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Yes 35%  35%  [ 8 ]
No 48%  48%  [ 11 ]
Depends 17%  17%  [ 4 ]
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 9:02 am 
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Thanks for the clarification on the H-1B program. I don't see where in your link it's mentioned that it started in April, and I assumed it started at the beginning of the new year.

As for the war on sciences bit, the issue is in our schools and the overall general de-emphasis on science being a good field of endeavor. Therefore we don't produce enough home grown people with the right skillsets to fill our demands.

Further, counter to DE's idea, most of these positions aren't something that you can just re-train someone for. They are highly specialized skills that require years of education and experience to fill.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 9:13 am 
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Aizle wrote:
Further, counter to DE's idea, most of these positions aren't something that you can just re-train someone for. They are highly specialized skills that require years of education and experience to fill.

Clearly we have no one around to fill these jobs. More Foreigners please!

Aren't you railing in another thread about how Republicans blame the unemployed for being lazy/undereducated?

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 10:29 am 
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Hopwin wrote:
Aizle wrote:
Further, counter to DE's idea, most of these positions aren't something that you can just re-train someone for. They are highly specialized skills that require years of education and experience to fill.

Clearly we have no one around to fill these jobs. More Foreigners please!

Aren't you railing in another thread about how Republicans blame the unemployed for being lazy/undereducated?


No that wasn't me railing about that particular foible of Republicans. My name isn't Xeq.

I'm not sure that article is really relevant. Sure there is some bias in hiring. Hell, I'm maybe even guilty of that as if someone has been unemployed for a couple years with absolutely nothing to show for it I definitely ask more questions about why. Is that being unfair? Maybe, but I will tell you this. When companies lay off people, they start with the dead weight. The people who aren't performing are the first to go. Now sometimes they aren't performing because they somehow got into the wrong position or a personality conflict. But that can also show some limitations in judgement or personality that as a hiring manager I need to be aware of.

Now before anyone gets all up in arms, I've been on the other side of that coin as well. I got laid off after 9/11 because the project I was working on was in effect dead weight. It wasn't revenue generating, internal only and when Q4 revenues are 30% of projected well ****'s gonna happen. Getting back into the work force sucked. It was a year before I had a full time job again. And that meant taking a large step backwards in both career and pay (to the tune of roughly a 40% paycut).

The issue (and this has been going on for far longer than the current recession) is that in the high tech sector there has been a continual shortage of qualified people in the US. This isn't that they don't want to hire people or that Americans are demanding too much money. It's that you can't find people with the required skills, education or experience.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:01 am 
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Aizle, I still cannot fathom that there has been a war "the sciences" for 20+ years by the religious right. Could you give some evidence supporting this?

I have seen no evidence of an overall general de-emphasis on science being a good field of endeavor. As a matter of fact, "There have been significant gains in course-taking at the national level, increasing from only 45 percent of students taking chemistry in 1990, to 55 percent in 1996, and 60 percent in 2004. The proportion taking three years of math increased from 49 percent in 1990 to 72 percent in 2004, and the proportion of students completing four years of math increased from just 29 percent in 1990 to 37 percent in 1994, and to 50 percent in 2004."



How is the religious right responsible for the supposed overall general de-emphasis on science being a good field of endeavor?

Aizle wrote:
The issue (and this has been going on for far longer than the current recession) is that in the high tech sector there has been a continual shortage of qualified people in the US. This isn't that they don't want to hire people or that Americans are demanding too much money. It's that you can't find people with the required skills, education or experience.


According to research conducted by the The Urban Institute:

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The pool of graduates with an S&E degree exceeds the number of S&E job openings each year, even though employers may not be as successful as they would like in attracting or retaining graduates into an S&E career...The pool of S&E-qualified secondary and postsecondary graduates is several times larger than the number of annual job openings.


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The story for S&E master’s and doctoral degrees is also primarily one of consistency in the proportion of all degrees awarded over the past two decades. About one-fifth of all master’s degree graduates obtained their degrees in an S&E field. There was an early 1990s peak but of just 1 to 3 percentage points over the 2002 level (the most recent year of available data). The master’s degree is more typically awarded to students pursuing professional jobs in business or technical jobs in non-S&E fields, because many S&E jobs, such as engineer, and most IT occupations do not require a graduate degree. At the same time, the doctoral degree is needed for more of the advanced S&E jobs and is not required in most other fields. Not quite two-thirds of all doctoral degrees are awarded in S&E; the percentage of all doctoral degrees awarded in S&E increased from 56 percent in 1977 to 60 percent in 2002. Most of that increase occurred from the later 1970s through the early 1990s, and the proportion has remained more or less stable since
then...
At the same time, the number of students completing an S&E degree has increased. Because the proportion of students pursuing an S&E degree has remained stable while the number (or proportion) of students pursuing a college degree has increased, more graduates earn an S&E degree.
...
In short, the U.S has been graduating more S&E students than there have been S&E jobs; hence, there are 15.7 million workers who report at least one degree in an S&E field but 4.8 million workers in an S&E occupation



Finally, I'll leave you with this to ponder:

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In our interviews with engineering managers (Lynn and Salzman 2002), rarely, if ever, do they say they are
unable to find graduates with the requisite technical skills but rather the “shortage” is of engineers with
communication, management, interpersonal and other soft skills.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:11 am 
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If there's a continual shortage of qualified people in the U.S. tech sector, and these jobs take "years of experience to fill" and most of the jobs are going to non-immigrant H1B visa holders rather than US citizens or even permanent residents... gee, I wonder what the problem is? :psyduck:

Yeah, these companies are either going to outsource or hire cheap foreign labor on a visa rather than a U.S. worker because you can get away with paying an Indian a "living wage" because when he goes back to India that money is a hell of a lot more than a living wage. Meanwhile, there went 6 more years of education and experience.

See, if these visas were immigrant visas, not non-immigrant H1Bs, then a lot more of these people would stay and be real U.S. workers. Many would eventually become citizens. These sorts of people, however, illustrate exactly what I've been talking about. They are not immigrants who just want to come here and be Americans like you and me. They are Indians or Pakistanis or Chinese or whatever that want to come here, earn a few bucks, and go home.

This problem is no different than agricultural workers coming here and driving Americans out of the crop-picking line of work. This, however, is worse because while any reasonably determined person can learn to pick oranges, with excessive numbers of H1Bs we're exporting our technological superiority. Awesome. Now we know how India and Pakistan learned to build the BrahMos and Babur. Great. :roll:

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:15 am 
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:19 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
If there's a continual shortage of qualified people in the U.S. tech sector, and these jobs take "years of experience to fill" and most of the jobs are going to non-immigrant H1B visa holders rather than US citizens or even permanent residents... gee, I wonder what the problem is? :psyduck:

Yeah, these companies are either going to outsource or hire cheap foreign labor on a visa rather than a U.S. worker because you can get away with paying an Indian a "living wage" because when he goes back to India that money is a hell of a lot more than a living wage. Meanwhile, there went 6 more years of education and experience.

See, if these visas were immigrant visas, not non-immigrant H1Bs, then a lot more of these people would stay and be real U.S. workers. Many would eventually become citizens. These sorts of people, however, illustrate exactly what I've been talking about. They are not immigrants who just want to come here and be Americans like you and me. They are Indians or Pakistanis or Chinese or whatever that want to come here, earn a few bucks, and go home.

This problem is no different than agricultural workers coming here and driving Americans out of the crop-picking line of work. This, however, is worse because while any reasonably determined person can learn to pick oranges, with excessive numbers of H1Bs we're exporting our technological superiority. Awesome. Now we know how India and Pakistan learned to build the BrahMos and Babur. Great. :roll:


According to the interview the H-1B visa employees would often decide to become citizens and end up becoming citizens.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:25 am 
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For consumption.

http://www.pewforum.org/Science-and-Bio ... elief.aspx

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:42 am 
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Aizle wrote:
According to the interview the H-1B visa employees would often decide to become citizens and end up becoming citizens.


That's because "often" is a weasel word.

NYT

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Highly skilled foreign-born workers are leaving the country in droves.


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But because of shortsighted immigration policies, we increased the numbers of temporary H-1B visas over the years, but not permanent resident visas.


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While they wait to become permanent residents, they can’t change jobs without losing their position in line or even accept a promotion. Their visas don’t allow their spouses to work or obtain Social-Security numbers which are needed for things like driver’s licenses. So they live like second-class citizens.


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We also surveyed 1,224 foreign students in the U.S. and learned that they were thinking much like the returnees. Only 6 percent of Indian, 10 percent of Chinese, and 15 percent of European students want to stay permanently. (In the past, most Indian and Chinese Ph.D.s in science and engineering ended up making the U.S. their home.)


Even the liberal rag people still pretend is a premier newspaper agrees with this. It does so even as it neatly switches gears from "Technology worker" to "student" to "Science and Engineering PhD" as if the rules for technology workers and students or professors were all the same.

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Fri Sep 28, 2012 12:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:50 am 
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Aizle wrote:
<youtube video>


Is that supposed to address my questions?

Tyson spends 7:30 addressing 9th-12th century Islam, followed by 5 seconds showing one billboard regarding the Big Bang Theory, then proceeds to talk about the "astounding" number of Jews who've won the Nobel Prize, and finishes with "not why 85% of The National Academy rejects God, I wanna know why 15% don't".

I'll throw a clue out there, Jews believe in God.

Yet, this speech gave no answers to the questions I posed about the war "the sciences" for 20+ years by the religious right. It only addressed anything regarding religion in the US by showing one billboard. Further, he didn't even address concerns about the supposed "overall general de-emphasis on science being a good field of endeavor".

Really? If that's your attempt at addressing the empirical evidence I presented, I'd have to question the integrity of your statements as not coming from a factual basis, but rather the way you "feel" about the state of affairs of which you're fearful.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 2:39 pm 
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Surely you don't need me to go an post the many many lawsuits to force teaching of creationism as "science". Then you have the below video which is the religious right in their own words. And the link below the video is an article by a gentleman that used to be a Republican but has been disillusioned by the direction the party has taken.



http://open.salon.com/blog/ted_frier/20 ... _education

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Vouchers have been "the third rail of education politics" ever since the 1950s, says Ravitch, and have been regularly rejected by voters whenever the issue has been put to a statewide referendum. So now, Republicans have started going around voters and using Republican-dominated legislatures to enact school vouchers directly.

That's what Republicans did in Governor Bobby Jindal's Louisiana, where nearly 400,000 students -- more than half the school population in that state - are eligible to attend private or religious schools at public expense given the way "low-performing" schools were defined.

The problem, says Ravitch, is that only about 5,000 slots in private and parochial schools exist. That's led to the farce of one school offering to triple the number of students it will take, even though it has no facilities or teachers to handle the new students while its current students receive instruction mostly via DVDs.

Another school, the Eternity Christian Academy, currently has only 14 students but has agreed to take in about 135 voucher students. According to Reuters, the school's students now "sit in cubicles for much of the day and move at their own pace through Christian workbooks."

One such "science" textbook explains, according to Reuters, "what God made on each of the six days of creation." The students are not exposed to the theory of evolution, says Reuters, because as the pastor-turned-principal explained it: "We try to stay away from all those things that might confuse our children."

Ravitch notes that other schools approved to receive state-funded vouchers use social studies texts "warning that liberals threaten global prosperity." Also typical are Bible-based math books that don't cover modern concepts such as set theory, or biology texts built around refuting evolution not explaining it.

What this underscores is that the conservative attacks against public education are motivated far more by ideological and theological concerns than financial and pedagogical ones.


There are more examples in the article.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 3:03 pm 
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That's not an article. That's a blogger's opinion piece.

Edit: In fact it really illustrates the hypocrisy of the entire assertion that some religious right "war on science" has taken place. He points out that 80% of education in this country takes place in the public schools, and harps on the lawsuits over Creationism which the religious right has lost over and over and over.

Aside from the silliness of then complaining that the RR has decided to relegate themselves to irrelevancy by "educating" their kids in ways that guarantee they'll only parody themselves.

The left has succeeded in getting the RR essentially neutralized in public schools. Teacher's unions dominate public education and are overwhelmingly democratic.

So, it's the left, not the right that is resaponsible for any "war on science". Its the left that is responsible for high school cirricula that require 4 years of social studies and English but only 2 or 3 years of math and science. That science, by the way, tends to be biology and geology far more than math and physics. Maybe if the left were more interested in teaching chemistry and physics and less interested in tacitly attacking the religious right by making evolution education the primary focus of science we wouldn't have this problem.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 5:01 pm 
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Didn't you get the memo DE? This is what 'journalism' is now...


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Um, what? Evolution is the primary focus of science in public schools? Not sure where you heard that. I can't even remember talking about evolution in high school. And we had it broken down to 1 year of biology, 1 year of physics, 1 year of chemistry. From what I've seen it's very similar in most high schools today. Where are you getting this idea from?


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 10:17 am 
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Amanar wrote:
Um, what? Evolution is the primary focus of science in public schools? Not sure where you heard that. I can't even remember talking about evolution in high school. And we had it broken down to 1 year of biology, 1 year of physics, 1 year of chemistry. From what I've seen it's very similar in most high schools today. Where are you getting this idea from?


Well gee, first of all you confirmed part of what I was saying: 3 years of science. In most places, high school is 4 years long, and even when 9th grade is still in middle school that doesn't actually change where it is in terms of progression, just where it is administratively.

Second, I don't know where you get off with this "Not sure where you heard that" based on your personal experience. If I were to go based on nothing more than my personal experience, I'd be exactly right; high school for us went 2 years biology, 1 year chemistry, and 1 year of physics. The final year was not even mandatory, and could be filled with things other than physics for kids that were not in "college prep" or higher tracks. My wife's was similar (in a completely different state) except that she didn't take chemistry or physics.

Then there's the fact that public schooling does not include just 3 or 4 years of high school. While earlier on there's a fairly even distribution of life, earth, and physical science simply because it's almost impossible not to cover basics such as states of matter, once 6th grade rolls around the focus shifts:

From the California Science Framework for public schools in the most populated state in the nation:

page 91 wrote:
In grade six the content standards focus on earth sciences. Students often become environmentally aware at this grade level, and this focus is meant to stimulate intellectual curiosity in that area.

In grade seven the content standards focus on life sciences. Students at this grade level typically receive a semester of health education, and this focus is designed both to complement that instruction and to prepare students for the biology/life sciences course work that is often taken in the early high school years.

In grade eight the content standards focus on physical sciences. This focus is designed to prepare students for the physics and chemistry course work that is often taken in the later high school years.


One full year each of biology and geology versus a year devoted to physics and chemistry together. One might point out the need for underlying math education first, but as long as one can add, subtract, multiply, divide, understands what an exponent is and what the basic order of operations is, there should be nothing in middle school chemistry and physics that is not manageable. Furthermore, those operations should be understood by the end of 6th grade/early 7th grade even for a track designed for average students.

This is hilarious in light of what's presented later in the document for grades 9 through 12. The document first acknowledges that biology is customarily covered first, then chemistry, then physics, and then says "well, but schools should have flexibility to do things differently if they wish". Fine and dandy, except that there's little incentive to change. Tacitly, this was acknowledged in the 6-8the grade section, with reference to biology being taken early in high school, and chemistry and physics later in high school. Essentially, the document pays lip service to the idea of moving physics or chemistry earlier into the high school years, but that's it. The earlier years, however, are when science is mandatory.

Let's look at North Carolina:

5 possible science sequences

Note that in this chart, "physical science" is not the same as "physics". Therefore, in every sequence except the first one, geology/biology are front-loaded, with "physical science" stuck in there, and in one sequence "principles of technology I and II" In only sequence I and II are both chemistry and physics even possible without taking one or the other as an extra science elective, and even in sequence II it's quite possible to do without one or the other by taking "physical science". This is all even assuming that NC mandates 4 years of science; the situation gets worse if its less, especially taking up years with things like "physical science".

We aren't demanding that kids take physics or chemistry, but we are demanding they take biology and geology. No, teachers are not just standing there preaching evolution year after year, but the fact is that the types of science most likely to touch on that issue are receiving the most emphasis, whereas the sciences most needed for preparation for engineering and other rigorous courses of college study are the easiest to skate out of entirely.

Of course, there are other possibilities as well. Geology and Biology are widely regarded as "easier" and therefore the thing to take if you just want to pass, not to mention that it's more statistically beneficial to a school system to pass a kid in an easy class than to fail them at a hard one. The types of people to want to get degrees in "education" furthermore, are not also often those most interested in chemistry or physics, and given the minimal requirements for those classes, many teachers may have no exposure to those beyond middle school at all. In fact, I know that some don't.

Still, it is very hard to imagine that there is no desire to avoid "correcting" the beliefs of kids who are taught Creationism by their parents. That would be dandy, except that these parents are the most likely to pull their kids out of school to "protect" them from science in the first place. One wonders if kids exposed to chemistry and physics and socializing with more moderate students might not be more likely to call "Creationism" into question as a scientific answer to how the world was created eventually on their own anyhow.

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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 12:47 pm 
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Wow, did some people ever miss the point of Tyson's segment?

Vindicarre wrote:
I'll throw a clue out there, Jews believe in God.
And you want to run around talking about confirmation bias?

What Tyson was pointing out was that, at one time, the Muslim world was the cradle of civilization. They were the pioneers of science and technology. They were the primary discoverers of knowledge. Then they decided that science and mathematics was the work of the Devil, and they experienced a technological regression from which they have never recovered. Now, theirs is a primitive civilization.

The Muslim empire was a theocracy, and for 300 years it stood at the forefront of scientific exploration. Today, there are more Muslims in the world than Jews and Christians combined, yet they represent an embarrassingly small minority of people making scientific discoveries. By contrast, the Jews who have been utterly decimated over the past two thousand years have fielded a large portion of Nobel laureates.

A war on science is not an unfounded fear. We have seen it happen before in history. It ruined the Muslim empire. They have not recovered. They are not making scientific discoveries. Meanwhile, the Jews who spent centuries as homeless vagabonds, are movers and shakers. They didn't even have a country, their temple razed so that not a single stone rest upon another, but they are at the frontier of human knowledge.

The billboard that Tyson references is a celebration of ignorance. (That segment was also longer in the original speech, it was cut out for YouTube's ten minute limit). As he points out, you have to pay quite a bit of money to put those up. The overall message is, "Reject science and come back to church." It is people celebrating their ignorance, and pushing others to devalue knowledge in favor of ignorance.

The billboard is representative of the push to have intelligent design taught in science classes. Here is a rather excellent explanation of why ID is not science. Suffice to say, the point isn't up for debate, least of all by any of you. Furthermore, the judge who wrote that received death threats from angry Christians. At the end of the day, to the religious contingent really doesn't care that ID isn't science. They simply wanted to remove science and use the classroom to push their religion onto the masses, and are angry that someone put a stop to it.

With regards to the statement about not caring why 85% of the Academy rejects God, but wanting to know wht 15% doesn't - that is the more interesting question. We know why 85% of the Academy rejects God. They don't need it. God is not answering any unknown questions for them. They don't look up at the sky at night and say, "Wow, I wonder what that is. I think it's angels being born." They look up and say, "Wow! Those are balls of gas, mostly hydrogen, undergoing nuclear fusion millions of miles away! Some of them are so far away that they don't exist anymore, and I'm just now seeing their light!"

Meanwhile, a lot of religious people have this belief that they must reject science for God. They look at science as though it's the work of the Devil attempting to lure them away from their Bibles. They look at evolution, at the Big Bang, and all they see is the Devil trying to lure them away from Jesus. Most don't want to admit it, because you can't stand around in a society full of computers, automobiles, and airplanes and say science is the work of the Devil without being treated like a complete and utter lunatic. Nonetheless, when it all comes down to brass tacks, that idea is at the core of the religious objection to science: It is the work of the Devil trying to lure us away from God.

Now, we have this 15% of the Academy that looks up at the sky and has the exact same thought about hydrogen undergoing fusion that their non-religious colleagues have, yet they still see God. They know full well that the universe is the result of a complex interaction of physical laws that does not require their God to exist, or any god at all for that matter, but they still see the glory and majesty of God revealed to them in their telescopes and microscopes. Many of them feel a deeper connection to God in their laboratories than they do in their churches, because in their laboratories they discover new aspects of God that were previously unknown to humanity.

That 15% is the interesting topic to study. Why do they see God when other religious people see the Devil? Why do they see God when their scientific fellows do not? What's different about the way that 15% looks at the world? When we figure that out, we can reach the rest of humanity. Much of this is addressed here:


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 1:28 pm 
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What Tyson was pointing out was that, at one time, the Muslim world was the cradle of civilization. They were the pioneers of science and technology. They were the primary discoverers of knowledge. Then they decided that science and mathematics was the work of the Devil, and they experienced a technological regression from which they have never recovered. Now, theirs is a primitive civilization.


[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_Golden_Age[/url]There is no consensus among historians about what caused the end of the golden age of scientific thought int he Islamic world. they certainly did not, however, somehow decide it was the "work of the Devil."

Corolinth wrote:
Today, there are more Muslims in the world than Jews and Christians combined, yet they represent an embarrassingly small minority of people making scientific discoveries.


No, there are [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_religious_groups]not more muslims than Jews and Christians combined.[/url]

Strike two. Try to get your basic facts straight before you start pontificating.

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A war on science is not an unfounded fear.


Yes, it pretty much is.

Quote:
The billboard is representative of the push to have intelligent design taught in science classes. Here is a rather excellent explanation of why ID is not science. Suffice to say, the point isn't up for debate, least of all by any of you. Furthermore, the judge who wrote that received death threats from angry Christians. At the end of the day, to the religious contingent really doesn't care that ID isn't science. They simply wanted to remove science and use the classroom to push their religion onto the masses, and are angry that someone put a stop to it.


First of all, I don't think anyone here would seriously contend that ID is science.

Second, even if we were, you do not tell us what is and is not up for debate by any of us. Just because you went out and got an engineering degree on your second try does not mean you are now in a position to talk down to everyone else here on science in general. If you want to talk at length about electrical waveforms, and the difficulties of making smartphones more durable, you go right ahead. However, quite a few of us have degrees in science, and even if that science is not as mathematically rigorous as engineering, we still understand quite well what is and is not science. You're an engineer, you're not Neihls Bohr.

Third, just because some heavily fundamentalist groups have pushed heavily for Creationism and ID in a classroom does not somehow establish that these are what's responsible for any shortage of technically qualified people in the U.S. In fact, despite your carrying on about muslims, I'll point out that 2 of the nations cited as common donors of technical people - Pakistan and India - have very large muslim populations.

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With regards to the statement about not caring why 85% of the Academy rejects God, but wanting to know wht 15% doesn't - that is the more interesting question. We know why 85% of the Academy rejects God. They don't need it. God is not answering any unknown questions for them. They don't look up at the sky at night and say, "Wow, I wonder what that is. I think it's angels being born." They look up and say, "Wow! Those are balls of gas, mostly hydrogen, undergoing nuclear fusion millions of miles away! Some of them are so far away that they don't exist anymore, and I'm just now seeing their light!"


So in other words, 85% of the Academy rejects God for reasons that have nothing whatsoever to do with religion.

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Meanwhile, a lot of religious people have this belief that they must reject science for God. They look at science as though it's the work of the Devil attempting to lure them away from their Bibles. They look at evolution, at the Big Bang, and all they see is the Devil trying to lure them away from Jesus. Most don't want to admit it, because you can't stand around in a society full of computers, automobiles, and airplanes and say science is the work of the Devil without being treated like a complete and utter lunatic. Nonetheless, when it all comes down to brass tacks, that idea is at the core of the religious objection to science: It is the work of the Devil trying to lure us away from God.


Except that most religious people who reject Evolution don't also reject other aspects of science. This is complete nonsense; what's really hilarious about it is that Creationists tend to say things so absurd that they are almost stawmen of themselves. Yet you've managed to take an already-caricature viewpoint, and strawman it to an exponentially greater degree of absurdity! That's really pretty entertaining.

You have the same problem as Tyson: you want to take the most absurdly extreme religious viewpoints, strawman them, then pretend as if there's some sort of justifiable reason to fear this boogyman of religion. Like I pointed out already, science has won over religion. We are not, lawsuits aside, teaching pseudoscience in the schools. The sort of people that want to shield their kids from scientific knowledge are only going to render themselves irrelevant. Furthermore, they are not going to engage in any meaningful "war on science" because the majority of religious people do not want Creationism or ID in school any more than you do.

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Now, we have this 15% of the Academy that looks up at the sky and has the exact same thought about hydrogen undergoing fusion that their non-religious colleagues have, yet they still see God. They know full well that the universe is the result of a complex interaction of physical laws that does not require their God to exist, or any god at all for that matter, but they still see the glory and majesty of God revealed to them in their telescopes and microscopes. Many of them feel a deeper connection to God in their laboratories than they do in their churches, because in their laboratories they discover new aspects of God that were previously unknown to humanity.


Exactly where do you get off speaking for these people as to where they do and do not feel closer to God?

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That 15% is the interesting topic to study. Why do they see God when other religious people see the Devil?


Since "other religious people" do not see "the Devil" in "Science", we can leave this question aside. Some religious people may see "the Devil" in the Theory of Evolution in particular, but very, very few reject science of other kinds. Yes, yes, this is a weird cognitive dissonance and makes no sense. We all get that. It's absurd enough without you exaggerating and strawmanning it.

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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 4:27 pm 
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Most. Very few. Criticizing someone for speaking in generalities when you do it all the time. The hypocrisy runs deep in this one.


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 4:45 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Neihls Bohr.

Niels Bohr.


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 6:04 pm 
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Wanted to chime in and mention that when I graduated high school, only two years of science classes were required for graduation. One "life" science (biology) and one physical science (chemistry). That's a damn shame IMO. I went on to take Physics as an elective.


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 29, 2012 11:35 pm 
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When I was in high school ( back in the Dark Ages) I took biology and chemistry. We covered a section on Creationism vs Evolution in Biology 1. One of my classmates came up with a unique reason why the planet Earth grew life...we are the result of an alien spaceship doing a garbage dump while passing by. :spit: :lol:

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2012 3:53 am 
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Slythe wrote:
Most. Very few. Criticizing someone for speaking in generalities when you do it all the time. The hypocrisy runs deep in this one.

Except I'm not criticizing him for speaking in generalities; I'm pointing out that his generalities don't bear any resemblance to reality.

The irrelevancy runs deep in this one.

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