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A Usenet persona calling itself Michael Daly wrote:
On 16-Feb-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: Nor do scientific principles DENY the existence of God. Which is where the discussion ends for many scientists and such institutions as the Catholic Church. Scientific principles can neither prove nor disprove the existance of God. Fundies can't deal with this concept. The Vatican (aided by the Jesuits you seem to respect) stated this in the mid-nineteenth century after a review of the "Galileo Affair". That's not necessarily true. Science probably can either prove or disprove the existence of God, if and when our scientific understanding advances to the point that we can identify the concept. Of course, one of the root difficulties is defining "God" and what that means. Does it mean a white guy in a robe with a long beard, or does it mean some intelligence so superior to our own that it appears to be omnipotent and/or omnicient? Or does it mean something else. There is a large body of scholars who believe that the physical properties of the universe, combined with statistical probability, provide substantial evidence of intelligent design of the Universe. It does not provide evidence of intelligent design. Are you sure? It certainly does not prove the existence of God. Nor does it disprove it. Evidence, however, is a rather more abstract concept than proof. A Bayesian would look at the probabilistic "evidence" and suggest that since the highly improbable has happened, their estimates are likely wrong. That would be tautology. Only if one pre-accepts the premise that the occurrence of a highly improbable event is a matter of random chance would this logic apply. On the other hand, if one posits the hypothesis that because an event that has occurred is highly improbable, it is reasonable to suspect some factor other than random chance is involved. Recognizing that improbability is a significant issue when examining events is sound scientific thinking. Bowing to the diety of "Random Chance" combined with the companion hypothesis of "Infinite Variation" is no more scientific than a simple belief in God. Just because a bunch of fundies pull some numbers out of their asses and make claims, doesn't prove anything. True, but not really relevant, since it was the scientific asses the numbers were pulled from. The "fundies" are merely suggesting, Occam's Razor-wise, that when an event is highly statistically improbable, it's perhaps more reasonable to conclude that there is some meddling with random chance going on that skews the system towards the occurrence of the statistically highly improbable event. You might call it a risk of "observer bias." Schroedinger's cat might be more than a cloud of probabilities if God's unseen thumb is on the scale. There is a large body of scientists and enthusiasts that support the concept of a hydrogen economy, but a larger body that can show it is mostly smoke and mirrors. Not really. The only real impediments to a hydrogen economy are infrastructure and investment...and consumer acceptance of the inconveniences associated with using a less energy dense fuel than oil. But the concept is hardy smoke and mirrors, and indeed technology is moving on apace to make it a realistic, economic reality...which is a good thing. Hm. So, now any field of study that is "fringe" is not acceptable? What ever happened to academic freedom of inqiry? There is also a significant proportion of the US population that thinks Elvis is still alive. Really? Do you have any evidence of this, or are you making assumptions again? -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
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