Hasty conclusions based on insufficient evidence. Tagging things as evidence based on wishful thinking or preconceived notions. Totally ignoring viable explanations due to unconscious self-serving selective blindness or aversion to being disproved or ostracized by peers. Inconsistency in the application of criteria. These are some things which can mar scientific investigation. You invoke peer review. OK. But peer review sometimes takes decades to uncover collusion and fraud. In fact, peers themselves are sometimes dupe by fraud for long periods of time before they realize they've been hoodwinked.
Scientific Misconduct
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_misconduct
Radrook, I'm well aware human beings are prone to error and fraud. The point you seem to be missing is that these mistakes were found and corrected using science. Once more we see the scientific method ultimately excel over ignorance, career pressure, laziness and greed (or whatever the frauds' motives were) every time. What's your point again?
I'm not in disagreement with the scientific method. I only disagree with
the demand that I have 100% certain in current theories. Wouldn't that require me to believe that such ideas are permanent? After all, if indeed such ideas are in full harmony with reality and reality never changes-then the ideas should never change. So requiring me to have 100% certainty in current ideas sinmply because they are the current ideas certainty is to demand that I practice fallacious reasoning.
Statistics of Scientific Fraud
http://www.orc.ru/~yur77/statfr.htm
Bolded: What "demand" do you speak of? Who placed it on you? Can you quote someone making this demand, or provide a link to what must be an external site in which this uncritical person demanded that "you have 100% certain[ty] in current theories"? Because I assure you I made no such demand, either in writing or in my intentions. What was your point here again?
Yeah, okay, but what does that have to do with this discussion? I totally agree with everything you're saying in this post, and I've never said or thought otherwise, since the time in my adolescence when I began to study how science works. What, again was your point with regard to this specific discussion?
I think you misunderstood my claim. I am simply saying that mistakes are made, respected theories once accepted as almost irrefutable are ultimately replaced by theories which are more useful and more in line with perceived realities. Dogmatic statements are retracted. And people who once were speaking of such claims as indisputable fact have to retract. That being the case, the logical thing is to withhold judgement and use words such as "likely" or phrases like "it seems as or appears to..."as qualifiers.
Evolution Fraud
http://www.nwcreation.net/evolutionfraud.html
Right, okay. Thanks for keeping those scientists on track. Meanwhile, in this discussion which we are actually having, I gave a bulleted summary in incomplete sentences of the current thinking on abiogenesis. It's not a scientific paper, and doesn't require the careful wording required in such papers. The single line I posted, "Please keep in mind that each of the following assertions are based on numerous studies conducted in a variety of different scientific disciplines", coupled with a basic understanding of science which should have been taught in grade school, is sufficient for the rest of us to understand that
this is the current thinking on the matter based on the best evidence we have. Feel free to add that italicised proviso in front of every statement anyone makes, ever, under any circumstances, so that we can all avoid, in the future, your time-wasting sidebars admonishing us to state the bleeding obvious.
Before we continue I would like for you to stop the name calling. It tends to provoke me into a name-calling contest which I am not willing to waste my time engaging in. As I said-if indeed that is your opinion of me, then please don't waste your time. You are entitled to your impressive trust in the scientific method. My opinion shouldn't be that much of an issue.
Fraud In Science
http://www.bmartin.cc/pubs/92prom.html
First, allow me to apologize. I rarely resort to name-calling, but I found "dingbat" to be a mild and somewhat amusing way of saying that I find your statement "
Changing of mind weakens trust and credibility whether it be secular or religious" to be
utterly without merit. Anyone making that statement is not in full possession of critical thinking skills, and misunderstands the scientific method. With that said, I won't call you a "dingbat" again.
And, since I find arguing with you a waste of time, I won't likely address you again, unless you say something so outrageously absurd as "Changing of mind weakens trust and credibility whether it be secular or religious", which I assure you will elicit an immediate rebuttal.