nige1, on 2011-February-04, 10:21, said:
Any person has a right to believe in Creationism. A scientist doesn't believe in Evolution, however.
Unfortunately, a lot of *people* - note, not scientists - believe in Evolution. More particularly, they believe in Science - mostly because they don't understand what Science is. Note, I'm not suggesting anyone on this thread fits that description.
Science, and logical thought, is a very useful tool. In many circumstances, it is *the* useful tool. But it's not omnipotent, and while it tends to correctness (because it discards the incorrect, or at least caveats it (*)), it is not necessarily correct. When that knowledge does not exist, people are involved in what I call the Religion of Science, and that can be as disruptive as any other illogically-founded belief (**).
Shorter me: you can't disprove Young-Earth Creationism, short of a Time Machine (which Science is having trouble allowing, currently). It's not *likely* to be the way everything worked, but you can't prove that we're not all in an experiment, where the experimenter loaded up the Universe with everything he wanted to see us puzzle out (faking as necessary, of course - remember, Magic is indistinguishable from both Sufficiently High Technology and a Rigged Demo), and sat back to watch the results. But you don't teach that in Science any more than you teach kanji in English (except, in both cases, as an example of "A is not B").
* - we still use Newtonian Mechanics, insanely more often than Einsteinian, in calculations, for instance. It's wrong - and has been proven wrong. But the amount of wrongness is negligeable in all but very few cases, and we put up a warning that in those cases (very small objects, very small distances, or very high relative speeds), you might get results that are significantly wrong.
** - and, unlike most of what I hear here, I am not equating "illogical" with "wrong" or "bad". I happen to hold several illogical beliefs, some of which I've pointed out in this thread; some of which Science as it currently stands say is wrong to the point of impossible. That's fine. I'm still going to use Barry Crane's "find the Q" rule (or its inverse - why should I tell you guys?) if I have a straight guess, for instance - it's better for me than actually guessing.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)