Sherlock Holmes wrote: ↑Sun Jan 23, 2022 3:33 pmI don't thinks that's an honest definition of a scientist at all, so here's one for you:
The Science Council wrote:A scientist is someone who systematically gathers and uses research and evidence, to make hypotheses and test them, to gain and share understanding and knowledge.
If a person does that then they are - like it or not - a scientist, your claim that that ethic is inconsistent with a simulatneous reverence for scripture is just an opinion. The vast majority of contributors to the scientific revolution, the enlightemnent were Christians, they also held to a set of beliefs, they too regarded scripture as a source of authority. They are the reason we have radio, antibiotics, aircraft, lazers, light bulbs, television, cars etc etc etc - these people were scientists and their adherence to a set of beliefs about God were completely irrelevant.
If you truly think that someone working under the framework of "I will automatically reject any and all data that conflicts with my religious beliefs" is doing science as a scientist, I don't know what else to say. Maybe you should go talk to some scientists in real life and ask them what they think of that framework?
How can a student get a good idea of how science works if all you do is teach them how you think it should work? If I were a geography teacher I likely would set aside a lesson or two on the flat earth hypothsis. Just because a hypothesis or theory might no longer be prevalent is no reason to pretend it never was prevalent. The flat earth hypothsis was a very reasonable hypothesis given the knowledge and data available at the time. It is a perfectly sound scientific hypothesis within the context and date of the day.
At this point I have to wonder if you even understand how science curricula are set. In the US, states convene panels of scientists and science teachers and they develop proposed standards/curricula and recommend textbooks. Then (usually) state school boards vote to (or not to) adopt those standards/curricula and use the textbooks.
So what gets taught is not my idea of how science works. Rather, it's the collective view of the scientists and science educators that gets taught. And to be clear, I'd be fine with teaching about the history of flat-earthism or young-earth creationism, followed by explanations of how those things turned out to be wrong and why scientists rejected them. But I wouldn't spend more than about a day on them either.
So its all a matter of which authority one chooses from among the many available, the many journals available?
I don't know how that relates to what I said.
I am a member of the general public and I do not see it that way at all. I do not rely solely on some autjhority when evaluating a claim, instead, I rely on my education to guide me.
Well, maybe you're the type of person who never takes anyone's word for anything on any subject ever, and you are constantly researching every aspect of everything in your life. But I hope you understand how unusual that is.
Of course, this is an important point, a very important point. I think we should place more emphasis on the history of science, we should teach older models and theories so that students can see how a once apparently valid model can later turn out to be wrong. We should encourage vigilance so that they too can or might encounter such a situation in their own work. That should be part of scienced education. If something truly is groundless, without merit then let it stand or fall, let the student develop the skills needed to reach that decision on their own.
Well we'll just have to disagree on that. I think science education should be more than telling students "Here's the data, you figure out how to analyze and interpret it". Like I said, the purpose of science classes in K-12 is to teach them how science works and the current state of the science. If they don't get one or either of those, they haven't really received an "education in science".
What is wrong with suggesting that "scientific conclusions that have been agreed to for well over a century" can or should be questioned? what if such an established conclusion was in fact wrong despite being accepted for several centuries?
What is wrong with teaching that there are some people who think the "holocaust" did not happen? Teaching that there is or was such a view, albeit a minority, is not the same as teaching that view.
Because if you have students graduate thinking that maybe the earth is flat, the holocaust didn't happen, and evolution never occurs, then we've done a terrible disservice our kids.
Firstly, there is no such body as the "scientific community".
There is no such official body, but there most certainly is a scientific community, especially in regards to specific fields.
Secondly, delegating the decision as to what is or is not scienticially plausible to some etehreal authority is not part of the scientific method. If one did make a discovery that undermines some existing orthodoxy then how does seeking the approval of that orthoodxy help? the very fact you are questioing something that we know the orthodoxy - by definition - will not question, is clearly a fruitless endeavor.
For example if the people comprising this orthodoxy, this officialdom, have all been taught "evolution is fact" and you have evidence that it might not actually be a fact then how do you think that othodoxy will respond? I suspect they will respond differently to a group that were not taught "evolution is a fact".
No doubt that if you're going to overturn a theory that's been widely accepted and has produced real-world results, it's going to be hard. You're going to be met with a high degree of skepticism, everything you show is going to be highly scrutinized and critiqued, and there will be many difficult hurdles to overcome. It may take an entire lifetime of work and arguing before you see any progress, and it's even possible your idea might not get accepted in your lifetime.
But that's the way it should be. It
should be difficult to overturn long-standing, well-established scientific theories.
This is why teaching such a lie - as is done today, routinely - is so dangerous, it undermines science.
What specific lie are you referring to?
There is no "scientific community".
Yes there is. Since we're talking about evolutionary biology, there is indeed a community of scientists focusing on it.
https://www.evolutionsociety.org/
Some people have done that I agree, but it is some, just as some police officers rape, some doctors kill and so on. Do we conclude that all doctors, all police are a threat? No we do not.
It's probably a moot point now, since there's no real concerted effort to get creationism taught in science classrooms. The last was with ID creationism, but that died a very quick death after the Dover trial.
Answeing "I don't know" is all I can say here. It is not biased to admit that one doesn't really have an answer to a question, if I knew 100% I'd say so, but I don't.
I'm saying the fact that you don't even know if you agree with AiG's requirement that all their employees automatically reject any and all data that conflicts with the Bible is in itself an indication of your bias on the issue. Do you not understand why?
For the same reasons Richard Dawkins put his arguments in a book I suspect, to bring ideas to the attention of the public.
But everything Dawkins wrote about was already covered in the scientific literature. OTOH, the same isn't true of Meyer's book. What specifically do you think the purpose of Meyer's book is? Why is he trying to bring his arguments to the public before he's presented them to the relevant scientists?
Being apathetic is great....or not. I don't really care.