
What a blowhard, asshole. A shame, since this show had some promise.
Really, Dr. Sagan?
Aesop wrote:If you think there was no preaching going on in the original Cosmos, I would suggest your cultural radar is long overdue for overhaul.Really, Dr. Sagan?
Sounds like a lot of assumptions, which are opinions, which are informed by prejudices, which is to say they're religious statements, not scientific statements.
Science tells me that if I cool ordinary water to 32F at 1Atm it will solidify.
I can repeatedly test that hypothesis, and go 100,000,000 for 100,000,000.
Telling me how and by whom or what water came to be is philosophy, not science.
And that's just the first 2 seconds of Epsiode 01, Season 01, of the original series.
So, please, let's not get all nostalgic just because Carl Sagan is dead.
If you can bring him back and chat with him now, I daresay his statements on the topic of philosophy would have a good bit more observational data, one way or the other.
I have a brother-in-law who believes that, that the earth is 8,000 years old (or some similar number gotten from counting begats and adding up ages), that dinosaurs lived at the same time as humans, etc.Every time someone gets up there and says "I believe every word of the bible is literally true and you shouldn't be allowed to teach children otherwise" they make it worse.
I was thinking more of the rise of Fundamentalism, Pentacostalism for instance, but also among the Presbyterians (in Princeton I believe?), in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.CByrneIV wrote:To say the second great awakening was a reaction against the theory of evolution would be both inaccurate in general and oversimplified...
...for one thing, it began several decades before the publication of "on the origin of the species" (the "first great awakening" began in the 1730's, the second in the 1790s and was fever pitched by the 1840s. "On the origin of the species" wasn't published until 1859)...
HOWEVER, at least a part of the motivating force and at least a part of what brought many adherents to it... sometimes a very large part... was a reaction against the theory of evolution, yes.
It was more a reaction against deism, humanism, and secularism in general, but evolution is a good focus point for that as a whole.
MarkD wrote:I have a brother-in-law who believes that, that the earth is 8,000 years old (or some similar number gotten from counting begats and adding up ages), that dinosaurs lived at the same time as humans, etc.
Just for "kicks and giggles", ask your B-I-L if he's ever heard of Eridu Genesis, the Utnapishtim episode in the Epic of Gilgamesh, or Deucalion.James Ussher (sometimes spelled Usher, 4 January 1581 – 21 March 1656) was Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland between 1625 and 1656. He was a prolific scholar, who most famously published a chronology that purported to establish the time and date of the creation as the night preceding Sunday, 23 October 4004 BC, according to the proleptic Julian calendar.
He was into it back then. I had the book (may still be at my folks' house) and watched every episode of the original, and I remember lines like "The Earth's albedo is changing" and ominous passages about Venus and runaway greenhouse effect.MarkD wrote:I wondered about that too. Atheism. Nuclear Winter. If he were still alive he'd probably be big into climate change.
We don't have these discussions, for the sake of peace in the family.Termite wrote:MarkD wrote:I have a brother-in-law who believes that, that the earth is 8,000 years old (or some similar number gotten from counting begats and adding up ages), that dinosaurs lived at the same time as humans, etc.
Lots of Christians who hold to that timeline don't really know where the idea comes from. There were many scholars who wrote on it, but one of the most noted was James UssherJust for "kicks and giggles", ask your B-I-L if he's ever heard of Eridu Genesis, the Utnapishtim episode in the Epic of Gilgamesh, or Deucalion.James Ussher (sometimes spelled Usher, 4 January 1581 – 21 March 1656) was Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland between 1625 and 1656. He was a prolific scholar, who most famously published a chronology that purported to establish the time and date of the creation as the night preceding Sunday, 23 October 4004 BC, according to the proleptic Julian calendar.