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BlacXiii
BlacXiii aka Blac13 has been a member since August 13, 2007, has scored 502 submissions, giving an average score of 3.28, helping 14 designs get printed.
Many prominent creationists apparently have the same view of truth as political radicals: whatever advances the cause is true, whatever damages the cause is false. From this viewpoint, errors should be covered up where possible and only acknowledged when failure to do so threatens greater damage to the cause. If colleagues spread errors, it is better not to criticize them publicly. Better to have followers deceived than to have them question the legitimacy of their leaders. In science, fame accrues to those who overturn errors. In dogmatic systems, one who unnecessarily exposes an error to the public is a traitor or an apostate.

Ironically, creationists make much of scientific errors. The "Nebraska Man" fiasco, where the tooth of an extinct peccary was misidentified as belonging to a primitive human, is ubiquitous in creationist literature and debate presentations. So is the "Piltdown Man" hoax. Indeed, creationist propagandists often present these two scientific errors as characteristic of paleoanthropology. It is significant that these errors were uncovered and corrected from within the scientific community. In contrast, creationists rarely expose their own errors, and they sometimes fail to correct them when others expose them.

by Robert Schadewald

PuterBoy
PuterBoy on Sep 08 '07 at 5:21pm
margolove
margolove on Sep 08 '07 at 5:22pm
I like that you just copied and pasted some text without attempting to make an argument of your own.
PuterBoy
PuterBoy on Sep 08 '07 at 5:27pm






*hopes everyone will get the irony in this message*
spires
   spires on Sep 08 '07 at 5:33pm
If the state-funded 'scientific' community had a self-correcting mechanism, why are many of those same errors persisting in textbooks still?
BlacXiii
BlacXiii on Sep 08 '07 at 6:21pm
It started out as just a thought I had, but then everyone started to act as though I attacked their belief system.



Got all Johnny Text Book on me and started putting me down for having such thoughts. I not saying I know the answer, I wasn't there and neither was anyone else.



But everybody has to be right instead of just having the BRASS to say I DONT KNOW.
BlacXiii
BlacXiii on Sep 08 '07 at 6:22pm
Thank you Margolove, I do believe Im the first person to ever do that.
MooseDinner
MooseDinner on Sep 08 '07 at 6:30pm
spires: textbook writers don't represent the best scientists or the latest knowledge of science. They are sometimes just slightly updated and corrected versions of much older textbooks. And they are of course edited by people who aren't scientists at all. Aside from that, it's hard to make an argument against a claim as vague as "many of those same errors persisting."
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I went 4 a walk the other day and while I was out I ran into myself. I did'nt stop to speak. I just gave a look in my direction and continued on my way. I really had nothing to say to myself, so I did what the devil has never done for any of us. I left me alone.