darwinism

Washington Post: Philosophy and History are inferior to Biology and Physics?

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'Intelligent Design' in the Schools (washingtonpost.com): "Many school boards are arguing about whether to include "intelligent design" in their curriculums, The Post's editorial said. If they are serious, the appropriate way is not to have scientists trying to discuss intelligent design in classes such as biology or physics...As the editorial said, such discussion is legitimate, however, in a history or philosophy class." Ford said - 'history is bunk'. If you can relegate discussion of meaningless nonsense away from science to philosophy and history classes, then you prove him right. (Oscar Wilde described fox hunting as the unspeakable in pursuit of the uneatable. My dad always describes philosophy as the unintelligible in pursuit of the unanswerable.)
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The earth is made of termite shit

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A Pennsylvania school district has decided that alternative theories to Darwinism must be taught, including Intelligent Design. Since there is no evidence for Intelligent Design (it is a hypothesis not a theory), then presumably other 'theories' that are backed by no evidence are equally valid examples to teach. One such theory, as pointed out by Richard Dawkins and held by a certain African tribe is the much more logical creation theory that the earth, the whole thing including the brown stuff under our feet that looks like crap, is actually crap - created from eons of termite defecation.
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How to debate Creationists without being boring

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The problem with arguing with Creationists and the like is that it is not worth it and no fun. Who can be bothered to read through 5 pages of futile debate? If someone persists in holding a view that they try and defend in quasi scientific terms, despite overwhelming contradictory evidence, then it isn't likely that rational argument will change anything. A better challenge is to argue against irrational belief from that very standpoint. In order to do this for evolution I have invented the notion of 'Spiritual Darwinism' a spiritual challenge to Creationism much as Intelligent Design is an attempt at a scientific challenge to Darwinism. Now you can use religious debating techniques: Creationist: Blah blah blah - goes on for ages. Spiritual Darwinist: You are wrong. Creationist: Prove it. Spiritual Darwinist: God spoke to me and told me that you are wrong. Creationist: No he didn't. Spiritual Darwinist:...
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Georgia out of its mind

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In 1848, in Georgia, it was illegal to teach a black person to read. Two years ago it was illegal to teach women in Afghanistan. Today Georgia is considering banning the word evolution from its school text books, making it illegal to fully educate anyone.
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Creationist revisionism creeps into school textbooks

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Decisions in Texas next week over school textbooks could change the way the that science is taught in many US states. "Holt, Rinehart & Winston has submitted a change that directs students to "study hypotheses for the origin of life that are alternatives" to the others in the book. Students also are encouraged to research alternative theories on the Internet." Seattle think tank behind Texas textbook challenge / Northwest -The Olympian
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Ass fact-checked to hell and back

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Jeff Jarvis on why consolidated media depends on professionals to uphold the truth whereas decentralized media powered by enough amateurs leads to the truth automatically. There is something reassuring about the democracy of many to many publishing. If you are a capitalist then this is a what you could call a marketplace, if you are socialist then this is power to the people and if you are a libertarian then this is, well, libertarian.
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Microdoc on the threats of a network monopoly

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Microdoc picks up on the same problem of lack of diversity within networks, outlined in my last post. Microdoc: Email, Google, Microsoft and the Lack of Diversity If this threat is real - and I believe it is, I also think that it can be modeled so that notional danger thresholds can be set for when the code in any one market varies by less than a certain percentage. The danger threshold would fluctuate over time according to two variables: the density (degree of connectedness - of machines connected to the Internet , not links within the Internet - which being one directional would reduce this factor by a half) and trends in viral activity (i.e. the amount of malicious code). In order to provide provable evidence and monitor results an industry independent organization could provide empirical evidence and suggest anti-trust measures to protect against the specific dangers of the...
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The memetics of weblogs

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Interesting empirical study of rules of meme spreading from looking at weblog postings, from the excellent Microdoc News. via Doc Searls "Rarely can an individual blogger get a story going." "The best blog stories are those that are branded with a word or phrase that is highly identifiable with that story." "The stories that get going are not usually subject specific blogs but stories that cut across all interests of the blogging community." "When bloggers action is not requested, most often stories get up and running for longer." "Perhaps the last conclusion we came to in this study is that blogs cannot be read in isolation from each other. Blog stories are understood and appreciated in aggregate and not in isolation. On the other hand, mainstream media stories tend to be read in isolation rather than read and compared. " Microdoc News: Dynamics of a Blogosphere Story
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We are not decended from chimps.

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"Richard Dawkins perhaps provided the best visual for our link to chimps," Fouts told Discovery News. "Imagine taking the hand of your grandmother, who was holding the hand of her grandmother and so on down the line. 155 miles out, one of the women would be holding the hand of a chimpanzee." This is not what Dawkins said and is complete BS. rather like saying "Imagine a chimpanzee taking the hand of her grandmother, who was holding the hand of her grandmother and so on down the line. 155 miles out, one of the chimps would be holding the hand of a human". Chimps and humans share a common ancestor, we are not decended from chimps any more than chimps are from us, but we share an ape ancestor. Discovery Channel :: Study: Chimps Belong In Human Genus
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Creationism is not a theory

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Creationist dogma will be taught alongside evolution in a second UK school, despite the fact that even the Pope seems to accept the evidence for evolution these days. "Evolution will be taught, other theories will be taught and children will be left to take a view of it themselves." Creationism may be called a theory by some, but to compare creationism to evolution is not comparing like with like. When scientists refer to a theory, they mean something that there is evidence for. There is no evidence for creationism, it is a hypothesis and a hypothesis for which there are alternatives with evidence - theories. The earth beneath our feet often looks the same color and texture as bullshit, lets call this the bullshit creation hypothesis. In this case, if children are to be taught all of the hypotheses of creation then we should teach them that the earth may...
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Dawkins’ visualization of evolution

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"You are holding your mother's left hand. At the same time, she clutches her own mother, your grandmother, with her right. Your grandmother then holds her mother's hand, and so on into the past. With each individual allocated a yard of private space, your ancestral queue snakes off into the Industrial Revolution, through the Middle Ages and on into prehistory, until, 300 miles down the line, it eventually reaches the missing link, the common ancestor that humans shared with chimpanzees six million years ago." The Observer | Review | Dawkins versus the priests and New Age shamans? No contest
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Richard Dawkins interview

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"Well, I say, the bit I was thinking about was when you said how you hated it when young children are described as Muslim or Jewish or whatever when they've had no say in the matter. He grins, and says it's pure Monty Python. 'It's like saying the three-year-old child is a neo-Gramscian Marxist child, we wouldn't do that.'" Guardian Unlimited, Simon Hattenstone meets Richard Dawkins
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