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Chris Innanen

Atheist ... Really?! - 0 views

  • An atheist believes the existence of God can be disproved.
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Additional: Atheists do not (should not - there are always exceptions) believe that the existance of a god can be disproved. Nor do they believe that the existance of invisible unicorns can be disproved, or that extensive effort should be put to doing so.
    • Chris Innanen
       
      An atheist sees no reason to act as if a god exists, due to a lack of compelling evedence to the contrary. Teapot argument: If someone claims there's a china teapot obiting Neptune, it would not be up to someone else to disprove them. The burden of proof is upon the claimant.
    • Chris Innanen
       
      An atheist sees no reason to act as if a god exists, due to a lack of compelling evidence to the contrary. Teapot argument: If someone claims there's a china teapot orbiting Neptune, it would not be up to someone else to disprove them. The burden of proof is upon the claimant. Atheists do not (should not - there are always exceptions) believe that the existence of a god can be disproved. Nor do they believe that the existence of invisible unicorns can be disproved, or that extensive effort should be put to doing so.
  • how you've done that
    • Chris Innanen
       
      While it is not probable that the existance of a god can be disproved, there can be compelling evidence to the contrary.
    • Chris Innanen
       
      While it is not probable that the existence of a god can be disproved, there can be compelling evidence to the contrary.
  • I'm an agnostic
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Agnostic is a "I don't know" or "I don't think anyone can know" answer to the question "is there a god?" This is in the realm of the theoretical. Atheist/Theist is an applied position, how one chooses to base their everyday decisions. One can either choose to behave by the human-set rules of this religion or that one, or choose to base their actions on a non-religious-based morality. (Which might share many of the same "goodness" facets, yet doesn't involve places of worship or a buck-passing of responsibility to a higher power.)
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  • exhausted the search
    • Chris Innanen
       
      One doesn't have to look at every Mall parking space before coming to the probable conclusion that their car has been stolen. Analogies aside, what search is being done here? Reading the bible? Waiting for a sign? One has a logical conclusion, the other has no viable end.
  • unsupportable statement
    • Chris Innanen
       
      His unsupportable statement was... his opinion?
  • throughout the Roman Empire in the early centuries
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Logical Fallacy: Argument From Antiquity http://www.theness.com/neurologicablog/?p=15
  • brilliant intellects
    • Chris Innanen
       
      What follows is a short list of historical people known for intelligence that were theists, or became so. A similar list could be compiled showing the reverse. Logical Fallacy: Aurgument From Authority http://www.theness.com/articles.asp?id=38
    • Chris Innanen
       
      What follows is a short list of historical people known for intelligence that were theists, or became so. A similar list could be compiled showing the reverse. Logical Fallacy: Argument From Authority http://www.theness.com/articles.asp?id=38
  • bigoted
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Bigot: "One who is strongly partial to one's own group, religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ." The implication is that all atheists are intolerant of theists. This cannot be supported. Some are however, just as some (if not many) theists are bigoted against atheists.
  • Other rules are be logical, be respectful, keep it brief, limit yourself to a single point, and 'remember that you don't have to win.
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Excellent advice to participants on both sides of the issue.
  • atheist in name but not in substance
    • Chris Innanen
       
      However, don't lose your logical, respectful attitude should they prove to be every bit as firm in their position as you are in your belief - should you be the theist in such a meeting. Taking a position in the local minority is difficult to maintain with pressure from your peers to take the easier road without conflict and conform to the larger group. Those that maintain thier minority position despite such pressures usualy have strong reasons to do so, and are not easily moved. A true skeptical atheist is open to a change of mind - a vital and necessary act in science - but they will likely be of the opinion that exceptional claims require exceptional evidence.
Chris Innanen

Sodium Chloride - High Blood Pressure - The Great Salt Myth - 0 views

  • This latest ban on sodium seems strange
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Next 4 paragraphs and the whole next section: Argument from Antiquity Why the historical perspective may be very interesting, it cannot be used as a basis of argument due to this sub-type of Argument from Authority. If you are just looking for facts relivant to the topic at hand - as I am - it would be best to skip to the next section.
  • If salt was believed to be so valuable and useful in so many ways for so many thousands of years by so many million people from so many different cultures, why is it that we have only recently discovered that it is dangerous?
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Argument From Antiquity Argument From Personal Incredularity Here we have the weight of all but the first paragraph written so far pressed into a single statement. It is a double fallacy depending on how it is read. The actual wordage is AFPI ("how could this be?") though the implication is AFA ("people of the past knew something we don't know now").
  • conspiracy
    • Chris Innanen
       
      With this word - and all that has come before it - this article has lost its last remaining hope for credibility. From now on, I just skim...
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  • Holistic healers
    • Chris Innanen
       
      DWR! ("Danger, Will Robinson!")
Tim Thompson

Intelligent Design Network :: Seeking Objectivity in Origins Science - 0 views

  • subjective, historical science
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Science isn't subjective... In fact, the first half of this sentence stresses objectiveness as science and yet in the second half science is called subjective. Science is not subjective.
  • undirected process such as natural selection
    • Chris Innanen
       
      "Natural selection" is the selection from among a group of available options by natural means.

      "Undirected" would imply random or unpredictable selection, whereas the effects of (natural) environmental pressures can be predicted and studied.
  • core claim of evolutionary theory that the apparent design of living systems is an illusion
    • Chris Innanen
       
      The "core claim of evolutionary theory" is not "that the apparent design of living systems is an illusion". The word "illusion" is not one that shows up in evolution research. Also, "apparent design" is a phrase that uses the word "design" to imply a transitive meaning of "to plan" (thereby also implying a planer) while using it as a noun ("a basic scheme or pattern that affects and controls function or development"). This statement would suggest that the "core claim of evolution" is the denial of intelligent design. I'd call that more of a side effect.
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  • science of design detection
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Science is not detecting things. Science is: 1) Hypothesis - "I wonder if this is true" 2) Prediction - "If this is true, then this should happen" 3) Testing - "Does this happen" 4) Conclusion - "This didn't happen, so this is probably not true" - or - "This did happen, so this might be true... make more preditions and test them to be sure." Detection might play a part in testing a prediction, but detection alone is not science.
  • tested or evaluated
    • Chris Innanen
       
      These two words are not equivalent. There have been no testable predictions made by ID that support its explanation and exclude explantations provided by evolution theory. A challenge: Create a test based on a prediction provided by the ID hypothesis that would contradict the prediction based on evolution for the same test. Then have many groups that favor each prediciton repeatedly perform the test. Collect and compare the results. That is scientific method, and to call ID a sciecne (and to teach it in a science classroom) it should be capable of such testing. Without testing, evaluation is subjective and not science.
  • the significant weight of its evidence
    • Chris Innanen
       
      The "significant weight of its evidence" is important, however, in that the weight of evidence is, so far, zero. That's significant and should not be ignored by focusing on the implications of the ID hypothesis. Please do focus on the evidence, do.
  • unavoidably impacts religion
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Taking note of the comment at its beginning, the whole paragraph seems to be quite true.
  • Positive evidence of design
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Is this "design by natural selection" or "design by an intelligent designer" here? The wording rules out neither, but is perhaps meant to imply the later. However, inserting "intelligent" does weaken the argument for ID slightly by making testable predictions.
  • chance as a plausible explanation
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Straw Man - Evolution does not make the statement that living systems are created by chance. Evolution is in two parts: random variation (you look and act different than I do), and natural selection (the way you look or act may help you survive and have more offspring than I, compared to the way I look or act). For one to say that chance is a plausible explanation for the structure of living things, is to say that evolution is RANDOM selection - which NO ONE is saying (re: Straw Man).
  • scientific research
    • Chris Innanen
       
      As per an earlier comment, there has yet to be a testable ID prediction that would contradict the prediction evolution would make for the same test. That is what is needed to prove one hypothesis over another. Until that time, evolution's massive and ever-growing collection of cross-supporting evidence remains the compelling solution to the question of how life came to be as it is today.
  • Activities 
    • Chris Innanen
       
      Public education, teaching resources, and networking... ...But no scientific research.
  • scientific evidence
    • Tim Thompson
       
      what is "scientific evidence?" how is it different from "evidence?"
    • Chris Innanen
       
      There is whole spectrum of quality when it comes to evidence, from anecdotal reports to the results of massive well-designed studies. "Scientific evidence" would imply evidence on the high quality side of the spectrum, useful for scientific purposes. However, though they claim to promote such evidence in support of intelligent design... They so have have demonstrated none. This is an example of a common litterary ploy of stating one position then ignoring it. Other examples might be: "No offense meant, but you are really ugly", or "I don't want to say I told you so, but... I told you so." Here they're saying that they want to be fair, objective, neutral, and scientific... But then are none of the above.
  • constitutional neutrality
    • Tim Thompson
       
      What is meant by *constitutional* neutrality?
    • Chris Innanen
       
      I think they mean they want something (ID) that is acceptable to the constitutional requirement of separation of church and state, the very requirement that makes creationism unlawful to teach in public schools. By stripping out the overtly religious elements of creationism and calling it intelligent design, the hope is that it will be taken as neutral in such evaluations. It is a fairly weak camoflage however, and as time goes on it can only get weaker as more and more proponents slip up and reveal its true religious underpinnings.
    • Tim Thompson
       
      The problem here is that the promotion of "the scientific evidence of intelligent design" by definition is counter to "scientific objectivity" (i.e. controlled observation of natural phenomena), because it is necessitated by and has grown out of a religious belief system (specifically a naively literalist reading of Hebrew scripture). The fallacy here is straight disingenuousness.
    • Chris Innanen
       
      I agree Tim. It's a tautology, starting with the conclusion (as written in the descriptions of religious texts) and looking for anomalies in the science-based descriptions of reality to use as proof that science is wrong therefore ID is right [a false dichotomy].
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Buy Verified CashApp Accounts - Canada - 0 views

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