I said nothing about prayer in schools or creationism in the post you are replying to.
I apologize (I suppose I unfairly “read that into it” … and I shouldn’t have).
[Here’s some information from the Centers for Disease Control:
Holy smokes, that’s some scary stuff. When you cited overall STD rates previously (the 1 in 5 number) I looked up STD’s (and came up with stuff regarding the other ones that are treatable, never realized herpes infection rates were so high).
I did pull this off the CDC website:
*Results of a nationally representative study show that genital herpes infection is common in the United States. Nationwide, at least 45 million people ages 12 and older, or one out of five adolescents and adults, have had genital HSV infection.
Over the past decade, the percent of Americans with genital herpes infection in the U.S. has decreased.
Genital HSV-2 infection is more common in women (approximately one out of four women) than in men (almost one out of eight). This may be due to male-to-female transmission being more likely than female-to-male transmission*
I admit, I’m shocked at the notion of 45 million Americans running around with herpes.
The human capacity to lie is part of the problem. Politicians do it on a regular basis. Evaluate facts and think objectively? What did Wall Street just do? And how did that affect the national debt? These objective and rational people, have, as their daily work, the management of other people’s money. Our trust was abused, and we, the average person, globally, paid for it.
I’m not sure why anyone would expect innate altruism out of bankers (maybe I’m cynical, but hasn’t every major recession started because of some sort of bubble bursting, code word for a bunch of wall street guys raiding the cookie jar)?
Lobbyists damage the relationship between government and the average person. The human capacity to allow others to suffer so they can make a buck is another problem:
You get no argument from me here.
The fact that everyone reading this began life as a human embryo does not seem to matter when a special interest group decides that a ‘greater good’ is being served. Adult stem cells have proven their efficacy but there’s no money in that. No patents for processes, and Return On Investment.
I thought the tide has turned in favor of adult stem cells (given its shown itself a more viable technology)? Here’s an excerpt from an article:
*NEW YORK (Fortune) – When it comes to stem cells, the public – and the media – tend to focus on embryos. But researchers and analysts say marketable therapies already are emerging from less controversial work with adult stem cells.
Adult cells make up the lion’s share of the stem cell space, mainly because they are easier to come by than embryonic cells, and less expensive to run in clinical trials. They are also derived from mature tissue, like bone marrow or umbilical cord blood, so they avoid the ethical debate that surrounds embryonic stem cells.*
money.cnn.com/2009/06/16/technology/adult_stem_cell_therapy.fortune/index.htm
Creationism is treated like it’s something new, but it’s not. It’s still being taught in Sunday Schools. But it, and the dreaded Intelligent Design, are enemies one and two respectively. While people post here trying to suggest that God was somehow involved in textbook evolution, the automatic response is no. And keep your god out of our public schools. There is little that is rational regarding the outcome of introducing such a concept to public school students aside from end of the world scenarios, or intimations of similar.
That’s a topic unto itself I suppose. I agree (with your broader inference) there’s a good case that religiosity can be an important source of morality; and whether any of it is true or not is immaterial to its social impact (or potential impact). Nevertheless, I’ve heard leading proponents of intelligent design explain their theories, and honestly I thought their methodology was terrible. The complexity of DNA does not infer an intelligent creator, in fact we’ve replicated evolutionary algorithms that show intelligence can form from randomness (indeed as far as we know that’s the only way it could have formed). We have physical evidence for evolution. IMHO (from the perspective of someone trained in law) I’d say the case supporting naturalism is far stronger than the case for theism.
I’ve seen some of whom I guess are the better apologists out there (guys like William Lane Craig); and honestly I think the arguments they make are logically bizarre (they’ll probably succeed in building more atheists than anything else). These new apologists are referred to as
evidential apologists, and they rely on concepts like Bayes probability theorem. But underneath it all they use subjective (name removed by moderator)uts (that I think is a terrible distortion and abuse of statistics). Moreover, the logic and assumptions they make are terribly flawed. So for a variety of reasons I just don’t find any of this stuff compelling.
I understand many others do, and of course it’s our individual right to believe what we want. I just have not been personally moved by any of these arguments.
So, in the midst of arguing evidence and logic, vague scare tactics are part of the equation. And no, I would not vote to force someone to believe in something like creationism.
Obviously a belief cannot be forced, but I think the relevant question is what direction does the weight of evidence take us? I think there’s objective answers to these questions; and IMHO it’s a better idea to base education on demonstrated facts, or at least plausible theories.