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I think that's questionable.
With some few notable exceptions, evolution is only questionable to people who know little or nothing about it.
I think that's questionable.
It is indeed a fact. That may be hard for some to accept.
With some few notable exceptions, evolution is only questionable to people who know little or nothing about it.
Not really.
The earth is about 93 million miles from the sun.
The diameter of the earth is about 8,000 miles.
Negligible effect re: closer to the sun.
As JeffDG pointed out, the slight ellipticality of the orbit would far overshadow it anyway, and even that has a negligible effect on the seasons.
Yep...Dawkins definitely believes its a fact.
A God that can be understood is no God.Science is not at all closed minded about this. All that has to happen is for one of these creationists to bring some real evidence. That has never happened. Even saying that there must be some sort of designer guiding the process is nothing but religious nonsense. If they want to make a claim such as you have laid out then they must present evidence of god whose has a hand on the process. So, prove god exists.
I tell you if you want to disprove evolution, which by then would not immediately means that creation is the default correct answer. All that has to happen is for one piece of evidence to come forward. One crocoduck skeleton, one fossil in the wrong strata, etc. But each piece of evidence actually adds to evolutions understanding, never subtracting from it.
I am hoping he chimes in as this is really more up his alley.
We understand what we are capable of understanding, and for people to assume that they can understand creation is the peak of conceit.
I haven't dug into it to read both sides, but John Yurkin(?) wrote a book in the 70s about the toxicity of sugar and it's correlation to heart disease, obesity, etc and was completely rebuffed by the apparent consensus at the time of "low fat" scientists.
This is correct, though it is a small effect.It is my understanding that the eccentricity of the orbit helps mitigate the temperature swings on seasons for the northern hemisphere.
Not primarily the amount of daylight (as in the length of the day, which is also caused by the tilt of the axis), but the sun angle during the day, as Dale B. said. The length of day is a secondary effect, though significant.It is my understanding that the primary driver for the seasons is the amount of daylight (caused by the tilt of the axis)
I think the biggest hurdle in believing evolution is people don't actually understand what it is. They think that evolution is a jellyfish giving birth to a crocodile. They also don't have a real concept of the scale of time it takes for very small changes to add up.
Yudkin wrote a book about his opinions that was largely ignored at the time. He didn't publish data in scientific journals to back his findings, which is what scientists do. Adkins did similarly, though his work couldn't even be elevated to scientific discovery, it was a diet plan (a rather stupid one, since one cannot stay on it indefinitely) . The problem is when one publishes one's findings through a mainstream publisher one bypasses peer review. No one vetted this information, looked it over critically. All we have is the author's word for it and that just isn't enough. I no more believe them than I believe Dean Hamer's group four a gene for spirituality, and for the same reasons. Had these people subjected their thoughts and data to stringent peer review they would have been far more believable to a scientific audience. This isn't silencing by peer pressure, this is just sloppy work.
Moreover, anyone who says that sucrose is a toxin is simply factually in error. Indeed Yudkin didn't reveal anything new, people have known for a very long time that too much sucrose is indeed bad for you.
And if they aren't even given that opportunity?
One has always had that opportunity, indeed in the 70s one didn't even have the page charges that are common today. Now, it is possible that the peer-reviewers of his day found his data lacking, given that most of his arguments are out of context or extrapolations of negative data.
This is a simple thing. You cannot point out a mechanistic basis of sucrose toxicity. Can't be done because sucrose isn't toxic. It is bad for you when consumed in excess, but so is anything including distilled water. And we knew that a long, long time before Yudkin published his book.
You seem to misunderstand the word "theory", but that doesn't surprise me. In your use it is conjecture or supposition. It means something completely different in science.
"Facts" don't depend on science to exist, only to be determined.
"Facts" don't depend on science to exist, only to be determined.
G was 6.67 * 10^-11 m^3/kg s^2 long before Isaac Newton was born...c was 3.0 * 10^8 m/s long before Maxwell measured it.
Oh, I'm not saying whether he is right or wrong, but from what little I read on it, he was stonewalled prior to the book. Why should stonewalling exist in a place where truth is supposed to be the only endeavor?
There is speculation that the speed of light has changed with the age of the universe. So, c may not have always been, uh, c.
There is nothing at all magic about human biology. Nothing.
Wow. Really?
Wow. Really?
Most of us sane, reasonable people believe that the literal creationists are, well, kind of nutbars. OK, maybe that's a little harsh. To some people, belief is simply more important than understanding. I don't pretend to understand how that type of brain works, but there you have it. We share the planet with a whole lot of them, so we may as well accept the fact and move on. But I'm always amazed by the number of otherwise very smart people who seem unable to grasp the concept of the (insert name of your favorite religious text here) as a body of work intended to teach us how to live with each other, not a science textbook. Some people, certainly including the faithful and the clergy, can read every word and completely miss the point.
Me? Sure, I think the world was created in six days. But who are we to say how long a "day" was for whatever force or entity did the creating? Or how it was done? That would be pretty presumptuous. I don't know what constitutes a "day" to God, whatever he/she/it/they may be -- being, force or something else -- but I'm pretty sure it doesn't line up with what we know as a "day" on this tiny, insignificant speck of rock. Was God some old white guy wearing a robe, floating in space, who waved his hands and made it all appear? Ummm... metaphorically, maybe, but you have to remember that the creation stories have been around since the beginning of human thought to explain the unexplainable. We're working on a new one now, and I suspect in a couple thousand years people will think that our most advanced theories today were amusingly naive and backward.
At one point, they were convinced that Pluto caused Uranus to "wobble". I will not go there.
Is that not what led to the search for Pluto?
I thought it was.
Is that not what led to the search for Pluto?
I thought it was.
There is speculation that the speed of light has changed with the age of the universe. So, c may not have always been, uh, c.
The Wikipedia entry on Pluto's discovery:
In the 1840s, using Newtonian mechanics, Urbain Le Verrier predicted the position of the then-undiscovered planet Neptune after analysing perturbations in the orbit of Uranus.[23] Subsequent observations of Neptune in the late 19th century caused astronomers to speculate that Uranus' orbit was being disturbed by another planet besides Neptune.
What would be really cool would be to consider the ramifications of c varying (albeit very very slowly) with time and space.
What would be really cool would be to consider the ramifications of c varying (albeit very very slowly) with time and space.
Especially if it varied in the early universe. Which could explain a lot of red-shifting and completely change how old we think the universe is.
It could also eliminate the need for an "Inflation" period in the very early Universe. If c were greater in the early Universe, temperatures could have stabilized across the early universe, showing the uniformity that is shown in COBE and WMAP data
Quoting on however:The Wikipedia entry on Pluto's discovery:
In the 1840s, using Newtonian mechanics, Urbain Le Verrier predicted the position of the then-undiscovered planet Neptune after analysing perturbations in the orbit of Uranus.[23] Subsequent observations of Neptune in the late 19th century caused astronomers to speculate that Uranus' orbit was being disturbed by another planet besides Neptune.
In other words, with Neptune's revised mass, the funny motions in Uranus's orbit were explained, and Pluto's discovery was shown to be a case of serendipity.In 1992, Myles Standish used data from Voyager 2's 1989 flyby of Neptune, which had revised the planet's total mass downward by 0.5%, to recalculate its gravitational effect on Uranus. With the new figures added in, the discrepancies, and with them the need for a Planet X, vanished.[50] Today, the majority of scientists agree that Planet X, as Lowell defined it, does not exist.[51] Lowell had made a prediction of Planet X's position in 1915 that was fairly close to Pluto's position at that time; Ernest W. Brown concluded almost immediately that this was a coincidence,[52] a view still held today.
I believe it's this Myles Standish .Myles Standish? Wasn't he a pirate or mercenary or something?