the way science works? From your comments it looks to me like you are mixed up about the way modern science works.
Give me science any day. It is through the science diciplines that we learn about our origins, and how reality works.
Evolution is the best hypothesis science has today to explain nature and the diversity of life on earth, and how everything got here.
It is backed up by mountains of evidence and an uncountable number of proven facts. Scienctific method has been proven to work, get the same results over and over, things are considered proven facts.
For instance, we know that the speed of light in a vacuum is a cosmological constant, and never changes: by using that universal speed limit cosmologists can determine distances and also measurements of time. That is just one of many things.
Are you religious? Do you have some other belief system preventing you from understanding the way science works? From your comments it looks to me like you are mixed up about the way modern science works.
Give me science any day. It is through the science diciplines that we learn about our origins, and how reality works.
.
- Super Nova
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
It is scientific. It is a theory that has been peer reviewed and stood up to challenge. There is no conflictin evidence that destroys the theory. All evidence supports the theory. Now much more scientific can you get.freediver wrote:I get the theory. I am just saying it isn't scientific.It's hard to believe in this day and age that many people don't get it about evolution, both macro and micro (natural selection)
You seem to have a different definition of "scientific" to the whole scientific community. What is you definition?
Utter rubbish. Hardy worth a response.freediver wrote:There is no such thing as a 'proven fact' in science. They all end up being disproven.A scientific Theory is an hypothesis, already backed up by a mountain of proven facts.
You should have stidied harder. We were all taught "Newton's theory of "Universal Gravitation""freediver wrote:It wasn't in my high school physics textbook.Gravity is a theory: the Theory of Gravity. It is still called that.
F=MA... replace A with G and you have the beginning.
The Formula for the Force of Gravity
Newton rightly saw this as a confirmation of the "inverse square law". He proposed that a "universal" force of gravitation F existed between any two masses m and M, directed from each to the other, proportional to each of them and inversely proportional to the square of their separation distance r. In a formula (ignoring for now the vector character of the force):
F = G mM/r2
Suppose M is the mass of the Earth, R its radius and m is the mass of some falling object near the Earth's surface. Then one may write
F = m GM/R2 = m g
From this
g = GM/R2
The capital G is known as the constant of universal gravitation. That is the number we need to know in order to calculate the gravitational attraction between, say, two spheres of 1 kilogram each. Unlike the attraction of the Earth, which has a huge mass M, such a force is quite small, and the number G is likewise very, very small. Measuring that small force in the lab is a delicate and difficult feat.
We all learned this stuff. or should have.
Now I know your takign the piss.freediver wrote:It would have burst your eardrums if you had heard it. It would have also burst your head into subatomic particles.As for the origin of the universe, the singularity that suddenly inflated (no explosion, it was a smooth and soundless expanding, like a balloon blowing up)
That's the issue, a mutation is a random event. Can you predicit exactly when the ball will fall on 00 on a roulette table.. no ... but you know the odds.freediver wrote:They are commonly referred to as natural selection. Can you predict when a beneficial mutation will happen?This is a large system full of chaos so making precise prediction is diffult. However there are many things that are predicatable based on probabilities.
If you can. That's why we have tested most theories in physics. We are now at the stage where we have to build even more complex devices to test e.g. CERN. If you cannot test directly you can validate by observing the universe... it's like one grerat big test rig... in realtime. If you observe it as predicted, you have validated an aspect of the theory.freediver wrote:Making predictions is not enough. You have to be able to actually test them.The timescales are long..... the evironment is not predicatable.... the process is though
I get your point. I think it is the more we have a deeper understanding the detail has to be refined. We find the deeper thruth... for now until something is revealed that force this refinement. There is power in being open to correction.freediver wrote:Eventually the entire paradigm must be discarded and replaced with a better one. That means it is not true. It is by being proven wrong over and over again that science is so powerful.In practise they are not opposites. Science seeks the truth. A theory can be proven wrong the moment we see a result that is not predicted/expected or the evidence goes against the theory. It generally needs a tweek or needs a full new thoery.
True, it doesn't require mutation. However major leaps occur when there is a mutation that give an advantage.freediver wrote:It is the mutation bit I was pointing out, not the benefit. Natural selection is also beneficial, but does not require mutation.They don't need to be forgiven for attributing it to a beneficial mutation... because they are. They have benefited from their relationship with man.
For your aguement to stand you must assume that all live has the same DNA. It doesn't... We evolved from simplier liveforms by mutation and natural selection eliminated those that were not to survive.
The burden of proof rest with you to prove there are unicorns. The burden of proof is for you to prove there is a god. Not this nonsense that the scientific community has to prove there is no god or unicorns.freediver wrote:So would my theory that unicorns die if you impale them with their own horns. That doesn't make the theory 'falsifiable' from a scientific perspective.It would be falsified if there was evidence that contradicted the theory.
Absence of proof does not mean there are no unicorns because they are magical beings and could hide from us. However without any evidence of their existence I would challenge your theory because it is not based on any observation in the real world.
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- Super Nova
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
annielaurie wrote:modern science works.
Give me science any day. It is through the science diciplines that we learn about our origins, and how reality works.
Yep....
Always remember what you post, send or do on the internet is not private and you are responsible.
- freediver
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
That does not make it scientific either. Do theories cease being scientific once they are disproven? Was creationism scientific before evolution came along?Evolution is the best hypothesis science has today to explain nature and the diversity of life on earth, and how everything got here
This does not make it scientific either.It is backed up by mountains of evidence and an uncountable number of proven facts.
Not by actual scientists.Scienctific method has been proven to work, get the same results over and over, things are considered proven facts.
Are you sure about that?For instance, we know that the speed of light in a vacuum is a cosmological constant, and never changes
You don't appear to know what science is.Give me science any day. It is through the science diciplines that we learn about our origins, and how reality works.
SN:
If I told my peers about my unicorn theory, would that make it scientific? You for example cannot disprove it. Does that make it scientific?It is scientific. It is a theory that has been peer reviewed and stood up to challenge.
Can you find any evidence to disprove my unicorn theory?There is no conflictin evidence that destroys the theory.
http://www.ozpolitic.com/evolution/scie ... ology.htmlYou seem to have a different definition of "scientific" to the whole scientific community. What is you definition?
Utter rubbish. Hardy worth a response.
Consistent with the theory of confirmation holism, some scholars assert "fact" to be necessarily "theory-laden" to some degree. Thomas Kuhn points out that knowing what facts to measure, and how to measure them, requires the use of other theories. For example, the age of fossils is based on radiocarbon dating which is justified by reasoning that radioactive decay follows a Poisson process rather than a Bernoulli process. Similarly, Percy Williams Bridgman is credited with the methodological position known as operationalism, which asserts that all observations are not only influenced, but necessarily defined by the means and assumptions used to measure them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton%27s ... ravitation" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;You should have stidied harder. We were all taught "Newton's theory of "Universal Gravitation""
What exactly is your conception of the big bang?Now I know your takign the piss.
Do you know the odds of a beneficial mutation occurring within a given time frame? Would you disprove the theory of evolution if they did not happen?That's the issue, a mutation is a random event. Can you predicit exactly when the ball will fall on 00 on a roulette table.. no ... but you know the odds.
Were we ever at a different stage?We are now at the stage where we have to build even more complex devices to test e.g. CERN.
Observational analysis is a rational precursor to empirical testing, but not a scientific substitute.If you cannot test directly you can validate by observing the universe...
Until it all gets thrown out. For example, many people consider relativity to be a refinement of newtonian mechanics, perhaps because of the way it is usually introduced. It is not. All concepts of newtonian mechanics are replaced. Mass, distance, time etc are not the same thing.I get your point. I think it is the more we have a deeper understanding the detail has to be refined.
This is the distinction between the scientific theory of natural selection and the broader theory of eovlution.True, it doesn't require mutation. However major leaps occur when there is a mutation that give an advantage.
It does. That is why you can call it the same thing - DNA. Though I have no idea why you think I am assuming this.For your aguement to stand you must assume that all live has the same DNA. It doesn't...
No it doesn't. I am arguing that there aren't. When you impale them, they disappear into a puff of glitter.The burden of proof rest with you to prove there are unicorns.
Why would I need to prove there is a god to be able to kill unicorns?The burden of proof is for you to prove there is a god.
The theory is that if you impale a unicorn with it's own horn, it dies. This would be true regardless of the existence of god or unicorns.Not this nonsense that the scientific community has to prove there is no god or unicorns.
What about whether it is scientific? You seem confused about the topic.Absence of proof does not mean there are no unicorns because they are magical beings and could hide from us. However without any evidence of their existence I would challenge your theory because it is not based on any observation in the real world
- IQS.RLOW
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
Freeloader, do you accept the theory of evolution or do you accept the theory of creationism?
Quote by Aussie: I was a long term dead beat, wife abusing, drunk, black Muslim, on the dole for decades prison escapee having been convicted of paedophilia
- freediver
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
IQ when I say it is not scientific I am not saying it is wrong. Quite the opposite. I think the transformative power of scientific theories is that they are wrong and will be proven wrong. This is a totally separate question from whether creationism is wrong or right or whether it is a scientific theory. Being the best available explanation does not make something scientific. The wrongness of one theory says nothing at all about the value of another.
- IQS.RLOW
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
Why not answer the question?
Quote by Aussie: I was a long term dead beat, wife abusing, drunk, black Muslim, on the dole for decades prison escapee having been convicted of paedophilia
- Mattus
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
Because its an idiotic question?IQS.RLOW wrote:Why not answer the question?
"I may be the first man to put a testicle in Germaine Greer's mouth"
-Heston Blumenthal
-Heston Blumenthal
- IQS.RLOW
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
Yours was. Mine wasn't.Mattus wrote:Because its an idiotic question?IQS.RLOW wrote:Why not answer the question?
Did you notice that he avoided it?
Quote by Aussie: I was a long term dead beat, wife abusing, drunk, black Muslim, on the dole for decades prison escapee having been convicted of paedophilia
- Mattus
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Re: Scientology - weird cult
I noticed he just got through carefully explaining how scientific theories are testable and may be supported by or rejected by evidence arising from experimentation. That neither evolution or creation can be directly tested by science. I noticed him carefully differentiating natural selection, which as been tested and upheld ( if not proven, simply because scientists avoid the term proof) from evolution. Your response was along the lines of "tl, dr so which ideology to you blindly follow?"
"I may be the first man to put a testicle in Germaine Greer's mouth"
-Heston Blumenthal
-Heston Blumenthal
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