Jose Fly
New member
Um, just because somebody is a professor doesn't make him king of the hill. Science DOESN'T work this way.
No one has said otherwise.
Consensus is necessary 'just to move' ahead on some assumptions but you don't have to follow another's speculation, assumptions, or research to work on a cure for cancer, for instance.
???????? I'm starting to think that you really have absolutely no idea what I'm talking about.
"My brother" said he didn't think science worked this way: to purport something THEN try to prove it after you've overstepped your bounds with the conclusion.
Yep, that settles it....you have no idea what I've been talking about. I'll give it one more shot....
You've claimed that your brother, who is a professional scientist, has reservations, doubts, and/or is generally skeptical about some aspects of evolutionary biology. My response to that is....so what?
If your brother truly believes he has a genuine scientific case against parts of evolutionary biology, why isn't he presenting that case to his colleagues? He could give a presentation at a conference, or write up a manuscript and send it to a journal.
As long as he keeps these reservations/doubts to himself and doesn't share them with other scientists, they will remain scientifically irrelevant. Do you understand that part? I'm not saying he has to present it as a firm conclusion or overstep anything. If he really is a scientist, then he knows how the process works.
Sure, science is always retesting BUT I've sat enough science classes to know you are not supposed to jump the gun and that such is greatly discouraged.
No one is saying he has to "jump the gun". All he has to do is present his position in a professional setting, like a conference or a manuscript. Then he gets feedback from his colleagues and is expected to respond.
It seems you're trying to have it both ways. You want to cite your brother and his views as authoritative, but you also want to shield him and his views from any scientific scrutiny.
Sounds a bit cowardly to me.
It is 'speculated' that dinosaurs came from birds. Now everyone is publishing their findings way way before they can deliver.
First, it's birds from dinosaurs. Second, I'd bet your knowledge on the subject of theropod/avian shared ancestry is severely lacking, so your opinions on the subject will be taken for what they are.....some anonymous guy on the internet ranting about a subject he knows nothing about.
In this thread, I asked for a photograph, among other things. It is ridiculous, at least in initial assessment, for this article to exist. What has it delivered on?
Are you truly curious and are interested in the answers, or are you just trying to "stump the evolutionist"?
And you think there is no bias nor politicking going on in science? Truly? I 'think' a little skepticism is frankly good and necessary for science.
Not everyone thinks in such ridiculous black/white terms, where if something isn't 100% absolutely perfect every time, it must not be at all reliable.
Also, wouldn't a good way to identify and expose "bias and politicking in science" be to increase the level of transparency in the process? Yet you're arguing for the opposite.
Peer review doesn't have to be published. Who made that rule?
Um.......?????????? So I guess scientists can share their methods and findings with each other by.....psychic powers? And given that one of the justifications for publishing papers is transparency in science, it's bizarre to see you, someone who believes science is a conspiracy, advocating for science to be less transparent and more secretive.
Didn't really think that through, did you? :chuckle:
No lab needs to 'check' with the author or you to move in a different direction. Sometimes I think you don't see how indoctrinated you are.
Your ignorance of the very basics of science would be less notable, if you weren't going around acting like you're an authority in it.
Dunning-Kruger in spades.