Rafael wrote:
Khross wrote:
That data does not support your claims, Xequecal. Read the question more closely. You are extrapolating conclusions not available from the questions asked. The poll questions whether or not God created man. The poll does not question when or how God created the rest of existence. You are inferring things you should not.
I agree entirely but the practical ramifications of that size subset of the population believing humans versus existence were created instantly 10,000 years ago by a creator diety that is essentially an invisible, omnipotent, omniscient, immortal person are both equally offensive in the face of simple science.
Not really. There are quite a few people (such as, for example, the catholic Church) that don't think it was "10,000 years ago" at all, but rather at the point of the beginning of the universe as we observe it, which should not be the least bit "offensive to science" to anyone without a massive agenda or chip on their shoulder. In fact, whether something is "offensive to science" or not is really not the issue.
If the issue is Young Earth Creationism (or anything else that's basically similar) versus science, one can't frame the issue as YES needing to conform to the assumptions or principles of science. Rather, the merits of the scientific approach have to stand on their own (which they do), but the argument "Creationism is an inferior approach because it doesn't conform to the results we obtain by the scientific method" is no more than question-begging, from a standpoint of a reasoning exercise. On the side of the YEC's, they're usually too unsophisticated and too afraid to address the question abstractly for fear it will call their own faith into question to recognize this. On the atheist/science/whatever side it's more a matter of simply being unable to bear the thought of seriously addressing the question of why science is a superior approach to Creationism rather than simply scoffing - after all, actually convincing people would leave no one to scoff at and feel superior to.
Rather the issue is one of two different sets of evidence - one being Biblical (or other accounts, if we want to use other religions) of Creation versus observation of the development of the universe.
What makes the scientific approach superior is (in addition to having significantly more complete evidence than just a few pages of testimony) that it simply looks at the evidence and draws conclusions, whereas the Creationists look at their evidence and then
run it through a process of interpretation (biblical literalism) and
then draw their conclusions.
In point of fact, the process of interpretation means that Creationism is problematic from a
theological standpoint
without even considering science, for this reason. Most YECs/literalists will claim they are "not interpreting" the Bible by taking it literally, but "taking it literally" is actually impossible simply because of translation issues and other related problems of dealing with documents 2000+ years old. YECs have essentially created their own caricature of themselves through this intransigence.
The other side of that is people like Xeq for whom acting scandalized about how supposedly stupid 50% of the people out there are, without fully considering the question.
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Khross, you're expecting a lot from the proponent of science in this thread. Like critical thinking and accurate analysis.
There are a great many people out there who imagine that simply being fascinated with science makes them scientists.