Second Offer: To ThePhy for a One-on-One Against Enyart

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Nathon Detroit

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GuySmiley said:
So to try to summarize, ThePhy will debate science if its an open forum where many people can jump in, but will not debate science one-on-one. Weird.
Yes, that appears to be the case.

The unknown boxer begs to fight the known boxer for years. The known boxer has nothing to gain from this yet kindly gives the unknown boxer a golden opportunity and invites him to box. The unknown boxer (who should be thankful for the opportunity) refuses to box the known boxer. :hammer:

Apparently the unknown boxer isn't much of a boxer. :box:
 

ThePhy

New member
GuySmiley said:
So to try to summarize, ThePhy will debate science if its an open forum where many people can jump in, but will not debate science one-on-one. Weird.
Yeah I know. In hundreds of science meetings, journals, research projects, and studies that I have been around I have yet to see a single one that would have been improved by a one-on-one debate. Isn’t that really weird? In some cases, as a matter of fact in a disturbingly high number of cases, the original ideas were improved by the inputs from others. Weird to the max. By the way – how many science ideas can you name that would have done better in a one-on-one setting? Surely you have some you can offer.
 

SUTG

New member
GuySmiley said:
So to try to summarize, ThePhy will debate science if its an open forum where many people can jump in, but will not debate science one-on-one. Weird.


So to try to summarize, Bob will debate science one-on-one , but will not debate science if its an open forum where many people can jump in. Weird.

I don't get it either way. Can't othe people jump in on the on-on-ones, or does Knight give only the two of them access?

I sort of understand why ThePhy is hesitant. Why doesn't Bob just reply to the gazillion open threads?
 

Nathon Detroit

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SUTG said:
I don't get it either way. Can't othe people jump in on the on-on-ones, or does Knight give only the two of them access?
Yes I limit access in the One on One threads.

I sort of understand why ThePhy is hesitant. Why doesn't Bob just reply to the gazillion open threads?
Not to speak for Bob but he has his own ministry to worry about. He also has a radio show, is the Pastor of a church AND is a husband and a father. I am guessing Bob isn't a TOL junkie like the rest of us. :)
 

SUTG

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Knight said:
Not to speak for Bob but he has his own ministry to worry about. He also has a radio show, is the Pastor of a church AND is a husband and a father. I am guessing Bob isn't a TOL junkie like the rest of us. :)


True, but it probably would take him less time to respond to the existing thread on relativity than start a whole new debate...
 

Nathon Detroit

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SUTG said:
True, but it probably would take him less time to respond to the existing thread on relativity than start a whole new debate...
Are you kidding????

Let's see... respond to one topic in one thread with one other person or... respond to 10 topics in 10 different threads with 10 different people. :think: Hmmmm I am not real great a math but I am thinking you might be wrong on this one. :)
 

SUTG

New member
Knight said:
Are you kidding????

Let's see... respond to one topic in one thread with one other person or... respond to 10 topics in 10 different threads with 10 different people. :think: Hmmmm I am not real great a math but I am thinking you might be wrong on this one. :)

No, he doesn't have to respond to ten threads. He just has to start one thread on his Theory of Absolute Time. I thought he could have responded to the existing thread, but it has been closed.

That would actually take less time than setting up a one-on-one. (Provided both posters were in the same inertial reference frame. :chuckle: )
 

GuySmiley

Well-known member
ThePhy said:
Yeah I know. In hundreds of science meetings, journals, research projects, and studies that I have been around I have yet to see a single one that would have been improved by a one-on-one debate.
So call it a conversation. Have you ever had a one-on-one coversation with another scientist where the two of you disagreed? Its not a BR, its just a one-on-one conversation.

Isn’t that really weird? In some cases, as a matter of fact in a disturbingly high number of cases, the original ideas were improved by the inputs from others.
How disturbingly high? Did you lose sleep over it, or did it just make you nervous? When you say input from others, you deny that a single 'other' could provide useful input. I've heard of the "rule of three" for cave exploration, but not for science labs.

Weird to the max. By the way – how many science ideas can you name that would have done better in a one-on-one setting? Surely you have some you can offer.
I'd love to answer this with the extensive list I've compiled but it would constitute converstation between only two people, and according to the new rules of science I've learned, I just can't.
 

GuySmiley

Well-known member
SUTG said:
So to try to summarize, Bob will debate science one-on-one , but will not debate science if its an open forum where many people can jump in. Weird.
Didn't Bob agree to answer one of ThePhy's threads? I guess this is not true.
 

Bob Enyart

Deceased
Staff member
Administrator
Justify ThePhy

Justify ThePhy

To answer the question: yes I did agree to answer the Orion's Belt thread ThePhy had singled out and I'm working on that (between other deadlines... and I'm terribly slow).

To somewhat agree with Knight: My original post on the nature of time was mostly a hope of getting a qualified person's take on it, a discussion rather than a debate as Knight said, to test the strength of my Summit Clock illustration. But after seeing how that thread progressed, I was somewhat encouraged by what I sensed as an inability of those who disgreed (including Phy) to stay on topic and refute my argument. Thus now I'm interested in a debate, although an informal one. Whereas my original thread lost focus and I did not think I could keep it on topic or get specific questions answered, so I bailed.

To Jusitfy Phy: I don't know if he intended this from the beginning, but ThePhy has turned his refusal to One-on-One against me into a full-fledged repudiation of the very idea of a one-on-one forum or debate. Now, that's getting silly. He asks, what's better, one-on-one or open forums, as though Knight could issue us a One-on-One exclusive worldwide license to discuss the nature of light. Phy, rest assured, it would not be an either/or situation. We could dialogue, without anyone having to shut down all other worldwide discussion of physics! One benefit of a one-on-one forum is the personal commitment it implies from both sides to stay on topic, to be responsive, and to answer questions, and another benefit is the bit of peer pressure the one-on-one forum entails. And since Knight has promised a sidebar thread in the Grandstands, the typical free-for-all that Phy prefers can commence there, and ThePhy and I could get all the third-party input available there (and on the entire world-wide-web, thus no one's ideas need to be censored :) . So Phy, if you and I never end up discussing the nature of time, I suggest you not turn your refusal into a one-man jihad against one-on-one forums. That'd just be silly.

-Bob Enyart
 

fool

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Hall of Fame
Hey Bob;
You alluded to do'in this with someone back in early December.
Let me ask you this;
Have you already written your debate and are just waiting for someone to spring it on?
You should try fool.
Us carpenters have a way of cutt'in thru people's fog.
Unless you're chicken.
Bwack, bwaaaack,bwaaaaack, bwwaaack :nananana: :nananana: :nananana: :nananana:
 

Bob Enyart

Deceased
Staff member
Administrator
Fool,

fool said:
Hey Bob;
You alluded to do'in this with someone back in early December.
With Phy, no?

Do I plan to publish the One-on-One? Well, I'd say, only if I win :) :).

Have I already written the debate. No, only the first post which started all this talk on TOL in the first place.

Am I just waiting for someone to spring it on? It's already been sprung. Actually, I wanted to see if Phy could refute my argument.

Am I chicken to debate fool? Only a fool would debate a fool.

Perhaps Knight will give you permission to One-on-One, alone. I have no doubt it'd be a reasonably popular thread.

-Bob
 

fool

Well-known member
Hall of Fame
Bob Enyart said:
Fool,


With Phy, no?
Are you absolutly sure?
from this thread, in post #75http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=24206&page=5
"Regarding evolve.exe, I’ll be happy to defend it with you on another thread; but first, if ThePhy will do so in January, I’m hoping to conclude our “time dilation” discussion, and then if you’d like to challenge me directly on the evolve program: great!"

So by your own words we see that you planned on debateing The Phy in Jan. and have got Johnny on your dance card after that.
Comments?
 
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Bob Enyart

Deceased
Staff member
Administrator
fool said:
...by your own words we see that you planned on debateing The Phy in Jan. and have got Johnny on your dance card after that.
Comments?

Yes, I agree. I must have misunderstood your point. Yes, that's my recollection, and I'm still happy to do so, in that order! -Bob
 

fool

Well-known member
Hall of Fame
Bob Enyart said:
Only a fool would debate a fool.
-Bob
It would appear that The Phy agrees with you. :banana:
"never argue with an idiot, he'll drag you down to his level and beat you with experience" -someonesomewhere
 

Bob Enyart

Deceased
Staff member
Administrator
Admitting My Error to ThePhy

Admitting My Error to ThePhy

Phy, as I said, I appreciate it when others correct my errors. You correctly identified a contradiction in how I interpreted scientific evidence as supportive of the Bible, and that error hurts my credibility and shows my bias. I presented evidence that Job’s description of Orion and the Pleiades indicated knowledge unobtainable by man until 4,000 years later, which I then interpreted as indicating divine revelation. Later, when I learned that literally half of my evidence was the exact opposite of what I needed for my original argument, I still made the same argument, to that extent discrediting myself and my original argument. Such elasticity of interpretation measures (1) bias, and (2) reciprocal degrees of ignorance and deceitfulness. Your argument, Phy, proves (1) bias on my part (my belief led me to a false judgment); and I claim that it shows (2) ignorance but not deceitfulness.

Phy, just as I have considered your argument here (and validated your criticism), if you will do a One-on-One against me rebutting my position that time is absolute and not relative, I will commit to responding to two more of your threads (none of which I have read). You said I should have answered this criticism two years ago, but every day that passes I have scores of letters, emails, and voice messages (including from good friends and loved ones), let alone posts at TOL and elsewhere, that I have not answered due to lack of time because work deadlines and my wife and kids take precedence. I don’t know when the last time a stranger in tears called you for help, but for me it was about thirty minutes ago (a boy name Lance just arrested). And being a terribly slow writer—this post has taken me about five nine hours (including the time to select the two parallel examples below)—I don’t go looking for criticisms or challenges to respond to, even on TOL and in the BEL forum, and most such pass unnoticed or as noise, until some rise above other priorities. Over the last 20 years, when I’ve wanted other local talk show hosts to respond to my letters, voicemails, emails, or recorded arguments I’ve sent to them, I’ve never had an expectation that they would in fact even notice, let alone actually read or listen to my rebuttal, and forget about them actually responding. When I send rebuttals to other talk show hosts (columnists, authors, etc.), I feel that doing so is mostly a waste of time, but it helps me think through my rebuttal, and perhaps against all odds, so-and-so might someday see my argument. I love coming to TOL to do Battle Royales and take on the occasional debate, and I always hope to do more than I have time for.

So Phy, you may want to stop reading here, because I’ve acknowledged your criticism and admitted my error, but I invite you to continue. There is more to the Orion and Pleiades error that I made, and for those who are interested, I want to provide a more full account of the error, and make whatever argument that can possibly survive my history on this issue.

The Error

In addition to ThePhy, I have to thank old-earth astrophysicist Hugh Ross of Reasons to Believe, for helping me measure my bias (which then reinforces my desire to handle evidence more carefully, though I admit this thanks to Ross is also a backhanded criticism). Why Hugh? As in the past when I’ve discussed my Orion’s Belt error, I’ve pointed out that a few years ago, I attended his presentation at Southern Gables Church in Littleton, Colo., organized and moderated by Denver newscaster Ward Lucas (an acquaintance); and it was there that I picked up a handout which presented this false argument for Scripture based on the stars of Orion’s Belt being gravitationally bound (and not unbound). I’ve read Ross’s The Fingerprint of God, and took notes at his presentation, and of all that, I only recall accepting this one argument (from Job), and trusting one piece of evidence (bound Belt) as from a trained astrophysicist. That trust was misplaced, but it did give Phy the opportunity to re-assert my bias. Fair enough, and while I’d rather safeguard myself from bias error, when I make one, I’m glad to have it identified.

(Skip this paragraph if you know the relevant Pleiades and Orion particulars.) From the notes I’ve collected on these two constellations: Isabel Lewis of the United States Naval Observatory says that astronomers have identified 250 stars as actual members of the Pleiades, all moving through space in the same direction, and at the same speed. Dr. Robert J. Trumpler of the Lick Observatory reported that, “Over 25,000 individual [measurements] of the Pleiades stars are now available, and their study led to the important discovery that the whole cluster is moving in a southeasterly direction… This leaves no doubt that the Pleiades are… a system in which the stars are bound together…” So the Cluster is not just apparent, but a true gravitational cluster, bound, as they are anciently described. “Can you bind the cluster [Heb. mahadannaw, bonds, bands] of the Pleiades, or loose the belt of Orion?” (Job 38:31). Contrariwise, the three second-magnitude stars that make up Orion’s Belt, almost a straight line as viewed from Earth, are rapidly moving apart from one another, with each traveling in a different direction at a different speed. Long ago, Astronomer Garrett P. Serviss said that, “In the course of time, however, the two right-hand stars, Mintaka and Alnilam, will approach each other and form a naked-eye double; but the third, Alnitak, will drift away eastward so that the band will no longer exist.”

Attempting to Salvage the Orion Argument

Job’s quote of God is of special interest because of all the dozens of ancient constellations he could have named, as best I can see none of the others indicate a binding together. Thus, while this cluster [bonds, bands] and belt primarily speak of a binding together, the other ancient heavenly images cannot be used to directly portray the concept of gravity (binding), such as the constellations of the scales [of justice], the altar, the ram, the goat, the bull, the serpent, the Virgin, the child, the crown, the mighty one, Leo the Lion, the fish, etc. None of those directly signify the concept of a binding together. Thus Job’s quote is uncanny:
God said:
“Can you bind the Cluster of the Pleiades, or loose the Belt of Orion?” -Job 38:31
Whether these constellations were both gravitationally bound or unbound, or one of each, Job’s quote is uncanny in that (1) it calls out the two names of ancient constellations which speak of binding; and (2) it points to extraordinary power required specifically to bind or loose. My bias (belief that has led to a false judgment) led me to accept the argument that this verse is even more compelling because both constellations were gravitationally bound, whereas both observations here (1 & 2) are valid and uncanny, regardless, because they speak generally of the concept and power of binding; and then, (3) a more careful reading of the text (Pleiades bound, Belt loosened) corrects the incorrect interpretation I had accepted and fits exactly with the true relationship of the actual stars.

Thus, the corrected Job 38 argument (my bias in full consideration) is that Job’s quote appears prescient because 3,600 years before Christian creationist Isaac Newton identified the concept of gravity, (1) Job singles out the two constellations which speak directly of binding; (2) points to the extraordinary power that such binding implies; and (3) his poetic description fits perfectly with the Pleiades gravitationally bound and Orion’s Belt being loosed.

Just as Genesis One puts such a priority on the creation of light (the nature of which is fundamental to understanding the universe), and states that the Sun is a light (and thus not a god as the ancient world imagined), this Job 38 passage adds to the cosmological insights in Scripture.

Phy referenced my interview with Michael Shermer, an editor of Scientific American. I began by mentioning that much of the ancient world worshipped the sun (moon and stars) as gods, and as I recall, I asked Shermer if at least we could begin with common ground, and agree that the Bible was correct in declaring on its first page, in Genesis One, that the Sun was a light (Gen. 1:16), and thus not a god, and therefore obviously (as later declared explicitly, Deut. 4:19) it should not be worshipped? Shermer’s knee-jerk reaction against anything biblical moved him to argue that the sun is not a light. (Listen to this 73-second excerpt, or go to the entire interview). Both sides fight bias. And I’d like to compare my problem of elasticity of interpretation of evidence with two major examples that ThePhy must wrestle with. When I give evidence for an isolated argument, it’s embarrassing (though important) to learn (and admit) that the evidence is exactly backward from what I had expected. Whereas, I will give two examples of extremely broad scientific observations which yield evidence exactly backward from what ThePhy and all atheists expect, which do not address an isolated argument, but entire foundational claims of their scientific worldview. If these examples are valid, then ThePhy should be able to admit the evidence is the opposite of what atheistic science would predict, and admit the elasticity of their interpretations. (1) Quickly decaying carbon-14 exists in carbon dioxide gas naturally occurring in wells representing the Permian, Mississippian, and Cretaceous (from supposedly 100 to 350 mya) in roughly equal amounts, indicating recent and simultaneous formation (see CO2 Gas Well Effluent Analysis), yet after decades of beating creationists over the head with radiometric dating, such extraordinary evidence (CO2 appearing everywhere in coal, diamonds, etc.) will not even be admitted as fitting, not into the Old-Earth, but the Young-Earth evidence column. (2) Mutation-based Darwinian evolution seems infinitely elastic in its ability to absorb apparently contrary data as though it were corroborative, including the 453,732 mutations now described in the literature which do not provide a single clear case of adding information to the genome (see Darwinism and the Deterioration of the Genome]), yet during this time evolutionists have only increased their defense of mutation-based evolution of species. These extremely broad scientific observations (for the age of the earth and evolution) yield the direct opposite results of what the atheistic model predicts, yet creationists cannot even get evolutionists to even admit that such broad observations fit better in the creationist model than the evolutionary model. Such admission would not equal a concession, but would demonstrate integrity and courage, and a willingness to objectively analyze the evidence, wherever it may lead. Thus, as I confront my bias, so we all should. Instead, we have TOL’s old-earther Johnny being “unsure” if it is even valid theoretically to sort “evidence into Evidence Columns” for Old and Young Earth.

Finally

Genesis One states that God gave the heavenly lights to be “signs“ (Gen. 1:14), and Ps. 147:4 that He has named all the stars. Christian creationist Johann Kepler, father of modern astronomy, discovered the three laws of planetary motion, and this young-earther used those laws to calculate the motions of the planets backward hoping to discover the nature of the Star of Bethlehem. Many of the constellations and names of the stars came down to us from the ancients, and the Apostle Paul (Romans 10:18) interpreted Psalm 19:1-6 to mean that the heavens depict the story of salvation.

Phy, you said that Job would have been correct if he had said that Leo’s legs or the Dipper’s handle would move. But Job’s actual statement not only illustrated a scientific truth [though you believe, just coincidentally], but it did so using the two constellations that could best illustrate the binding nature of gravity. My bias and ignorance will continue to give ammunition to atheists and skeptics who reject the Bible as God’s Word. However, Scripture and science present strong evidence of God’s existence and His Word as Truth.

ThePhy should be able to agree to at least this common ground: to admit that unlike much of the ancient world, the Bible was right in declaring the sun a light and not a god; that it is uncanny that the Bible’s creation story gave such priority to light; and that it is uncanny that Job would select the two constellations that depict the concept of being bound, and then ask a question that so well fits with the gravitational relationship of these constellations: “Can you bind the Cluster of the Pleiades, or loose the Belt of Orion?”

-Bob Enyart
 
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Stripe

Teenage Adaptive Ninja Turtle
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forget the one-on-one debate .. i'd pay good money to see a debate on whether or not the physicist should accept bob's proposal....

uh ...

oh wait ... *hides*
 
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