REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Teaching Evolution Should Be Compulsory

POSTED BY: MAGONSDAUGHTER
UPDATED: Thursday, September 8, 2011 18:54
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Sunday, September 4, 2011 7:30 PM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Well here's a thought, I think television and facebook are more about indoctrination and mind control than education.


Maybe all three are. It's possible.

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People fought for the right to have universal education, much like health care because they know they are the big factors in enabling people to improve their lot in life (along with job opportunity).



This is true. However, I think we can all agree that non-indoctrinating styles of education are probably best.

From what I've seen of the American public school system, which is likely very different from the Australian system, it treats all students like criminals and inmates, and trains them to only operate at a cubicle desk job. Anything outside of that is vocational training, learned on the job or by trial and error. This is opposed to private preparatory schools, which train leaders of industry and the nation. In this way a class (or maybe even caste) system is created and enforced. I would not like to see those differences become even worse.

So I think we can also agree there are good and bad ways to organize a public school system. Right now, I would agree with DT about the American public school system, and say that it needs to be redesigned.

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Is air really made up of hydrogen and oxygen or is it magical fairy dust?


None of the above, it is made up primarily of nitrogen. ;)

It may need to be recognized that for a number of people, it might not matter at all what their air is made of or what air even is so long as they can still breathe and aren't being poisoned. You can send a kid to school, but you can't make them care.

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ignorance imposed by their family's flawed beliefs.


I kinda think that's rare even if people ARE exposed to alternative viewpoints. I suspect that if anyone was going to grow away from preexisting viewpoints, they would do so already with or without school. What you're really asking here is, if there were no school, would they ever find the alternative answers they seek. I would guess maybe, and maybe not.

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Sunday, September 4, 2011 7:33 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


I just wanted to point out that I said common chimps CAN be aggressive, extremely hierarchical and even warlike, not that they always are.

Bonobo behavior is more uniform when it comes to hunting (both sexes hunt) and food sharing (females and young get a larger share than among common chimps.) Bonobos have also never been observed to hunt other bonobos from other tribes. OTOH bonobos DO have hierarchies, but they resolve hierarchical tensions with sex, usually the lower ranked 'offering' sex to the higher ranked.

Common chimps have a lot more variation in their behavior, it varies a lot between individuals, tribes, regions and areas of the continent. My point was not that chimps are nasty and that we are like chimps. It was that human nastiness can't be solely attributed to formal large-scale hierarchies, b/c nastiness CAN be found among species that don't have those large formal structures.


Remember when teachers, public employees, Planned Parenthood, NPR and PBS crashed the stock market, wiped out half of our 401Ks, took trillions in taxpayer funded bailouts, spilled oil in the Gulf of Mexico, gave themselves billions in bonuses, and paid no taxes?

Yeah, me neither....

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Sunday, September 4, 2011 7:35 PM

BYTEMITE


That seems fair.

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Sunday, September 4, 2011 8:43 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:


This is true. However, I think we can all agree that non-indoctrinating styles of education are probably best.


agreed.


Quote:



None of the above, it is made up primarily of nitrogen. ;)


I'm pretty sure that oxygen is also there, although nitrogen is the main gas.

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It may need to be recognized that for a number of people, it might not matter at all what their air is made of or what air even is so long as they can still breathe and aren't being poisoned. You can send a kid to school, but you can't make them care.

You are missing my point. I don't think you can teach that everything is subjective and open to debate. Some things are simply not for debate. Evolution vs creationism is one of them. You can't argue about the affects of gravity, otherwise you'll be walking off tall buildings.

You can't make anyone care and that isn't really the point. You shouldn't be teaching fantasy is real.

Quote:



I kinda think that's rare even if people ARE exposed to alternative viewpoints. I suspect that if anyone was going to grow away from preexisting viewpoints, they would do so already with or without school. What you're really asking here is, if there were no school, would they ever find the alternative answers they seek. I would guess maybe, and maybe not.



I disagree. Many people have use education as a tool to better themselves and they do that by being exposed to knowledge and ideas they wouldn't have had at home. I can certainly say that was true for me and my siblings. My mothers knowledge of anything mathematical did not extend beyond primary school years and my father has very fixed views of the world. Education has enabled me to be exposed to ideas that they would not have had a clue about.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 3:04 AM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:

I'd argue that those are natural laws, more than they are government derived laws. You couldn't have a society in the first place if those rules weren't already ingrained into most (maybe even all? Even sociopaths seem to understand this one to some degree) humans.

These are laws you tend to see with very little exception across all human societies and culture, because if the society DIDN'T have them, it would quickly self-destruct. Civilization also follows evolutionary principles.


They do seem to be fairly universal. As does the concept that murder doesn't count in war or battle. I think my problem is really about how government is perceived, so ill perceived by Americans in particular. Any society will have a system of governance, a person or people who make decisions, a person or people who implements the law. Just because the idea that murder is abhorrent seems pretty ingrained in human nature, doesn't mean that people in more 'natural' societies wont occasionally do it, and be punished for it.

I think that the complexity of hunter gatherer societies is being underestimated. They have laws and plenty of them, often not that 'natural' either, but laws that are difficult to understand, such as strict conventions around who can marry who and taboos that make little sense to us. There are people in charge, often heirarchies are formed around elders, but it can also be blood lines as well.

The idea that any society can function without law is naive.

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The problem comes in when you introduce the concept of "the other," because then a society might rule then it's okay to go to war against that other society, which then makes that society okay all of the other bad things so long as it's directed at the right people. The good news is, it seems most societies are nowadays moving towards more tolerant, which means they identify other people as human instead of subhuman other. But it does still happen, often with the help of propaganda.


I don't think we've changed one whit. We still have that capacity to demonise and dehumanise the other if we intend to fight them. And in the end, we're still fighting over the same basic stuff since we wrangled over the waterhole. People fight over resources. But we also have the capacity to form alliances and negotiate. Both are part of our nature.

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But generally, humans tend to be frightened and disturbed by murder and rape or even the idea of committing either one. They shy away from it. So I would guess those are actually fairly unnatural, or at least not anything that is evolutionarily selected for. And if they're not behaviours that are evolutionarily selected for, my thinking is you can eventually expect them to die out, unless something prolongs the incidence of the behaviour.


I think we are all born with the capacity for violence and aggression. It's a survival instinct. We evolved having to kill - kill to eat, to protect our young, to save ourselves. That's why the call it the fight or flight reflex. We all have the capacity to act in that way, to switch into aggressive mode. A collegue of mine calls it the 'amygdala hijack' meaning the higher brain functioning gives over to reflex.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 3:04 AM

DREAMTROVE


1) Fire will do it. Just look at the Amazon.

2) I've read that the people we call aborigines are the mix of multiple migrations, each with different tech levels.

3) The Maori are connected to the great melanesian expansion, which was definitely a wave that began in IIRC, taiwan, and went as far west as madagascar.



Hard to miss the pattern of expansion here. I agree this was an advanced society, and destructive.

4) Re: Australia, any wave of expansion was bound to have a mark on the continent, but I'm not sure which really precipitated the collapse, I was hoping for some input.



Nature abhors a vacuum. This doesn't just happen. Some ecosystems deliver less than others, but there are some life forms that can live on nothing. You'll never find a natural "desert" which is just sand. You'll find some where the resulting lifecycle is more low key like tundra, but if it's mountains of sand, I smell humans. If mountains of sand existed in place for millions of years, some little critters and seeds would take it over.

If it weren't obvious from the picture above, where you can see the dead river valley system, the topographical map makes it more obvious



Geologists can reconstruct what a landscape like this would have looked like, just like they paleontologists reconstruct creatures from bones.

Just having looked at a lot of environmental destruction, it's very easy for me to picture what this looked like pre-human



I was just fishing for any information on it, figured you might know more than I.


One of the common misleads is "low rainfall" which is confusing cause and effect. Rainfall is the result of humidity, which is the result of transpiration, ie, trees make rain, and rain makes applesauce.

Not everything is a rainforest, but everything is green:



Alberta, before and after humans, change over the last decade.

That change may stay for a very long time. But 10,000 years ago it looked like this



Still, looking at the satellite map of Australia, I'm guessing a lot of it was rainforest, and probably not that long ago.

Humans are thought to have originated in the central saharan watershed


Where they were split off from their congolese bonobo relatives after an invasion of chimpanzees into cameroon.

It's postulated that human/bonobo superior ability to swim was the deciding factor, which means that the humans who moved north crossed water to do so. Neither species would have been capable of a massive trek across the desert, so we can be fairly certain there was no desert in between cameroon and the central sahara.

The bonobo moved south across the congo river, and are still there. They are basically human, but possess no technology, passed perhaps the use of tools, but no ag or fire. The result is they still live in a rainforest.

Ergo, they did not trek across this



But rather, at least something more like this



Given the climate, and evident, it was more like this at the time



I'm guessing so was Australia, pre-human. I don't think 1kiki was disagreeing with that. I think she was saying that "any human" would do it.


Kiki

My counter argument is basically this: Bonobo are essentialy human, and still live in a rainforest. There are lots of areas that have been inhabited by humans for a long period of time without suffering ecological decline, but others suffer decline rapidly. Europe, S. America and central Africa all had humans in the post ice-age period, other places, like SW US and C. Asia were only just getting them around the same time. My postulation is that it is not the fragility of the environment, but the behavior of the particular humans, ergo, our cultural valaues re: the environment, do matter.

In Mexico, it's very noticeable which areas were inhabited by Mayans vs. which were inhabited by Aztecs because the two cultures, there for basically the same amount of time, had radically different views on the environment.

The Aztecs had a social value set very similar to what we as Americans have today, and the Mayans had something clearly superior, from a perspective of the Earth, and anyone who wanted to live on it in subsequent generations.


ETA: This thread is a good debate and shows exactly why debate is needed. It does not matter if someone is very wrong, because you can trust the informed mind to make an intelligent decision. If someone should come in and say "The jews did it all" for instance, we're likely to reject that, but it doesn't mean we should forbid him to make the case.

Also, on ecosystems, and why some don't recover, it's important to remember that in most cases, the humans who destroyed it are still there. Maybe all cases. I can't think of an exception. Recovery is slow, and requires an absence of more destruction. It will take a very long time for the Sahara to recover, the important thing is not creating another.

This is why it worries me that the idea that "deserts are natural" is being taught. If you follow evolution and logic you can see that this is not possible: Nature abhors a vacuum, life can conquer anything, life would slowly spread to uninhabited areas, and nothing would stop it. Once there, life would make its own environment.

But this belief that deserts are natural is one that allows us to continue to behave as we do, because we absolve ourselves of any responsibility for the portions of the planet which are uninhabitable, and so we allow ourselves to destroy the rest.


That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 5:25 AM

BYTEMITE


Most of the deserts around the world today do appear to be human caused, including Australia, the Middle East (see the problems Sumeria caused, and the conditions in Afghanistan versus the much more lush nearby Kashmir). I am not as sure about the Sahara itself, I've read that big layer of sand may have been deposited by a higher sea level, which also deposited salts that prevent much from growing there.

A similar case is probably true with the Utah desert, because uplift created erosion which exposed VAST sandstone deposits. Otherwise Southern Utah would probably look a lot like Northern Utah.

So I'd say that both explanations can be true.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 6:20 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I confess. I haven't read the thread.

My raw opinion? Thanks for asking...

Do we teach about "gravity"?
Do we teach that the earth is round?
Do we teach that living things are made of "cells"?
Do we teach that lightening is electricity?

There is a trove of hard-won knowledge that has taken human eons to test and verify, and that is literally what separates us from the chimps. Letting it slip away in because of some sort of scientific relativism or religious fervor - which declares that ALL human statements are equal - is bone-headed. Of course we should teach evolution. Not as "fact", but as a predictive and testable hypothesis.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 7:48 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Absolutely it should be compulsory. As for teaching it to primary school children, I've never really thought about before, but now I have it seems reasonable, and sensible. It goes a long way towards answering a big, important philosophical question: how we got here. And we've never shied away from answering this question in the past: humanity has a long and broad history of teaching creation myths to its children; so why not beautifully logical scientific theories? I think it might do something like boost IQ by a couple of points across the board...

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 9:03 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


I apologize b/c I have been posting off-topic and will continue! (briefly) but I did want to respond to this:

"I'd argue that those are natural laws, more than they are government derived laws. You couldn't have a society in the first place if those rules weren't already ingrained into most (maybe even all?) ... These are laws you tend to see with very little exception across all human societies and culture(s) ... The problem comes in when you introduce the concept of "the other," ... But generally, humans tend to be frightened and disturbed by murder and rape ..."

As organisms, it takes very little for humans to survive. All we need is to have two offspring survive long enuf to have offspring of their own, and two of those offspring to survive long enuf ... and so on.

I can't think of a single 'natural law' that hasn't been violated by some culture. Love and protectiveness towards offspring? Meet the Spartans. Abhorrence of rape? Not among the Yanomami Indians. Repulsion towards murder? Among the San Bushmen of the Kalahari males are expected to murder any male who has publicly dissed them. Squeamishness for torture? Some American Indians routinely tortured captives. And so on.

If there are natural tendencies they are easily overcome by cultural training. If there are evolutionary reasons for those tendencies they seem to not be very robust. Remember, all evolutionary survival requires is that two offspring live long enough to have offspring of their own. It doesn't matter how you get there. Keeping women as baby-making slaves works until life gets so miserable they start killing their children and themselves, as happened with the Tainos under Columbus.

As for survival of cultures, my current thinking is that many cultures trade on expansion into areas with more resources, whether that means walking further for firewood and water, inventing new technology, or conquering the neighboring tribe.

Cultures can survive by expansion for a while even if they are not sustainable long-term. When resources do eventually get depleted, the culture can either change (and in that sense 'die' as a culture) or the people can die. I think it's a testament to the power of human culture that many peoples have gone extinct rather than change.


Remember when teachers, public employees, Planned Parenthood, NPR and PBS crashed the stock market, wiped out half of our 401Ks, took trillions in taxpayer funded bailouts, spilled oil in the Gulf of Mexico, gave themselves billions in bonuses, and paid no taxes?

Yeah, me neither....

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Monday, September 5, 2011 9:24 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:


I can't think of a single 'natural law' that hasn't been violated by some culture.



Of course, but again, that's culture. And it's still hard to find exceptions to those "natural laws" (for lack of a better term), simply because, as you seem to agree, exceptions ARE self-destructive, and eventually it does lead to all the men being wiped out in a war, or their oppressed women in forced marriages fleeing, or suicide.

None of those are evolutionarily advantageous, even if they DO happen to manage to raise two children to replace the parents. I'd argue that in cultures that are skewed enough to self-destructive, it greatly impacts whether the next generation survives long enough to reproduce. Plus people CAN and do leave a culture if it becomes too awful.

As for when cultures die, there are always remnants. I don't think it's very common for the people to go entirely extinct - the hunter gatherers of the Amazon are the descendents of a very old (and quite possibly very brutal and theocratic) empire that killed itself out. Clearly there were at least some survivors.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 9:59 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Byte: There is a difference between a CULTURE surviving, and individuals who descended from that culture.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 10:56 AM

DREAMTROVE


Byte,

Not to hammer a point toward a 100% endpoint, but to illustrate the logical underpinning of my position:

The natural desert cannot exist. If living things exist, as they do, which can and do gain their nutrients from the air, and from the biomass, even on a microscopic scale, and we know them to do so on a far larger scale, then live creates life, and more, it creates the nutrients which sustain life.

Given this, the edge of any natural desert would be instantly under attack from all surrounding life forms. Given no agents of change with a deliberately debilitating effect on the overall presence of life, like the desertification associated with unnatural grazing, associated erosion and the fixed location and support system that prevents the perpetrators, like a pairing of human and sheep, from continuing to destroy, then any desert which is not presently growing much be by necessity shrinking.

As any presence of life is going to lead to an increase in resources, nutrients and water vapor, any recovering land will rapidly accelerate towards a greener and greener future, thus given an unlimited amount of time, and no agent of opposition to life, that life would be victorious in conquering the desert. It's the absolute reverse of the environmental degradation we see with human environmental intervention and "management."

The amount of time it would take would be dependent on the situation, but rapid enough that no geologic form presently could explain any natural desert, as I understand it, and I'm dubious that any deserts of the geologic past, if one were to have been there, would have hit the Sahara level of devastation without some destructive organized agent of change.

The Sahara itself was a stable rainforest 3 million years ago when humans first arrived. It immediately began a slow, but not steady decline, there were periods of recovery and desertification. As time progressed, the problem accelerated, and the situation got worse, it ceased to be a forest and became barren in places, but it may not have plummeted into a mountain of sand until that last few decamillenia. During the last ice age onset, the last attempt to recover in the Saharan system drew it closer to a stable state, but it was not enough for the onslaught of human destruction, and the final collapse makes its way into the written historical record in Egyptian hieroglyphs, and is almost certainly the origin of the Atlantis story, which later gets confused with Minoa by Plato, and perhaps a few others down the road.

Perhaps the Saharan system is weaker in recovery, or easier to damage, but the most logical answer is that it got humans first. 3 million years of humanity makes a piece of land almost irredeemable.

My guess would be that the Saharan system was more resilient, based on age, though those closer to the water have a clear advantage.

Anything that was once on the sea floor would seem to have a disadvantage, but I don't know how serious that is.

94 million years ago



20,000 years ago



Deserts are primarily human areas, but that wasn't the reason I put up the graphic. Notice the way ecosystems have moved. The Taiga system in N. America occupies perhaps not a single consistent square mile of the 17 million it now holds.

The rapid mobility of some ecosystems would lean towards any area that is habitable, will be inhabited.



Another thing to bear in mind is that land which is underwater, while it would register as a desert in terms of fossils, would be actually more filled with life in terms of biomass.

The presence or absence of life is a matter of chaos and evolution, and that evolution will take any space you can give it. There is no sound logical reason I can find for life to simply evolve in favor of the void.


That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 11:11 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Damn Byte, ya done stole all the thunder I was gonna throw!

And far, far more politely that I woulda, so imma just shut up now....

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 11:30 AM

BYTEMITE


Yes, but the graphics also show the North American desert and the Saharan underwater.

I honestly don't know enough about the Saharan, so I was willing to concede that could be grazing, but I wanted to also point out that it was susceptible to begin with.

But the American deserts I'm pretty sure were not the product of overgrazing. Now the very far southwest deserts MAYBE had Anasazi growing maize with bad agriculture techniques, but even though that would strip out nutrients and could create a dust bowl, we don't have evidence of a large enough population in the area. What we do have is significant uplift and significant erosion into a fairly major deposit of sandstone.

So I would argue the natural desert can exist when certain key circumstances predispose the region to that climate - the reason those HUGE amounts of sandstone exist in southern Utah is BECAUSE cretaceous age sandstone put down by high sealevels was then eroded. The flow patterns in the sandstone are all consistent with eolian deposits, meaning wind, meaning a natural desert.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 11:49 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


'And it's still hard to find exceptions to those "natural laws" ... '

Not all that hard to. Take for example what the Portuguese and Spanish did to the indigenous peoples, what the British did to its empire, etc. There seem to be large cultures that were or are based on violating at least a few of your 'natural laws'.


Remember when teachers, public employees, Planned Parenthood, NPR and PBS crashed the stock market, wiped out half of our 401Ks, took trillions in taxpayer funded bailouts, spilled oil in the Gulf of Mexico, gave themselves billions in bonuses, and paid no taxes?

Yeah, me neither....

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Monday, September 5, 2011 11:56 AM

BYTEMITE


Um, remember what I said about the concept of the "other?" All of those examples pretty much fall under that.

The ones that DON'T were the few you listed before (in-tribe rape/murder). And now that I'm thinking about it, I'm starting to wonder if your "murder" examples aren't actually an example of an honour culture, which is different from a tolerance of murder, and more to do with punishments for perceived transgressions.

I mean, heck, if you want to go there, in America murder is legal in the form of capital punishment. But I think that's kind of stretching the argument a little to something I was never really talking about.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 11:57 AM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by dreamtrove:
Fire will do it. Just look at the Amazon.

2) I've read that the people we call aborigines are the mix of multiple migrations, each with different tech levels.

3) The Maori are connected to the great melanesian expansion, which was definitely a wave that began in IIRC, taiwan, and went as far west as madagascar.



Hard to miss the pattern of expansion here. I agree this was an advanced society, and destructive.



That map is very hard to read, but even can see that New Zealand is part of Polynesia, not Melanesia. You are way off on this topic. Melanesian, Polynesian and Micronesian are all considered different, although Micronesian is a mix. Quite different cultures and none of them have anything to do with Australian Aboriginals. DO a little research for crying out loud. You get your facts so skewed, but I can see as usual you will argue vehemently about stuff that you know very little about.

You might want to check out the migrationary path of Australian Aboriginals. They came a faster and completely different route to Polynesians.

You're stuff about collapse is way off. Although Australian Aboriginals have left their mark, they did not cause the desert in the centre of Australia. The desert is caused by the climate and in particular the continental climate.

You may not be aware, but we are not just a big desert as everyone often imagines. Since you like piccies.

we have rainforests



tropics



temperate rainforests - this is where i live



blue mountains outside of Sydney



tasmania where I am about to holiday



This is the desert as it currently looks with all the rain - central Austalia has unreliable rainfall, not none.



desert bloom



I have to dash. but I just want to say one thing about the Aboriginals use of fire. It wasn't destructive it was actually an agricultural tool. They did controlled burns. Fire got rid of undergrowth and encouraged edible plants. Now the Australian bush needs fire to regenerate. We now have taken on board that type of land management and do controlled burns.

I'll talk about continental weather systems another time.



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Monday, September 5, 2011 4:25 PM

DREAMTROVE


Sorry, my mistake, I meant the Austronesian expansion, melanesian is just one part of it. You are correct.

Nice pics, btw.

The ecology of your continent, I am aware of. It's not the Sahara, but large portions of the continent were clearly devastated. Denial will get you nowhere but further ecological decline.

America is in almost the identical boat: We came as white invaders, killing and displacing indigenous peoples, whom we treated terribly, and now feel really bad about that, but the indigenous peoples during prehistory had been terrible stewards of the environment and there's absolutely nothing wrong with saying so. Our descendants and theirs both need to work as a better future that does not destroy, and no, a controlled burn does not help, nor does it really exist. Your fires make our news regularly, as I'm sure ours do in your news.

Obviously there's a lot of room for green here:



But also a lot of room for this:



And that is obviously not a natural development.

Neither is this: (USA below)



There's no need to be so PC as to deny the problem.

My fear is that if we accept natural deserts, we take no responsibility for creating them, and we will not curb our destructive tendencies. I think this parallels Frem's fear of us accepting natural sociopathy.


All of that said,


Byte,

Yes, I agree, I said above, some regions are more susceptible to destruction, but that doesn't mean they are voids. In fact, the Amazon is very fragile.

http://geology.utah.gov/utahgeo/geo/geohistory2.htm

I guess to be clearer, I mean this:



might be natural, and this



is the result of human intervention.

The mass extinction of the holocene event is nothing more than the presence of humans, which is the point that 1kiki was making about which I did not disagree, I only averred that it was marginally civilized humans with fire and herding, and not pure hunter gatherer humans, who would have no reason to have more impact than bonobos.

Not too much of the Sahara is under water in 94 M BC, but that's not really the point. The Saharan cycle of decline I detailed above. The point is that it is the homeland of the human species, and specifically, humanity was born into a rain forest river valley system, with a speculated point of origin here:



At the time, it looked more like this:



Of all the events that happened, there were changes in water levels during the ice ages, but I'm dubious that these created the substantial decline.



That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Monday, September 5, 2011 5:46 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


DT, please show some evidence that Australian aridity, and you are right, we are an arid land, it man made. It's just a pile of poo as an argument. You know what divides the lush fertile land from the drier aear? The continental divide, we call it the Great Dividing range. if you knew anything about weather patterns you might undertand that the weather system comes off the ocean and hits the range, emptying clouds and causing rainfall and then guess what, no major permanent body of water to renew the clouds until they hit the coast on the other side and thus you get a green belt and an arid belt. You can see this actual change as you drive through the landscape. many continents, including your own have deserts or arid land as a result of similiar continental weather patterns.
This gives more information

http://weathersavvy.com/Q-Deserts1.html


as with the rest of the world, australias climate has vaired greatly and had significant impact on the landscape.

Quote:

Between 60,000 and 40,000 B.P., northeastern Queensland, south New South Wales, and southeastern South Australia were drier than at present. From 40,000–30,000 B.P. a colder climate than at present is indicated from one New Guinea area. Dryness became even more accentuated in northeastern Queensland, whereas many lakes filled up in the southern mainland, probably because of increasing precipitation effectiveness there. Before the end of this period colder conditions than now were already giving rise to slope instability in the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales.

The period of 25,000–15,000 B.P. saw the greatest lowering of the New Guinea treeline, reaching an extreme at 17,000 B.P. when glaciers also achieved their maximum extent. This was the time of extensive glaciation in Tasmania and small glaciers formed in the Snowy Mountains. Estimates of the lowering of mean annual temperature range from 6°–10°C. Northeastern Queensland experienced its driest Late Quaternary climate; lakes were contracting throughout the southern mainland and the final phase of substantial desert dune building took place before the period ended.

In the Snowy Mountains ice retreat began before 20,000 B.P., as did the construction of clay dunes in the southern semi-arid belt, a process demanding higher temperatures. However, in New Guinea and Tasmania ice retreat and treeline rise did not begin till after 15,000 B.P. Temperatures rose rapidly and everywhere most of the ice had gone by 10,000 B.P., when some lakes filled up in southern Australia, implying an increase in absolute precipitation.

In the last 10,000 years climate has been relatively stable although there are some indications that temperature and rainfall were marginally higher than now between 8000 and 5000 B.P. Since then, lake levels have oscillated; a brief, limited resumption of periglacial activity took place in the Snowy Mountains and there were small glacier advances in New Guinea.



Rainfall in this country is the major factor. We are indeed a dry continent. However, Aboriginal people adapted well to the arid conditions, and it is really only agrarian cultures that have the issue with arid places.


NB This is what antartica looked like 37 million years ago. Guess you'll need to blame all those angry penguins





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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 1:25 AM

DREAMTROVE


We have a great divide too, and a lot of desert. It would not take very long for that forest to conquer the continent, as rain does not come from the rain god.


You can even predict how long it would take for australia to be completely covered by rainforest in human absensce, it would take a while, but not enough to merit a change in geology. The takeover of glaciated areas all across the northern hemisphere by forests was pretty much instant.

I admire some native american cultures too, but I'm not going to be an idiot about it. You just don't want to emulate a society that creates this level of disaster. Sure, the society we live in is worse. Look at what our globalists have done to Alberta and Brazil in just the last decade. This would have taken a primitive tribe at least a thousand years.

But that's not good vs. bad. That's just a difference in scale of bad.

ETA:



Interesting theory, but I'm very dubious. The precipitation and wind patterns do not match the ecological pattern of australia, nor to they correlate well globally.



It looks good at first, but scan for a while, you will have to make a lot of exceptions, China, Europe, Argentina, Madagascar until you find you're just making exceptions. Some areas are more susceptible, but it also matters where the humans are.

Reconstructed historical maps also don't conform to the model, and while both are speculation, the proponents of natural desert clearly do not agree.





I suspect that dry was more steppe than desert, but would look like that on a satellite map.

Anti-evolution crowd argue that evolution theory led to genocide. That case could be made. Same with psychopaths and deserts. I don't want to argue against science, but I think that this belief in natural desert is a convenient lie which feeds our environmental laziness.

That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 4:50 AM

BYTEMITE


Ah. Then, baring further information about the Sahara, I agree. My only point was that areas under water lay down a lot of sandstone, and the presence of sandstone will generally contribute to a vast sand-dune desert when that sandstone erodes. While there are a few explanations to HOW the sandstone erodes that don't require humans, in most places nowadays I'd agree that it's probably humans.

I also don't know much about Arizona, honestly, I'm making a guess that if there was man-made eco-destruction, it was maize because, like corn, it sucks nutrients out of the soil without putting much back (oral histories also mention some population growth then collapse due to droughts). But, a side-note: the sandstones of Arizona were created under much the same conditions as the sandstones of southern Utah, and rocks seem to have been exposed by the same up-lift then extension (basin and range) episode.

The painted desert picture also appears to have dry grass and scrubbrush covering the tops of the exposed sand/sandstone, and is probably not as barren as it appears (this would depend on the month the picture is taken). The Sahara, however, is.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 12:28 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Magons: give it up doll. You are trying to debate with someone who doesn't "debate", but makes statements as flat fact which cannot be backed up and which are in some cases just plain wrong. Haven't you gotten that by now?

I'm not going to make my usual mistake of trying to refute even the more outlandish claims, I'VE learned that lesson. You can go right ahead if you want to, but bear in mind it will be a waste of energy; he believes what he believes, end of story. I would say it's akin to "my mind is made up, don't confuse me with the facts", except that facts WOULDN'T confuse him, he'd just ignore them or disagree with them, in favor of his own particular theories (which of course are "facts").

There are natural deserts, period. Man isn't responsible for everything on this planet, good OR bad, it just seems that way to some people.

You live in/near the temperate rainforest area? How COOL...so do I! Our redwoods are both the creators and the result of our temperate rainforest, and I love nothing so much in all the world as both that microclimate and those trees!

Curious: Our eucalyptus trees were planted by settlers to cut the wind. They're everywhere (and being eradicated as "non-native", with which I can't argue but I sure hate seeing them go). Here, they've been planted and expanded from there, so I can't know where they grow naturally. You can; to what ecosystem do they belong Down Under? Ours SEEM to thrive a bit more on the edges of the temperate rainforest but not IN it, but again, I can't know because they were planted. Can you tell me?


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off



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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 12:36 PM

BYTEMITE


...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumer#Decline

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertification

Perhaps it's possible that research leads someone to logical conclusions, but that research may no longer be available to post on demand.

An argument may be had about whether or not those conclusions are accurate or not, but this does not make those conclusions invalid. We are not in the realm of FACT here, we are in the realm of SCIENCE, where we may question and test hypothesis and conclusions and nothing is ever known for absolute certain, not even Law.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 12:48 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


DT, you are a wonderful example of how to make 1 + 1 = 11. You grab a little bit of information and make a fantasy of it.

Eg
There is no evidence that there have been waves of people with increasing technology that settled Australia prior to the Europeans. There have been waves, but there is no evidence that any of them were anything other waves of the same or similiar ethnicity, given the similarities between those who settled the southernmost regions of Tasmania and wer cut off for thousands of years and those who settled the north. All have them have been hunter gatherer societies more or less. None of them were connected with Melanesians or Polynesians.

There is no evidence that they possessed any mythical desert creating technology.

They did impact the landscape, no doubt about it, but there footprint over tens of thousands of years was incredibly light compared to the havoc that European settlement have created over a few hundred years. I guess there you see the difference in impact from a hunter gatherer society and an agrarian/industrial/technological one.

Forests did exist in central australia, but millions of years ago according to fossilised records. Many millions before humans existed. They died out because of climate change.

Aboriginals did use fire, but they did not use the slash and burn method that farmers use in other forested areas, the aim of which was to kill the forests to plant crops. Being hunter gatherer, they did not plant crops like that. They used fire to remove undergrowth from forests and to encourage the growth of edible plants. Many Australian species rely on fire to germinate eg eucalypts trees. This is have been a change to the ecology as a result of a kind of agricultural practice, but it results in forest regrowth, not destruction.

Contrary to what you claim, the arid lands are not artificially created badlands. They are lands which receive little or unreliable rainfall. They are often teeming with life that has adapted to arid conditions, hence the fact that Australia was populated throughout, and Aboriginal people adapted to living in them. Some animals and plant species, having adapted to dry conditions and the sporadic rain, only bloom or hatch when it rains and may lay dormant for years. Hence you get desert blooms and a varitable wealth of nature that springs to life around Lake Eyre now that it is, as it only sporadically is, filled.

You may see desert and arid conditions as being a 'collapse' but i don't see them the same way. They are unique ecological systems in themselves, many of them naturally forming due to global climate changes. Like Antartica, they can be tough for humans to survive in, but that doesn't mean that they are unsuccessful, unless you only count eco systems that humans can plunder and grow food as being successful.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 2:24 PM

DREAMTROVE


Byte,

I completely agree

Quote:

from wikipedia: desertification, above:

Causes



A herd of goats in Norte Chico, Chile. Overgrazing of drylands is one of the primary causes of desertification.
Dryland ecosystems are already very fragile, and can rarely sustain the increased pressures that result from intense population growth. Many of these areas are inappropriately opened to development, when they cannot sustain human settlements.[13]
The most common cause of desertification is the overcultivation of desert lands.[14] Over-cultivation causes the nutrients in the soil to be depleted faster than they are restored. Improper irrigation practices result in salinated soils, and depletion of aquifers.[13]
Vegetation plays a major role in determining the biological composition of the soil. Studies have shown that, in many environments, the rate of erosion and runoff decreases exponentially with increased vegetation cover.[15] Overgrazing removes this vegetation causing erosion and loss of topsoil.[13]



I have nothing to add to that.


Niki,

Do you have something scientific to say? Or is this another exercise in tag team time-wasting.


Magon,

Simple advice: if you begin a post with an insult, you will never get a positive result.

As for migrations, I started with quoting an article I had read in a scientific publication. Sure, the author might have had no evidence, but then it seems unlikely that it would have been published. Ergo, he had some evidence. He can still be wrong, but I think that the statement "there is no evidence" is doomed.

I would not make the same claim about natural deserts. Sure, there is evidence, as Byte pointed out above, with sandstone erosion, but also, as per wikipedia, there is also a scientific consensus. You can play the Niki game of appearing surprised and pointing at me and doing the Crazy Eddie, but it's unlikely to move me, in part because I've met that trick, but mostly because I am stating the consensus opinion. That means the balance of the scientific world is, in this case heavily, on my side. The only way to sway that is with a balance of evidence. So, I conceded a point to Byte, that there were natually fragile regions, but not that nature would tolerate a wasteland. It just makes no sense. Not logically, not scientifically.

Ergo, it needs a causitive agent. Something has to explain the satelite picture of Australia. I have one. It's a politically incorrect one, but this was a scientific discussion, not a political one, and it's scientifically all kinds of sound. If aborigines didn't deplete the land by farming or grazing it into dust, then who did, the kangaroos?

I'm short on time, and I'm not going to waste it on personal attacks or politics. I was interested in 1kiki's point, and the precise point at which humans become a liability to the land. The point to which epic tectonic upheavals are a detriment to the land is not all that useful to me, as I can do nothing about them, outside of use the to define the negative space of thhe problem.

So, to the issue we were discussing, the impact of humanity on the planet, I think I can set a starting range of two positions I hope we can all agree on:

1) The bonobo apes of the congo are NOT a detriment to the land.

2) The athabasca oil project in alberta IS a detriment to the land.

Given those two points, I come to the conclusion, as that, given Lucy is not different sequence from a bonobo, but rather in chromosomal count (2-3 merger mutation) she represents a human, but her phenotypical expression would have been identical to a bonobo, not of today, but a bonobo of 3 million years ago, at which point they were also not a detriment to the land.

Ergo, since the geological record shows humans to have been a liability to the land in most cases over most of the time. That it is human behavior and not human genetics that makes humans a detriment to their environment, and that was my point to 1kiki who has long since left the thread and I don't blame her, but hey, it's still better than politics.

Now, inside of those two goalposts, what went wrong and why is both of interest to me and certainly up to debate. Outside of that, when we move into denial of human impact or human behavior, then I lose interest. There is a scientific debate to be had there, but it is both outside the mainstream view and not particularly useful in an applicable manner to any modedrn environmentalist who wants to effect positive change.

If that position is crazy to you, then ah well

As for your post, I thought it was at odds with the facts posted, including what you, yourself, have post above, re:rainfall and biodivesity. The species of the desert are also present, typically in equal or greater numbers, in the non-desert. It's just in the desert there is nothing else, so they stick out more agains the sand.


That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 3:34 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by dreamtrove:

The most common cause of desertification is the overcultivation of desert lands.[14] Over-cultivation causes the nutrients in the soil to be depleted faster than they are restored. Improper irrigation practices result in salinated soils, and depletion of aquifers.[13]
Vegetation plays a major role in determining the biological composition of the soil. Studies have shown that, in many environments, the rate of erosion and runoff decreases exponentially with increased vegetation cover.[15] Overgrazing removes this vegetation causing erosion and loss of topsoil.[13]



Overcultivation of desert lands.... it means those lands are arid and are being cultivated or grazed. Causes increase or deteroriation of arid lands. Doesn't mean it causes arid lands.


Quote:

Magon,

Simple advice: if you begin a post with an insult, you will never get a positive result.


Fair enough. Can you please provide some recent links to any of your claims. Otherwise I will consider the information you provide to be simply conjecture on your behalf and not valid.

Quote:

As for migrations, I started with quoting an article I had read in a scientific publication. Sure, the author might have had no evidence, but then it seems unlikely that it would have been published. Ergo, he had some evidence. He can still be wrong, but I think that the statement "there is no evidence" is doomed.

Citation?

Quote:

I would not make the same claim about natural deserts. Sure, there is evidence, as Byte pointed out above, with sandstone erosion, but also, as per wikipedia, there is also a scientific consensus.

The wiki article talked about the increase in deserts as a result of grazing and cropping, both of which didn't take place as a result of Aboriginal settlement.

If you claim that ALL deserts are man made, you do not ackowledge that there exist different eco systems on our planet, which should, by your assumptions be covered with thick lush forest without man. This is a nonsense. Ecosystems occur due to global weather conditions and topography and continental weather systems. Yes, they are significantly and destructively impacted by human settlement when that settlement is of a agrarian, industrial and/or technological nature. Hunter gatherer societies significantly less so.

Your argument would assume that tropics occur because of the overwatering of humans????

The planet has zones of eco systems - tropics occur in certain regions, as do arid zones, as do permafrost, as do forested areas.

Quote:

but not that nature would tolerate a wasteland. It just makes no sense. Not logically, not scientifically.

Do you read my posts. Arid lands are not wastelands just because farming and grazing are difficult. They mostly have life and lots of it.

Quote:

Ergo, it needs a causitive agent. Something has to explain the satelite picture of Australia. I have one. It's a politically incorrect one, but this was a scientific discussion, not a political one, and it's scientifically all kinds of sound. If aborigines didn't deplete the land by farming or grazing it into dust, then who did, the kangaroos?

It's not about political correctness. Your argument is nonsense. There is no evidence that Aboriginal people had these kind of agricultural practises despite your manic insistence that they did. Please cite something....

Jarod Diamond in Guns, Germs and Steel describes Australia has not having the conditions needed to move into a farming society, having no easily domesticatable plants or animals. Ever thought about how you might herd kangaroos. He also says that societies that remain hunter gatherer demonstrate the success of their environment and their capacity to adapt, as people change lifestyles ie to farming to survive.


Quote:

Outside of that, when we move into denial of human impact or human behavior, then I lose interest. There is a scientific debate to be had there, but it is both outside the mainstream view and not particularly useful in an applicable manner to any modedrn environmentalist who wants to effect positive change.

I don't deny the impact of human settlement, I just dispute many of your claims because there is NO evidence. It's just shit you make up, and I have no time for that either.

Quote:

As for your post, I thought it was at odds with the facts posted, including what you, yourself, have post above, re:rainfall and biodivesity. The species of the desert are also present, typically in equal or greater numbers, in the non-desert. It's just in the desert there is nothing else, so they stick out more agains the sand.

That's quite the silliest thing you have posted.


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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 3:41 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Niki2:
Magons: give it up doll. You are trying to debate with someone who doesn't "debate", but makes statements as flat fact which cannot be backed up and which are in some cases just plain wrong. Haven't you gotten that by now?

Yeah, I'm finished here. It is pointless debating with someone who makes things up.

Quote:

You live in/near the temperate rainforest area? How COOL...so do I! Our redwoods are both the creators and the result of our temperate rainforest, and I love nothing so much in all the world as both that microclimate and those trees!

Curious: Our eucalyptus trees were planted by settlers to cut the wind. They're everywhere (and being eradicated as "non-native", with which I can't argue but I sure hate seeing them go). Here, they've been planted and expanded from there, so I can't know where they grow naturally. You can; to what ecosystem do they belong Down Under? Ours SEEM to thrive a bit more on the edges of the temperate rainforest but not IN it, but again, I can't know because they were planted. Can you tell me?


Eucalyptus trees are pretty ubiquitous here, and there are lots of different species.

Where I live their are mountain ash, enormous trees nearly as big as redwoods. The forests are beautiful, but achingly dangerous in summer because of the threat of fire.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 5:05 PM

BYTEMITE


I think the problem I'm seeing here is there is a misunderstanding about arid lands and deserts going on. The primary disagreement appears to be a matter of definition.

DT seems to be using arid lands, desertification, and deserts in different ways. For example, northern Utah has arid highland prairies, and arid temperate forests. Only southern Utah is what we might call an arid desert, with lots of sand. However, Southern Utah is not barren either, and there's vegetation, meaning the soil has nutrients.

Desertification is caused by over grazing and bad agriculture, which steals nutrients from the soil and increases erosion, creating a dust bowl (often in the form of an "erg" or a "sand dune field").

That is not to say all dust bowls in history have been man made. The Jurassic age eolian sandstone I mentioned that's the source of most of Utah's southern sand, there are virtually no fossils (not even of plants), and the sand fields appear to have been very barren. But I'd agree with DT that in modern times, most dust-bowl style ergs are probably man-made.

Is the central Australian desert man-made? I don't know enough, so I'm listening to both sides of the argument here.

I think DT is probably right about the Sahara, I only meant to point out that the Sahara was predisposed by it's geological history.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2011 5:42 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
I think the problem I'm seeing here is there is a misunderstanding about arid lands and deserts going on. The primary disagreement appears to be a matter of definition.

DT seems to be using arid lands, desertification, and deserts in different ways. For example, northern Utah has arid highland prairies, and arid temperate forests. Only southern Utah is what we might call an arid desert, with lots of sand. However, Southern Utah is not barren either, and there's vegetation, meaning the soil has nutrients.

Desertification is caused by over grazing and bad agriculture, which steals nutrients from the soil and increases erosion, creating a dust bowl (often in the form of an "erg" or a "sand dune field").

That is not to say all dust bowls in history have been man made. The Jurassic age eolian sandstone I mentioned that's the source of most of Utah's southern sand, there are virtually no fossils (not even of plants), and the sand fields appear to have been very barren. But I'd agree with DT that in modern times, most dust-bowl style ergs are probably man-made.

Is the central Australian desert man-made? I don't know enough, so I'm listening to both sides of the argument here.

I think DT is probably right about the Sahara, I only meant to point out that the Sahara was predisposed by it's geological history.



You are quite correct. Desertification is different from deserts or arid land, and is increasinly resultant from human settlement and activity and there certainly has been significant impact on Australia from settlement post European colonisation.

However, Australias eco systems are primarily resultant from natural climatic conditions. It is a largley arid land, with an arid eco system, and a whole lot of other kinds of systems including temperate and tropical rainforests and grasslands and the rest.

DT's claims that there was some group of Australian Aboriginals caused the arid ecosystems through use of a) technology? or b) farming practices is not supported by any evidence. However no doubt he will continue to make these claims based on 'some information he once heard' and will not be swayed otherwise.

I might as well say that I believe that fairies caused forests to grow because I once heard something like that...


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Wednesday, September 7, 2011 6:09 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Well teaching evolution is compulsery in my state from middle school on up, so from 11 upwards. I see no reason to teach it earlier because:
1. Kids all hear about it anyways from nature books and documentaries, so it isn't a foreign concept when they hit middle school.
2. Teachers already struggle to cover everything that is already in the manditory corriculum for elementary school kids, adding something else will just be more difficult.
3. It doesn't really seem necessary to me, yes its the currently popular and favored hypothesis about where life came from, but it isn't the only hypothesis. They can wait until middle school in my opinion.

That Dawkins charactor sounds like a terrible bore. And if he isn't careful he'll sound just as weird about fantasy stuff as those on the total other extreme of the spectrum, the content of his feelings will be different but it will still leave the folk in the middle shaking our heads.

I think everyone enjoys dinosaurs and other creatures we don't have anymore, they're interesting and an interest in them doesn't necessarily indicate a belief in evolution. I love those shows like Walking with Dinosaurs, where they use the fossils to generate computer models of what the dinosaurs and other creatures looked like and they have them digitally running around and eating each other, those shows are fun to watch because I like seeing something old that we don't have anymore, its interesting.

A DT a chara,
I'm going to say this, I don't think you would really like living in a society that is run like squirrel society is. Baby squirrels who are born different don't make it to adulthood, nonhuman creatures don't keep their disabled around, they leave them to die, or they die on their own. Because they don't raise genetically disadvantaged offspring and don't want them one could say that squirrels are totally okay with eugenics, their behavior smacks of it. And I know how vehement your feelings are on that particular matter.

Magon's, I agree that education is important but you may want to be careful not to sound like you're doing the "white man's burden" thing. You spoke a bit patronizingly about lifting people out of the ignorance of their families, I know what you meant and I do think that ignorance is a problem, but when people are ignorant of evolution's intricacies it doesn't make them kill folk or what have you. Sure a lack of education tends to lead to more of that misunderstanding and lack of tollerance stuff, but evolutionary knowledge in eight year olds isn't going to change any of that.

I'd also like to say that someone not believing in gravity and jumping off of a building is different than someone not believing in evolution and ... ... whatever Magon's thinks the intelligent design believer will do.



"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Wednesday, September 7, 2011 6:46 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

Originally posted by RionaEire:
Well teaching evolution is compulsery in my state from middle school on up, so from 11 upwards. I see no reason to teach it earlier because:
1. Kids all hear about it anyways from nature books and documentaries, so it isn't a foreign concept when they hit middle school.
2. Teachers already struggle to cover everything that is already in the manditory corriculum for elementary school kids, adding something else will just be more difficult.
3. It doesn't really seem necessary to me, yes its the currently popular and favored hypothesis about where life came from, but it isn't the only hypothesis. They can wait until middle school in my opinion.

That Dawkins charactor sounds like a terrible bore. And if he isn't careful he'll sound just as weird about fantasy stuff as those on the total other extreme of the spectrum, the content of his feelings will be different but it will still leave the folk in the middle shaking our heads.

I think everyone enjoys dinosaurs and other creatures we don't have anymore, they're interesting and an interest in them doesn't necessarily indicate a belief in evolution. I love those shows like Walking with Dinosaurs, where they use the fossils to generate computer models of what the dinosaurs and other creatures looked like and they have them digitally running around and eating each other, those shows are fun to watch because I like seeing something old that we don't have anymore, its interesting.

A DT a chara,
I'm going to say this, I don't think you would really like living in a society that is run like squirrel society is. Baby squirrels who are born different don't make it to adulthood, nonhuman creatures don't keep their disabled around, they leave them to die, or they die on their own. Because they don't raise genetically disadvantaged offspring and don't want them one could say that squirrels are totally okay with eugenics, their behavior smacks of it. And I know how vehement your feelings are on that particular matter.

Magon's, I agree that education is important but you may want to be careful not to sound like you're doing the "white man's burden" thing. You spoke a bit patronizingly about lifting people out of the ignorance of their families, I know what you meant and I do think that ignorance is a problem, but when people are ignorant of evolution's intricacies it doesn't make them kill folk or what have you. Sure a lack of education tends to lead to more of that misunderstanding and lack of tollerance stuff, but evolutionary knowledge in eight year olds isn't going to change any of that.

I'd also like to say that someone not believing in gravity and jumping off of a building is different than someone not believing in evolution and ... ... whatever Magon's thinks the intelligent design believer will do.



"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya



Hello,

This is a rather logical and reasonable analysis of things.

--Anthony


_______________________________________________

“If you are not free to choose wrongly and irresponsibly, you are not free at all”

Jacob Hornberger

“Freedom is not worth having if it does not connote freedom to err. It passes my comprehension how human beings, be they ever so experienced and able, can delight in depriving other human beings of that precious right.”

Mahatma Gandhi

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Wednesday, September 7, 2011 8:30 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


A Anthony a chara,
Thanks.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Wednesday, September 7, 2011 8:42 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by RionaEire:


Magon's, I agree that education is important but you may want to be careful not to sound like you're doing the "white man's burden" thing. You spoke a bit patronizingly about lifting people out of the ignorance of their families, I know what you meant and I do think that ignorance is a problem, but when people are ignorant of evolution's intricacies it doesn't make them kill folk or what have you. Sure a lack of education tends to lead to more of that misunderstanding and lack of tollerance stuff, but evolutionary knowledge in eight year olds isn't going to change any of that.


I'm not sure what you mean about white man's burden, you'll have to explain how that relates to what I said about education. I thought I had talked about the opportunities that it gave people that they may not otherwise have. That was my family's experience.

Quote:

I'd also like to say that someone not believing in gravity and jumping off of a building is different than someone not believing in evolution and ... ... whatever Magon's thinks the intelligent design believer will do.



I think it is a good parallel example. You either believe in scientific evidence or you believe in something else. People who believe in creationism - and I mean literal creationism, not necessarily ID) ignore scientific evidence in favour of faith based belief. It really is that simple.

Dawkins does come across as bit of a bore, which is a shame because much of what he says is intelligent and interesting.

Personally, I'd rather this fellow delivers the message. Much prettier too.



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Thursday, September 8, 2011 5:20 AM

BYTEMITE


At least we all seem to be in the "Lighten Up Already Dawkins" crowd. The guy DOES come on a little strong, and for someone who thinks individual selection is the strongest factor in evolution, he's sure concerned about the group behaviours going on here. According to him, logical traits that lead to atheism should lead to competitive superiority, so what's he so worried about?

He strikes me as a hypocrite and a blow hard, propagator of the myth that altruism is a disadvantage, and the only credit I give him is for developing the meme concept. He is religiously atheist, and gives the rest of us a bad name.

Sorry, I did try to keep my personal dislike of the guy and his theories out of this conversation. Calling him a "bore" was just my cue. :)

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Thursday, September 8, 2011 10:52 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
propagator of the myth that altruism is a disadvantage...


And this alone is plenty enough that I consider him an asshole, not to mention factually incorrect regarding that specific concept.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Thursday, September 8, 2011 11:25 AM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Hi Magon's, all I meant was that I got this feeling from your post of "We need to teach evolution in primary school because we need to pull people up out of the ignorance of their families" That's not exactly what you said, but that's the feeling I got from it. Now granted I'm coming at it from a different angle than you so we see it differently, that's just the feeling I got from that basic content. I totally agree that school is to teach people so they can grow up and know stuff, pursue their dreams, discover, seek knowledge and learn more than their parents learnt. So we obviously both think school is very important. I'm definitely not one of the "who needs public school" crowd as I've made clear before, I think school is quite necessary for our society.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Thursday, September 8, 2011 12:11 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Riona, I understand what you're saying, and given you don't believe in evolution, I think I understand somewhat how you feel. But there IS a certain difficulty in a child getting one view from their parents and nothing else. I never forgot the line in Parenthood where Keanu Reeves said something to the effect of "You have to get a license to drive a car or own a dog, but any butt-reamin' asshole can have a kid". Far too few parents pay enough attention to their children (especially in this day and age of two working parents or only one parent), and often just pass on their own concepts as fact. It's sad that, from what I hear and read in newspapers, etc., our country has come to a place where so many parents have become almost (if not totally) UNinvolved in their kids' learning; it seems to me that of those who DO help kids learn, at least half of them are pushing an aenda. Sure, kids can hear otherwise from their peers and when they grow up, but parents have an awfully strong effect on their kids, so I'm in favor of some kind of mitigating source.

These youngsters will be running the country when they grow up, and making important decisions that might affect everyone; I hate the indoctrination in schools, but in my opinion there is more good in them than bad, and I think science should be left as science.


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off



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Thursday, September 8, 2011 12:51 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


I think school indoctrinates kids nearly as much as parents do to be perfectly honest. Schools are not neutral. I wish parents would get more involved in teaching their kids stuff, as I've been noticing it parents lay off teaching the kids anything now adays because they figure the kids will just learn it in school. But there are things, like morality and good judgement and choice making, that school doesn't teach and maybe school isn't supposed to teach those things. But kids don't learn it now adays because parents are lazy buggers. I know that's a different topic on some level, but you're saying that children are learning stuff from home that you feel needs counteracted at school, and I'm saying that a lot of kids now adays aren't learning much of anything at home, so school is the only info they're getting. I see this as related though you may not quite understand why/how.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Thursday, September 8, 2011 4:48 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Then it's up to *US*, collectively as people, to fill the gap, Riona.

Which some of us do, heaven knows all the local munchkins bring me the hard questions they don't trust anyone else with, it seems.

But yeah, decent parenting is the first step, and us, all of us, are the second, so we ought not fail as well.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Thursday, September 8, 2011 6:54 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by RionaEire:
Hi Magon's, all I meant was that I got this feeling from your post of "We need to teach evolution in primary school because we need to pull people up out of the ignorance of their families" That's not exactly what you said, but that's the feeling I got from it. Now granted I'm coming at it from a different angle than you so we see it differently, that's just the feeling I got from that basic content. I totally agree that school is to teach people so they can grow up and know stuff, pursue their dreams, discover, seek knowledge and learn more than their parents learnt. So we obviously both think school is very important. I'm definitely not one of the "who needs public school" crowd as I've made clear before, I think school is quite necessary for our society.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya



I'm sorry if I came off that way. That's not really how I feel. I think evolution should be taught because it is important and interesting and generally kids seem to love the learning about the stars and the solar system and the universe and long extinct animals and proto humans.

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