Mojo
Mostly harmless
Beyond saying "it's unfalsifiable" there is nothing to discuss within a scientific context.
Do you know what we call unfalsifiable ideas presented in a scientific context?
Beyond saying "it's unfalsifiable" there is nothing to discuss within a scientific context.
You are not reading me right. I said "it might be worth giving Genesis a second look".
Well there is this post but I must admit that the GOP stance seems rather confusing. On the one hand they say that they are opposed to critical thinking in the class room but then they say that "Teachers and students should be able to discuss the strengths and weaknesses of these theories openly and without fear of retribution or discrimination of any kind" which IS critical thinking. So if I use the words "critical thinking" when they are not explicitly used in the context, I am referring to the statement that the GOP made.Can you link to some posts where people other than you have said that, please?
That's the trick. The objective is to try and rail road me into inadvertently posting a word that could be misinterpreted as an entire creationist argument.The questions can only “trick” you if you don’t have valid answers to them. And since the only alternative you have offered is “goddidit”, it looks rather as if you don’t.

Well there is this post…
That's the trick. The objective is to try and rail road me into inadvertently posting a word that could be misinterpreted as an entire creationist argument.
And when asked out right about what other theories should be taught they completely ignore the question.It’s the only alternative you have been able to present.
That question has been addressed. (One poster even pointed out that there is no "official" theory of evolution).And when asked out right about what other theories should be taught they completely ignore the question.
You are not reading me right. I said "it might be worth giving Genesis a second look". Large numbers of students are going to school with beliefs that are incompatible to what they will learn in the science room. That's a lot of people who aren't going to get much out of a science class if their beliefs aren't addressed.
However, I am only postulating this as apossible exception to the "it's unfalsifiabe - we won't waste any more time on this" rule. I am willing to accept that we don't need to deal with their beliefs at all or that we should deal with their beliefs elsewhere and leave it out of the science class room.
They have made their ignorance of current education for under 16s clear to all. For instance they don't think kids are any longer taught 2+2=4 in math classes, that the North Pole is rather chilly in geography lessons.Ah, ok. A mod-split thread of a derail from another thread. Well then, while this is a derail off of that earlier thread, surely this is bang on here, given that is literally what this thread's about? And in any case, since my post directly addressed your own post, I don't see how you can describe mine as a derail, not unless you accept that yours itself was a derail, from whatever original course you may have had in mind for your thread.
...Anyway, moving on. I agree, teaching critical thinking in schools seems like a great idea. But why just in science, though? Why not literature as well --- for instance, discussing controversial authorship (Shakespeare? The Bible?), and/or controversial content, and/or critical analysis and criticism of plots (as opposed to merely literary analysis)? Why not history, that is one field that would be a great subject for critical analysis and evaluation. Civics as well, obviously. And most importantly in religion, in religious schools where they actually teach religious subjects.
In fact, given that critical thinking is something so sorely needed, and in practice so sorely lacking, it would be a terrific idea to properly teach it in schools, rigorously, I'm with you there; but given that it is needed in every subject, not just science but also literature, and civics, and history, and religion (where religion is taught, in religious schools) surely a better idea would be to have a separate subject called Critical Thinking, that teaches critical thinking both standalone, and also as it relates to specific subjects taught in other classes? Why single out just science?
It's an argumentum ad absurdum. It shows how absurd the whole idea is, of even considering wild unsupported declarations (including of the kind the Bible makes, the unfalsified and unfalsifiable bits).
Think about it. In your scheme of things, in science class about evolution, you'd need to have Creationism also discussed, as well as Maori creation myths, as well as creation stories from Hindu mythology and ...well, why stop with religion, why not out-and-out fiction like the Silmarillion as well, and interesting sci-fi .....as well as, I suppose, wild random "theories" that students might be able to come up with themselves? That won't even be a science class any more.
And again, why just science class, right? Why not literature as well, and history as well, and civics as well, and religious studies as well (in religious schools)? Well, there also, those classes would devolve to chaos, and not even look like history classes any more, or civics classes, or literature classes.
Once again, your point about emphasizing teaching of critical thinking rigorously is well taken. But it makes sense to make it a separate subject, then, rather than merge that teaching with other subjects like history and science and literature and religious studies.
psionl0 said:You are not reading me right. I said "it might be worth giving Genesis a second look"
psionl0 said:Large numbers of students are going to school with beliefs that are incompatible to what they will learn in the science room. That's a lot of people who aren't going to get much out of a science class if their beliefs aren't addressed.
psionl0 said:However, I am only postulating this as a possible exception to the "it's unfalsifiabe - we won't waste any more time on this" rule.
psionl0 said:I am willing to accept that we don't need to deal with their beliefs at all or that we should deal with their beliefs elsewhere and leave it out of the science class room.
They have made their ignorance of current education for under 16s clear to all. For instance they don't think kids are any longer taught 2+2=4 in math classes, that the North Pole is rather chilly in geography lessons.
Their view of under 16s education is -to put it poilitley - peculiar to say the least.
…don't care that the GOP wants to cast education back into the middle ages.
This is why I am reluctant to answer questions like these. Everybody is trying to trap me into appearing to be a religious nut and hence derail the thread.
Your problem is that you can't cope with the fact that there are some things that can be falsified with the scientific method and some things that can't - even though you "know" that they are wrong.When someone who claims not to be a theist spends such an inordinate amount of time staunchly defending theist principles, others will understandably grow suspsicious of that someone's motives!
Your problem is that you can't cope with the fact that there are some things that can be falsified with the scientific method and some things that can't - even though you "know" that they are wrong.
Non-sequitur - its not a fact at allOf course, this is a fact that you can't argue against
"God", he means "god". A god that is hiding in just the right moments, but after we unsuccessfully tried to detect him he continues to physically interact with the universe.Such as?
And the derail continues . . . .
The phrase "much that is religious" is too vague to mean anything. If you mean that we can use the scientific method to show that many claims in the bible are wrong (such as the universe is only 6000 years old) then that is true. But anything the bible says about God himself is beyond the realm of scientific testing. For example, the notion that God determines the outcome when you roll dice (Proverbs 16:33) is totally unfalsifiable. You can say that it is nonsense but you can't say that "science proves" that this is nonsense. There endeth any discussion of gods in the science class room because science is theologically neutral.
Either you misunderstood my post or you are making a claim which is just plain false.So, coming to the highlighted sentence above – if the bible makes any claim about what a claimed/believed God can do or has done, then science can very easily investigate such claims to see if the claim is supported by any of the known evidence … and in the case of all God claims there is no credible evidence to support the claims – and that is the conclusion of Science.
That question has been addressed. (One poster even pointed out that there is no "official" theory of evolution).
...snip..
Either you misunderstood my post or you are making a claim which is just plain false.
Like the invisible dragon, if somebody claims that the outcome of a dice roll is controlled by God then there is no scientific test that can prove otherwise. All you can do is show that the outcomes are consistent with random forces. Similarly, there is no scientific test that can determine the mind of God (obvious if there is no god).
Such claims may be unbelievable and not worth a second glance but that is not a scientific standard.
You are not reading me right. I said "it might be worth giving Genesis a second look". Large numbers of students are going to school with beliefs that are incompatible to what they will learn in the science room. That's a lot of people who aren't going to get much out of a science class if their beliefs aren't addressed.
However, I am only postulating this as a possible exception to the "it's unfalsifiabe - we won't waste any more time on this" rule. I am willing to accept that we don't need to deal with their beliefs at all or that we should deal with their beliefs elsewhere and leave it out of the science class room.