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8/19/2008 2:51:09 AM EDT
what a joke
feel free to discuss

take it away HENRY


"If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him." -- Voltaire
8/19/2008 2:52:58 AM EDT
[#1]
AGNTSA
8/19/2008 3:06:32 AM EDT
[#2]
Did that idiot not evolve proper motor control of his arms?



I believe in a Creator, and therefore that the design of the universe, and everything in it, is an intelligent design (lower case).

I also believe that the mechanisms of that design are interpreted by us through science as evolution (geologic or biologic). IOW, I have no conflict whatsoever with accepting Belief and Science. If God wanted to design me from a fresh dog turd or an ape, who am I to argue?

ID (capitals), as a SCIENCE is right up there with Global Warming: it's bunk. I wish it weren't, but there it is.

IBTST. (In Before The Shit Storm)
8/19/2008 3:14:43 AM EDT
[#3]
The problem with Henry Rollins is that HE thinks he's smart and he's here to enlighten us.
8/19/2008 3:18:37 AM EDT
[#4]
Intelligent design is neither...



- CD
8/19/2008 3:24:21 AM EDT
[#5]
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.
8/19/2008 3:38:38 AM EDT
[#6]

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


Agreed, but it takes more than that for it to be labled SCIENCE.

Yes, I look across creation and say, "Wow! Can God cook or can He COOK!". Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."
8/19/2008 3:46:46 AM EDT
[#7]

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You'd be suprised the stuff nature can come up with after BILLIONS OF YEARS
8/19/2008 3:48:32 AM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:
Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."
Thats my take,when science can prove it maybe ill like Christmas more
8/19/2008 3:56:34 AM EDT
[#9]
8/19/2008 4:06:45 AM EDT
[#10]


Space Jesus is crying because your grammar sucks ass.
8/19/2008 5:36:24 AM EDT
[#11]
8/19/2008 11:59:41 AM EDT
[#12]

Quoted:
img.photobucket.com/albums/v359/b_walton24/db051218.gif


Doonsbury is in for SUCH a shock when he dies....
8/19/2008 12:04:37 PM EDT
[#13]
I tend to not really listen to what Henry Rollins has to say on any topic, let alone something like intelligent design.  I also don't seek his opinions on neurosurgery, foreign diplomacy, astrophysics, or engineering.  

Why?  HE'S A FUCKING ENTERTAINER.  I also don't listen to Susan Sarandon, Madonna, Britney Spears, or Tim Robbins.  
8/19/2008 12:04:56 PM EDT
[#14]

Quoted:
img.photobucket.com/albums/v359/b_walton24/db051218.gif


Theres a lot of truth to that......
8/19/2008 12:05:18 PM EDT
[#15]
God laughs at unbelievers. Everyone laughs at Henry Rollins.
8/19/2008 12:08:07 PM EDT
[#16]
Henry Rollins is a liar.
8/19/2008 12:09:08 PM EDT
[#17]

Quoted:
... Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."


Which is why it's a good thing that we are to walk by faith and not by sight.
8/19/2008 12:12:05 PM EDT
[#18]
8/19/2008 12:15:23 PM EDT
[#19]
intelligent =/= henry rollins

douchefag = henry rollins
8/19/2008 12:34:24 PM EDT
[#20]
What day did God create the dinosaur fossils?
8/19/2008 12:40:27 PM EDT
[#21]

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You have to distinguish between big "ID" Intelligent Design and little "id" intelligent design.

Intelligent Design = a poor attempt at making a scientific argument that evolution didn't happen and the earth is 6000 years old.

intelligent design = a philosophical position based upon inductive reasoning that argues that the sheer complexity and majesty of the universe suggests an intelligence behind said universe's design.    

What you're suggesting is little "id," which is different from the big "ID" being fought about these days in the local school boards.  
8/19/2008 12:42:10 PM EDT
[#22]
IBTL
8/19/2008 12:45:54 PM EDT
[#23]

Quoted:
"If god did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him." -- Voltaire


you do know, do you not, that voltaire was an avid atheist?

The priest at the deathbed said, as Voltaire was a bit of a skeptic towards religion: "I urge you to swear off the devil." Voltaire replied "Now now, young man, this is not the right time to make enemies."
8/19/2008 12:48:05 PM EDT
[#24]
DAMN.
IBTL.
8/19/2008 12:49:34 PM EDT
[#25]
in.
8/19/2008 12:53:53 PM EDT
[#26]
I have two quotes on this...

"To surrender to ignorance and call it God has always been premature, and it remains premature today." -Isaac Asimov

and...

"We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture!" -Pastor Ray Mummert, creationist/intelligent design proponent, March 2005

8/19/2008 12:57:39 PM EDT
[#27]

Quoted:

Quoted:
img.photobucket.com/albums/v359/b_walton24/db051218.gif


Doonsbury is in for SUCH a shock when he dies....


No, any minute now the TB is going to develop a circulatory system, brain and nervous system, etc. etc. and then we'll be in for big trouble!
8/19/2008 1:06:29 PM EDT
[#28]

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You have to distinguish between big "ID" Intelligent Design and little "id" intelligent design.

Intelligent Design = a poor attempt at making a scientific argument that evolution didn't happen and the earth is 6000 years old.

intelligent design = a philosophical position based upon inductive reasoning that argues that the sheer complexity and majesty of the universe suggests an intelligence behind said universe's design.    

What you're suggesting is little "id," which is different from the big "ID" being fought about these days in the local school boards.  


What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".
8/19/2008 1:10:39 PM EDT
[#29]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You have to distinguish between big "ID" Intelligent Design and little "id" intelligent design.

Intelligent Design = a poor attempt at making a scientific argument that evolution didn't happen and the earth is 6000 years old.

intelligent design = a philosophical position based upon inductive reasoning that argues that the sheer complexity and majesty of the universe suggests an intelligence behind said universe's design.    

What you're suggesting is little "id," which is different from the big "ID" being fought about these days in the local school boards.  


What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


That's not what they tried to implement in the Kansas school district a few years ago under the name "ID."  It appears that ID is kind of like feminism, no one really knowns what the name means.
8/19/2008 1:15:05 PM EDT
[#30]

Quoted:
img.photobucket.com/albums/v359/b_walton24/db051218.gif


8/19/2008 1:18:12 PM EDT
[#31]

Quoted:

What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


The Dover case pretty much established that ID is just Creationism in new clothes.

If you want to think of ID as "science", it is really bad science.  "Global Warming" bad.

8/19/2008 1:23:25 PM EDT
[#32]

Quoted:

Quoted:

What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


The Dover case pretty much established that ID is just Creationism in new clothes.

If you want to think of ID as "science", it is really bad science.  "Global Warming" bad.



The problem with ID is that it takes a reasonable philosophical argument (complexity suggests design) and tries to force it into a scientific argument by saying that mathematically, the "chance" of this happening randomly is so small that one must conclude that an intelligent power is behind it.  The problem, of course, is that it is almost impossible to talk about the "chance" of the universe working the way it does because we have nothing to compare our universe to.  

If somehow you were able to take a God's eye view of things and watch 1000 universes get started and fall to crap, but one universe created a wonderous human civilization, then you could at least have the beginnings of a scientific argument for intelligence, but of course no one can have that kind of perspective.  
8/19/2008 1:26:43 PM EDT
[#33]
The idiocy of "ID" in any incarnation damages our country by surrendering educational excellence to foreigners who have no problems with kooks fighting to teach fantasy in their science classes.

It also lowers our prestige in the world as a nation, by projecting the image of ignorant, backwards, unintelligent and superstitious buffoons.

It also makes Christians look like swindlers, lunatics, and liars.
8/19/2008 1:27:56 PM EDT
[#34]

Quoted:

Quoted:
img.photobucket.com/albums/v359/b_walton24/db051218.gif


Doonsbury is in for SUCH a shock when he dies....


Not likely.
8/19/2008 1:29:21 PM EDT
[#35]

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


Agreed, but it takes more than that for it to be labled SCIENCE.

Yes, I look across creation and say, "Wow! Can God cook or can He COOK!". Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."

That is what faith is about. If we had proof we wouldn't need it
8/19/2008 1:29:55 PM EDT
[#36]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You have to distinguish between big "ID" Intelligent Design and little "id" intelligent design.

Intelligent Design = a poor attempt at making a scientific argument that evolution didn't happen and the earth is 6000 years old.

intelligent design = a philosophical position based upon inductive reasoning that argues that the sheer complexity and majesty of the universe suggests an intelligence behind said universe's design.    

What you're suggesting is little "id," which is different from the big "ID" being fought about these days in the local school boards.  


What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


That's not what they tried to implement in the Kansas school district a few years ago under the name "ID."  It appears that ID is kind of like feminism, no one really knowns what the name means.


Westboro is supposed to be a "Baptist" church, too - you can;t stop someone from misusing a word - look at how its "pro-choice", not "pro-interuterine infanticide"...
8/19/2008 1:30:22 PM EDT
[#37]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


The Dover case pretty much established that ID is just Creationism in new clothes.

If you want to think of ID as "science", it is really bad science.  "Global Warming" bad.



The problem with ID is that it takes a reasonable philosophical argument (complexity suggests design) and tries to force it into a scientific argument by saying that mathematically, the "chance" of this happening randomly is so small that one must conclude that an intelligent power is behind it.  The problem, of course, is that it is almost impossible to talk about the "chance" of the universe working the way it does because we have nothing to compare our universe to.  

If somehow you were able to take a God's eye view of things and watch 1000 universes get started and fall to crap, but one universe created a wonderous human civilization, then you could at least have the beginnings of a scientific argument for intelligence, but of course no one can have that kind of perspective.  


gotta agree with the deduction regarding the lies in the kitzmiller case
http://web.archive.org/web/20051030082431/http://ydr.com/story/doverbiology/87427/
8/19/2008 1:31:06 PM EDT
[#38]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


Agreed, but it takes more than that for it to be labled SCIENCE.

Yes, I look across creation and say, "Wow! Can God cook or can He COOK!". Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."

That is what faith is about. If we had proof we wouldn't need it


and if it can't be proved, it has no place in our educational system, at least not within the sciences. I am fine with people believing what they want, but science class is not the place for faith discussions.
8/19/2008 1:32:32 PM EDT
[#39]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


The Dover case pretty much established that ID is just Creationism in new clothes.

If you want to think of ID as "science", it is really bad science.  "Global Warming" bad.



The problem with ID is that it takes a reasonable philosophical argument (complexity suggests design) and tries to force it into a scientific argument by saying that mathematically, the "chance" of this happening randomly is so small that one must conclude that an intelligent power is behind it.  The problem, of course, is that it is almost impossible to talk about the "chance" of the universe working the way it does because we have nothing to compare our universe to.  

If somehow you were able to take a God's eye view of things and watch 1000 universes get started and fall to crap, but one universe created a wonderous human civilization, then you could at least have the beginnings of a scientific argument for intelligence, but of course no one can have that kind of perspective.  


False argument - we can look at the fossil record, and see how fast life changed in the past.  We can compare that to current rates of genetic drift and mutation, especially in isolated breeding  populations, and see what the numbers say.
8/19/2008 1:33:47 PM EDT
[#40]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


Agreed, but it takes more than that for it to be labled SCIENCE.

Yes, I look across creation and say, "Wow! Can God cook or can He COOK!". Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."

That is what faith is about. If we had proof we wouldn't need it


and if it can't be proved, it has no place in our educational system, at least not within the sciences. I am fine with people believing what they want, but science class is not the place for faith discussions.

ok
8/19/2008 1:34:16 PM EDT
[#41]

Quoted:

Westboro is supposed to be a "Baptist" church, too - you can;t stop someone from misusing a word - look at how its "pro-choice", not "pro-interuterine infanticide"...


Are we really misusing it?  From wiki:


The unequivocal consensus in the scientific community is that intelligent design is pseudoscience.  The U.S. National Academy of Sciences has stated that "creationism, intelligent design, and other claims of supernatural intervention in the origin of life or of species are not science because they are not testable by the methods of science."  The American Association for the Advancement of Science says "intelligent design has not been demonstrated to be a scientific theory."  The US National Science Teachers Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science have termed it pseudoscience.  Others have concurred, and some have called it junk science.

"Intelligent design" originated in response to the 1987 United States Supreme Court Edwards v. Aguillard ruling involving separation of church and state.  Its first significant published use was in Of Pandas and People, a 1989 textbook intended for high-school biology classes.  Several additional books on "intelligent design" were published in the 1990s. By the mid-1990s, intelligent design proponents had begun clustering around the Discovery Institute and more publicly advocating the inclusion of intelligent design in public school curricula.  With the Discovery Institute and its Center for Science and Culture serving a central role in planning and funding, the "intelligent design movement" grew increasingly visible in the late 1990s and early 2000s, culminating in the 2005 "Dover trial" which challenged the intended use of intelligent design in public school science classes.

In Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, a group of parents of high-school students challenged a public school district requirement for teachers to present intelligent design in biology classes as an alternative "explanation of the origin of life." U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III ruled that intelligent design is not science, that it "cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents," and that the school district's promotion of it therefore violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.


ID is the bastard child of creationism.  
8/19/2008 1:35:13 PM EDT
[#42]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You have to distinguish between big "ID" Intelligent Design and little "id" intelligent design.

Intelligent Design = a poor attempt at making a scientific argument that evolution didn't happen and the earth is 6000 years old.

intelligent design = a philosophical position based upon inductive reasoning that argues that the sheer complexity and majesty of the universe suggests an intelligence behind said universe's design.    

What you're suggesting is little "id," which is different from the big "ID" being fought about these days in the local school boards.  


What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


That's not what they tried to implement in the Kansas school district a few years ago under the name "ID."  It appears that ID is kind of like feminism, no one really knowns what the name means.


Westboro is supposed to be a "Baptist" church, too - you can;t stop someone from misusing a word - look at how its "pro-choice", not "pro-interuterine infanticide"...


1. How do they misuse baptist? Having no creeds leaves the term baptist open to those who wish to use it. It is neither trademarked, nor backed by any lengthy theological treatise, at least not in modern America.

Im not here to defend them, just their right to be called baptists...
8/19/2008 1:38:43 PM EDT
[#43]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


You have to distinguish between big "ID" Intelligent Design and little "id" intelligent design.

Intelligent Design = a poor attempt at making a scientific argument that evolution didn't happen and the earth is 6000 years old.

intelligent design = a philosophical position based upon inductive reasoning that argues that the sheer complexity and majesty of the universe suggests an intelligence behind said universe's design.    

What you're suggesting is little "id," which is different from the big "ID" being fought about these days in the local school boards.  


What you call "ID" is Creationism - "Intelligent Design" whether capitalized or not, has nothing to do with Creationism.  ID neither cares nor claims to know "who" designed anything - it primarily looks at the known age of the universe, the presumed earliest appearence of life, and the state of life now, and analyzes the probability that natural change could get us to where we are now in the time available.  It's kind of like some tollways that give you a stamped ticket when you get on them, and then check the time when you reach the exit - if you get there too soon, they know you had to be speeding.
ID seeks to see if we "got there too soon".


That's not what they tried to implement in the Kansas school district a few years ago under the name "ID."  It appears that ID is kind of like feminism, no one really knowns what the name means.


Westboro is supposed to be a "Baptist" church, too - you can;t stop someone from misusing a word - look at how its "pro-choice", not "pro-interuterine infanticide"...


1. He is talking about our esteemed school board, not Westboro.
2. How do they misuse baptist? Having no creeds leaves the term baptist open to those who wish to use it. It is neither trademarked, nor backed by any lengthy theological treatise, at least not in modern America.

Fuck it let's extermenate the lot of them. After all with no souls there is no reprecussion right
8/19/2008 1:40:10 PM EDT
[#44]

Quoted:

False argument - we can look at the fossil record, and see how fast life changed in the past.  We can compare that to current rates of genetic drift and mutation, especially in isolated breeding  populations, and see what the numbers say.


Not false.  There is no scientific baseline set in stone to say that evolution should take X or Y amount of years.  The ID argument is basically "We don't think it should have taken this long to evolve, so must be God did it."  It is basically a "God of the gaps" argument, which is not a very good argument.    
8/19/2008 1:48:39 PM EDT
[#45]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Westboro is supposed to be a "Baptist" church, too - you can;t stop someone from misusing a word - look at how its "pro-choice", not "pro-interuterine infanticide"...


Are we really misusing it?  From wiki:


The unequivocal consensus in the scientific community is that intelligent design is pseudoscience.  The U.S. National Academy of Sciences has stated that "creationism, intelligent design, and other claims of supernatural intervention in the origin of life or of species are not science because they are not testable by the methods of science."  The American Association for the Advancement of Science says "intelligent design has not been demonstrated to be a scientific theory."  The US National Science Teachers Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science have termed it pseudoscience.  Others have concurred, and some have called it junk science.

"Intelligent design" originated in response to the 1987 United States Supreme Court Edwards v. Aguillard ruling involving separation of church and state.  Its first significant published use was in Of Pandas and People, a 1989 textbook intended for high-school biology classes.  Several additional books on "intelligent design" were published in the 1990s. By the mid-1990s, intelligent design proponents had begun clustering around the Discovery Institute and more publicly advocating the inclusion of intelligent design in public school curricula.  With the Discovery Institute and its Center for Science and Culture serving a central role in planning and funding, the "intelligent design movement" grew increasingly visible in the late 1990s and early 2000s, culminating in the 2005 "Dover trial" which challenged the intended use of intelligent design in public school science classes.

In Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, a group of parents of high-school students challenged a public school district requirement for teachers to present intelligent design in biology classes as an alternative "explanation of the origin of life." U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III ruled that intelligent design is not science, that it "cannot uncouple itself from its creationist, and thus religious, antecedents," and that the school district's promotion of it therefore violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.


ID is the bastard child of creationism.  


The establishment clause appleis only to Congress.  One of the first official acts of Congress was to order Christian bibles - the establishment clause was meant to prohibit Congress from making a particular BRANCH of Christianity the Official State Religion - a la Church of England.  Since a shcool district is not Congress, it can;t violate the establishment clause.  But that's just one example of how much fail this judge is full of...
8/19/2008 1:49:29 PM EDT
[#46]

Quoted:

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We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


Agreed, but it takes more than that for it to be labled SCIENCE.

Yes, I look across creation and say, "Wow! Can God cook or can He COOK!". Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."

That is what faith is about. If we had proof we wouldn't need it


and if it can't be proved, it has no place in our educational system, at least not within the sciences. I am fine with people believing what they want, but science class is not the place for faith discussions.


Fill me in on when Evolution was "proved" - if it was, it would be the Law of Evolution.
8/19/2008 1:57:26 PM EDT
[#47]

Quoted:

The establishment clause appleis only to Congress.  One of the first official acts of Congress was to order Christian bibles - the establishment clause was meant to prohibit Congress from making a particular BRANCH of Christianity the Official State Religion - a la Church of England.  Since a shcool district is not Congress, it can;t violate the establishment clause.  But that's just one example of how much fail this judge is full of...


O.k.  I guess we're now changing subjects from "what is intelligent design" to "I don't like current church/state jurisprudence."  On our new topic, you are wrong about the 1st Amendment.  It applies to the state via the 14th Amendment.  As for church/state separation, I think it does go too far at times, but in this instance I agree with the Courts.  There is no place in a science class for a religious argument.  If they want to teach comparative theology then the school should have a theology elective.  
8/19/2008 1:57:53 PM EDT
[#48]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
We look at a work of art by Picasso and think "Wow!  What beauty!  What an artist!".

We look at the human body and say "Wow!  What a random product of chance with no design!"

Yet the latter is far more beautiful than the former and we believe it is a fluke chance.

Does not compute.


Agreed, but it takes more than that for it to be labled SCIENCE.

Yes, I look across creation and say, "Wow! Can God cook or can He COOK!". Sadly, however, that is no more proof of His existence than, "Because the Bible says so."

That is what faith is about. If we had proof we wouldn't need it


and if it can't be proved, it has no place in our educational system, at least not within the sciences. I am fine with people believing what they want, but science class is not the place for faith discussions.


Fill me in on when Evolution was "proved" - if it was, it would be the Law of Evolution.


Certainly, not all theories have been vetted sufficiently to become a law. That said, evolution, at many levels has been supported enough to merit discussion. At the same time, the ID crowd has done little more than say, things are too nice to be an accident. Religion belongs in the Humanities, testable hypotheses and observation belongs in the science class.
8/19/2008 2:00:44 PM EDT
[#49]
ibtl
8/19/2008 2:00:57 PM EDT
[#50]

Quoted:
Fill me in on when Evolution was "proved" - if it was, it would be the Law of Evolution.


Fill me in when you figger out what a scientific theory is.
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