No, it is Raëlian creationist!!Darth Wong wrote:Sorry, but Star Trek IS creationist. It's just "intelligent design" creationist instead of young-earth creationist.
(just watch Who Mourns for Adonais!!)
Moderator: Vympel
No, it is Raëlian creationist!!Darth Wong wrote:Sorry, but Star Trek IS creationist. It's just "intelligent design" creationist instead of young-earth creationist.
Your argument would have more impact if you quoted him directly.Vympel wrote:See the episode "Where Silence Has Lease", Season 2. In this episode, Picard and Riker make the decision to self-destruct the Enterprise (strangely enough from engineering with their hands on a panel presumably for authorization)- giving themselves 20 minutes to prepare for it.
Leaving aside how irrational it is to self destruct the ship when the entity they're being held hostage by is only planning to kill 1/3 to 1/2 (so it can learn the nature of death- it's immortal), Data asks Picard what death is. On one hand he has religion and on the other hand he has stark atheism. He supposedly rejects both and gives a sickening spiel that sounds exactly like intelligent design nonsense, with Picard saying that he believes our existence is beyond what we currently percieve blah blah blah .....
Oh come now I'm not going to sit there and post him word for word as I watch the episode.Rathark wrote:
Your argument would have more impact if you quoted him directly.
Intelligent Design is merely a code word for creationism. It's irrational.And while I am totally against creationism, I believe that "Intelligent Design" is only bad when it masquerades as science. As a matter of philosophy, theology or personal belief (NOT coercive), and so long as it acknowledges the true scientifically measured age of the universe, Intelligent Design does not worry me at all.
Yup.For example, if a Catholic physics lecturer stated that "the universe came into being because God willed it 13 billion years ago", then he is teaching the wrong class. Regardless of his personal beliefs, as a physicist he must stick to what science can understand and not rope in totally irrelevent material that cannot be proven or disproven by science. If he wants to discuss his personal beliefs, he would be better off inviting someone from the theology department over for some tea and scones.
Depends on your definition of the genre. 'Science fiction' is really just a euphemism for anything set in the future nowadays.Here's a related question for you: If my novel is set in a highly technologized far future, and acknowledges the existence of life after death and an infinite being beyond time, space and the material multiverse, is my novel science fiction or science fantasy?
Then what about sci-fi which is set in the past or present, such "Men In Black" (which is about the modern-day government keeping extraterrestrials under wraps) or the "Space 1889" roleplaying game, which takes place in an alternate history where space travel was developed in the 19th century and the first man landed on Mars in 1870??Vympel wrote:Depends on your definition of the genre. 'Science fiction' is really just a euphemism for anything set in the future nowadays.
Ok I'll put it this way ... advanced technology is whether its sci-fi or notSimon H.Johansen wrote:Then what about sci-fi which is set in the past or present, such "Men In Black" (which is about the modern-day government keeping extraterrestrials under wraps) or the "Space 1889" roleplaying game, which takes place in an alternate history where space travel was developed in the 19th century and the first man landed on Mars in 1870??Vympel wrote:Depends on your definition of the genre. 'Science fiction' is really just a euphemism for anything set in the future nowadays.
Acknowledging the true scientifically estimated age of the universe is no different than acknowledging the true nature of evolution, which is NOT designed. Durandal put it best: intelligent design is just creationism in a clown suit.Rathark wrote:And while I am totally against creationism, I believe that "Intelligent Design" is only bad when it masquerades as science. As a matter of philosophy, theology or personal belief (NOT coercive), and so long as it acknowledges the true scientifically measured age of the universe, Intelligent Design does not worry me at all.
Which is precisely why you should also oppose intelligent design, since you just replace "physicist" and "universe" with "biologist" and "biosystem" and you have basically the same thing.For example, if a Catholic physics lecturer stated that "the universe came into being because God willed it 13 billion years ago", then he is teaching the wrong class.
Your novel can acknowledge that my dog Fuzzy is lord and master of all creation if you like; it would still be science fiction/fantasy. Science fiction has nothing to do with real or theoretical advances in science; it is generally an excuse to set up an outlandish premise in which fantastic things become possible. It has historically ignored scientific realism at every opportunity.Here's a related question for you: If my novel is set in a highly technologized far future, and acknowledges the existence of life after death and an infinite being beyond time, space and the material multiverse, is my novel science fiction or science fantasy?
I doubt Roddenberry wrote that; "The Chase" was sixth season.Darth Wong wrote:Keep in mind, however, that Roddenberry was simply not all that bright. Look at the idiotic "Progenitors" story. DNA sequences encoded 4.5 billion years ago which survived completely un-altered today, and which GUIDED our evolution in advance?
Sorry, but Star Trek IS creationist. It's just "intelligent design" creationist instead of young-earth creationist.
In the beginning, God (Rodenberry) created the heaven and the Earth.Uraniun235 wrote:I doubt Roddenberry wrote that; "The Chase" was sixth season.
Besides, what in-context answer do you have for so many lookalike species spread across the galaxy?
Not to nitpick, but neither X-Men nor Jurassic Park are Hollywood creations, as X-Men is based entirely upon Marvel comic books*, and Jurassic Park is based upon a novel by Michael Chrichton...Darth Wong wrote:However, that doesn't mean it can't be criticized for being bad or overrated sci-fi, and that is certainly the case of TNG-Trek's repeated violations against evolution theory, just as it is with X-Men and Jurassic Park. It sometimes feels as if idiots in Hollywood are engaged in some kind of overt movement to discredit, misrepresent, and totally distort evolution theory through their entertainment products, so that they can poison the well against its acceptance by young people.
Zuh? This concept ('progenitors') appeared in TOS?data_link wrote:In the beginning, God (Rodenberry) created the heaven and the Earth.Uraniun235 wrote:I doubt Roddenberry wrote that; "The Chase" was sixth season.
Besides, what in-context answer do you have for so many lookalike species spread across the galaxy?
Then his budget was cut, and so he had to re-use designs from his first project.
Some alien species removed humans from Earth many tens of thousands of years ago, and human-derived species wound up on many planets throughout the galaxy, albeit with minor evolutionary changes. This would explain the similarities and genetic compatibilities without resorting to this idiotic notion of 4.5 billion years of planned evolution.Uraniun235 wrote:Besides, what in-context answer do you have for so many lookalike species spread across the galaxy?
The dinos in Jurassic Park develop new abilities within a single generation in order to overcome their breeding restrictions. This feeds creationist notions of evolution as some kind of direct stimulus/response problem-solving mechanism rather than selection among a population with pre-existing variances.Simon H.Johansen wrote:BTW, while Jurassic Park is loaded to the teeth with anti-scientific dogma,** I don't recall it as discrediting evolution theory.
They do? I was under the impression, at the end of the novel, that the dinosaurs were simply craving L-lysine rich foods such as chicken...Darth Wong wrote:The dinos in Jurassic Park develop new abilities within a single generation in order to overcome their breeding restrictions. This feeds creationist notions of evolution as some kind of direct stimulus/response problem-solving mechanism rather than selection among a population with pre-existing variances.
Was this in the book? I never have seen the movie, but I do have read the book which it was based upon. Anyway, I never expect a sci-fi novel to be realistic - unless it's written by an actual scientist, of course. (for example: Contact by Carl Sagan)Darth Wong wrote: The dinos in Jurassic Park develop new abilities within a single generation in order to overcome their breeding restrictions. This feeds creationist notions of evolution as some kind of direct stimulus/response problem-solving mechanism rather than selection among a population with pre-existing variances.
Some alien species removed humans from Earth many tens of thousands of years ago, and human-derived species wound up on many planets throughout the galaxy, albeit with minor evolutionary changes. This would explain the similarities and genetic compatibilities without resorting to this idiotic notion of 4.5 billion years of planned evolution.
Actually, that episode was from BEFORE Seven-of-Nine set foot on the USS Voyager... (3rd season, if I recall correctly)Uraniun235 wrote:Woah, they ripped off "The Immunity Syndrome" in Voyager?
I guess you don't feel any shame if you're getting laid by Jeri Ryan.
I think it's the part where one dinosaur switches genders.Crayz9000 wrote:They do? I was under the impression, at the end of the novel, that the dinosaurs were simply craving L-lysine rich foods such as chicken...Darth Wong wrote:The dinos in Jurassic Park develop new abilities within a single generation in order to overcome their breeding restrictions. This feeds creationist notions of evolution as some kind of direct stimulus/response problem-solving mechanism rather than selection among a population with pre-existing variances.
Oh wait. You mean the frog DNA mutation problem? Yeah, that never made too much sense.
I'm pretty sure the book explicitly states that's due to the frog DNA, since they spliced in DNA from a frog that changed genders if there weren't enough of one gender or the other to sustain a viable population. I don't entirely get it either.Slartibartfast wrote:I think it's the part where one dinosaur switches genders.Crayz9000 wrote:They do? I was under the impression, at the end of the novel, that the dinosaurs were simply craving L-lysine rich foods such as chicken...Darth Wong wrote:The dinos in Jurassic Park develop new abilities within a single generation in order to overcome their breeding restrictions. This feeds creationist notions of evolution as some kind of direct stimulus/response problem-solving mechanism rather than selection among a population with pre-existing variances.
Oh wait. You mean the frog DNA mutation problem? Yeah, that never made too much sense.
BattleTech for SilCoreStanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
There's nothing to get. Its pseudoscience.The Dark wrote:I'm pretty sure the book explicitly states that's due to the frog DNA, since they spliced in DNA from a frog that changed genders if there weren't enough of one gender or the other to sustain a viable population. I don't entirely get it either.
I honestly can't take credit for that. It was in an article I read in Scientific American. However, it is an apt desciption, and it's not like I didn't think similarly before reading it. Intelligent design is just another way the creationists try and sneak their agenda into public schools.Durandal put it best: intelligent design is just creationism in a clown suit.
Well, now that I think about it, I'm not sure. My boss as my internship over the summer said that "Windows 3.11 was DOS in a clown suit," so I may have applied that to creationism and later on found that article. I'm not sure. Whatever. I'm drunk.Durandal wrote:I honestly can't take credit for that. It was in an article I read in Scientific American. However, it is an apt desciption, and it's not like I didn't think similarly before reading it. Intelligent design is just another way the creationists try and sneak their agenda into public schools.Durandal put it best: intelligent design is just creationism in a clown suit.