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dwise1
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Posts: 5946
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(9)
Message 71 of 307 (655508)
03-11-2012 12:01 AM
Reply to: Message 54 by foreveryoung
03-10-2012 12:23 PM


Re: Despised POVs
The creationists who bring up an old topic don't realize it has been repeatedly brought up and supposedly debunked. It is freshly new to them. Creationists, for the most part, get enthusiastic about an idea they think will finally seriously undercut "evolutionistic philosophy". They will excitedly bring it up in a forum such as this and then face ferocious, mocking and ridicule. They don't even realize how they have been debunked. They can't realize it because they don't have the slightest idea of what the opposing arguments are.
Yes, that is absolutely correct. That is the situation that I have been describing for decades. Of late, I have referred to it as "Barnum's Law", as in "a sucker born every minute." And do please note that this situation has been created and is continually sustained by the creationist community and by the religious denominations, sects, and congregations that embrace "creation science." And the solution must come from that community and in those churches. And every solution starts with individuals.
Now, the history is that creationists came up with claims, which turned out to be false, and presented them to themselves and to the general public as part of their current (ie, post-Epperson vs Arkansas, 1968, which had led to the striking down of the 1920's "monkey laws") political agenda to remove evolution from the public schools. Part of that agenda was their travelling "medicine-show" debates which local scientists and educators were duped into and through which they were exposed to those false claims and which motivated them to learn all they could about those claims, which led directly to those claims being refuted. Most of this history unfolded by the early 1980's, such that most creationists claims had been created and refuted by that time.
And despite their claims having been refuted, the leading creationists continued to publish and to use those refuted claims. In fact, if you were to walk into a Christian bookstore right now and browsed through their creationist books, you would find those exact same false claims that had been refuted three full decades ago and no mention whatsoever of that fact.
Real-life example, the full story of which is at http://cre-ev.dwise1.net/moondust.html. In 1985, I encountered Dr. Henry Morris' false claim of a "1976" NASA document, "well into the space age", that showed through direct measurements that a 4.5 billion-year-old moon should have a layer of meteoric dust nearly 300 feet thick. When I pulled that NASA document off the library shelf, it turned out to be a 1967 printing of papers from a 1965 conference, a full year before our first lunar landing on 02 June 1966. I shared my findings with Gish, who had responded for Morris, as two astronomers also researching this claim had done with Morris. Both Gish and Morris at first tried to bluff us, ignoring our findings, xerox copies of which we shared with them, and ended up ignoring us; when I approached Gish at a local appearance, he professed total ignorance of that claim but took down my name and address to send me a response, but the only response I got was the immediate and unexplained cancellation of my subscription to their newsletter, Acts & Facts. Then circa 1991, Morris mentioned in the preface of a new book that they no longer use the moon dust claim because they found it to be unreliable. However, Morris' book, Scientific Creationism (2nd edition, 1985), which contains that false NASA document claim, had never been corrected and is still being sold as "current". Furthermore, almost every one of the ICR's books (through their publisher, Master Books) has an appendix of "Uniformitarian Estimates of the Age of the Earth", which lists a very large number of creationist "young earth" claims, all false and refuted and many attributed to an "unpublished work" by Harold Slusher, who is also the earliest source of that false NASA document claim that we have found. And, yes, the false moondust claim is in that list.
Which brings us back to walking into just about any Christian bookstore right this instant and browsing through their creationist books and finding all those old, old false and refuted creationist claims present as the latest thing, none of which has, according to them, ever even been addressed by "evolutionists", never giving any indication that those claims had in fact not only been addressed but also soundly refuted.
Fundamentalism traces back at least a century, though during most of its history it had been a small fringe group. Then circa 1970, their ranks were suddenly swelled by disaffected hippies (AKA, "The Jesus Freak Movement") which in turn led to a campaign of aggressive proselytizing that further increased their numbers immensely. All those new members needed to be brought up to speed quickly, so their education became an important issue. It has been suggested that this caused those churches to abandon their traditional approach of a lifetime of biblical study to arrive at one's own understanding and interpretation in favor of effectively reducing the Bible to quote-mined sound-bites and having the students accept the minister's interpretation as Gospel. Part of what they were taught was creationism and "creation science". And as these new members were newly armed with this "mountain of evidence" "against evolution", they zealously joined in the fight against evolution and started using "creation science" as a tool in their proselytizing. They did well against victims who did not know enough about science nor about "creation science", but anyone at all knowledgeable about science could immediately see through their albeit not personally intentional deception. Those creationists who did encounter knowledgeable victims found themselves shot down in flames, not understanding what had just happened, not unlike what they often experience on forums (which are a fairly recent venue, though it did happen on CompuServe in the late 1980's). Most often, those creationists retreat and refrain from discussing creationism, while many come to question what their religious leaders had taught them with a number of them ending up leaving the faith just as their religious leaders had taught them that they must do; similarly, those creationism-based churches are hemorrhaging their next generation as 65% to 80% of their children raised on creationism not only leave the faith, but give up on religion altogether, leaving those churches depending on proselytizing to keep their numbers up. And as new members join up and existing members turn their interest towards "creation science", the cycle repeats itself.
Which brings us to Barnum's Law. As creationists fall by the way-side, new creationists appear to take their place. On CompuServe, it was called "slaying the slain" (has kind of a zombie sound, doesn't it?) while here the term is PRATT, "Points Refuted A Thousand Times". One generation of creationists have a go at it and get shot down and give up (OK, there are several possible outcomes, but best left to being discussed elsewhere) and they are then replaced by the next generation, with a generation time being only a couple/few years, if even that long. Each new generation learns from the same place, the creationist community and the creationist literature, which has now gone on-line. And each new generation only learns the claims and none of the other history nor any of the truth.
They go away angry and despising atheists and what passes for scientists and probably never attempt to engage them again.
Yes, they failed and are confused because they cannot understand what went wrong. When I and a creationist co-worker left that 1985 debate, he was in shock, repeatedly muttering, "We have mountains of evidence that would have blown those evolutionists away. They (ie, ICR master debators Gish and H. Morris) didn't present any of it. Why not? We have mountains of evidence ... " At a 1991 amateur night debate event a young creationist got up and announced that he had new scientific evidence that will just blow the evolutionists away (his own words): "The speed of light has been slowing down." Immediately, the non-creationist half of the audience burst into uncontrollable laughter while simultaneously trying to explain why Setterfield's 10-year-old claim, which had been soundly refuted immediately, was wrong. The poor guy just stood there in shock without any idea what had just happened.
Now, when those creationists go away angry, is it really because of how their false, deceptive, and thoroughly refuted claims were received? Or is it because their claims turned out to be false, deceptive, and thoroughly refuted?
Remember, part and parcel of creationism is being taught that those creationist claims must be true or else Scripture has no meaning and God does not exist. During the "Jesus Freak Movement", I was a fundamentalist "fellow traveller" (borrowing from McCarthyism in which friends of communists were themselves implicated as "fellow travellers") in that friends and family of friends had converted (and a couple decades since then, my own sister as well, but like a virus over time that church became less virulent; yet another example of natural selection at work ... in the case of the virus, at least, and of the church only by analogy). I understand the hold that biblical literalism has and I understand the utter importance of religious faith has on these people. So I can also understand the allure of "creation science". And how its lies can poison a believer's soul. Or at the very least how it can hold a believer's faith hostage.
And, yes, those creationists do probably never attempt to engage "evolutionists" again (I use quotation marks because that is a creationist term that they misuse and overload with all kinds of perjoratives; my use of "creationist" also requires explanation, since it refers to one subset instead of all believers in creation). For one thing, they have begun to realize that they have nothing, or at least that what they thought was unassailable turns out to be very flimsy at best. Apparently, that even happened to leading creationists Duane Gish and Henry Morris, who quite literally wrote the "creation science" book. In the preface of his book, The Age of the Earth (1991, Stanford University Press), G. Brent Dalrymple, Reseach Geologist at the US Geological Survey at Menlo Park (and very well versed in radiometric methods) described how his encounters with creationists over the years had motivated him to write the book. His first encounter in 1975 was when Gish and Morris came to Menlo Park to present their case to several hundred US Geological Survey scientists, the only such creationist attempt that I've heard of. Dalrymple describes it as having been a lively session, though he mentioned that a major response from the scientists was to try to explain what was wrong with Gish and Morris' misrepresentations of thermodynamics. I think that experience might have been a source of the creationists' motivation thereafter to avoid presenting their case to scientists. Similarly, I have encountered creationists who actively evangelize through creationism. One in particular comes on very strongly, full of bluster, mercilessly bullying his victim, until he realized that his intended mark is knowledgeable, at which point he immediately changes his tune, tries to make super-nice, and tries to disengage as quickly as possible. Pathetic, isn't that? But it is one creationist reaction, which is pretty much what the leading creationists used.
So then, when you go away angry, are you really angry at the "evolutionists"? Or at the creationists for having given you crap? Or at yourself for having fallen for that crap?
This is how you keep getting new arrivals on a constant basis with the same old arguments. They don't know their fellow christians have been down the same road with the same argument.
Rather, we get new arrivals because of what I have described. And, yes, with the same old arguments, and again for the reasons I have described. And, no, they do not know what had happened to those who had gone before them, again for the reasons that I have described. Now please tell me, is that any way for you guys to run an anti-evolution crusade?
No, really, whose fault is all that? Clearly the creationists'.
But the bottom line is that creationists rarely last any time at all, while non-creationists (which includes the vast majority of believers in divine creation who do not side with "creation science", the former by far outnumbering the latter) can last much longer, even multiple decades. Which makes sense, since we have the evidence on our side while the creationists are at odds with the evidence. Let's face it, the creationist position is that the world is as we find it to be, then God does not exist, which is not at all a winning position that would promote retention of creationists. BTW, that creationist position is yet another creationist lie; if they have lied to you about all those other things, why believe them this time as well?
All they know from their fellow christians is that atheists and most scientists are assholes and act hatefully when their ideas are presented for debate. No commonality is every reached.
Wow! What an amazing coincidence! Over the years we have learned that creationists and fundamentalist are assholes and act hatefully when their ideas are discussed. What are the odds of that happening?
Though the automatic hatred of atheists has always puzzled me. Over the decades, I have been viciously attacked for believing things that I clearly do not believe. Or for advocating things that I would never advocate. And I have been preached to about what atheists think and believe, none of which was the least bit true, but at the same time different fundamentalists have independently thrown the exact same false claims about atheists at me, which indicates to me a common source. So then, just exactly what nonsense are they telling you about us? Though I guess that should be a separate topic.
And, of course, for commonality to be reached, there needs to be some kind of common ground, or at least some kind of common understanding. Now, I know that this can be seen as derogatory, but we normals do see things differently than creationists/fundamentalists do. Or rather the other way around. In the past I have quoted Dan Barker, now "America's leading atheist", but he had grown up in the fundamentalist faith and became a fundamentalist minister. To demonstrate how fundamentalist he and his family were, his mother used to go about doing her housework singing in tongues -- can you out-fundie that? He described the fundamentalist situation as being where your theology becomes your psychology. And I have experienced that. When I was going through my divorce I was helping a Lindy friend balance out her church's single ministry's dance classes (normally, 150 women and only 50 men would sign up and then within a few weeks most of the women would drop out) -- this was another "fellow traveller" experience for me. When the divorce actually hit (she filed, for no reason ever given), this friend talked me into going through their DivorceCare program, since that would keep me in the dance classes. She also talked me into attending a few presentations by a pair of renowned Christian counselors. Those were all geared for a completely alien mind. As a oft-time "fellow traveller", I could understand where they were coming from (as we used to say in the 60's; sorry if I'm being too anachronistic), but still it was completely foreign to me as a normal. Those counselors' presentations used some common counselor concepts (eg, boundaries), but they would then always blow it by saying that your reason for doing anything right was because that is what Jesus wants you to do. Good for a Christian, especially their kind of Christian, but completely worthless for an atheist. And the message of DivorceCare was that I could never ever recover from my divorce, because it is impossible for you to ever recover from your divorce unless Jesus made it happen. All of which demonstrates that the target psychology was based on fundamentalist theology and was completely foreign to normal psychologies.
So then, normals work with evidence. Actual evidence is how you can communicate with us. That is the common basis through which to communicate with us.
Fundamentalists and other sects based on "creation science" work with beliefs and theology and dogma, even when all that conflicts with evidence. Normally, that would not be a problem, since we would gladly allow you play in your own private little universe. But you won't allow that option, will you? You (collectively) want your own private version of "reality" to be imposed on everybody's children's education. Also, you insist on making statements about the physical universe based on your theology, ie based on particular questionable fallible-human interpretations of what your theology wants to claim, whether true or not, as its basis.
OK then, just what should our common basis for communication be? Especially considering that most of our communication is about the physical universe. Sorry, but basing it on evidence just keeps forcing itself to the forefront. But then I am a normal.
Distrust of science and scientists grows and so they never even get started on the road to learning what everybody on this board already knows. All that is left is distrust and enmity.
That is clearly your own stupid choice. And I say "stupid" because it is.
OK, so why distrust science? Because those who know anything at all about science can recognize your claims as false? And because of that you decide to distrust science and refuse to learn anything about science? Now that is most decidedly stupid.
In the 1970's when the creationists of the Institute for Creation Research (ICR) who had literally invented "creation science" and whose master debators (it's always tempting to delete the "de", though one should also remember to ipreface it with "mental" or "intellectual"), Drs. Duane Gish and Henry Morris, travelled their "snake-oil" debate circuit across the entire nation, most of their opponents were being exposed to "creation science" for the very first time. And, of course, those opponents, who all came out of those fiascos angry at how they had been duped into what they thought would be a scientific debate and instead got fire-hosed with all kinds of complete nonsense ("Drink from the fire hose! Drink from the fire hose!").
{voice="John Belushi from his "Pearl Harbor" speech in Animal House"}Did they just walk away sulking and silently hating creationists while forever refusing to learn anything at all about creationism? No they did not! They immediately started reading up on creationism. They went directly to the creationists' own writings and learned what they were claiming in their own words. And they read those creationists' cited sources and they went to those sources and they discovered exactly what those cited sources had actually said. And they clearly saw how the creationist claims differed from those sources that they had cited. And did they keep all that to themselves? No, they did not! They communicated their findings to their friends and colleagues. And they formed state-wide communication networks. And these state-wide networks started communicating with each other and came to take on the name of Revolutionary War communications networks called "Committees of Correspondence". And around 1980 or slightly later, they organized a central clearing house for all the information that they were gathering and disseminating and they called it the National Center for Science Education (NCSE).{/voice}
OK, so what's the creationist response to such treatment? Do they organize? Do they at least try to learn what their opposition is saying? Do they try to research anything at all? No, they curl up in a ball, AKA "the fetal position", and hope that everything will go away.
Pathetic. And patently stupid. No insult; you (collectively) have made the case yourself.
I don't think this chasm will ever be breached.
Yes, it can. But it's up to you (collectively). As long as you choose to prevent this from happening, it will never happen.
A christian is going to believe what they do regardless of what you present to them. This isn't stupidity to them. It is the only sane way of living that they know of.
Yes, that is true. And I do realize and appreciate that as a multiple "fellow traveller". Now the question is, is that Christian believing something that is true or not? Because as a normal, the truth does matter to me. Is it the case that the truth does not matter to a Christian?
So I guess it boils down to what really matters. The truth? Or religious dogma, regardless of how questionable the source?
They are not going to let you take away their faith at all costs, and so their will be a lot of emotion involved and a lot of distrust involved.
No, they will not. But when they base their faith on a fabric of demonstrable lies, then where does that leave them?
Isn't that what it eventually comes down to?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 54 by foreveryoung, posted 03-10-2012 12:23 PM foreveryoung has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 80 by foreveryoung, posted 03-11-2012 1:01 PM dwise1 has replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 178 of 307 (656349)
03-17-2012 8:27 PM
Reply to: Message 177 by onifre
03-17-2012 8:22 PM


Re: Life is like a box of chocolates, now leave this site
You're a banana!
Noooooooooooooo!!! Not a banana!!! Our mortal enemy!!!
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!
Dudes! Onifre is a comedian!
Duh?
Edited by Admin, : Reduce consecutive exclamation marks to three, shorten the "aahh".

This message is a reply to:
 Message 177 by onifre, posted 03-17-2012 8:22 PM onifre has replied

Replies to this message:
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dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 205 of 307 (656522)
03-19-2012 3:41 PM
Reply to: Message 190 by Percy
03-19-2012 7:34 AM


Re: Life is like a box of chocolates, now leave this site
foreveryoung to Onifre writes:
Why don't you go shove it up your ass?
WWJD.
Simply WJDD: wither that sucker! (Matt. 21:19)

This message is a reply to:
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dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


(1)
Message 207 of 307 (656525)
03-19-2012 4:14 PM
Reply to: Message 184 by foreveryoung
03-19-2012 1:47 AM


Re: Fool me once
Decades ago on CompuServe there was an odd fellow named "Suds" (hopefully, that was only his nickname). He said that he was a retired mathematician and that he had invented Gray Code and that he had suffered a few strokes and could no longer work as a mathematician. He also strongly advocated an odd form of word magick, that reality is determined entirely by what we say it is.
But he once did come up with a brilliant observation: It does not matter one bit whether Christianity is true or false, but rather all that matters is that Western Europe believed it to be true and acted upon that belief. Indeed, Christianity did have an immense influence on European history and culture and it does not matter one bit whether Christianity was even true, just so long as those generations had believed it to be true.
Humanists have adopted much of the morality found in the bible. You could completely eradicate Christianity today and that morality would remain.
No, rather the situation is that humanists have adopted the morality found in society. It is society that determines morality, not religion. Arbitrary rules that don't make any sense in society end up getting dropped and abandoned, which is why so much of that "absolute morality" in the Bible is completely ignored, even by the most fervent believers in that "absolute morality".
What actually happened in the past was that religion incorporated the society's moral standards and became the vehicle for the society's expression of those standards and became responsible for passing it on to the next generation, and along the way generated a mythology of how those standards had come about and why they must be followed. At which point "Suds' Law" kicked in and the religious tradition became the standard for morality, even to the point of new cultures adopting a foreign religious tradition as their own. And then centuries later, humanists return to looking to society as a baseline source of morality, though examining that morality and its consequences in order to evaluate it.
As former Mexican President Portillo had said on "60 Minutes" circa 1980: "It's been a long time since we've worn feathers."
The problem would come if anyone ever started to question the basis for that morality.
The only real problem that would cause would be if their religious beliefs regarding morality were to have set them up for a fall. If they believe, as far too many fundamentalists have insisted to me in the past, that without that biblical basis morality (most often expressed as "if God did not exist") could not possibly exist and there is no reason for anyone to behave themselves, even to the point that it would be alright for them to become an axe murderer. Of course, such a belief is utter foolishness besides being just plain wrong. And again it's not the lack of a biblical basis for morality that would be the least bit of a problem, but rather those individuals' religious beliefs about what that would mean that would create the real problem.
Without the biblical basis, all that is left is utilitarianism. Without a genesis that is absolutely, literally true, there is no rational reason to accept the bible as a basis for morality that goes beyond utilitarian purposes.
And your point is, what?

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dwise1
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Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 218 of 307 (656785)
03-22-2012 4:43 AM
Reply to: Message 215 by foreveryoung
03-22-2012 2:01 AM


Content removed. --Admin
Edited by Admin, : PM me.

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dwise1
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Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


(9)
Message 244 of 307 (659211)
04-13-2012 12:49 PM
Reply to: Message 29 by foreveryoung
03-10-2012 2:11 AM


Working on Geology Degree
I will have a geology degree by may 2014, and then will hopefully be going to graduate school.
Commendable. But doesn't that conflict with your beliefs? From what I've seen, I assume you to be a young-earth creationist (YECist) and believer in Flood Geology, which is contradicted by geology. Unless you inform us otherwise, I assume that you're attending a college or university that actually teaches geology and not Flood Geology.
To illustrate my concern over how your institution teaches geology, let us refer back to the issue in the late 1980's over state accredidation of the post-graduate science program that was being run by the Institute for Creation Research (ICR; co-founded by Dr. Henry Morris, the Father of Flood Geology). Part of the process included a visitation committee that inspected the program; I received a copy of their report, which is somewhere in one of my boxes since I've moved a couple times since then. In that report, the committee observed a post-graduate micro-biology class in session and observed that they were using the same textbook as most universities use, but they were using that same textbook very differently from any university. The entire class was going through the book page-by-page under the direction of the instructor and crossing out everything that the instructor told them to cross out with, "We don't believe that. And we don't believe that either."
By the same token, a conservative Christian college is also capable of providing a good education in the sciences. While a graduate student in Physical Geology at Calvin College, Dr. Steven Schimmrich was very active in on-line discussion of science and religion. He was (and I'm sure still is) a conservative Christian who was also a very strong and efffective opponent of "creation science"; since receiving his doctorate, he has left the fray to concentrate on his family and career. When he took his site down, I posted some of his pages on my site as a mirror, but since having to move my site I have not put them back up, waiting for him to bring his site up. However, I do quote from his pages here: http://cre-ev.dwise1.net/quotes.html#SCHIMMRICH
Another example is geologist Steve Smith, a devout Christian, whose testimony is posted on Glenn R. Morton's site (more on Morton below) at http://home.entouch.net/dmd/ssmith.htm. Raised in a conservative evangelical church, in high school he became a YEC when he was loaned a copy of Henry Morris' book, Scientific Creationism. As he tells the story:
quote:
A year later, I went to a small church college in the midwest. I knew I wanted to be a scientist, but I didn't know exactly which field to major in. I started out in Chemistry. During my first year at college, I also took the two required Biblical Studies classes: Old Testament and New Testament Bible. In the Old Testament class, the Genesis accounts of the Creation and the Flood were discussed. I can remember that during one of those discussions, I some how ended up at the chalkboard diagraming and describing to the entire class how the vapor canopy model resolved many of perceived conflicts between the Biblical account of a pre-Flood earth destroyed by Noah's Flood and modern scientific evidence. I had the answers to everything, few could argue with me and even fewer tried. After the class, a few friends quietly commented that I ought to take the Physical Geology 101 class. The implication was that I might not be quite so convincing there.
Later that school year, I came to the conclusion that I might really enjoy a career in Geology. I was already an avid rock and fossil collector and had always found the Earth Sciences exciting so I signed up to begin Geology during my Sophomore year. I went to that first Geology class prepared to meet the Devil on his own ground. I knew every argument for a young earth and flood geology backwards and forwards. However instead of meeting the Devil, I met a man with a deep love for God and for teaching Geology. He started every class with a devotional thought and a prayer and then he began to teach Geology. He didn't argue Creation/Evolution. He simply taught Geology. I listened to the history of Geology and began to study all the methods and the knowledge accumulated by generations of geologists (many of whom were devout Christians). Bit by bit the evidence for an old earth became overwhelming and with it was a lack of any real evidence for a young earth and the type of Flood described by Henry Morris and others. I didn't even have a chance to argue Creationism in that class, every argument was destroyed by what I could see and demonstrate in the rocks themselves. By this time, I was very confused as to how I would ever reconcile my science and my Christianity.
During the latter part of the semester, we were given an assignment to do a review and report of the book _The Christian View of Science and Scripture_, by Bernard Ramm. Although outdated (even in 1977), this book carefully went through the many historical methods of harmonizing Genesis with science. It described the theological and scientific pros and cons for each theory. Although the book argued for a Progressive Creationism theory, there was no clear cut winner that preserved both scientific integrity and a literal fundamentalist interpretation of Genesis. Flood Geology (as per G.M. Price, and later H.M. Morris, J.C. Whitcomb, Jr., etc.) was among the least favorable theories since it had both major scientific and theological problems.
{ snipped -- paragraphs describing his struggle to reconcile science and Christianity and how he has reconciled them, followed by several creationist pronouncements }
There is a very real danger in these {creationist} pronouncements. When one bases their faith upon the rise or fall of a scientific theory, they are on real "sinking sand." When I left for college, I believed these sorts of either/or statements - many people do. If I had learned the facts of geology or biology or physics or astronomy or anthropology or geochronology or ... under the teaching of someone other than a godly professor, the crisis to my faith would have been much more severe. I feel it is very unlikely that I would be a Christian today. I would probably be a bitter agnostic and not because of science but because my Christianity set me up to fail.
I suppose that is why this Creation/Evolution issue is so important to me. I know that I sometimes talk about this topic so much that others get tired of hearing it. I know my wife does and I'm sure that my pastor does too. But when one has a close call with spiritual death, it becomes a critical issue. Every year, I see young Christians go away to college with the idea that science, in one form or another, is some sort of Satanic conspiracy. Sooner or later they end up struggling with their faith in the light of new knowledge. Some will survive because their faith is strong enough to overcome any evidence - many do not. I have met some bitter people who left the church because they believe that their religion "lied to them". I hate seeing this when I believe that it is so unnecessary. We as Christians need to be real clear about what is important to our faith and what is not.
Smith also tells of the wide variety of faiths he has encountered among scientists (including "but very few" atheists) and:
quote:
Most claim to be agnostic and feel threatened or repelled by Christians who verbally attack science and scientists. Their rejection of Christianity is strongly based upon the behavior of Christians that they have met(!) or heard on TV and the belief that in order to be a Christian, one has to turn their back on all intellectual activities and simply accept unsupported dogmatic doctrines. Neither I, nor any of my colleagues that I've talked with have ever seen or heard of any anti-Christian conspiracies within the scientific community - and this type of activity would be hard to keep quiet.
So then, the animosity towards fundamentalists that you report is simply a matter of reaping as you had sown. Which is how you are now sowing with a vengence.
And what are you planning on doing with your degree? Work in the field? If so, then I need to give you a heads-up through the story of Glenn R. Morton, as he tells it at ABOUT THE AUTHOR, Why I left Young-earth Creationism, and The Transformation of a Young-earth Creationist.
I first encountered his story in the late Robert Schadewald's report on the 1986 International Conference on Creationism, through which I first came to realize the very real danger that creationism poses for its believers' faith when Morton told of having hired several geology graduates from the ICR (and hence schooled solely in Flood Geology) who suffered severe crises of faith after being faced day after day by rock-hard geological evidence that they had been taught did not exist and could not exist if Scripture were to have any meaning.
To keep this short, here are Morton's quotations as I post them here:
quote:
After receiving a B. S. in Physics I spent one year in graduate school studying the philosophy of science. I entered the oil industry as a seismic processer where I began to learn geology on the job. Before this education in geology was complete, I published 27 articles and notes in the Creation Research Society Quarterly, presented a paper at the first International Conference on Creationism, and ghost wrote the evolution section in Josh McDowell's book Reasons Skeptics Should Consider Christianity. During this period I switched sub-disciplines within geophysics and began to interpret seismic data. There was a major problem; the data I was seeing at work, was not agreeing with what I had been taught as a Christian. Doubts about what I was writing and teaching began to grow. Unfortunately, my fellow young earth creationists were not willing to listen to the problems.
By 1986, the growing doubts about the ability of the widely accepted creationist viewpoints to explain the geologic data led to a nearly 10 year withdrawal from publication. Eventually my doubts about the reliability grew so large that I was driven to the edge of becoming an atheist.
and
quote:
But eventually, by 1994 I was through with young-earth creationISM. Nothing that young-earth creationists had taught me about geology turned out to be true. I took a poll of my ICR graduate friends who have worked in the oil industry. I asked them one question.
"From your oil industry experience, did any fact that you were taught at ICR, which challenged current geological thinking, turn out in the long run to be true? ,"
That is a very simple question. One man, Steve Robertson, who worked for Shell grew real silent on the phone, sighed and softly said "No!" A very close friend that I had hired at Arco, after hearing the question, exclaimed, "Wait a minute. There has to be one!" But he could not name one. I can not name one. No one else could either. One man I could not reach, to ask that question, had a crisis of faith about two years after coming into the oil industry. I do not know what his spiritual state is now but he was in bad shape the last time I talked to him.
And being through with creationism, I very nearly became through with Christianity. I was on the very verge of becoming an atheist.
As you learn more about geology, you may want to visit his site more often.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 29 by foreveryoung, posted 03-10-2012 2:11 AM foreveryoung has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


(1)
Message 246 of 307 (659221)
04-13-2012 1:38 PM
Reply to: Message 245 by GDR
04-13-2012 1:01 PM


Re: anger is normal
Oh, I have seen a lot of hate coming from fundamentalist Christians. Mainly in the form of e-hate-mail, type-by flamings (like Mrs. Doubtfire's "run-by fruiting") sent to me in response to my website, cre-ev.dwise1.net. Also in email correspondence and forum messages. Those suckers are full of hate!
I would agree that fy at times behaves like a troll, but most of the other times he doesn't.
Rather, he's a kid! He says that he's two years away from his undergraduate degree, which suggests that he's 19 or 20. Still needs to develop some maturity. Plus he's at that awkward age where fundamentalist kids start to wake up and he's in an environment, college, which tends to hasten that awakening; Christian sources place the deconversion rate at 65% to 80%. Looks like he might be becoming yet another statistic.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 245 by GDR, posted 04-13-2012 1:01 PM GDR has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


(2)
Message 248 of 307 (659242)
04-13-2012 4:22 PM
Reply to: Message 80 by foreveryoung
03-11-2012 1:01 PM


Re: Despised POVs
Having been short on time at the time (a month ago), I let slide my reply to your Message 80. But now while you're cooling off, I thought I should submit my reply.
I have never known any christianity that was not based on the idea that the whole bible was absolutely true.
vs
Most christians I run into are of this stripe {ie, do not base their faith on the whole bible being absolutely true}.
You're contradicting yourself there. I believe what you really meant to say is that it is your belief that Christianity must be based on biblical literalism and inerrancy, however most Christians you meet do not share in that belief.
So then, even though you cannot conceive of being a Christian if the Bible is not 100% true and accurate, most Christians can. Instead of preaching to them to adopt your position, shouldn't you take a little time to listen to them to try to understand something about their position?
Nothing an atheist or scientist can ever say will sway these folks {who do not believe the Bible to be literal and inerrant} away from their faith. They believe because they need to believe. However, once the hardknocks of live come along, or someone of the christian faith they looked up to lets them down, their faith will come crashing down.
And yet, ironically, it is the biblical literalist/inerrantist whose is susceptible to what scientists say, because they are basing their faith on "scientific" statements that are contrary-to-fact. And if even one error is found in the Bible, then they are taught to discard the whole thing because that proves either that God does not exist or else is unworthy of worship so their only choice is to be atheists -- fundamentalists have preached so many variants of that nonsense at me over the decades, but it still boils down to the same thing that you're saying.
Obviously, because fundamentalists and especially young-earth creationists are required to believe as true things that are contrary-to-fact, that means that they are basing their faith on falsehoods. Of course, this raises the question of the actual role of truth and truthfulness in their form of Christianity, along with the role of lying and deception. That is especially the case in the promotion of "creation science". Which of course very readily discredits the religion among observers, which is one reason why you see so many eyes start to roll up when you start talking about your beliefs.
Which necessarily brings us to the question: Is that any way to run a religion? You may believe that it's the only possible way, mainly because that's what you've been taught to believe, but we see so many serious problems with it.
And when you start to also see those problems, you will need to decide on a course of action. You've been taught to become an atheist, but is that really necessary? I'm reminded of a Bertrand Russell quotation, which paraphrases as: "When a Catholic becomes a free-thinker, he becomes an atheist, but when a Protestant becomes a free-thinker, he merely forms a new church." The reasoning behind that is that Catholic teaching is that it is the only Christian doctrine, deviation from which is heresy, whereas the history of Protestant Christianity has been churches splintering into new churches over all manner of doctrinal differences.
So then, when that time comes, will you approach the situation like a Catholic, as you have been taught, and abandon Christianity? Or like a Protestant and form or adopt a new theology that is much more concordant with reality?
Because you are not immune. Conservative Christian sources and youth ministries estimate that of the children raised as fundamentalists (and evangelicals and conservative Christians), 65% to 80% of them will leave the faith in young adulthood with most of them leaving Christianity and even religion altogether. And college is a prime experience in that deconversion process. Having been involved with "creation science" and having read deconversion stories caused by creationism, my understanding is that it's when they learn actual science and realize that they had been lied to all their life, but a blog I was referred to (unfortunately, neither I nor Ed Babinski, who had led me to it, can find it again) cited a study that showed that it's the humanities in college that lead to far more deconversions than science does. According to that study, it is due to their learning that there are other perpectives exist, ways of looking at things other than their own, and of looking at things through other perspectives, as well as understanding those other perspectives, which are all what happens in history, literature, and philosophy classes.
The best way to preserve one's fundamentalist beliefs is through ignorance, but yet again, is that any way to run a religion? Or to live your life?
The only logical way to be a christian in my opinion is to look at my way: The whole bible is true, including genesis. If this kind of thinking is only a century old, then the vast history of christianity has been practiced on shaky ground.
No, I didn't say that. Rather, what I said in Message 71 was (emphasis added):
DWise1 writes:
Fundamentalism traces back at least a century, ...
You may refer to the Wikipedia article for more complete information, but Fundamentalism started as a movement in the wake of the Niagara Bible Conferences at the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th, followed by the publication of The Fundamentals between 1910 and 1915; it was in 1920 that the actual term "fundamentalist" was coined. It was a reaction against the modernism and liberal theology that had started in the 19th century following the Enlightenment, and especially against the "higher criticism", which was a German attempt to understand the origins of the Bible through textual analysis (eg, the source for the Gospels was named "Q" for "Quelle", meaning "source").
While many of the ideas had existed before, they were codified into actual doctrine during this time. The article names three sources fundamentalism drew from:
1. The Five Fundamentals, from the aforementioned publication, which were:
a. The inerrancy of the Bible
b. The literal nature of the Biblical accounts, especially regarding Christ's miracles and the Creation account in Genesis.
c. The Virgin Birth of Christ
d. The bodily resurrection and physical return of Christ
e. The substitutionary atonement of Christ on the cross
2. Dispensationalism, a new interpretation of the Bible created in the 1830's by John Nelson Darby and the Brethren movement. This is what all your end-times interpretations and the "count-down to Armageddon" are based on; it got really crazy in the local fundamentalist mega-church, Chuck Smith's, during the 1980's.
3. The doctrine of inerrancy courtesy of Charles Hodge in the mid 19th century. This was mainly an attempt to counter the higher criticism.
So as I told you, fundamentalism is only about a century old, with its component parts not much older than that.
You really should learn something about your history, and being in college is the ideal time to do that. I know that some disciplines' requirements can keep students very busy; eg, engineering demands so much that students have no free time nor much opportunity to deviate from the curriculum plan. I do not know how demanding the geology program is on your time, but you do still have your general ed and elective requirements. You should look into what religious studies has to offer and how those classes could satisfy those requirements. A history of Christianity, which might be offered instead through the history department, would be a good idea too. Or a kind of "development of Christian thought" class. That would also help you to understand other Christians.
Take advantage of the opportunities to learn! As the Talmud teaches (in the Pirke Avoth, "Sayings of the Fathers"): "The more learning, the more life!"

This message is a reply to:
 Message 80 by foreveryoung, posted 03-11-2012 1:01 PM foreveryoung has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 249 of 307 (659355)
04-15-2012 2:49 PM


Does this look closed to you?
This is to prove to foreveryoung that this topic is not closed.

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 256 of 307 (659364)
04-15-2012 3:33 PM
Reply to: Message 255 by jar
04-15-2012 3:17 PM


Re: posted at the request of foreveryoung.
I agree with you, Jar. And the sad fact is that all his recent conduct in the past days clearly demonstrate that his brain was not working. It really is tiring to try to deal with a raving lunatic (which is what he was presenting himself as being). I need to be off to salsa class right now. Hopefully he can try to actually address my post in the next few hours.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 255 by jar, posted 04-15-2012 3:17 PM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 261 by jar, posted 04-15-2012 4:45 PM dwise1 has replied
 Message 263 by foreveryoung, posted 04-15-2012 5:32 PM dwise1 has replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


(1)
Message 266 of 307 (659387)
04-15-2012 6:28 PM
Reply to: Message 261 by jar
04-15-2012 4:45 PM


Re: posted at the request of foreveryoung.
Not saying that he actually is a raving lunatic, but rather that is exactly how he is acting and which is just as tiring.
For example:
Message 228
foreveryoung writes:
fuck you
Message 229
foreveryoung writes:
go fuck yourself
Message 1
foreveryoung writes:
Message 1
foreveryoung writes:
Message 231
foreveryoung writes:
go to hell
Message 413
foreveryoung writes:
What a load of crap but typical of the attitude here.
Message 420
foreveryoung writes:
Shove it up your ass.
Message 421
foreveryoung writes:
Another load of crap from someone who is high on himself without realizing he has his head stuck up his ass.
Message 423
foreveryoung writes:
I am taking a closer look. I see one huge fucking asshole... That would be you mutherfucker.
Message 424
foreveryoung writes:
No I am not drinking. I hate each and everyone of you assholes and I am not sparing any words about it. Every fucking one of you is a worthless piece of garbage.
Even though how he is able to create paragraphs, his content is the same. He objects to what's been written. Objects to what exactly? He refuses to say and then rants in the same vein as quoted above. What is the reasoning behind his objections? He refuses to say and continues to rant in the same vein as quoted above.
It is impossible to reason with someone who refuses to think and it is impossible to have any kind of rational discourse with someone who is so strongly committed to being irrational. It's the same as trying to deal with a raving lunatic, even when the person is not actually one but rather insists on acting like one.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 261 by jar, posted 04-15-2012 4:45 PM jar has seen this message but not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 281 by foreveryoung, posted 04-15-2012 8:10 PM dwise1 has replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 270 of 307 (659394)
04-15-2012 7:05 PM
Reply to: Message 263 by foreveryoung
04-15-2012 5:32 PM


Re: posted at the request of foreveryoung.
I am not going to address any post of yours after you call me a raving lunatic.
It is a call for you to stop acting like a raving lunatic. Which you will of course refuse to do.
Remember, all this row between us started when you attacked me first. So don't you dare break your promise to never reply to any of my posts again!
I guess you have such self control that you have never gone into an all consuming rage?
Oh yes I have! Which is why I know, from personal experience, that what you are doing is not the way! Which is why I have been trying to get you to snap out of it and to stop and think!
Now, of course you are going to take this in completely the wrong way, because you are hell-bent on do that! One thing that helps is to talk with somebody about it. I am not telling you to go get professional help, even though you will yet again misconstrue what i say. Sit down and have a long talk with somebody you trust and feel that you can open up to. It could be somebody at church. If you do reach the point of seeing an actual counselor, be aware that there are counselors who specialize in fundamentalist/evangelical/conservative Christians and are usually billed as "Christian Counselors" -- my Dan Barker reference was no joke and I have seen it in operation many times, especially when a friend talked me into DivorceCare, most of which makes no sense to a non-Christian, and in seeing presentations by two Christian counselors, much of which again makes no sense to a non-Christian.
I have previously suggested -- and I sincerely hope that this is not the case -- that you might be experiencing the first stages of deconversion. You are in a prime population for it, not only because of your age and that you're going to college, but also since you are studying a science that your beliefs most likely disagree with ("creation science" certainly disagrees with geology). If that is what you are going through, then realize that you are not alone and you are not the only one to have ever gone through it. Christian youth ministers and polls (eg, Barna Group) place at 65% to 80% the number of children raised in the faith leaving it and even any religion by young adulthood; you are part of that cohort. If there's a campus ministry that offers counseling, I can almost guarantee that they've encountered it many times before. If the need is there, then there is no reason not to take advantage of their experience.
And in addition, engage in some kind of strenous and non-destructive physical activity to try to work some of it out of your system. Or to at least leave you too exhausted to do anything.
And do please remember your promise!

This message is a reply to:
 Message 263 by foreveryoung, posted 04-15-2012 5:32 PM foreveryoung has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 288 by foreveryoung, posted 04-15-2012 8:20 PM dwise1 has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


Message 297 of 307 (659435)
04-15-2012 9:44 PM
Reply to: Message 281 by foreveryoung
04-15-2012 8:10 PM


Re: posted at the request of foreveryoung.
You broke your promise.
Your point is only valid for this past month perhaps.
For the latter part of this past week, actually. That was precisely what I've been referring to all along!
So snap out of already!
... ,and what I started reading in "three kinds of creationists" set me off on an uncontrollable rage.
So why didn't you just say so? And just what the hell did I write that could have set you off?
Other than that, I am usually quite rational. You may not like my point of view, but I am rational.
So then seek to be rational again!
BTW, Henry Morris was the inventor and purveyor of "Flood Geology". You know, the ICR nonsense that Glenn R. Morton and his fellow geology graduates from the ICR had learned and which caused them crises of faith, including driving Morton to the verge of atheism, when they were faced every day, day after day, with the rock-hard geological evidence that Henry Morris had taught them did not exist and could not exist if Scripture were to have any meaning. I've read a number of his books and I wouldn't trust anything he has to say. Be very careful.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 281 by foreveryoung, posted 04-15-2012 8:10 PM foreveryoung has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 300 by foreveryoung, posted 04-15-2012 10:45 PM dwise1 has not replied

  
dwise1
Member
Posts: 5946
Joined: 05-02-2006
Member Rating: 5.6


(4)
Message 304 of 307 (659540)
04-16-2012 2:42 PM


Summary
A classic scene from The Bob Newhart Show (the first one, where he played a psychologist) might help foreveryoung to better understand the situation and his problem. Bob is with a patient, a surly middle-aged black man:
quote:
Patient (keeps insisting bitterly): Everybody hates me because I'm black!
Bob: Uh, no. Everybody hates you because you're a very unpleasant person to be around.
Patient (having a break-through): Oh!
foreveryoung constantly complains that everybody hates him because he's a creationist. No, if anybody does hate him, then it's because he is a very unpleasant person to be around.
foreveryoung started this topic as a snivelling spoiled child and ended it with a full-blown temper tantrum. Oh, sure, he tried to wipe his nose and appear to have started behaving himself, but he is continuing his temper tantrum via PMs. In that, he demonstrates that he has learned to practice hypocrisy.
In Message 263, he stated:
I am not going to address any post of yours after you call me a raving lunatic. Sorry. No dice.
Now of course, I read that as it was written, that since I had described him as a raving lunatic then he was not ever going to reply to any post of mine. So when he shortly thereafter replied to my reply to that, I made the off-hand comment that he had broken his promise.
Well, that touched off his powder-keg again. He replied with Message 300 at 15-Apr-2012 7:45 PM PDT. Of course, we don't know what he had written at that time, because he then edited it, no reason given, at 7:46. In the latter version, he stated that he had not meant that statement as I had interpreted it and even expressed sorrow over the misunderstanding. Sounds reasonable, doesn't it?
But then two minutes later, at 15-Apr-2012 7:48 PM PDT, he sent me this PM:
foreveryoung writes:
Are you fucking serious? You totally misunderstood me. I was talking about not responding to the post you wanted me to if you were going to go around calling me a lunatic. I will respond to a post if I fucking feel like it. You missed my point. I am not going to respond to you per your request if you act like a jerk.
Still up to the same old nasty temper tantrums, while hypocritically trying to appear reasonable to everybody else. And I am sure that I am not the only one to continue to receive such PMs from him.
I'm CC'ing my reply to him to Admin with a request for instructions on how to block any and all future PMs from foreveryoung. This is the very first time in my entire life that I am blocking anybody, but this nasty brat is thoroughly deserving of that distinction.
foreveryoung is a spoiled child given to violent temper tantrums. He wants to sit at the adult table and be treated as an adult while at the same time want everybody to accept his temper tantrums. Sorry, foreveryoung (or "foreverpuerile"), but in order to sit at the adult table, you need to behave yourself accordingly, which you not only refuse to do, but you even insist that everybody tolerate your temper tantrums. That is not going to happen; nobody likes being around an ill-tempered brat throwing a fit, not even his own parents.
Based on his persistent misconduct, I vote that foreveryoung go ahead and leave for now, returning after he has finally learned some big-boy manners. He needs to grow up and especially to out-grow his temper tantrums. He needs to learn that self-esteem comes from within and is not gained by the approval of others. He needs to learn how to behave among adults and how to engage in discourse with adults. Only then can he be welcomed at the adult table.

  
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