Complexity
Philosopher
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2005
- Messages
- 9,242
What a lousy excuse for a thread, especially the OP.
Lol, pet theory.
I'm, sure if I had a degree in physics, I would get irritated when people with only a layman's knowledge in the area criticized my 'pet theory' of gravity for purely philosophical reasons.
Expect the "Gish gallop" any time now. Clop-clop... clop-clop... clop-clop...
"No, those have always been whales! You must show how a banana evolved into a whale before I will believe!"
In other words:" Na Na Na... I can't hear you!"
This is plumjams main get-out. Retreat into time-irrefutability-irrefutability. Since evolution takes a long time to happen, all he has to do is mention this fact and ::::: POOF ::::: he has won the argument.
Imagine if we were talking about plate tectonics.
It's also the same "get-out" that geologists use when describing plate tectonics. However, we can test it based upon features we can measure in our time scale.
On the face of it, though, it seems enormously more reasonable than the TOE. This is because plate tectonics describes a mindless physical process producing unremarkable rock formations which are devoid of specified complexity / apparent design. However, if someone were to take me to Mount Rushmore, point to the faces and argue with a straight face that these formations were produced by mindless physical processes such as plate tectonics + erosion then I'd be justified in concluding that this person was pretty irrational.
Really? Apart from variations within limits where and when has evolution been observed?
Here's a quote from Malcolm Muggeridge which pretty much sums up my view on the matter:
Possibly. Same thing for evolution. But it is what best fits the data right now. If new data comes along that requires a readdressing, I can't wait to see it. It will mean I learn something new.I've no idea whether plate tectonics is a very accurate theory or not. Perhaps in 20 years someone will come along with a radically different theory that fits the data a lot better.
You've never looked at a geod? Stalagtite/stalagmite formation? MOuntain ranges, Volcano formations? You claim unremarkable rocks, I see well ordered predictable structures emerging from fundemental physical principles.On the face of it, though, it seems enormously more reasonable than the TOE. This is because plate tectonics describes a mindless physical process producing unremarkable rock formations which are devoid of specified complexity / apparent design.
funny thing is that is exactly how the old man in the mountain came about. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Man_of_the_MountainHowever, if someone were to take me to Mount Rushmore, point to the faces and argue with a straight face that these formations were produced by mindless physical processes such as plate tectonics + erosion then I'd be justified in concluding that this person was pretty irrational.
Actually, you could. You could point to tell tale signs of worked rock. We have evidence of people working stone, so we know what that looks like. It's a rather easy thing to prove.It's worth noting that I couldn't really prove him wrong. Even if I showed him historical data about the creation of the faces he could always argue that it's a hoax; a myth.
Of course there is absolutely no eveolutionary analog of this challenge, but rather a fanciful game of yours.Also, it is not impossible that plate tectonics plus erosion could (given enough time) 'create' an accurate copy of Mount Rushmore somewhere else in the world. But to believe in that tiny possibility over the possibility of intelligent design, in my opinion, is by far the less rational choice to take.
It is crazy. But it's what the evidence shows. Similarly, Shroedinger's cat shows how crazy quantum theory is, yet it is what the evidence shows. Crazy isn't a good enough argument against a theory. It takes....evidence.People here are believing that the many-orders-of-magnitude-more-complex than Mount Rushmore life forms on Earth were first brought into existence and then enormously but blindly developed by mindless physical forces.
Sorry, but it's crazy.
Here's a quote from Bobby McButtcrack which sums up my view on the matter:Here's a quote from Malcolm Muggeridge which pretty much sums up my view on the matter:
""I myself am convinced that the theory of evolution, especially to the extent that it's been applied, will be one of the greatest jokes in the history books of the future. Posterity will marvel that so flimsy and dubious a hypothesis could be accepted with the incredible credulity that it has."
I can't help but think he's attempting to illict a response to "prove" a point in his religion thread.
In any case, without any further information, Saying "i'm skeptical of evolution." is like saying "I'm skeptical of dave."
really? dave who?
What did dave do?
Is Dave here?
BTW for those of you who didn't actually catch on, this thread is an experiment.
It is crazy. But it's what the evidence shows. Similarly, Shroedinger's cat shows how crazy quantum theory is, yet it is what the evidence shows.
I missed where you said that. My apologies for that.No kidding. Not to mention that I SAID that I was going to do it. As you can see it jumped from being rational to irrational in no time flat.
Exactly. Because you mentioned something general. Skeptics like to discuss the details. Lobbing a rather troll-like grenade is bound to ellicit some reactions.I'm not a Creationist, I just mentioned something GENERAL, and still I got backlash.
Actually, you don't rest your case. What you proved was troll threads attract a lot of attention and Plumjam's refutable arguments add fuel to the fire.So I guess I rest my case.
BTW for those of you who didn't actually catch on, this thread is an experiment.
Michael Douglass is one ugly chick.And also more "assumptions" I'm a chick. Not a HE.
I didn't mean to imply that it was evidence of quatum theory, but rather it was an exmaple of the strangeness (craziness) of the quantum world.Not the cat. The cat is an example of how quantum theory DOESN'T work at macroscopic levels. Using it as an an example of quantum theory working is backwards.
Here's a quote from Malcolm Muggeridge which pretty much sums up my view on the matter:
""I myself am convinced that the theory of evolution, especially to the extent that it's been applied, will be one of the greatest jokes in the history books of the future. Posterity will marvel that so flimsy and dubious a hypothesis could be accepted with the incredible credulity that it has."
This is the evolutionist's main get-out. Retreat into time-irrefutability.. which makes most aspects of the theory untestable, and therefore non-scientific (as the word 'scientific' is commonly used).
Faith fueled by imagination.

No kidding. Not to mention that I SAID that I was going to do it. As you can see it jumped from being rational to irrational in no time flat.
I'm not a Creationist, I just mentioned something GENERAL, and still I got backlash.
So I guess I rest my case.
BTW for those of you who didn't actually catch on, this thread is an experiment.
And also more "assumptions" I'm a chick. Not a HE.
I missed where you said that. My apologies for that.
You started a thread in a skeptical site making a rather broad unsubstantiated claim. That same response would occur if you had said, "I've read up on electricity, and I'm skeptical of it."
"I've read up on DNA, and I'm skeptical of it."
"I've read up on spaceflight, and I'm skeptical of it."
Exactly. Because you mentioned something general. Skeptics like to discuss the details. Lobbing a rather troll-like grenade is bound to ellicit some reactions.
Actually, you don't rest your case. What you proved was troll threads attract a lot of attention and Plumjam's refutable arguments add fuel to the fire.
Michael Douglass is one ugly chick.![]()
The Creationist lable is attached to anyone questioning Evolution.
I'm not posting any more here. I've proven my point though you wish to claim otherwise.
This wasn't a troll thread.
And I was accused of being a creationist simply for expressing skepticism about something general about Evolution.
Me: Continents take millions of years to move that far.
PJ: Ah, the time-irrefutability argument.
ME: /facepalm
For any lurkers who don't know any better, you should be informed that Plumjam is a creationist shill. Follow this thread for a time (if he continues to post, that is) and we shall point out the most common creationist arguments that he makes and how to refute them. It will become readily apparent that his methods of argumentation are quite dishonest.
Lol, pet theory.
I'm, sure if I had a degree in physics, I would get irritated when people with only a layman's knowledge in the area criticized my 'pet theory' of gravity for purely philosophical reasons.