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To be clear, Raphael, are you saying that you think the development of ears and eyes disproves the theory of evolution?
I, too, welcome my work being questioned so long as the questions are friendly in intention.
Quote from: pantodragon on 14/01/2013 14:56:17I, too, welcome my work being questioned so long as the questions are friendly in intention.I found this remark quite telling. I may be reading too much into it in which case I hope you will correct me. If I have prepared a research paper, an engineering report, or a business plan I welcome that work being questioned and I am wholly indifferent to the friendliness of the intention. Friendlieness will not make the findings of my research more accurate; friendliness will not make the conclusions of my engineering report more useful; friendliness will not ensure the success of my business plan. I expect, indeed I demand, a probing, skeptical, hostile attack upon my observations, my interpretations, my conclusions and my recommendations. Anything less may fail to unearth weaknesses or errors and I do not wish to be associated with second rate work. In contrast you seem to be more concerned about the form of the criticism (and its intent) rather than its efficacy. Am I reading you correctly and if so can you explain why you would favour an approach that is less efficient at improving the 'end product'?
I expect, indeed I demand, a probing, skeptical, hostile attack upon my observations, my interpretations, my conclusions and my recommendations. Anything less may fail to unearth weaknesses or errors and I do not wish to be associated with second rate work.
I don't think whether evolution is "continuous" or features "punctuated equilibrium" makes any difference to the overall concept of evolution in the general sense.
People behave as they are treated.
Actually Dawkins critique was more concerned about showing that "punctuated equilibrium" did not conflict with continuous evolution and that the scientific press (and to some extent the authors Eldredge and Gould) made more of this concept than it deserved.It is not "science negating science" at all, even if there was a theory that did result in rethinking the original concepts. Science aims to exactly do this. Theories are there to be disproven but not discarded on the basis of simple non-belief. Evolution as a theory, has been tested regularly and has yet to really fail any significant test - and there are plenty of attacks from religions and concepts such as intelligent design. Before these idea came along in the 19th century the only view of how flora and forna came about were the, now obviously false, religious ones.
how about you just focus on the 'work' being offered instead of offering nonsense?
DISCUSS the topic?What a concept?
You are so typical of the nonsense trolling the internet...why do folks who have so little to say always manage to find an issue in what somebody said or how they said it, resorting to even pointing out grammar or spelling errors?
Do you mind if I toss you overboard and severe the rope so we can continue on with the journey?
there is my observation and my hostile attack probing your skepticism regarding how pantodragon phrased his request for discussion.
Karl Popper revolutionised the philosophy of science by pointing out that you can never prove a theory correct, no matter how many observations you make; you can only succeed in proving it false.
In contrast you seem to be more concerned about the form of the criticism (and its intent) rather than its efficacy. Am I reading you correctly and if so can you explain why you would favour an approach that is less efficient at improving the 'end product'?
Hello Pantodragon, may I ask what your objective would be here in the question proposed?