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Postmodernism At Work
Independent Individualist ^ | Apr 29, 2008 | Reginald Firehammer

Posted on 04/29/2008 10:20:32 AM PDT by Hank Kerchief

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To: DoctorMichael
Wow! A Thread of your very own!

I made the big time!

And it's been amazingly polite for the most part.

The only thing better would be the "Outstanding Freeper" or somesuch writeup that they do. You know, like the one they did for Radioastronomer before he was banned.

On second thought, nevermind...

41 posted on 04/29/2008 1:31:43 PM PDT by Coyoteman (Religious belief does not constitute scientific evidence, nor does it convey scientific knowledge.)
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To: Hank Kerchief
Yes, I have written a report of Barbara McClintock during my undergraduate education about how a scientific dogma can be successfully overturned and the reward that awaits them from the Scientific community if they ended “have the goods” (”goods” being replicable data, an explanatory mechanism, and a testable hypothesis). Contrast this to the “we don't need no stinking data” we get from “cdesign proponentists” who seek to overturn the system of empirical Science.

The author states that most mutations are detrimental and the rest are mostly neutral. This is an error. By far the majority of mutations are selective neutral. Your author doesn't even understand the basics of Kamura’s neutral mutation theory and the basics of Molecular Evolution.

She also thinks that sharks maintaining the same basic body plan over millions of years is somehow a blow against the theory of evolution (Normand the millions of years, and the evidence of so many other species changing around them). Nothing in the theory of evolution through natural selection MANDATES major body changes. A shark had a great body plan and a great food procurement strategy back in the late Cretaceous, and over two thousand shark species have been described in the fossil record.

Should I point out all her other errors? She started out with fundamental errors in her first paragraph that showed her poor understanding of the subject and the history of Science.

So what is her degree? What work has she done in genetics? Her obfuscation about her credentials goes well with her obvious lack of knowledge on the subject.

42 posted on 04/29/2008 1:38:36 PM PDT by allmendream (Life begins at the moment of contraception. ;))
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To: Soliton

“I will happily debate Ms. Hewitt.”

Why would she lower herself to debate you? Science is not establish by debate. What do you care if other people agree with you or not. If they are wrong, well then, to bad for them.

Why do you believe in Lamarckian evolution? (I’m learning your methods.) You’re the only one that has mentioned it. The moth example is a fact, one frequently used by evolutionists as an example of adaptive evolution.

Speaking of Giraffes, what kind of mutation would cause the growth of a long neck, and an especially developed heart to pump blood all the distance at the same time? If they weren’t developed at the same time, which came first? Certainly not the long neck or they couldn’t have survived. When you’ve answered these questions, tell me how you know it.

I see, to have your own opinion about something, to not bow down to some authority or the other, is now call “unbridled ego.” Well, as a matter of fact, you are absolutely right. It’s also called independent individualism, it’s also called thinking for yourself, it’s also called originality. These must all be things you despise. I guess that would make you a collectivist second-hander who has never had an original thought of his own.

You don’t need to verify it, she could send you her research papers, which I doubt you would understand. But no one really cares what you think. Believe what you like. It’s a free country so far.

Have a nice day!

Hank


43 posted on 04/29/2008 1:45:03 PM PDT by Hank Kerchief
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To: Coyoteman
You are relatively new to this site, so perhaps some explanation may help. This site used to be science-friendly at one time. It has since largely been taken over by fundamentalists who insist on interrupting science threads with witnessing or challenges to what elsewhere is considered mainstream, established science. Most scientists left in disgust, some were banned. I am one of the few of an old group still left defending science from religiously-oriented attacks. That comes nowhere close to the definition of a troll. A troll's mission is to disrupt. And as for conservatism, I remember when being a conservative didn't require a person to believe in one of the extremist, fundamentalist religions. You know, back when I voted for Reagan in four different elections.

That depends on how relatively you define 'new'. I've lurked, then posted for about three years. That may be small compared to your tenure, but I don't think that qualifies as new by any standard.
Yes, I am totally aware that there are elements who disrupt or challenge science threads, often with ideas that are, at best, tangential. These things are usually also ill-supported. But science-friendly or not, this is not a science site! This is a conservative site. Obviously, I have no idea what your motives are. But if you have a pattern of always fighting the Evo/ID battle, where that is but a slice of the concerns, it would appear that perhaps that is your primary interest. And while that doesn't mean you're here to disrupt, it's also not that far from the pattern of one who does, and it does bring a certain ring of tangentialness itself. Science of course has it's place in the discussion of conservative thought: that the accomplishments of private citizens and groups advance the quality of our lives, not government controls. That a free market of ideas brings us the sweetest fruit.

And as for conservative requirements of belonging to a fundamentalist religion, that's a liberal line if I've heard one. If that was so true, then why did the GOP nominate someone without the proper religious anointation? I seem to recall many of the fundamentalist type leaders being squarely against McCain. (...as well as other secular types) This forum is full of less than religious fundamentalist conservatives, and such a an accusation to the contrary does offense.
44 posted on 04/29/2008 1:48:43 PM PDT by jack_napier (Bob? Gun.)
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To: allmendream

Her obfuscation about her credentials goes well with her obvious lack of knowledge on the subject.

She didn’t say anything about her credentials, as a matter of fact. I did, because I know what they are. If she wishes to provide more she can. I really think she’s fed up with FR though, and doubt she’ll be back.

I’m not sure you read the first paragraph, because if you did, you would know this was not a formal paper, but a slightly cleaned up very quick response to some questions posed on a forum a year or so ago. She gave me permission to post it as an intrim article, which is what you’ve got. She would probably agree with some of your criticism.

Still think you have not answered the questions posed though. Doesn’t really matter, though.

Hank


45 posted on 04/29/2008 1:55:04 PM PDT by Hank Kerchief
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To: allmendream
Wilson: It has only to do with the respect with which we regard one another, the dignity of men, our love of culture. It has to do with are we good painters, good sculptors, great poets? I mean all the things we really venerate in our country and are patriotic about. It has nothing to do directly with defending our country except to make it worth defending.

I guess science and philosophy really don't have much to do with each other.

Wilson may be a great scientist, but there are so many logical fallacies in his argument that one wouldn't know where to begin.

46 posted on 04/29/2008 2:08:49 PM PDT by x
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To: Hank Kerchief
It depends on what the meaning of "proven" is.

But so far as what the meaning of "is" is, you're in the clear.

47 posted on 04/29/2008 2:10:04 PM PDT by x
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To: Coyoteman
Sorry, but I consider philosophy to be closely akin to nonsense.

Funny, because you keep using philosophy in your posts. Are you saying you speak nonsense?

48 posted on 04/29/2008 2:11:12 PM PDT by dan1123 (If you want to find a person's true religion, ask them what makes them a "good person".)
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To: Hank Kerchief
The following two statements are parts of comments made on the Free Republic forum in response to Pamela Hewitt's "Problems of Evolution."

While the postmodern dodge is fairly standard evolutionist boilerplate, the article itself was disappointing, especially when it got to the "Hewitt conjecture". She needs to read some recent RNA research and then come back with a better theory.

49 posted on 04/29/2008 2:18:20 PM PDT by dan1123 (If you want to find a person's true religion, ask them what makes them a "good person".)
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To: Hank Kerchief
The only question I saw you pose was if I knew about Barbara McClintock. I do. She is an excellent example of how if you overturn a Scientific paradigm they give you a Nobel Prize.

The author stated her credentials (same article different web site) exactly as you did; a “medical professional” (i.e. a nurse) who had “done work in genetic research” (did she collect samples?).

I read the entire article, otherwise how would I have known about the shark idiocy; you might recall that it was at the end of the article.

If she cannot take the heat maybe she should avoid the kitchen. You put up ideas in Science to have them critiqued and criticized; although it was obvious from her “so called Theory of Evolution” opening shot that she was singing to the “cdesign proponentist” AMEN chorus and expected only laurels for her juvenile critique that got the very basics of evolution incorrect.

I have seen better educated Biology undergraduates, which is all I suspect her “credentials” in genetics extend to. Wow, so impressive. She also looks from her pic that she got any degree a long time ago; maybe she should dust off those old text books, much of what she thinks she knows of the subject is incorrect.

50 posted on 04/29/2008 2:22:28 PM PDT by allmendream (Life begins at the moment of contraception. ;))
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To: Hank Kerchief
I'm not entirely sure whether you intend this to relate only to genetics, but if I might stick an oar in here - what is being touched on is right at the crossover between the philosophy of science and the actual methodologies involved in its practice. You can start by exploring what is meant by "proof" and what is meant by "knowledge" - the two are quite different things, especially when you try to work out the differences in their treatment between "scientism" and "postmodernism."

Most science is a broadly inductive process, meaning that the tools used to develop proof within certain other scientific fields (mathematics and logic) are only of limited use inasmuch as they are equally broadly deductive. Without delving too deeply into the relation between mathematics and logic (Russell and Whitehead did that) one might complain that deductive processes are essentially tautological; that is, one can rearrange data for the purposes of clarification but that relatively little new "knowledge" is generated. (See Wittgenstein on the topic - maybe he'll hurt your head less than he does mine).

Within certain fields this can be very highly developed. Such concepts as an "event space" within Boolean logic describe that set of data that grouped together must be examined for the relationship termed causation. Within that event space those relationships may treated with a certain mathematical rigor. The trick is defining it in the first place. Where that is applied to a huge, practical scientific problem such as the origin of life that definition is clearly impossible. Were we to know enough to define the event space we wouldn't be asking most of the questions in the first place.

The implication is that such topics are quite beyond any sort of "proof" in the customary logical sense. Where certain small pieces may be isolated enough to define that event space they can be dealt with piecemeal, which is how science breaks this sort of thing down. One can, for example, demonstrate the passage of an electrical signal through the heart by measuring it, and note inductively that muscle contraction happens on a one-to-one correlation with it, but one has not proven the causal relationship until one can explain its mechanisms in detail. That's what event space means in this context.

The real difficulty is that although the classical (and crude) scientific model - observation, hypothesis, experiment, conclusion - lends itself to a more or less deductive treatment, it isn't actually how practical science usually works. The accretion of data that is subsumed under the term "observation," for example, is (1) a necessarily inductive process, and (2) not necessarily "observed" at all, but gathered and available for observation, data, and not information, if you prefer. Within this patterns are discerned, other observations included and compared, some discarded for either valid or invalid reasons - already we are filtering the data and the decisions made to do so are more or less arbitrary and hence subject to challenge. It isn't a clean model; it never was, and we haven't even got out of "observation" yet.

All of this is only tangentially related to that academic discipline popularly termed "postmodernism," although its predecessor "poststructuralism" is perhaps more accurate. That discipline regards the entire scientific process as a "realist epistemology," having been deconstructed (more or less) by Baudrillard, et al, and treated as just another metanarrative among several. I defer here to FReeper Borges who knows more about the topic than I do. Postmodernism considers itself transcendent to such metanarratives, or at least early postmodernism did so. (It is ironic that Marxism was specifically mentioned by Baudrillard as one such metanarrative to be discarded, in the light of the behavior of more contemporary postmodernists, who embraced it.) Whether postmodernism itself constitutes such a metanarrative to be viewed by suspicion by postmodernists is at the moment a fairly hot topic in the field.

But the test of truth within most poststructuralist/postmodernist treatments is the relationship of reader to text, observer to language and not to object, which is one reason the "all viewpoints are equally accurate" accusation hits the mark. That is not in the least a scientific point of view, which postulates the independence of observer and object.

Derrida is one postmodernist who has attempted the topic, which is essentially the relationship of text to reality. It is ironic that he did most of his work never having read Wittgenstein on it, who did it better (IMHO) and came to a quite different set of conclusions. I cite line two of his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, which states baldly "the world is made up not of things, but of facts." That means something very different in science than it does in, say, literary criticism, where both "thing" and "fact" are endlessly negotiable. I may be old-fashioned, but I still prefer the logical positivists to the postmodernists. So sue me.

That's as I understand the topic at the moment. I'm probably completely full of crap. I need a beer.

51 posted on 04/29/2008 2:26:27 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: x
Please expound upon those supposed logical fallacies. I would enjoy hearing them.

Wilson was a great Scientist as well as having a great sense of what makes our Nation great. Science doesn't have to be put into pills or bombs in order to be of value.

Michael Faraday was once asked of what use Electricity could possibly be. He responded “of what use is a newborn baby?”. Some things have an intrinsic value in and of themselves, and Scientific knowledge is one of them.

When asked the same question by Parliament he told them ‘I have no idea what use Electricity will be put to, but no doubt some day you will tax it.’.

52 posted on 04/29/2008 2:27:46 PM PDT by allmendream (Life begins at the moment of contraception. ;))
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To: allmendream
Would having a particle accelerator really make us respect each other or love culture more?

And after we've funded all the poets, painters, and sculptors who'd make the country worth defending, who'd have the millions left over to pay for a giant particle accelerator.

Wilson's comment reflects the arrogant 1960s "how can we afford not to spend the money" attitude that caused us so much trouble in those days.

I do notice that Wilson was an accomplished sculptor as well as a scientist.

But that also points to another fault in those 60s academics: they didn't have much understanding of what made most other people tick.

Pastore had the better part of the argument on this question.

Build the project or not -- but don't use highflown rhetoric to mock the concerns of ordinary taxpayers.

53 posted on 04/29/2008 2:38:50 PM PDT by x
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To: x
Did putting men on the moon make you love our nation and culture more? Was it a point of national pride? Was it directly applicable to the national defense of our nation?

Yes, to me, a particle accelerator in the U.S. that is the best in the world REALLY does make me respect our nation and love our culture more than if we did not have a cutting edge particle accelerator in the U.S. and needed to send our Physics graduate students to Europe to study.

Science is as worthy a pursuit as painting or poetry, and having great Scientists as our countrymen makes me as proud as having great painters writers and poets. Science can also possibly be of greater use; but it needn't be directly applicable to national defense in order to be of value.

Perhaps R.R. Wilson was a bit touchy on the subject, having worked on the Manhattan project (that is the Nuclear bomb program for those of you in Rio Linda). He obviously bristled at the suggestion that all physics could be good for was making a bomb with a bigger boom.

54 posted on 04/29/2008 2:53:36 PM PDT by allmendream (Life begins at the moment of contraception. ;))
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To: Hank Kerchief

I’m saying you can’t rule out evidence surfacing that puts a new spin on old knowledge and possibly refutes it. A lot of things people thought were scientifically correct in 1908 are not the case in 2008. I fuully expect it to be the same in 2108.


55 posted on 04/29/2008 2:55:44 PM PDT by Borges
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To: Hank Kerchief; Coyoteman; allmendream
Why would she lower herself to debate you? Science is not establish by debate.

Science IS debate. You make an assertion and back it with logic and evidence. Your opponent makes a counter assertion an hopefully has logical reasoning and evidence to back their claim. Science evolves through the filter (natural selection) of logic and evidence. Hypotheses that canot survive logic and evidence perish; those that can, propagate

Your Lamarckian Maven is invited to debate her proposition. I will do it alone, or if you will allow, I will invite my rational friends.

56 posted on 04/29/2008 3:27:55 PM PDT by Soliton
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To: Hank Kerchief
If "nothing in science is ever proven:"

I must assume

What follows this appears to be nothing more than a littany of strawmen. I've never know you to be a fan of that sort of thing.

57 posted on 04/29/2008 3:44:40 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Coyoteman

I find your assertion re your scientific degree and years of practice unlikely.
I have too many years of lecturing at University not to recognise a post-grad in his early 20’s.
If you are 35+ yrs experience, what has happened to concretise your brain, that you sound 21?
After all, nothing is provable. Please prove your assertions to me, here and now!!


58 posted on 04/29/2008 3:50:40 PM PDT by weatherwax (Let none who might belong to himself belong to another: Agrippa)
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To: Coyoteman

Please give actually references regarding what you claim you do. You know, so they can be checked


59 posted on 04/29/2008 3:54:58 PM PDT by weatherwax (Let none who might belong to himself belong to another: Agrippa)
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To: allmendream
Did putting men on the moon make you love our nation and culture more? Was it a point of national pride? Was it directly applicable to the national defense of our nation?

Missile technology was very much applicable to the national defense of the nation. So was getting to the moon before the Russians.

If you already agree with Wilson you're likely to find his comments wonderful. If aren't on his side to begin with, you may not be convinced.

And the "we can't afford not to spend the money" and "it's about our national greatness" arguments don't set a good standard for determining appropriations.

60 posted on 04/29/2008 4:03:11 PM PDT by x
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