Originally posted by WeatherOp
:lol:And when it rains cats and dogs, it really is raining cats and dogs. But, I'm not gonna get involved in this.
You've already illustrated my point; it's impossible to clearly demarcate which parts of the bible are parable/mythologically derived and which are (or, rather, could be) literal descriptions.
Indeed, that very phrase 'raining cats and dogs' could well be taken literally without foreknowledge of the culture that created it; it could be twisted into all manner of different meanings, from the literal sense of raining animals, or so the most abstract sense of some strange belief that animals are thrown down from the sky rather than born.
Because of this, it's very easy for someone - say Stealth here - to go back, read it, and fit in interpretations based upon existing 3rd party knowledge (i.e. scientific or philosophical concepts). My understanding is that the most consistent anthropology/mythology in that area, at that time, would make it highly likely the OT was written based on an agglomeration of multiple, flat earthist creation myths, and conveys that message.
(that would not, of course, mean the NT shared the same view; it was written after Pythagoras and the spherical earth was accepted theory)
Even if you accept that sort of liberal* reinterpretation, it still doesn't make the bible a valid source as it can only be verified through independent empirical investigation; nee science.
Hence why, to go back OT, ID has no place in the classroom, as it has not literal/factual basis. Ignoring the fact we've gone, what, 6 pages and seemingly not a single person has been able to define what ID is beyond 'God did it'.
*if someone doesn't know the meaning of the word liberal in that context, they're getting a kickingOriginally posted by WeatherOp
Yes and I still stand by that. So, lets put this debate in the history books.
Let me start by saying, there is not any scienctific evidence on ID, while I see evidence all over the place that does not count as science. Now, lets hit the other side, there is also no evidence of the universe starting by itself. So, what should be taught, nether of it.
But, if you want to teach NS and the Big Bang, you must also say there may be a Creator, as some of you have said. Cause if you teach NS, but leave the possiblity of a Creator out, you are therefor teaching something you are not sure of and have no evidence to support, same way with if you teach ID and don't teach NS.
So, to uphold the Neutrality of the Constitution, you ether teach both or none. As you don't force ether on anyone.
Anything else that needs to be added? If not, lets end this thread.
There is no scientific basis for any creator (empirical evidence, etc). The bible is not valid in this regard either (see above).
More importantly, there is no scientific (testable, observable) theory for either a) the creation of the universe by God or b) the creation of life by God.
In the case of a) we can test many of the hypotheses behind the big bang theory based on observing, for example, cosmic background radiation; up to the first few nanoseconds of its existance (bearing in mind time was created at the big bang, which was an exponential increase, so there's still a hell of a lot to find). So there is an explanation being formed for the reasons behind it, the physics, etc, and the aforementioned evidence is supporting that.
(cosmic background radiation is a perfect example of scientific hypothesis being tested; it was predicted a big bang would leave cosmic background radiation, and lo and behold, they found some. this sort of testable scenario is what is absent from all religious based doctrine)
It's not complete, of course, but no-one has ever said that. But it's the best supported theory, and if we want to expand it we need to keep asking questions, not throw it away.
There is no explanation, let alone observable evidence of God creating the universe. Nor is there any attempt to explain how or why God existed before all other matter. That explanation does not fit any of the accepted criteria required for a scientific theory; hence it is not science.
b)There is plenty of evidence for evolution, etc. But none for ID, and no theory to even examine for that. (brief, cos this bit has been done to death)
Remember, if you wish to teach Christian creationism in science, you have to teach all other creation mythologies. Ever. Because they all have the same amount of supporting evidence, and all can be bent liberally to suit.
What you should do, IMO, is teach (the various tenets of religious) creationism in Religion Education (as you point out, none of the 'evidence' for ID is science, it's religious/belief based and thus should be put into RE), and Evolution, etc, in Biology (i.e. the appropriate science class). To place ID in a science class, without it holding
any form of scientifically testable or validatable qualities as science is sheer folly. In the event of an unexplained part of, say, evolution or the big bang, the explanation is simply 'this is being investigated'.
Not prejudging another, evidenceless explanation, whatever that may be. I would judge it to be a massive violation of church and state if the explanation for every unanswered question was determined to be 'God'. Don't know 5+5? Put God! It would be simple indoctrination, and based on the debate I've seen here and elsewhere, completely inaccurate and factually wrong.
By holding science as inherently aetheistic, too, you're making a major mistake in exactly what science is. Science is effectively agnostic; the issue of God in science is determined by evidence, not feelings. So long as there is no evidence, it would be wholly fallacious to involve God as science. As the concept of a supernatural diety/dieties is inherently un(and dis)proveable, too, it can never have a role in the reasoning of science; what use is a universal 'maybe'?
Would you amend mathematics classes to teach pi=3 because the bible says so? Otherwise is 'forcing' 3.14...etc onto people, by your statement.
Science in science class, religion in RE class. What the hell is wrong with that?!
Originally posted by .::Tin Can::.
I think you have to have faith to believe in either one. To me, that counts for something.
That's a fundamental misunderstanding of science. Science - evolution being the example here - abhors the concept of faith. It relies upon empirical evidence, and testable hypotheses.