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Old 08-13-2007, 11:54 AM   #701
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In the creationist case, what is more disturbing is their inability to continue to learn; to continue to educate themselves.
CM, creationists are in fact a peculiar species of Luddite.

The inability to continue to educate themselves is wilful. Indeed, if one examines their core beliefs, it is a necessary duty for them to remain ignorant, because if they were to learn, this would mean in turn that they were adapting to their environment, which in turn would mean that they were in a sense, evolving ... something their belief system not only says is impossible, but the work of Satan. The ignorance they manifest is displayed proudly as a badge of honour and righteousness in many cases, they revel in the fact that they resist all attempts to understand anything outside a narrow, prescribed remit set by their inbuilt "inerrancy censor". And, at bottom, that "inerrancy censor" exerts the influence it does because one of the core beliefs underlying its very existence is the idea that knowledge is evil, arising in turn from a woefully naive, indeed positively anencephalic, interpretation of the Adam and Eve story. The chilling corollary of this viewpoint is that anyone who pursues knowledge is also evil, which means each and every rational thinker here. Douglas Adams had something to say about this when he wrote about the Krikkit Wars.

Having followed the Archaeopteryx comedy trail in another thread has simply demonstrated how entrenched the mindset is once it takes hold, and how the relentless commitment of the adherents of that mindset is, as I remarked earlier at RDF, both pathetic and insidious.
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Old 08-13-2007, 12:07 PM   #702
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In the creationist case, what is more disturbing is their inability to continue to learn; to continue to educate themselves.
CM, creationists are in fact a peculiar species of Luddite.

The inability to continue to educate themselves is wilful. Indeed, if one examines their core beliefs, it is a necessary duty for them to remain ignorant, because if they were to learn, this would mean in turn that they were adapting to their environment, which in turn would mean that they were in a sense, evolving ... something their belief system not only says is impossible, but the work of Satan. The ignorance they manifest is displayed proudly as a badge of honour and righteousness in many cases, they revel in the fact that they resist all attempts to understand anything outside a narrow, prescribed remit set by their inbuilt "inerrancy censor". And, at bottom, that "inerrancy censor" exerts the influence it does because one of the core beliefs underlying its very existence is the idea that knowledge is evil, arising in turn from a woefully naive, indeed positively anencephalic, interpretation of the Adam and Eve story. The chilling corollary of this viewpoint is that anyone who pursues knowledge is also evil, which means each and every rational thinker here. Douglas Adams had something to say about this when he wrote about the Krikkit Wars.

Having followed the Archaeopteryx comedy trail in another thread has simply demonstrated how entrenched the mindset is once it takes hold, and how the relentless commitment of the adherents of that mindset is, as I remarked earlier at RDF, both pathetic and insidious.
James Blish wrote a set of three novels - to which he gave the name of After Certain Knowledge - concerned with the pursuit of secular knowledge. In one of his commentaries, he claimed that a central Christian question was whether all seeking after such knowledge was not, in fact, a sin. Dave does not appear to regard the acquisition of scientific fact as a sin - he gives the appearance of being unable to understand the facts that he acquires.
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Old 08-13-2007, 12:37 PM   #703
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After Such Knowledge
Blish declared that another group of novels was a trilogy, each dealing with an aspect of the price of knowledge, and given the overall name of "After Such Knowledge (or via: amazon.co.uk)" (the title taken from a T. S. Eliot quote). The first published, A Case of Conscience (or via: amazon.co.uk) (a winner of the 1959 Hugo Award as well as 2004/1953 Retrospective Hugo award for Best Novella), showed a Jesuit priest confronted with an alien intelligent race, apparently unfallen, which he eventually concludes must be a Satanic fabrication. The second, Doctor Mirabilis (or via: amazon.co.uk), is a historical novel about the medieval proto-scientist Roger Bacon. The third, actually two very short novels, Black Easter (or via: amazon.co.uk) and The Day after Judgement (or via: amazon.co.uk), was written using the assumption that the ritual magic for summoning demons as described in grimoires actually worked.
May I suggest what may be a more useful source for understanding fundamentalists: The Book of Jerry Falwell: Fundamentalist Language and Politics (or via: amazon.co.uk), written by a cultural anthropologist who studied Falwell and fundamentalists the same way other anthropologists study Voodoo trance dancers. (Anthropologists actually have a lot of respect for trance dancers, and Susan Friend Harding has a lot of empathy for her subjects, even when she knows that they are delusional.)

I recommend the chapter on the Creationist Museum in particular, pages 223 ff, in which the author finds a post-modern take on creationism, with creationism as a conscious parody of science.
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Old 08-13-2007, 12:39 PM   #704
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Interesting. Thank you.
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Old 08-13-2007, 02:39 PM   #705
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:-) You've been watching too much TV on The Skeptic Channel. Why don't you come to my church sometime and meet me? I'm a really normal guy with a really normal family and my church is full of really nice, normal people. You'd be amazed.
We wouldn't be amazed if such "nice, normal people" turned out to be entirely ignorant of almost any scientific subject. Especially if they're anything like you, Dave.
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Old 08-13-2007, 02:46 PM   #706
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Dave, you had no fucking idea what volcanism had to do with Lake Suigetsu, and ridiculed people for even bringing it up. You may understand volcanic markers now, but you sure as hell didn't at the time, and I doubt you understand them now, or you wouldn't be so completely in the weeds when it comes to radiocarbon calibration techniques, despite the exhaustive attempts of at least a dozen people to educate you.

CM is perfectly clear and perfectly unconfused on lake Suigetsu. You can't figure it out at all. Why do you think you got like two votes out of almost 150?
I didn't read anything about volcanism in the Lake Suigetsu paper. I did read about the Kanbun earthquake. That's why I've been scratching my head for several weeks now hearing people talk about volcanism and coral and tree rings and how they relate to Lake Suigetsu.
Why would you expect to read anything about volcanism in the Lake Suigetsu paper, Dave? When you say things like this, you make it screamingly apparent that you just cannot be made to understand how this whole consilience thing works. I've explained it to you at least half a dozen times now. Why are you incapable of getting it?

If you can calibrate radiocarbon in one place, you can calibrate it everywhere. You don't need to have coral growth rings and tree growth rings and ice cores and lake bed varves and marine sediments all in the same place. Once you've got radiocarbon dating calibrated, it's calibrated everywhere. Is that such an impossible concept for you to grasp?

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Why do all the independent C14 cal curves cross-correlate so closely, none show a 100X carbon spike at 4500 years ago, and all show ages well older than 10,000 years?
Because everyone has agreed to certain faulty assumptions. This is a recording.
Except you haven't shown those faulty assumptions, and it wouldn't work if you could. HOW CAN THEY ALL BE WRONG FOR DIFFERENT REASONS, BUT ALL WRONG BY THE SAME AMOUNT? This is a recording.

Jesus Fucking Christ, Dave.
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Old 08-13-2007, 03:34 PM   #707
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If you can calibrate radiocarbon in one place, you can calibrate it everywhere. You don't need to have coral growth rings and tree growth rings and ice cores and lake bed varves and marine sediments all in the same place. Once you've got radiocarbon dating calibrated, it's calibrated everywhere. Is that such an impossible concept for you to grasp?
How do you know? Have you tried radiocarbon dating everywhere on Earth? Maybe the laws of physics are different in Japan.


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Because everyone has agreed to certain faulty assumptions. This is a recording.
Except you haven't shown those faulty assumptions, and it wouldn't work if you could. HOW CAN THEY ALL BE WRONG FOR DIFFERENT REASONS, BUT ALL WRONG BY THE SAME AMOUNT? This is a recording.
Memetic conspiracy, remember?
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Old 08-13-2007, 03:47 PM   #708
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Indeed, Dave has made a very clear claim regarding consilience - that all scientists are completely incompetent or engaged in a massive conspiracy. Dave has provided no evidence of either.
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Old 08-13-2007, 03:49 PM   #709
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Except you haven't shown those faulty assumptions, and it wouldn't work if you could. HOW CAN THEY ALL BE WRONG FOR DIFFERENT REASONS, BUT ALL WRONG BY THE SAME AMOUNT? This is a recording.
Memetic conspiracy, remember?
In which case, we're right back to square one: either all scientists are liars, or they're all idiots.

Which one do you believe, Dave? (I mean, the other Dave.)
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Old 08-13-2007, 03:55 PM   #710
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Nice job of missing the point davey.
When are you going to discuss the amazing fact that all the methods you are so certain must be wrong
are wrong in different ways but always so as to lead to the same result???
Or are you going to continue to pretend there's no problem with that?

no hugs for thugs,
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This has been explained numerous times. It is my theory that scientists obtain consilience (sort of) in dating because there is an agreed upon consensus out there that everyone shoehorns their dating results into.
No; that is your hypothesis. The next step is to define "shoehorn" as it applies to science. Then see if there is any evidence whatsoever to support your hypothesis. If there isn't, you have to drop it. Of course, if you can find a few thousand scientists who admit to "shoehorning" data, someone might start calling it a "theory."

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