Ever heard the saying
"If it looks like a elephant....." blah blah blah?
Yes of course I expected this kind of response .
Such narrow minded thinking .
Ever heard the saying
"If it looks like a elephant....." blah blah blah?
Neither of those links involves an argument made by Kenyon. The arguments he made from those issues, and others similar, were not sound, no.He was unsound to point to biomolecular chirality as a deep issue?: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-007-1003-0_10
Or the likelihood of an oxygenated early atmosphere, now more strongly confirmed than then?: http://www.astrobio.net/geology/earths-early-atmosphere/
When you linked to Kenyon (as with your other links) you ignored his arguments, and attempted to invoke his authority instead of argument to back your contentions. Since you paid no attention to Kenyon's arguments, which were and are garbage, and instead focused on his credentials, that was the focus of the reply.I stick to the ID arguments themselves.
My focus was not on his YEC whacknotions, but the way his arguments do not measure up to his education or personal reputation - his arguments look dumbed down, manipulative. They are unsound, wrongheaded, to a degree that is difficult to credit to someone with his experience and credentials. They remind me of the kinds of "arguments" Jesuit missionaries used to establish the Catholic saints and revered personages among the existing pantheon of deities and beliefs wherever they went - moving the holidays around to match, adopting local rituals of veneration, etc.If he was/is deceitful on those aspects i.e closet YEC, such personal failings unfortunately provides plenty of ammo for the like of you
Except for the last part starting with Jesuit missionaries (I guess any 'devout' Catholics here will take no offense at), the rest there is your trademark mix of outrageous misrepresentations and bald assertions. Ugh.Neither of those links involves an argument made by Kenyon. The arguments he made from those issues, and others similar, were not sound, no.
When you linked to Kenyon (as with your other links) you ignored his arguments, and attempted to invoke his authority instead of argument to back your contentions. Since you paid no attention to Kenyon's arguments, which were and are garbage, and instead focused on his credentials, that was the focus of the reply.
My focus was not on his YEC whacknotions, but the way his arguments do not measure up to his education or personal reputation - his arguments look dumbed down, manipulative. They are unsound, wrongheaded, to a degree that is difficult to credit to someone with his experience and credentials. They remind me of the kinds of "arguments" Jesuit missionaries used to establish the Catholic saints and revered personages among the existing pantheon of deities and beliefs wherever they went - moving the holidays around to match, adopting local rituals of veneration, etc.
Yes of course I expected this kind of response .
Such narrow minded thinking .
Well done. No surprising you eh?
Trekking round the open nature park I step in what I think (presume etc etc and based on previous visits to the park) elephant dung.
Instantly I start looking for the duck who dropped it there.
Any one in this discussion know of an ID'er who is not religious? Or a elephant who doesn't push out elephant dung?
I am aware of many religious persons who are not ID'ers.
What about a agnostic (and all sub groups) ID'er? Or a duck who pushes out elephant dung?
ID'er to be clear is defined as what ?
What about agnostic ?
Whats your point ?
Michael - because you asked nicely. He he, only kidding. OK, so about ducks shitting elephant pooh. Umm...no. Too hard. Let's try "are there any non-religious ID 'freaks'". Well, you know how there is this thing called doing a web search? I just did one. Typed in 'non-religious ID proponents'. Guess what? Seconds later, noticed at #1 down the list:Well done. No surprising you eh?
Trekking round the open nature park I step in what I think (presume etc etc and based on previous visits to the park) elephant dung.
Instantly I start looking for the duck who dropped it there.
Any one in this discussion know of an ID'er who is not religious? Or a elephant who doesn't push out elephant dung?
I am aware of many religious persons who are not ID'ers.
What about a agnostic (and all sub groups) ID'er? Or a duck who pushes out elephant dung?
Not biting.
Michael - because you asked nicely. He he, only kidding. OK, so about ducks shitting elephant pooh. Umm...no. Too hard. Let's try "are there any non-religious ID 'freaks'". Well, you know how there is this thing called doing a web search? I just did one. Typed in 'non-religious ID proponents'. Guess what? Seconds later, noticed at #1 down the list:
http://www.equip.org/article/non-re...nian-evolution-proponents-intelligent-design/
Yes I know what you must be thinking. It's all a sham - cunning make-believe front to sucker sincere, innocent, but naive folks in and treat them to a program of gradualist religious indoctrination. Or maybe it really IS just like it says there. You don't HAVE to be an iceauraeske 'A fundie' or an otherwise unejaKtd hick, to take ID seriously.
Think about that remote possibility Michael - when not under the influence that is. But don't worry, I have a feeling a certain someone will quicky lay into each and every name listed there and relentlessly expose their 'real' credentials/agenda/other sneaky awfulnesses.... Please DO bite here. Must fly.
I don't care for whatever religious views he or others hold to. Only that he is honest and competent to present sound arguments.
Professor Emeritus of Biology at San Francisco State University. Competence to argue biology taken care of, the issue reduces to one of honesty...
I had no idea that was or at least is alleged to be the case. That interview earlier linked to was some time in the mid-90's, and it's perfectly clear there he subscribed to an old earth position. Wikipedia lists him as a YEC, but I cannot find a direct quote of Kenyon espousing that. It would mean either a shift in position since that mid-90's interview, or the implication is he was lying as to his true beliefs then.
Other then any of the following, do you have any other scientific means by which to explain that at one point there was no life, then there was?
[1] Abiogenisis occurred due to conditions on Earth at a particular time.
[2] Panspermia
[3] An advanced Alien race, planted the seed for the rise of the modern human.
[number 3 of course, still needs Abiogenisis to explain there own being and as an explantion for the Universe as a whole and the fact that at one time life did not exist, then it did]
Of course we can. We know there is life now. We know there was no life at the formation of the universe. Therefore it began.We know considerably more about planetary formation than we know about the origin of life--which is virtually nothing. We know that planetary formation happened, but we cannot say with a straight face that "we know" that abiogenesis happened.
Yes, it does - just as the concept that the thing in your hand became a rock at some point is the winner by default.But that does not automatically make abiogenesis, a process about which we know absolutely NOTHING, the winner by default.
I think what I said is pretty clear. Abiogenesis is a technical word (label) for the chemical-then-biochemical process of the origin of life. Calling this unknown process "abiogenesis" does not mean anybody has a theory as to how life originated. It's just a label for the (unresolved) issue.? A label to the problem?? I'm not really sure of what you mean.
The simple WIKI definition is........
" is the natural process by which life arises from non-living matter, such as simple organic compounds.[6][9][10][7] It is thought to have occurred on Earth between 3.8 and 4.1[11] billion years ago. Abiogenesis is studied through a combination of laboratory experiments and extrapolation from the characteristics of modern organisms, and aims to determine how pre-life chemical reactionsgave rise to life on Earth".
And I don't believe in this whole devious side track by one particular god botherer, that I have ever used the term "theory of abiogenisis" or even hinted at it being a theory.
I have certainly said and implied that other then the non scientific explanation of ID, that abiogenisis appears to be the only possible answer, by whatever means. And I believe that has been borne out in some of the links I have given.
I strongly disagree: Of course they are explanations......the only explanations that we know that can be ascertained.No, but so what? All you have done is listed the logically possible natural causes of life on Earth. None of these is an explanation of any sort, let alone a theory.
Is everyone afraid of me ?
I ask a simple question and I get " not biting " .
Social constructs are not my strong point , never have been .
I guess most of the time , I can put things together , but I'm not always right .
Anyway
And yet the vast majority of equally competent and credentialed biologists, can and do interpret things far differently.I don't care for whatever religious views he or others hold to. Only that he is honest and competent to present sound arguments. His still current title is
Professor Emeritus of Biology at San Francisco State University. Competence to argue biology taken care of, the issue reduces to one of honesty...
I don't believe you. Fans of pseudoscience don't get to tell people what the science is.A grab-bag of hypotheses, none of which survive close scrutiny, does not constitute plausible explanations.
I feel safe to give you a "like" as I don't believe q-reeus will dare attempt his usual immaterial comments after he has given a "like" to, wait for it!!!! river at post 484I don't believe you. Fans of pseudoscience don't get to tell people what the science is.
Thanks for that very informative post. It gels with my impressions from the outside. I have learned be especially wary of raw assertions, and unfortunately 'our god' Wikipedia cannot be trusted as source of Truth, only provisionally, and with care.He was certainly competent in formal terms. Stanford PhD, research experience at NASA Ames, etc. He was rather controversial at SFSU, since many students (and fellow faculty) weren't comfortable with evolutionary biology being taught by a prominent critic of evolutionary biology. But he wasn't the only guy teaching evolutionary biology and there were other classes for him to teach. He understood evolutionary biology better than most biologists and was able to teach it very well. There wasn't any creationist content in his classes. He would point out difficulties and controversies regarding various hypotheses as he went along, but that was what any good teacher would do.
Interestingly, I don't recall him ever teaching a science class on ID, despite its scientific pretensions.
I encountered him in some team-taught classes that did address the evolution/ID issues more straight forwardly. They weren't offered by the biology department though, but rather by something called 'NEXA' which addressed science-humanities interactions. (It was a great idea but I don't think that these classes exist at SFSU any longer.) There were many NEXA classes, all were very good, and the ones featuring Dean Kenyon were very popular and standing room only. He would be paired up with a proponent of evolution and the class would be kind of a semester long interaction. Each meeting addressed something like the history of evolutionary and creationist ideas, their literary or artistic impact on the wider culture, and the many philosophical and theological issues.
The whole thing was always very cordial. Kenyon was sometimes more technically informed than his opponent about the biology, but at a disadvantage since he was trying to defend a viewpoint that was more difficult to defend. Having said that, I don't recall a lot of disagreement about the raw data of evolutionary biology, the data upon which evolutionary theorizing is built. The disagreements arose regarding its interpretation and were often more philosophical than scientific. It was hugely educational for us students, since we could observe complex problem cases being addressed from all angles by exceedingly smart minds. I learned a lot of philosophy of science sitting in there, from watching it play out in action. (I've always thought that our alternative fora could be like that, if they were conducted right.)
He's retired now. He must be getting up in years.
He was very smart and very humane, he never used insults and snark to put down people he disagreed with. (That's a virtue that many people on Sciforums should emulate.) Regarding honesty, I don't recall him ever saying anything that I didn't think he believed was true.
I don't believe that he was a young-earth creationist when I knew him. He certainly gave no indication of it and seemed to me to be rather dismissive of the young earth idea. I haven't spoken with him for 30 years, so I don't know how his thinking has evolved since then, but I'd be surprised if he was a YEC now. I believe that the anonymously authored Wikipedia article is wrong about that. (It seems to have been written by a hostile individual who probably never knew Kenyon.)