Can you name a creationist who publishes outside of his field of expertise? We'll wait. :chuckle:
Heck, can you name one who publishes without a degree?
Dude....don't follow every creationist down every rabbit trail they put before you. Stick to your topic, and make them do the same.
With your demonstration of logic here, I doubt you've ever conversed on the subject. Thus, you aren't qualified to create a conclusion that means anything.
Hey! :sibbie:
For 2 good reasons. The cost of believing in common descent is very low because as an idea, common descent has little if any bearing on anything scientific. And then, the price of not believing in common descent is very high because one will lose their job for questioning the common descent dogma.If that's true then why has it been consistently being accepted at increasing numbers in the scientific community over the past 100 years? Now it's to the point that it's almost unanimous among scientists that evolution is very real and observable (north of 99%).
So if science is making it appear more and more ridiculous every day, why don't the scientists think that?
Ignore my comment above this one. You've provided enough here to convince me to give you the benefit of the doubt that you have the degrees you claim to have.my bachelors is in general chemistry, my masters is in an applied field of chemistry heavy on toxicological analysis - my thesis project concerned gc mass spec work that was cutting edge at the time (twenty years ago)
not sure why any discussions i've had in the politics forum should give you cause to doubt me :idunno:
and my group is due to meet soon to cobble together a paper for sociology, so i'll prolly be gone for a while
and i loved organic - iirc, we used streitweiser and heathcock
No, your inability to think betrays what you apparently consider qualifies you.Hilariously enough, I'm actually more qualified than many well known creationists. Not that I'm that qualified, but that's the point. Many creationist "experts" are anything but
you don;t read so good, do you?
i have a BS in chemistry and I have an MS in Chemistry
as well as a MEd
and i'm back in school on a PhD track
and yes, i'm taking a sociology class this fall
I'll try. But I felt those sources adequately ended that side conversation
No, your inability to think betrays what you apparently consider qualifies you.
Why don't you go back to the post I was responding to and admit where your logic went off the rails, then we can talk qualifications.
Your "origin story" is also a belief system and not science.Because as 6days has admitted, creationism is a belief, not science.
Your "origin story" is also a belief system and not science.
But then, since creationists here agree that creationism is a belief and not science, maybe the question is moot? :think:
Of course it does. Descent with modification is perfectly well compatible with Creation. Only difference is that you believe that matter came alive on its own.Fortunately, origins has nothing to do with evolutionary theory
Ken Ham, Bodie Hodge. That's literally just off the top of my head
Bodie [Hodge] attended Southern Illinois University at Carbondale and received a BS and MS in mechanical engineering. His specialty was a subset of mechanical engineering based in advanced materials processing, particularly starting powders. He conducted research for his master’s degree through a grant from Lockheed Martin and developed a New Method of Production of Submicron Titanium Diboride. The new process was able to make titanium diboride cheaper, faster, and with higher quality. This technology is essential for some nanotechnologies. Bodie published two peer-reviewed articles (with his advisor) on the subjects: R. Koc, C. Meng, and D. B. Hodge,“New Method for Synthesis of Metal Carbides, Nitrides, and Carbonitrides,” Annual Progress Report Advanced Industrial Materials Program, 1998. R. Koc and D. B. Hodge, “Production of TiB2 from a Precursor Containing Carbon Coated TiO2 and B4C,” Journal of Materials Science Letters, 1999. During his years at SIUC, Bodie continued his personal study of biblical apologetics and began teaching this topic to a junior high Sunday school class. While at SIUC, he was the president of one of the few Christian student organizations, Christians Unlimited, and was also an officer in the student chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. |
I'd like to believe that the creationists here see the flaws and are so close to seeing the light and accepting evolution. But the fundamentalist mindset is a stubborn beast. I hold out little hope that they see what we do: that creationism is a belief lacking corroborating scientific evidence, and that evolutionary theory is a belief substantiated by so much evidence that it's become a scientific theory
Those are full of errors so mindboggling that they aren't even funny. So you've got nothing?Speciation: http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/news/100201_speciation
Antibiotic resistance:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/terms/antibiotic_resistance.htm
http://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/antibiotic-resistance-mutation-rates-and-mrsa-28360
Read then get back to me. Mmkay?
Those are full of errors so mindboggling that they aren't even funny. So you've got nothing?