Yes... it does seem wrong to "debate" the truth. I mean evolution is factual for everyone. It was before we understood it. It is while we understand it better...and it always will be. The facts will just keep being the facts whether other people know about the facts or not. And when we debate them, it seems like it's a debatable issue... as though a jury or emotions or beliefs or dogma could settle the issue. It's hard to know what you are even debating and we just end up addressing their assorted digressions. The creationists ask for evidence of all kinds, don't accept any evidence, and never offer any of their own--just semantic games and notions about how science is faith too and that "you have
faith the sun will rise". The questions are loaded... on par with asking "how far to the end of the earth?" And you realize that you need to fill them in a lot of missing scientific knowledge in order to begin to answer the question...and they'll use any pause on your part or detailed science as a way of saying you can't answer. They are never grateful for having their questions answered. They are never excited about new discoveries.
Does something good come from such debates. It was cool watching the Dover trial, and I think people may have learned stuff...if nothing else, I learned how very dishonest, goalpost moving, and obfuscating some people are willing to be to make sure that nobody understands what natural selection is and how much evidence there is which proves that it drives evolution.
I suspect that these debates just give undeserved credibility to the faithful and obfuscate a simple understanding of evolution more than it clarifies. Plus, it allows them to hone the way they say stuff without really saying something completely false...it's more that they use a lot of words to say nothing much at all while while inferring things about science and pretending they are being academically rigorous.
What is there to debate? It adds credence to the idea that there really is some damn controversy as to whether evolution happened or not. Sure, debate them on line all you want...keep them from stupefying others. Plus, they may have been "intelligently designed" for the amusement of skeptics which is why their intelligent designer sends them to us to play
And it's fun to know for certain you're right and they are wrong because you actually understand the facts and they are going out of their way not to. But I think mockery probably works better overall then debate. Sure, it's not nice...but look how impervious T'ai and Kleinman are... it's not like their feelings get hurt easily. And fellow skeptics are amused. Plus, at any moment any creationist could ask any skeptic on this forum for information and they could have it presented to them as clearly as any text book--and modified especially for them with links included --from a multitude of smart people who understand the question and answer quite well-- But they never ever thank anyone for offering just that. They exploit the wonders of science while endlessly propping up their invisible overlord and insulting science and scientists at every turn unless they can twist something a scientist said to somehow support their claim. They pretend to know "higher truths" while dismissing those who might teach them actual facts that they can verify for themselves.
Of course, debating them online allows other people to read and absorb even when creationists can't or don't. But I think respectable scientists should treat creationists as the kooks they are, because any engaging on the part of sincere scientists will only be used to bolster their opinion of their claims and their nonsense non-theory.
I'm not strongly against it. But I'd like some idea of the point of it all before endorsing such an idea... and a bit of evidence to see if it works. I've never even heard a creationist ask a sincere question he wanted answered. Does anyone know of such a debate that convinced anyone of anything they didn't already believe or that lead to something positive?