Ziggy Stardust wrote:I'm really not sure why I have to keep spelling things out for you. Since apparently your reading comprehension is fucking awful...
Because you're not being very clear.
I am going to be very explicit:
About time.
1) The questions were vague, and don't actually give us any specific idea as to what the people involve actually believe. Believe it or not, "religion" and "spirituality" are subjective concepts that vary wildly from person to person, and something as vague as "do you believe in God" is, shockingly, not a terribly accurate arbiter of a person's actual beliefs. Do you not understand the difference between a Mormon and an agnostic?
The
Pew survey question was as follows (I don't have the Larson survey question):
"Which of the following statements comes closest to your belief about God?"
The respondents are asked to pick one of four options:
1. I believe in God
2. I don’t believe in God, but I do believe in a universal spirit or higher power
3. 1 I don’t believe in either
4. No answer/Don’t know/Refused (VOL.) 1
It is unclear precisely what you find vague about these answers, or why you believe the respondents were unlikely to understand them. That's irrelevant; certainly *some* respondents understood the questions, which belies your ridiculous characterization of scientists as people incapable of holding irrational beliefs.
2) The study sample was members of the AAAS. Believe it or not, membership of the AAAS does not make you a scientist. Membership in that society tells us absolutely nothing about the profession of the individual in question. Members of the AAAS are from a very wide variety of fields. I personally have no interest in conflating, for example, behavioral psychologists with particle physicists by blandly grouping them together as scientists. Do you understand the difference between a psychologist and physicist, or between any other scientific disciplines?
I'm uncertain as to what field delineation has to do with the notion of the plausibility of some scientists holding irrational beliefs.
I didn't define scientist as anything. That you are so utterly incapable of understanding the English language is not my concern.
Sure you did. And I quote:
"I know. And the way she said it was utterly retarded, especially for someone who is supposed to be a scientist. It betrayed a complete lack of understanding of basic science. It was moronic."
This is what we've been arguing about. I pointed out survey evidence of significant numbers of scientists holding equally if not exceedingly more ridiculous beliefs.
Don't think I don't notice the selective quoting of my last post, by the way. So, again, you provided a poll that is completely worthless and irrelevant to this discussion because it doesn't actually gives us any useful information except that if you draw a large sample of people from a wide variety of disciplines and ask them vague "yes or no" questions, about half of them will answer yes.
Wasn't a "yes/no" question. Again, you might actually bother looking at the survey.
Good fucking job. And I already explained why belief in God is not comparable to the statements I was criticizing Brand for making, a point which you ignored and I feel no need to restate.
No one cares. The issue is with scientists who believe in a *personal God*. A giant spaghetti monster.
Then why are you being so overly defensive about this stuff?
Because you're wrong, and because this discussion is interesting.
If you selectively filter out stuff you can't justify, it becomes a lot easier to adopt a certain position, doesn't it?
The psychobabble has nothing to do with my position. I've not commented on the user interface except to point out that's what it is.
The numbers 4 and 5 aren't good enough for you? Were you seriously unable to grasp the intention of my question, or are you being intentionally obtuse about this?
The conventions 3+1 and 4+1 aren't good enough for you? If you have a question, ask it.
For the THIRD FUCKING TIME, the fact that her lover is dead is completely irrelevant to what we are talking about.
Repeating yourself does not make something so.
Brand's theory was vindicated because it was CORRECT; the love between Cooper and his daughter, as made incredibly explicit in the film, transcended space and time, and was the key to saving humanity.
Cooper's love didn't "transcend space and time." Nothing transcended anything. Cooper, with the help of the technology of the tesseract, made some books fall.
This isn't that fucking difficult, especially since the movie says this outright.
Quote, please?
I don't want to have to repeat this for a 3rd time; it's fine if you disagree with me, but it's NOT acceptable for you to blatantly ignore me.
Fourth time, according to you, but in reality you've yet to even make the case.
I never said they did.
And I quote:
"Also, again, you seemed to have either not been paying attention or are really bad at reading subtext, because the movie was also pretty clear at the end that Anne Hathaway was going to be rescued by Cooper, and that the planet she was on would become humanity's new home."
What in the flying fuck does GR visualization have to do with whether or not it is hard sci-fi?
You have the most credible depiction of a worm hole and a black hole in the history if fiction. That's what.
Not only are you terrible at reading comprehension and deliberately dishonest, but you also completely and utterly lack the ability to take a joke.
You might consider you suck at telling them. You raised this point while addressing scientific implausibility in other media (Star Wars). I gather you mean to argue that suspension of disbelief would require the audience to believe the inside of the BH, therefore, is Cooper's bookshelf. Despite all the evidence that they are actually inside some sort of artificial construct.