The Galatian
Active Member
I would certainly amend my statement to "almost always for religious reasons", if anyone could come up with even one exception.
But I don't think that's going to happen.
But I don't think that's going to happen.
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Show me a scientist who doesn't have some religious belief. It is silly to act like creationists are the only ones who are religious. Every scientist is, whether they admit it or not. Even the atheist, because that is a religious belief.I'm unaware of any scientist who rejects evolution who doesn't do so for religious reasons.
Name me one who isn't of a religious persuasion that rejects evolution.
Problem here. It appears that you rejected evolution for scientific mis-reason. Evolution and design are not incompatible, but may be different ways of viewing the same (long-time) process.I did not believe in evolution before I was a Christian because there was too much indication of "design" in the world around me.
Well, let me see -- if one discounts personal claims of motivation, then no one's personal story has credence according to Kluge. That is an interesting statement to make.Originally posted by M. D. Kluge:
Helen argues that both she and her husband are examples of people rejecting evolution for scientific reasons. Hers is an argument rebutting our claim that no scientist rejects evolution based upon scientific arguments. (I'm not going to stand o ceremony and dispute whether either of the Setterfields is really a scientist.) If what Helen claims is factually correct, then she has raised a forceful counter-argument.
There are two problems with Helen's claim. Firstly I think one should discount personal claims of motivation. It is obvious that when one goes through a "conversion experience", or a major "paradigm shift", if you prefer that term, that during the shift one's thinking is often confused and it is impossible to accurately recollect it later.
I can't speak for Austin. I can speak for myself, however. I also heard an interesting personal story this past week which I will mention at the end here. But then, if personal memories are not to be trusted, Kluge and those who agree with him might as well stop reading now!Of course one can discount Steve Austin's claim that he became a YEC because of the scientific evidence when we learn that he had been earlier publishing creationist material under a pseudonym. I don't think that makes him a liar. It's just that he can't consistently reconstruct his mental processes of going forom evolution to creation. I wouldn't expect him to do much better recounting a conversion in the reverse direction. People have these conversions and supply the reasons later. That is not to say that the supplied reasons cannot be valid reasons, but only that they are not likely to have been the actual reasons.
And I, on the other hand, found the evidence compelling from a scientific point of view! And I have no doubt that the resistance by many to the evidence of a young creation has nothing to do with real science but with other personal matters.The second problem with a conversion to young-earth creationism based upon scientific evidence is that there just isn't any such evidence. I don't mean that a person couldn't in good faith THINK that he or she believes in young-earth creationism because of some scientific reason. I have little doubt that such reasons are simply misunderstandings.
Let's start from the bottom here: a vague allusion to a popular book? Excuse me? I have quoted rather extensively from Atkins' The Second Law, including his reference, as a professional in the field, to a generalized law of entropy. Now, if you don't like the term, that is your problem, but it is quite true that the tendency of all things is to go from organized to disorganized without interference of a specific design and the environment allowing that design to work (in the case of both life and crystals) or without direct interference by an intelligent being (such as a human) to stop the progress towards chaos. Bicycles rust, rocks wear away, stars burn out, etc. etc.In the cases of the Setterfields this is well-illustrated. Helen claims evolution to be scientifically impossible based upon patently misunderstood themes from thermodynamicsx, information theory, genetics, and possibly other branches of science. While it may be true, for example, that Helen rejects evolution because she honestly thinks it is forbidden by some generalized entropy principle, the fact is that there is no such generalized entropy principle. I have no problem conceding that if there were such a genralized entropy principle forbidding evolution, then Helen would be rejecting evolution for scientific reason, and she would serve as counterexample to Galatian's and my claims. The trouble is that her factual claim is just wrong and she can find no argument to back it up, nor any reference save vague allusion from a popular book.
Oh, I am most certainly not the first! I am one in a very long line, actually! And when you have to resort to "sound or plausible scientific reason" despite the evidence offering that reason, I can see that you are retreating into "If I or some group of scientists who meet my qualifications and are of my choosing don't agree, then the reason is not sound or plausible."When we say that no one accepts creationism based upon scientific reason, perhaps we should have qualified this as "sound or plausible scientific reason" meaning some reason accepted or regarded plausible by a significant portion of the scientific community even if Helen were the first to connect that reason with the impossible of evolution.
Um, no, I didn't say that. I merely pointed out that a tiny minority of people with doctorates in science think that thermodynamics is a problem for evolution. If you want to draw a conclusion, you're on your own. I didn't make one.Galatian, you have used your 'majority makes the truth' argument ad nauseum. That seems to be what you believe, so that's that.
If you ask a scientist why he doesn't think the 2nd Law is a problem for evolution, he'll start talking about evidence. God hasn't commented to us on the 2nd Law. And logic has to match the evidence.I've never held that the majority determines the truth. I prefer strange things like data, God's Word, logic -- weird stuff like that.
Um, no, I didn't say that. I merely pointed out that a tiny minority of people with doctorates in science think that thermodynamics is a problem for evolution. If you want to draw a conclusion, you're on your own. I didn't make one.</font>[/QUOTE]Barry is sitting here reading with me and I read your comment right there and howled. Then I asked Barry, "What's the difference between what he said and what I said?"Originally posted by The Galatian:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Galatian, you have used your 'majority makes the truth' argument ad nauseum. That seems to be what you believe, so that's that.
If you ask a scientist why he doesn't think the 2nd Law is a problem for evolution, he'll start talking about evidence. God hasn't commented to us on the 2nd Law. And logic has to match the evidence.</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />I've never held that the majority determines the truth. I prefer strange things like data, God's Word, logic -- weird stuff like that.
Barbarian observes:Galatian, you have used your 'majority makes the truth' argument ad nauseum. That seems to be what you believe, so that's that.
Barbarian observes:I've never held that the majority determines the truth. I prefer strange things like data, God's Word, logic -- weird stuff like that.
I'd be pleased to hear a documented case wherein a scientist concluded the 2nd Law ruled out evolution who didn't also have a religious conversion.Well, sir, I have talked to scientists. They are not saying what you would like to claim they are saying.
Skepticism. Imagination would be supposing things that aren't necessarily true. Skepticism is waiting until someone presents evidence.So while you are speaking from imagination,
Anecdotes aren't evidence.I'm afraid I am speaking from experience and conversations actually held.
Well, let me see -- if one discounts personal claims of motivation, then no one's personal story has credence according to Kluge. That is an interesting statement to make.</font>[/QUOTE]This is an example of something I just noted on the Vitamin C thread, the inability to parse a whole argument. When I argued that one should discount personal claims of motivation I was writing about personal claims of motivation in a fundamental change of heart, not any and all personal motivations under all circumstances. Both the context of our argument here as well as my explanatory remarks (whih Helen did copy and paste) make that clear.Originally posted by M. D. Kluge:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Helen argues that both she and her husband are examples of people rejecting evolution for scientific reasons...[deletia by MDK]
There are two problems with Helen's claim. Firstly I think one should discount personal claims of motivation. It is obvious that when one goes through a "conversion experience", or a major "paradigm shift", if you prefer that term, that during the shift one's thinking is often confused and it is impossible to accurately recollect it later...
Absolute rubbish. It makes about as much sense as saying "unless you've had small pax you can't know what's happening to a person who has had small pax."And, unless he has been through a paradigm shift, he is simply not in a position to know what is going on mentally or what one remembers.
That is not at all implausible. It is also not relevant. What is relevant is not whether your memory is clear, but (1) whether it is correct and, more importantly (2) if there is sound basis for believing it to be orrect.My memory of that time and a lot of what was involved is quite clear
Did any neutral observer actually recored what was happening to you during those five years? Did someone record your attitudes from day to day, independently of you? And if they did would you even believe them? Would you trust yourself during a time of internal crisis to accurately describe your internal crisis, and also trust a neutral observer to faithfully write down what you had told him or her?-- often my kids have to remind me of things I or they did in earlier years, but no one has to remind me of what happened during the five years of reading which were required for me to finally admit to the truth of not only creation but a young creation.
The problem isn't that all of your memories of your paradigm shift experience must be wrong. The problem is that your memories of your paradigm shift are unreliable. This one might be correct. . You might have some subjective reason to believe that this memory is among the most reliable of your paradigm shift experience. Unfortunately no one else can share that subjective reason.What Kluge is missing is that I fought that change right up until the end.
The question of whether Barry Setterfield is or isn't a scientist is not part of this thread. Although I regard his claims to be a scientist as dubious I have indicated that I do not wish to stand upon ceremony in that matter. In other words, for the sake of argument what I have written in previous posts to this thread assume Setterfield to be a scientist.It is fine to discount me as a scientist....[deled by MDK] However since it is the main line of work of Barry's, and since his research is original, and since he is privately funded in regards to this research (by a number of individuals, not a grant), I think I am safe in assuming that it is just a matter of him not fitting Kluge's definition of a scientist rather than Barry not being one in reality.
Let's start from the bottom here: a vague allusion to a popular book? Excuse me?...p/quote]
I said no such thing. Reread the thread, Helen. I said you made a vague allusion FROM a popular book, not TO a popular book. Please reparse, Helen. Had I said "a vague allusion to a popular book" my meaning would have been "Helen alluded vagulely to a popular took." The adjective "vague" would modify "allude" or its cognate "allusion", which is to say that I would have meant that something Helen was doing was vague.
I did not do so. I said Helen referred a vague allusion FROM Adkins' book. That is, the vague allusion is something in Atkins' book. I have never disputed that Helen referenced precisely what that vague allusion was, word for word. I don't dispute that she transfered Atkins' text faithfully.
The problem, as I noted, lies with her interpretation of that text. She failed to realize that Atkins' text was a vague allusion to thermodynamics and its second law. She did not vaguely reference Atkins' text.
The parsing blunder Helen has made here should be of concern to all of us. Of course on a first reading it's an easy mistake to make, one made by all of us occasionally. So Helen understood "to" instead of "from" and thought how stupid my argument was. (And my argument would have been rather stupid had I written what she misread.)
But then Helen failed to do something that written communication affords a luxury not available in spoken dialog. When one finds one's partner to have said something stupid, one's life's experience should have taught one that there is a reasonable chance that one has just mis-parsed the argument. In spoken dialog this is a real problem because one cannot reparse the ephemeral spoken word. In writing one can.
It's one thing to tell me I'm wrong. It's another to imply say that what I said is stupid. Obviously Helen wouldn't have written her response as she did had she gone to the trouble of reading what I said and ascertaining that her quotation of me "to a popular book" matched my referenced "from a popular book". It's even more outrageously ridiculous when one observes that Helen misquotes me the line after quoting me.
No, I know that YOU are trying to separate them, sort of. Trouble is Atkins is talking about thermodynamics. He's not talking about a generalization of the second law of thermodynamics. That is a figment of your own imagination. Since Atkins is talking about thermodynamics, nothing he wrote or could have written could possibly support your claim about an alleged generalization.In addition, I presume you have forgotten that I deliberately separated this concept of the universal trend toward entropy from thermodynamics
No, general entropy has no requirements at all because the term is undefined.General entropy does not have that requirement
That would be interesting if, attached to each name, was one or more references to scientific publications explaining what those authors thought evolution and thermodynamics were incompatible. As a list it's about as interesting as a list of the names of scientists who think aliens have landed somewhere in New Mexico.I also looked up an email I got last year and include the relevant part here:
> Included below are the names & credentials of legitimate
>scientists whose expertise is in physics, chemistry, or biology to whom
>I believe would concur that evolution & thermodynamics are
>incompatible:
[lengthy list deleted]
No, quite the contrary. No one versed in information theory rejects the concept of meaningful information as being from stochastic information. It's just that information theory, as it is understood and practiced, does not talk about those distinctions. It is not about the meaningful aspects of information.As far as information theory goes, the evolutionist defense hinges entirely upon the rejection of the concept of meaningful information as being different from stochastic information.
That's right. We don't know everything about evolution. However, that is not relevant in this context. You said that genetics either makes evolution implausible or mitigates against it. What we do not know does neither. To succeed here you have to argue that something we know about genetics prevents the evolution of whatever type you think it forbids.As far as genetics goes, there is no known way for a cell to make a de novo protein. Period. And that is required for evolution...
By the same token Helen is welcome to add to the above the fact of the tooth fairy.Kluge is welcome to add to the above the fact that natural selection as a driver of evolution is a farce.
That is a good example of Helen's inability to parse and hold several ideas in her head at once. As has been noted many times in the past, "natural selection" is used in two senses, which causes absolutely no conbfusion among scientists who can immediately and easily tell which sense was intended. Helen has used "natural selection" in one of its senses, the pruning of deleterious mutations through death without reproductin (or with diminished reproduction). The term "natural selection is also used, however, to mean the previous definition plus the creation of new genotypes (resulting in new phenotypes) through mutation. Obviously it is the fuller second usage which is thought to be responsible for much of evolution. The farce here is that Helen hasn't learned or figured out that Natural selection has a meaning wider than that which she has decided to allow, nor has she figured out how to tell which usage an author is using in any given context. Perhaps we would not be surprised if one of Helen'sa biology students made that mistake, but Helen?First, natural selection deletes by virtue of death, thus depriving any given population of some portion of its genetic variability potential.
Gee, it's a real pity that members of that long list of educated and credentialed scientists who think evolution and thermodynamics incompatible haven't saturated the scientific literal with articles containing the reasons why evolution is impossible, while it's left to a poor, uncredentialed retired school teacher to give incorrect descriptions of some of those "evidences."There are many more scientific evidences regarding the impossibility of evolution...
Oh, I am most certainly not the first! I am one in a very long line, actually! And when you have to resort to "sound or plausible scientific reason" despite the evidence offering that reason, I can see that you are retreating into "If I or some group of scientists who meet my qualifications and are of my choosing don't agree, then the reason is not sound or plausible."</font>[/QUOTE]The question here is whether there exist a sound scientific argument against evolution, not whether I can find some infallible procedure for locating one. The fact is that you have not elucidated any such animal that has been thought by competent scientists to be valid and correctly stated. Infact your history on this and other boards demonstrates the opposite, at least for you. It’s not that your arguments from thermodynamics, information theory are wrong. It’s that they so totally miss the mark amd reveal you not to have studied either of those disciplines to the point where explanation would do any good. (We bry anyway.)..
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />When we say that no one accepts creationism based upon scientific reason, perhaps we should have qualified this as "sound or plausible scientific reason" meaning some reason accepted or regarded plausible by a significant portion of the scientific community even if Helen were the first to connect that reason with the impossible of evolution.
You are confusing two kinds of “reasons”, inductive and deductive. Data are a type of inductive “reason”, as one may be led to an inductive conculsuin by them. However, here we are talking about alleged “reasons” why evolution is impossible. That type of “reason” is an argument. For example, when you say that evolution is impossible because of the generalized entropy principle, you are giving a reason of the second type. “The generalized entropy principle” is not a datum! It is an argument. Were it a sound argument you would have provided a correct scientific reason for the impossibility of evolution.Because the reasons are both logically sound and scientific. They don't even have to be 'plausible,' because they are data, and data just sits there, whether or not one considers it plausible.
I doubt it. I, and most of the “evolutionists” here try to quote in context. When I read a phrase as jarring as “arguments do not need to be plausible” or the like I stop to understand what the author meant.(I am now laughing because I am quite sure someone is going to take a phrase in the above totally out of context and quote me as saying "they don't have to be plausible" without the rest of the sentence. Oh well....)
You haven’t shown that he embraced creationism for scientific reasons. Even if we concede that Kenyon regarded Wilder-Smith’s book as convincing Kenyon that evolution had really big problems, and that the reasons were valid scientific ones, that is not at all the same as convincing anyone that creationism was true by scientific methods.Now, to give what I promised to give at the end of this post. Last Wednesday night Barry and I, on a short personal vacation, were privileged to be able to meet with the Catherine who posts here, her husband, and Dean and Tricia Kenyon for a lovely dinner and evening's discussion.
After which I can state without qualification that Dr. Kenyon switched from evolution to creation on the basis of scientific evidence only. He did, after all, write a book promoting evolution. That book was then refuted by Dr. Wilder-Smith. Dr. Kenyon stated to us that he spent an entire summer seeking to undo Wilder-Smith's arguments and could not do it.
He changed points of view on the basis of scientific evidence and only scientific evidence.
I just took a look at the thread. I don't see where I said that.Galatian, Mark -- I quote authoritative sources and your responses are either that I am misquoting or that I do not understand the material.
Evidence is required.I give personal experiences and I am told that is not acceptable.
Not if you want to convince others.I relate the experience of others which I have heard first-hand in personal conversations with them and am told anecdotes are not acceptable.
I'm skeptical. BTW, it could easily be that they misled you, or even misled themselves as to their motives. "Be careful not to fool yourself, and you're the easiest one to fool." - FeynmannIn essence, I am being called a liar,
Good heavens. I said that? Where?ignorant, and perhaps stupid, too.
I don't think you're despicable, Helen. In fact, I find much in you that is admirable.Why on earth would you want to have a discussion with someone that dispicable?
Nothing but evidence.Nothing is acceptable to you folks except what you already agree with.
You too, Helen.Have a good evening.
Partly right. I have misunderstood the material and I have responded indicating your mistake.Galatian, Mark -- I quote authoritative sources and your responses are either that I am misquoting or that I do not understand the material.
No, you were topld that personal CONVERSION experiences--or in secular terms change of paradigm experiences, are not reliably remembered by those undergoing them. That's almost too obvious to elaborate upon. When one undergoes a fundamental paradigm shift one literally does not know what to think or how to think. Of course one's memories of the experience are likely distorted and therefore unreliable.ersonal experiences and I am told that is not acceptable.
Well, that wasn't my objection, but I agree with it nevertheless. I am under no illusions about the stories about myself and my aquaintances that I tell being actual history "wie es war" (as it was). I don't assume that anyone who writes an autobiography tells his or her life story as it really was either. Rather I understand such stories as reports of one's perspective, clues, to be sure, to what is really happening, but always always always distorted.I relate the experience o0 others which I have heard first-hand in personal conversations with them and am told anecdotes are not acceptable.
Liar==no. Ignorant==yes. Stupid==well, here yes. The problem with your account of your own memories or experiences isn't that you deliberately misrepresent them. Hence I do not think you are a liar, nor do I think anyoje else here is caling you a liar or thinks that you are a liar.In essence, I am being called a liar, ignorant, and perhaps stupid, too.
Now who is calling who stupid???Why on earth would you want to have a discussion with someone that dispicable?