citizenzen
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2011
- Messages
- 1,454
Did you read the part before Hmmm?
That was so long ago.
So many posts.
Did you read the part before Hmmm?
That was so long ago.
So many posts.
That's whittled it down a bit, but what does "contradicting science" actually mean? Science isn't a set of doctrines or beliefs that can be contradicted and there are plenty of grey areas.
As you point out, when scientists contradict other scientists we don't claim science is incompatible with itself, we sometimes even call it "peer-review". Disagreeing with scientists' findings isn't necessarily an incompatibility with science.
And no, this doesn't somehow make religion compatible with science (other than possibly semantically), I'm trying to clarify what point is being made here. If we phrase the idea in a less controversial and broad sweeping way as something like "some religions have doctrines which are in disagreement with the consensus of mainstream science" what point is being made beyond that?
Saying science and religion are not compatible makes it sound like religious people might be incapable of being scientists which is demonstratively untrue.
So replace "all" with "any". Sorry, I mistyped.It's difficult to conceive of an event which would violate all laws of physics. One would expect some of the laws to remain inviolate.
You need to read more by scientists. This is flagrantly false--they claim it all the time.Scientists don't know, and don't claim to know all the laws of physics. If they did, they could safely stop being scientists.
Again, flagrantly false--EVERY time some new observation contradicts widely accepted theories it is ALWAYS greated with at least one person saying "No. You're wrong. That didn't happen."If an event, such as, say, neutrinos exceeding the speed of light, were to be observed, scientists would rarely insist that such a thing absolutely didn't happen. They would preserve a skeptical open-mindedness.
Not even close to true. The reason it's not is because 1) science is not a monolithic entity, and 2) scientists are required by the rules of the field to state what evidence they would require in order to accept some claim. So there's always a few hold-outs, but any researcher knows what's necessary to make their outlandish claim accepted by the majority of researchers.If scientists did, in practice, discard observations that didn't fit current physical theory, then that would have prevented most of the progress in twentieth century physics.
Seriously, did you stop learning about science in your freshmen gen-ed courses? Real scientists do this ALL THE TIME. Pick up any copy of Paleontologica Electronica to see examples of it. If you don't have the data to support a conclusion, some scientist WILL say "No, that didn't happen", be it a miracle or a tectonic upheaval. And if you don't think it happens, you don't know enough about how science operates to make such statements as you're making.This should not be mistaken for a categorical statement of impossibility, which science does not do.
The supernatural aspects of religions are incompatible with current scientific understanding.
You can find scientists believing all sorts of weird things, like creationism, steady state universe etc. That doesn't make those beliefs scientifically grounded.
You need to read more by scientists. This is flagrantly false--they claim it all the time.
There certainly are scientists that claim to know enough to know that miracles such as most religions argue for cannot happen. I mean, let's face it, knowing about black holes isn't that critical to knowing that water cannot turn into wine.westprog said:There are scientists who claim to know all the laws of physics? If there were, that would be rather more disturbing than having a religious belief.
Again, you're showing your ignorance. I've been to several talks by Creationists that were actually quite good (well, information-wise; their style tends to be so boring it puts even scientists to sleep). One in particular was about stream sediment load. Other Creationists work in biochemistry, or physics, or any number of other fields. The only thing a Creationist cannot do is work in fields dealing with deep time, because they don't believe in it--after that, they can work anywhere they want.I am not aware of a modern creationist scientist producing work of any note
Seriously, did you stop learning about science in your freshmen gen-ed courses? Real scientists do this ALL THE TIME. Pick up any copy of Paleontologica Electronica to see examples of it. If you don't have the data to support a conclusion, some scientist WILL say "No, that didn't happen", be it a miracle or a tectonic upheaval. And if you don't think it happens, you don't know enough about how science operates to make such statements as you're making.
palaeo-electronica.org said:All taxa are present in the area today and support a woodland-pond interpretation of the site. ... The Desmognathus sp. specimens may help shed light on the evolutionary origins of the genus Desmognathus, which purportedly has its roots in this region during the Mio-Pliocene.
DNA paper said:We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of deoxyribose nucleic acid (D.N.A.). This structure has novel features which are of considerable biological interest.
DNA paper said:In our opinion, this structure is unsatisfactory for two reasons: (1) We believe that the material which gives the X-ray diagrams is the salt, not the free acid. Without the acidic hydrogen atoms it is not clear what forces would hold the structure together, especially as the negatively charged phosphates near the axis will repel each other. (2) Some of the van der Waals distances appear to be too small.
Than you're delusional.That's how I think scientists talk.
There certainly are scientists that claim to know enough
Than you're delusional.
You picked PAPERS to figure out how scientists TALK. This goes well beyond just "Papers are written"--they require a whole different way of articulating thoughts. If you want to know how scientists speak, you need to talk to them. When you do, you'll find that they're quite willing to say other people are completely wrong, and that some idea is nonsense.
Again, you're showing your ignorance. I've been to several talks by Creationists that were actually quite good (well, information-wise; their style tends to be so boring it puts even scientists to sleep). One in particular was about stream sediment load. Other Creationists work in biochemistry, or physics, or any number of other fields. The only thing a Creationist cannot do is work in fields dealing with deep time, because they don't believe in it--after that, they can work anywhere they want.
This is significant, and your lack of knowledge on the topic revealing, because it's a common Creationist tactic to use experts in one field who are also Creationists to discuss fields outside of their expertise in support of Creationism. Anyone familiar with the debate should be familiar with the tactic.
Read some geology. While some of the language SOUNDS circumspect and tentative, once you understand the jargon you realize that it's actually quite viceous and nasty at times. The editors encourage this--some journals have a policy of encouraging debate (provided both sides continue to back up their information).However, when they wrote scientific papers, they reverted to quite circumspect, tentative language. That is because whatever the personalities of scientists, science is circumspect and tentative.
Would you argue that the idea that the ammonites died out 65.4 million years ago isn't science merely because we can't raise ammonites and subject them to an impact from a 10-km diameter bolide? Or that the conclusion that thrust faulting occurs isn't valid because we can't actually shove an island arc over a continent? Or do you think that perhaps experimentation on related fields more ammenable to such experimentation, and the gathering of large amounts of data in support of one conclusion or the other, may be just as valid? I'll give you a hint: Unless you're going to argue that archaeology, geology, paleontology, astronomy, and a few other fields aren't science, you have to accept that not all science is conducted through repeatable experiments to validate a specific conclusion.If some scientist happens to be confident that transubstantiation doesn't occur - so what? His Catholic colleague is equally confident that it does. Unless one of them does some actual science - repeatable experiments to validate a conclusion - then their opinions aren't science.
Are you sure you want to say that? I'll give you the chance to correct yourself if you'd like.I don't care what scientists think, or believe, or say to each other, or write in newspaper articles, or tweet, or put in JREF posts. If it's not in a paper, it's not really science.
Read some geology. While some of the language SOUNDS circumspect and tentative, once you understand the jargon you realize that it's actually quite viceous and nasty at times. The editors encourage this--some journals have a policy of encouraging debate (provided both sides continue to back up their information).
And journals are not the only place scientists "do science". Go to GSA sometime and attend any of the (myriad of) lectures on mass extinctions. Those get downright hostile. And good luck saying that a speach given in an accademic conference among fellow experts isn't "doing science"--it's got a tradition as long as, if not longer than, publishing in journals, and such talks are subject to peer review in that they are reviewed (in abstract form) prior to acceptance (never been part of the process myself, but I know people who have) and they are subject to immediate evaluation by one's peers in the form of the audience.
You've artificially limited what you accept as science to that which best supports your conclusions. Hardly an honest view of the subject.
Would you argue that the idea that the ammonites died out 65.4 million years ago isn't science merely because we can't raise ammonites and subject them to an impact from a 10-km diameter bolide? Or that the conclusion that thrust faulting occurs isn't valid because we can't actually shove an island arc over a continent? Or do you think that perhaps experimentation on related fields more ammenable to such experimentation, and the gathering of large amounts of data in support of one conclusion or the other, may be just as valid? I'll give you a hint: Unless you're going to argue that archaeology, geology, paleontology, astronomy, and a few other fields aren't science, you have to accept that not all science is conducted through repeatable experiments to validate a specific conclusion.
Again, you've artificially constrained science to best support your conclusion.
What would you propose as a scientific test for a one-off miracle that happened centuries ago?
Are you sure you want to say that? I'll give you the chance to correct yourself if you'd like.
Where would be the proof that such an event happened?