.
This spring sees a new assault of hate mail, innuendo, detraction and calumny against the yet-unreleased movie "The Principle" as well as its producers, Rick DeLano and Robert Sungenis. The enemies of this film are going public with criticisms of it without having seen the movie they're criticizing, and without having met the persons they calumniate.
This OP references THIS thread in General Discussion.
Posting any of this info on the other thread(s) on CI that deal with the movie would only serve to undermine any intelligent discussion of the film, but it seemed to me that it's rather likely that these blogs and discussion boards are going to wipe out this content before long because it is overtly self-incriminating. I have seen the movie and they have not, so I can say with confidence that these web pages are laughable for their ignorance and pride.
Obviously, not everyone who is quoted here in this OP is an Enemy, however, a lot of them are, and the source site, npr, is hostile to the producers, as you might well imagine, since National Public Radio is a bunch of card-carrying libs who know which side their bread is buttered on. It's bread is buttered on the side of the twin A's of Atheism and Antichrist.
Therefore, perhaps keeping commentary and updates on the ridiculous heckling from mind-numbed minions of the Enemies here on this thread, will help to distinguish this insanity from "the meat of the issue," which is after all, the truth. Because the truth is always the meat of the issue, whatever the issue is.
Here is a typical example, linked in
Magisterial Fundies (--I went ahead and patched in some of the links inside various comments below the article -- Notice how there are very few links, and most of them were at the beginning of these comments (bottom) and the more recent ones (top) are off-topic, nonsensical, and lacking any references. More on this in the next post--) via this post :
MattMay 6, 2014 at 2:20 PM
Oh really? Both Mulgrew and Krauss have called you out:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2014/04/08/300609595/why-physicists-are-in-a-film-promoting-an-earth-centered-universe
Reply
Source -- npr . . The Two-Way . . breaking news from NPR -- america
Why Physicists Are In A Film Promoting An Earth-Centered Universeby
SCOTT NEUMANNApril 08, 2014 4:17 PM ET
It has the look and feel of a fast-paced and riveting science docuмentary.
The trailer opens with actress (who starred as Capt. Janeway in Star Trek: Voyager) intoning, "Everything we think we know about our universe is wrong." That's followed by heavyweight clips of physicists and .
Kaku tells us, "There is a crisis in cosmology," and Krauss says, "All of these things are rather strange, and we don't know why they are occurring right now."
And then, about 1:17 into the trailer, comes the bombshell: The film's maker, Robert Sungenis, tells us, "You can go on some websites of NASA and see that they've started to take down stuff that might hint to a geocentric [Earth-centered] universe."
The film, which the trailer promises will be out sometime this spring, is called . Besides promoting the filmmaker's geocentric point of view, it seems to be aimed at making a broader point about man's special place in a divinely created universe.
(Sungenis, who writes the blog , also has a history of anti-Semitic writings and h0Ɩ0cαųst denial, according to the .)
None of this sits well with Krauss, who is well-known for his writings and lectures. He tweeted early Tuesday: "For all who asked: Some clips of me apparently were mined for movie on geocentricism. So stupid does disservice to word nonsense. Ignore it."
In a post later in blog, titled "I Have No Idea How I Ended Up In That Stupid Geocentrism Docuмentary," the physicist elaborates:
"The notion that anyone in the 21st century could take seriously the notion that the sun orbits the Earth, or that the Earth is the center of the universe, is almost unbelievable. I say almost, because one of the trials and tribulations of being a scientist with some element of popular celebrity is that I get bombarded regularly by all sorts of claims, and have become painfully aware that ideas as old as the notion that the Earth is flat never seem to die out completely."
Kaku, who is a perennial in science docuмentaries, has not commented.
And, as for actress Mulgrew, , also writing for Slate, wonders aloud:
"About the trailer, yes, it's narrated by Kate Mulgrew, aka Captain Janeway from Star Trek: Voyager. Some people are lamenting this, wondering if she's a geocentrist. I doubt it, and you can't necessarily judge an actor for the work they do. Mitch Pileggi (from The X-Files) narrated an episode of debunking the Apollo Moon hoax, yet he also narrated So you can't jump to any conclusions here."
But, really, an Earth-centered universe?
If you thought , 15th century mathematician and (a century later) put an end to all that, you'd be wrong. Still, it's hard to tell just how many people we're talking about.
What we do know is that when asked whether the Earth revolves around the Sun or the other way around, in a recent survey compiled by the National Science Foundation.
Update at 5:50 p.m. ET: Mulgrew: 'I Am Not A Geocentrist'
Actress Mulgrew writes on her Tuesday afternoon:
"I understand there has been some controversy about my participation in a docuмentary called THE PRINCIPLE. Let me assure everyone that I completely agree with the eminent physicist Lawrence Krauss, who was himself misrepresented in the film, and who has written a succinct rebuttal in SLATE. I am not a geocentrist, nor am I in any way a proponent of geocentrism. More importantly, I do not subscribe to anything Robert Sungenis has written regarding science and history and, had I known of his involvement, would most certainly have avoided this docuмentary. I was a voice for hire, and a misinformed one, at that. I apologize for any confusion that my voice on this trailer may have caused. Kate Mulgrew"
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April 8, 2014 April 8, 2014
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Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
Good grief. Next thing you know someone will build a Noah's Ark theme park.
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Roger Perrone Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
You can already buy a plastic "scale model" of the Ark at Hobby Lobby. And, no, I'm not kidding.
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David L Roger Perrone • a month ago
Mass manufactured by genuine child labor, courtesy of China, the place where abortions are mandatory after the first kid... Good going Hobby Lobby: you're funding the abortions you claim to abhor.
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ColtKale David L • a month ago
Ah but they profit off those so it's okay. Letting their employees make their own sɛҳuąƖ decisions doesn't help their bottom line.
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David L ColtKale • a month ago
I... agree(?!) Just when I thought I understood the world I live in, you go and say something that makes sense to me...
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PBSisBest Org David L • a month ago
Wrong room
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texascy David L • a month ago
And you know for a fact that the toys are made there? Or are you just making up unproven practices for a company you disagree with?
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Robert Little texascy • a month ago
The Noah's Ark kit is distributed by Minicraft Models, and the bulk of their kits are manufactured in either South Korea or China. This is the kit that Hobby Lobby carries. Not all of Hobby Lobby's items are manufactured abroad, however. Just an FYI from someone who used to be in the business.
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thomas adams texascy • a month ago
Oh please. I quit going to HL a long time ago but I can assure you 99% of the junk there there comes from China and you know it.
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David L texascy • a month ago
Have you been to Hobby Lobby? They don't sell toys, first of all. And second of all, they sell "God loves the USA" signs with shiny gold "Made In China" stickers on them. Go see for yourself, it is no secret.
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James C David L • a month ago
Sadly your comment David holds true for about 90% of all the magnets, key chains, T-Shirts, junk that is sold in EVERY National Park store across America. Ninety Percent is sadly probably very low. Check it out at any national park. Doesn't make sense to me. As for a Geocentric Earth, leave it to the "True Believers" to push this craziness.
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Art Aficionado David L • a month ago
If you require contraception from your employer work elsewhere.
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cittadina Art Aficionado • a month ago
Do you mean to say avoid employers who hold your healthcare hostage (and contraception is healthcare)? Wouldn't it be better if corporations didn't meddle in our basic human rights? How about an employer that wouldn't sell sugar-drink products because they think obesity is a sin?
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Ryan Karl cittadina • a month ago
Oh you must mean federal governments who force their citizens to have a specific healthcare plan regardless of age or sex? Works really well when a single man with no kids is forced to pay for maternity care, contraception, mammograms etc. That's the biggest intrusion on one's healthcare decisions here so your point is moot and baseless.
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cittadina Ryan Karl • a month ago
Oh, so you'd rather pay for prisons, exorbitant taxes to support emergency room care, instead of preventative care, and and and? Think ahead, friend, think ahead and be a citizen
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skyarizonadreamer Art Aficionado • a month ago
If employers are allowed to not pay for certain medical services, most employers will cut as much as they can to cut costs and boost profits. So no matter where people work, they will not be able to get a full range of medical insurance... By extension, the only viable solution is to have everybody sign up for Obamacare. That way all people can get complete medical coverage and businesses can cut costs and boost profits.
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David L Art Aficionado • a month ago
That is an over simplification. We function in a society that has used employer-supplied healthcare for decades and to separate contraception from healthcare ignores the fact that some women require "the pill" for hormonal regulation that is unrelated to the desire to have children (or not). The situation is just too slippery a slope to be a one-liner.
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Bruce Higgins Art Aficionado • a month ago
For me, this means "shop elsewhere." And I do.
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Hector Cepeda Roger Perrone • a month ago
Would those share shelf space with movie-monster characters and fantasy figures?
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Kayt Rivermoon Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
Hasn't someone done this already ? There's already a Christian theme park--Around Branson MO I think...Makes me think aobut praying...for a moment of SCIENCE.....
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c g Kayt Rivermoon • a month ago
"that's the joke" - Ranier Wolfcastle
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PiersCarrigan Kayt Rivermoon • a month ago
...Whoosh.
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dan mcferr Kayt Rivermoon • a month ago
Nope. I'm pretty sure that,s Ken Hamm and his nonsense land, but if there is a new one I don't know it will only convince me that the the enlightenment is OVER
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mjafla Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
There is a taxpayer funded one going up in Kentucky as I type for about $73 million. ..As part of the creation museum.
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Truth Seeker Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
Where they can show the movie in 3D!
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Jeffrey Kelley Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
Numerous ancient civilizations, and scientific investigations tell of a great flood, which occurred around the time described in the Bible. They are all quite similar and involve some sort of water vessel with human and animal inhabitants. One must be close-minded to not consider events that are still beyond our comprehension or current understanding. Science has stagnated for centuries due to the brutal efforts of pessimistic naysayers.
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Sick of the BS • a month ago
My 17 year-old daughter believes she is the center of the universe, or at least that's how she often acts. However, I am pretty sure if asked, she would know the earth revolves around the sun.
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notsofast Sick of the BS • a month ago
Yes, most teenagers -- and,unfortunately, many adults as well -- suffer from this delusion.
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Matt Lynch Sick of the BS • a month ago
well, in a relative sense, isn't everyone the center of their own universe?
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Rosa Eveningstar Sick of the BS • a month ago
Comment of the week. And it's only Wednesday.
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Charles Gato • a month ago
"You can go on some websites of NASA and see that they've started to take down stuff that might hint to a geocentric [Earth-centered] universe."
So not seeing something when you visit a website indicates that it used to be there. That would explain the missing cat videos on the IRS.gov site.
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Craig Rheinheimer Charles Gato • a month ago
You must be new to the conspiracy theorists' definition of evidence. The absence of evidence is just proof you're hiding something.
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FLCPA Charles Gato • a month ago
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
Heres the star trek video that they pulled from the irs site
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ColtKale FLCPA • a month ago
Sounds exactly like what I would expect from the IRS.
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FLCPA ColtKale • a month ago
They spent something like 100k on its production. Government waste at its finest.
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Guy Western Charles Gato • a month ago
I KNEW it! Just try applying for 501(c)(4) status for a non-profit PAC that lobbies for stray cats! Uh-huh, red-tape runaround all the way.
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Kelly Cox • a month ago
What a hoot! I actually ran into a geocentrist regularly in one of the old Yahoo chat rooms. For all I know, it was the guy who made this movie. I would bring up Foucalt's pendulum, and he would say that they snuck a little motor into the pendulum that made it rotate. The only thing that made him pause was geostationary orbiting satellites. He would admit that they couldn't stay up if the Earth was stationary, then the next day he would be back to saying "The Earth doesn't rotate, because I can't feel myself moving!" Pretty funny but also rather sad.
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Andrew Magallanes Kelly Cox • a month ago
It's really hard to reason with people with small minds.
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p w Andrew Magallanes • a month ago
Your use of the word "small" is remarkably charitable, I think: I would have chosen something more along the lines of "no" or "nonexistent."
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Andrew Magallanes p w • a month ago
Haha. If they can function properly then I have to assume there is at least a little mind. I just wish the little minds wouldn't be so loud about their nonsense.
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Rob Ware p w • a month ago
As Krauss himself said, "Whole universes can come from nothing. It turns out that nothing is almost everything."
Never underestimate the power of nothing.
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ColtKale Kelly Cox • a month ago
The earth rotates around its center - the center of the universe, obviously!
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Lurk Skywalker • a month ago
Oh great, I hope none of those geocentrists are Texans, or else it will probably turn up in my kids' science textbooks as a valid scientific theory, alongside intelligent design!
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Truth Seeker Lurk Skywalker • a month ago
Well, you could always move to at least a 19th century state!!!
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Kayt Rivermoon Truth Seeker • a month ago
Been there. Done that. It was called, Arizona, during Ev Mecham's reign as Governor !
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Matt Lynch Kayt Rivermoon • a month ago
Arizona does not count as a 19th century state.
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Drake Bradley Matt Lynch • a month ago
S/he said that it was, during Ev Mecham's governorship, not that it currently is. I mean, we've advanced pretty far, as a state! Not a whole lot of air conditioning back in the 19th century, I would imagine. Progress and whatnot.
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Running Dog • a month ago
The comment mined from Lawrence Krauss was quite interesting. "We don't understand nothing." I thought he had mistakenly used a double negative. He then went on to state, "Whole universes can come from nothing."
"It turns out that nothing is almost everything."
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MrDeadly Running Dog • a month ago
And Nothing is precisely what this film seems to be worth.
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Dave Leppo Running Dog • a month ago
Jerry Seinfeld had a show about Nothing!
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Deb Dedon Running Dog • a month ago
And if nothing is almost everything, then there is no such thing as 'nothing'. One more construct in need of retooling.
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Gary Way Running Dog • a month ago
Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. Only mass can't. That's why the universe is larger than we can measure it and why there is no center.
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Ray Roth Running Dog • a month ago
WOW! That's a real s-t-r-e-t-c-h!
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Running Dog Ray Roth • a month ago
Sometimes nothing can be a real cool hand.
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Truth Seeker • a month ago
Next thing you know, someone will make a "bio-pic" about a guy named Noah and all his animals!
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cubistguy • a month ago
Our little Robert Sungenis is simply an opportunist. He knows the time is ripe for producing a film about an Earth-centered Universe. He'll make his money back by pandering to the those who are wired to believe anything (dis)organized religion tells them.
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TheUnPossible • a month ago
But Earth is the center of the universe. As is Mars, Proxima Centuri, Andromeda and everywhere else in the universe. So I guess, in that respect, geo-centerism is correct.
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Luc S TheUnPossible • a month ago
Actually, for clarity, I am the center of the universe. Everything else is questionable as to it's existence, and clearly exists on the periphery.
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Bill G. Luc S • a month ago
Actually, I am the center of the universe. Further, you are all figments of my imagination (yeah, I did dream up Art Aficianado and colt call, sorry...) who will go "poof" when my universe ends.
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TheUnPossible Bill G. • a month ago
So, you're the lathe of Heaven?
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General Specific Bill G. • a month ago
It's okay, you needed an Abbott to your Costello.
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Matt Lynch Bill G. • a month ago
please un-imagine them. Your universe would be much happier without them.
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Johnny Zhang Bill G. • a month ago
I think you're describing solipsism
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TheUnPossible Luc S • a month ago
Sorry, but my daughter is. Just ask her.
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Gaius Marcius Coriolanus Luc S • a month ago
Colt Call is but a tumor in your mind.
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Luc S Gaius Marcius Coriolanus • a month ago
Wrong end.
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Gaius Marcius Coriolanus Luc S • a month ago
Hahaha. Also Discourse tells me the title of this article is "sdfdfsdf"
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Luc S Gaius Marcius Coriolanus • a month ago
Yeah it does come up with some weird ones.
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Running Dog Luc S • a month ago
No, I am!
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Matt Lynch Luc S • a month ago
thank you for the bjerkely shout out
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Ryan Frazier • a month ago
I hope she got paid a lot, because I don't see Mulgrew being invited to to many more sci-fi conventions now that she's anti-science.
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Guest Ryan Frazier • a month ago
On her social media profile it has an apology stating she disagrees with the message of the movie and the director's views and that she didn't know that her voice over was going to be used in such a movie. Let's give her the benefit of the doubt. It wasn't that long ago some other person was acted for "movie" and later found out it was used in an anti-muslim film. Con artists seem to be trying to trick reputable folks into acting for films they misrepresent to the actor.
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Truth Seeker Guest • a month ago
That person won a copyright infringement suit which prevents the movie from being shown. It was basically considered as being a fraud perpetrated on the actress.
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Nicholas 123 Guest • a month ago
But she still read the nonsense script. You can do nutjob narrations stuff (as NPR pointed out with Peleggi) as an actor, but then don't squawk when people call you an ignorant hack because you did it for a check. Getting paid is no defense for promoting ignorance.
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TheUnPossible Ryan Frazier • a month ago
She's already issues a statement that references Kraus' statement and somewhat mirrors it. The was unaware of who was behind the docuмentary and what was contained in it. Captain Janeway's gotta eat.
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Truth Seeker TheUnPossible • a month ago
She and others might be able to sue.
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TheUnPossible Truth Seeker • a month ago
They might have a case, but they are aware of the "Streisand Effect" and don't wish to give this charlatan any more publicity than they have to.
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The Original DB • a month ago
I cannot believe that Michio Kaku or Lawrence Krauss would knowingly associate themselves with such a ludicrous anti-science movie venture. Without question, there will be at least one lawsuit filed to prevent that movie from ever being shown.
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Truth Seeker The Original DB • a month ago
Yeah, there's now one good legal ruling about such "bait and switch" movie making.
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Melissa Jansen • a month ago
I would like to say that as a Christian, I believe that God created the universe. AND, as someone who believes in science, the universe is not geocentric. Please, please no one mistake the guy who made this video as the Spokesperson of All Religious People (not that anyone has yet, but I just know someone will). *shudder*
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Truth Seeker Melissa Jansen • a month ago
Religion and science are simply not compatible. One does not require evidence and proof, the other does. One can make testable predictions, the other can't. One can tolerate ideas and theories that can be falsified, the other can't!
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Melissa Jansen Truth Seeker • a month ago
The two pursuits are not identical, and not meant to be interchangeable. But they have this in common: they're both about looking for truth. As your name implies, that is something you value. I have always loved science, ever since I was a little girl, because it helps me understand the world around me. I love God because he helps me grow as a person. The two are not the same, but they're complementary; religion helps me cope with the realities of the physical universe, and science helps me appreciate the majesty and genius of the Maker.
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Matt Lynch Melissa Jansen • a month ago
As long as you don't refuse to believe in the Big Bang or Evolution, that is a perfectly reasonable view to have, IMO Truth is just being militant.
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Melissa Jansen Matt Lynch • a month ago
Well, that's good. I was hoping to get your permission. What a relief.
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The_Truth_Seeker Matt Lynch • a month ago
Oh, I'll definitely refuse to believe any of those things, if the evidence doesn't support those concepts and even more evidence can't be produced over time and/or the "evidence" is not consistent, or becomes contradictory. Hell, yes I will refuse to believe it then!
You just don't get it do you? You just don't understand how this whole science thing works, do you? The way the Romans thought 2000 years ago (and their standard of evidence), is still just fine by you, right? Glad some us have evolved since then at least.
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Matt Lynch The_Truth_Seeker • a month ago
I'm was not talking to you. I was attempting to talk to a seemingly logical and rational person. Not a militant. Please stop talking to me. If you truly believe the evidence does not support the claims put forward regarding evolution or the big bang, we have no common basis on which to have a conversation. I don't care to change you mind.
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Truth Seeker Matt Lynch • a month ago
Religion is NOT evidence, or proof based - therefore your reply to Melissa, that you are OK with her "hybrid philosophy" of the world, is NOT enough if you claim to really abide by the scientific method of seeking the " truth" (I prefer reproducible facts). You either follow the scientific method, all the time - or you don't follow it at all! Science is NOT something that you accept "al a carte", depending on your mood, inclination, instincts, "gut feelings", "inspirations" or "visions" that you might have on any particular day (especially Sunday). Unlike science, religion "always rewards you" for holding onto whatever beliefs you may desire (regardless of how whacked out they might be - like 'Scientology").
Can't have it both ways, Matt, since that is a pure cop-out (whatever "reality" may turn out to be)! It's not enough to accept 1-2 out of 100,000+ scientific observations, conclusions and principles (like evolution and/or climate change). You have to be willing to accept most of them, until any one is overturned by "convincing new evidence". When it comes to seeking the "truth", you can't have your cake and eat it too.
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Matt Lynch Truth Seeker • a month ago
I've made my point. If you truly believe that one cannot believe in science without spending all of their time focused on it, You are making the case to fund scientific research even harder to make, because by your definition, science only helps a small group of people. The belief in scientific theories is not contradictory to the metaphysical belief in a deity. I'm done talking about this. there is now consensus to be reached here. I don't negotiate with extremists, religious or otherwise
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Truth Seeker Melissa Jansen • a month ago
What "Maker"??!!! Where did you get this "very weird" notion about some kind of imaginary human benefactor? Why is this concept necessary for anything having to do with experiencing the universe and trying to understand how it works and came about? How does this ancient concept even make any sense at all, anymore? What NEW evidence is there for anything like this even being possible? Where did this (just one) "Maker" come from? Why would there only be ONE, why not thousands of "Makers"? If you accept that "A Maker" can exist, then why is there just one? What if I "believe" there are at least 100 "Makers" ( just to pick some other completely arbitrary number), all specializing in some particular type of "Making"? Who's to say I would be wrong?
Show me how you came to this conclusion for the existence of "A Maker" (or do you just believe what others tell you?). Show me the logic, or just send me a picture of this "Maker". What, is the "Maker" camera shy, or something? I'll settle for an MP3.
Also, where was this "Maker" of yours, on 9/11, and what was this Maker so busy doing that they couldn't take time to save even one person that day? The concept of an all-powerful "Maker" that, in the end, is completely impotent to prevent really bad things from happening, is really kind of a useless concept, isn't it? Indeed, it's kind of evil isn't it? Now if I believed in a "magical Maker" (that just somehow always existed), then at least I wouldn't make endless excuses as to why bad things keep happening at completely random times and places (and to really good people). My Maker would never allow a young child, or any animal to EVER die, before their time! So, "God" is a totally archaic and very useless concept/myth that was created by people who didn't know much more than your average ant. Such a complete waste of people's time and lives!
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Melissa Jansen Truth Seeker • a month ago
Clearly this is not a matter of evidence to you. You hate religion, and have taken refuge in science and logic. You have had negative experiences regarding religion, and now you want to destroy it for everyone else. Who are you to judge that my faith is a waste? Rage at people about their beliefs all you want- trying to take away the meaning people ascribe to their lives won't add any to yours.
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Matt Lynch Truth Seeker • a month ago
Of course they're compatible! I'm agnostic, but science does NOT preclude the existence of god. Science makes no metaphysical claims, and religion should make no physical ones. They don't even touch the same realm. Of course they're compatible.
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Truth Seeker Matt Lynch • a month ago
Makes NO sense at all! Science absolutely precludes the "acceptance" of anything which cannot be backed up with evidence. Science doesn't preclude "imagining things", but it does preclude equating imagined things and speculations, which can never be proven, with things which can be proven, explained, or at the very least observed. What? Are you expecting this - forever mysterious - forever unknowable - infinitely powerful and all-knowing "entity" (who's origin, composition, behavior and means of existing and functioning can never be known) to show up some time in the near future? Of what possible USE is this "very weird concept", anyway? Can your belief (or that of others) predict anything at all? Anything?
What a cop-out, Matt! Call me when your (or someone else's) "God" shows up, OK? Would love to be proven wrong (about no such "magical entity" existing). It would be the greatest day of my life (even better than meeting Santa Claus again)!
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Matt Lynch Truth Seeker • a month ago
dude, did you read my post at all? I'm agnostic, I don't believe in making metaphysical claims, but my point is that that is a philosophical choice. There is not a single tennet of science that precludes the existence of God. Science shows us what is out there and how it interacts, but not how it came to be. There is a veil of ignorance into the metaphysical nature of the universe, and those who claim they know what is on the other side make no sense to me. You seem to know that there is no being, and that's great for you, but you can't know any more than a religious person can't know their god exists. That being said, I won't tell them (or you) they're wrong, because I don't know. I wasn't there when the universe was created, so I can't say it wasn't a God or was one. A metaphysical claim doesn't need to make predictions to be true or false.
Example: I made the choice to get up and go to work today. Once I got to work, I trusted in the determinant nature of natural laws to create a medical device that will reliably work in every situation without magically breaking and killing someone. I trust that those laws remain constant. Many people use this argument to claim that the universe is deterministic. The thing is I made a choice to get up, I had the option to stay in bed (yes I know of the paradox of the illusion of choice, let me finish) There are plenty of instances in which the science you know and love points to a non-deterministic universe. The deeper we delve into quantum mechanics, the more the micro universe seems random. The fact of the matter is that we have lots of scientific observations, and some people will look at that and say the universe must be deterministic, but others will look at the same evidence and say that it is not. The fact is, they are both metaphysical claims, and neither can be proven either true or false. The same goes with the creation of the universe. The observations we have made so far in no way preclude the existence of an external being.
I am not arguing that God exists. I'm arguing that you have no idea whether he does and that scientific theory does not inherently make claims on the metaphysical. You attach that meaning to it because you have FAITH that the lack of observation means it doesn't exist.
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Truth Seeker Melissa Jansen • a month ago
You need to listen (or read) this then:
http://www.npr.org/2014/04/07/... 3
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Matt Lynch Truth Seeker • a month ago
That in no way disproves the existance of God. Please stop making us non-believers look bad.
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Truth Seeker Matt Lynch • a month ago
It completely explains how this "myth" came about - so, yes, it does prove that Jesus was NOT "God", or born of a god. He was born from a Jєωιѕн woman, who got pregnant in the traditional way, just like the rest of us (or at least some of us). The fact that millions of people just got all confused about this, for all these years, shows that you can't believe what people made up two thousand years ago. Q.E.D.
Which reminds me - I have a nice bridge for sale - and it's cheap too!
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Matt Lynch Truth Seeker • a month ago
Start an argument with The_Truth_Seeker if you want to fight with someone. That's the kind of religious blindness you should be militant against.
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dan mcferr Melissa Jansen • a month ago
Thank you for your input. My impression is that most Christians have similar views. It's been the loud mouth bigots, political grifters and such ilk that cause so much trouble
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Matt Lynch Melissa Jansen • a month ago
The Catholic church has even taken to accepting scientific theorys as the answer to how God created the universe. Religion and science can work together, because science makes no inherent metaphysical claim, and no religion *should* make a physical one.
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Mark Novak • a month ago
Good reason to ban all homeschooling. It is only with home schooling that this form of ignorance can persist.
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Tiny Hands • a month ago
May I just say, the API-mined title for this story, as displayed in the Disqus app, perfectly describes its subject:
"sdfsfsf"
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thomas adams • a month ago
I had the hots for Kate Mulgrew when she played Capt. Janeway; a smart, strong woman. Now she plays a geocentric moron. What a big turnoff!
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Don McLeod thomas adams • a month ago
She's still a goddess.
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dave frasier • a month ago
The socially accepted insanity of religion has too long influenced humanity.
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K P • a month ago
Wow, what a load of crap that trailer is. The one guy toward then end claims we are the only life in the universe; quite a claim! More creationist garbage, poorly cloaked in scientific language. At the risk of making the loony creator lots of money, we should all see this, as a reminder of why we all must oppose this type of stultifying nonsense at every turn.
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Andrew Magallanes K P • a month ago
So true. I am often asked why I am so vocal about my opposition to religion. Stuff like this is why.
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mjafla K P • a month ago
Just stream it for free on the net and he not make a nickel. I personally don't have that much time to waste.
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James Crissman • a month ago
Not only does the sun revolve around the earth, the earth revolves around Mr. Sungenis, and he revolves around his solid excretory pore.
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Rosa Eveningstar • a month ago
"So stupid does disservice to the word nonsense. Ignore it."
That's all the review I need. Thank you, Michio Kaku.
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Chenda Duong • a month ago
Arrgg. This is just like when Animal Planet decided to show that stupid fake docuмentary on mermaids. As a teacher, this kind of thing makes me so angry. It's already hard enough to get my students to understand what logic and the scientific method is and how it works...But to have films like this that are purposely made to be glossy and seem real in the hopes that it will fool people who aren't able to see the film for the propaganda that it is...these filmakers should be ashamed. Completely reprehensible.
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rlj1 Chenda Duong • a month ago
Use this film to teach the difference between the scientific method and pseudo scientific method and point out to them how a small false premise or illogical step can be manipulated to lead to way off conclusions - it'll give your students the skills to differentiate between these that so many adults don't seem to have.
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anonemoose • a month ago
I don't want to live on this planet anymore
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Stephen Mooney • a month ago
Film production: so simple a geocentrist can do it!
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Andrew Magallanes • a month ago
Yet another attack on science, logic and reason by the religious loons. I wish they would go hide under a rock and stay there and let the rest of us progress without their hindering ways.
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Truth Seeker Andrew Magallanes • a month ago
A few of those "rocks" are called Kentucky, Tennessee and Texas.
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Truth Seeker • a month ago
This is a work of satire and comic genius, right? Was it written by Mel Brooks? Will it also feature Piccard and other Star Trek characters? This should get an Academy Award nomination (for best and most creative screenplay) in 2015.
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skyarizonadreamer • a month ago
It is a free country. So, people can believe what they want...However, from a public policy standpoint, the really sad thing about all of this is that these earth-centered-universe people consistently vote for dogma-based public policy, which hinders the ability of our nation to quickly and effectively adapt to changing social, political and environmental conditions.
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Ray Roth • a month ago
When the idiot invasion occurred, apparently it affected the U.S. Midwest and South disproportionately. Funny how people with a limited education think they know everything. They actually love broadcasting their ignorance.
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Mungo Munro • a month ago
My God! It's full of knuckle heads.
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Hector Cepeda Mungo Munro • a month ago
So many people. Too few monoliths to benefit from.
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Curious Fella • a month ago
Some religious people feel genuinely threatened by science, reason, and questioning authority.
Truly religious people can not win an honest debate on cosmology. By definition.
So they often employ sleazy tactics to promote their agendas.
And sleazy tactics often succeed where reason fails.
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John Stuckey • a month ago
First Creationism and now this? Will the TeaPubs require the public schools to teach this too?
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Leaf Derekson • a month ago
Further more... The Earth is flat. This can be proven by holding a coin up in front of a light. Observe, the coin casts a round shadow, just as the Earth casts a round shadow on the Moon. Its A Fact!
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Tiny Hands Leaf Derekson • a month ago
Also, bananas are the perfect fruit! Look at how it fits our hands, and how easy it is to peel it open. And have you ever dropped a banana? No, certainly not, thanks to its no-slip skin!
I'm not being paid to say this garbage, that's for sure!
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Leaf Derekson Tiny Hands • a month ago
Time fly's like an arrow.
Fruit fly's like a banana.
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Rosa Eveningstar • a month ago
My parents are geocentrists. Thanksgiving dinners are awkward.
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Tiny Hands Rosa Eveningstar • a month ago
Is it because of the different gravity?
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Rosa Eveningstar Tiny Hands • a month ago
No, it's because of soundbytes like this:
"They never went to the Moon! It's all a hoax! My astrologer told me so!"
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Miss Snarkypants Tiny Hands • a month ago
Don't you mean 'gravy'?
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PugFid • a month ago
"If you thought Aristarchus of Samos, 15th century mathematician Nicolaus Copernicus and (a century later)Galileo put an end to all that, you'd be wrong."
Aye, you would. The honor of putting "an end to all that" belongs to James Bradley, who in 1728 discovered stellar parallax. To seal the deal, Giovanni Guglielmini in 1791 confirmed by experiment the existence of the Coriolis effect. While time eventually proved Galileo right, it ought to be remembered that the evidence was not, during his own lifetime, in favor of his hypothesis (phases of Venus notwithstanding).
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Hector Cepeda • a month ago
This movie might be worthwhile. With any luck it'll be just as ridiculously hilarious as What The Bleep Do I Know? A classic hoot!
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Kelsey Schoenbaum • a month ago
I wish this was some kind of meta-docuмentary (a la Joaquin Phoenix) illustrating how easy it is twist facts and take things out of context in order to give faux-credibility to an absurd theory.
Sadly, unless this is a SUPER long-con, it looks like the filmmaker is serious.
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Craig Rheinheimer • a month ago
It seems the lessons of the slimy tactics employed by the makers of Expelled were forgotten too quickly.
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Mark Kropf • a month ago
I have found some center here: The Principle is the center of misrepresentation.
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Kayt Rivermoon • a month ago
and, I proclaim, officially and for the Record...You are all Wrong. CATS are the center of the Universe. Mine just told me so. Niiiice Kitty .
Neil deGrasse Tyson comes in a close second.
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novenator • a month ago
She didn't know she was promoting geocentrism when she was the freakin' narrator? Pretty lame excuse there Kate
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Bob H novenator • a month ago
Simple matter for her to return her pay and demand (backed up with a legal injunction) that they not use the trailer because of fraud.
If she is serious, she should at least be considering this course of action. I certainly would if I were in her position.
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Frank Fiamengo Bob H • a month ago
Why? Does she have an obligation to help the fools who bite at this hook? I say take the money .
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Bob H Frank Fiamengo • a month ago
Obligation to fools? Clearly no. Returning the money would give her the moral/ethical high ground and be good PR, both for her and against the clowns. It would probably also be a good place to start from if she wanted to get an injunction against using her voice.
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Truth Seeker • a month ago
If any of the people in this movie were duped into being in it and providing NEW quotes, then they can probably sue for fraudulent misrepresentation.
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Clovis Sangrail • a month ago
I'm sure that Lawrence Krauss is a crackerjack physicist, but he needs to work on his history. The idea that the earth is flat isn't old; in fact, it may never have existed. The popular error that he is groping for is the idea that people used to think that the earth is flat. It originates with Washington Irving's biography of Christopher Columbus (1828). It was published near the end of an era in which the purpose of biography was less to educate the reader about the subject's life than it was to provide an example of moral behavior. Columbus cooked the books to get funding for his voyage, shaving 8,000 miles off the circuмference of the earth and moving India 100° of longitude closer to Spain than it actually is; then he returned from his first voyage with captive Carib natives whom he sold into slavery in the mines, thus singlehandly beginning the transatlantic slave trade. Desperate to find something praiseworthy in his subject and coming up empty-handed, Irving fabricated the flat-earth story so that he could depict Columbus as a hero of science doing battle with the forces of ignorance and superstition. The list of those who taught that the earth is spherical includes Pythagoras, Aristotle, Eudoxos of Knidos, Eratosthenes, and Ptolemy. Dante Alighieri depicts the earth as a sphere in the Divine Comedy (1300 AD), and the last globe (spherical map of the earth) not showing the New World was made in Nuremberg in 1491 (the first was made in Alexandria ca. 200 BC).
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Miss Snarkypants Clovis Sangrail • a month ago
Ever hear of the Flat Earth Society?
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TheUnPossible Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
The GOP?
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Clovis Sangrail Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
Washington Irving created the flat-earth myth in 1828, and the Flat Earth Society was founded in 1956. I take issue with Krauss for referring to flatearthism as an "old idea" when it in fact is quite new when compared with, let's say, Pythagoras, who taught the sphericity of the earth 2500 years ago.
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Miss Snarkypants Clovis Sangrail • a month ago
The Flat Earth Society originated with the Bedford Level experiments in early 19th century. I think that is the greatest source of any modern misconceptions, and not Irving. Still, as to your point, not an old idea.
I give Krauss the benefit of the doubt that when he says "ideas as old as the notion that the Earth is flat", that he's referring to beliefs held prior to the Ancient Greeks.
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Clovis Sangrail Miss Snarkypants • a month ago
Modern expressions of ancient flatearthism invariably relate the misconception to conditions existing prior to Columbus, and for that, Irving is to blame. But I am gratified to see that you are capable of posting a thoughtful and fact-based comment rather than one evidencing nothing more than compulsive flippancy, like your previous effort.
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Miss Snarkypants Clovis Sangrail • a month ago
You're confusing flippancy with brevity. I was honestly puzzled that your polemic lacked any reference to Rowbotham and FES.
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Truth Seeker Clovis Sangrail • a month ago
Ever hear of the Dark Ages and the Inquisition?
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Miss Snarkypants Truth Seeker • a month ago
I didn't expect a kind of Spanish Inquisition.
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Kelly Cox Truth Seeker • a month ago
Nobody was ever sent to the Inquisition for claiming the Earth is not flat.
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Truth Seeker Kelly Cox • a month ago
They were subject to the inquisition JUST FOR THINKING!
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Kelly Cox Truth Seeker • a month ago
Then your response to Clovis had nothing at all to do with what he wrote, apparently.
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Philip Sloat • a month ago
It never ceases to amaze me how inane, misinformed and self-deluded people can make Christianity look silly and stupid. This is an extreme example of the misguided attempt to make the Bible into a scientific text book. These people are reading the Bible for all the wrong reasons. It is a book that explains what our purpose is and why God created the universe. It is not a book to read to find out the age of the universe or how the universe (or even our solar system) is aligned or arranged.
Please do not judge all of us Christians by lunatics such as Dr. Sungenis! The vast majority of Christians find no conflict between the teachings of our faith and the facts of science.
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Truth Seeker Philip Sloat • a month ago
You need to read or listen to this. It's the only way to accept the "story of religion" and also accept the scientific method. But then, you can't still believe the story as it has come down to modern society.
http://www.npr.org/2014/04/07/... 1
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Truth Seeker Philip Sloat • a month ago
Are you schizophrenic then? How can that be?
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Will Harper • a month ago
If we are the center of the universe why isn't God sitting on someone's couch eating pizza pockets? Ya think he'd be living in the low rent non center of the universe? Was He chased out when Eve went off the menu? Is that the story? No wonder women get less pay.
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dee geejay • a month ago
Well . . . technically it IS the center of the universe - but so is everywhere else if you believe cutting edge expansion theories - so . . . there's that.
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Matthew Fry • a month ago
From a certain point of view it doesn't matter, but the math of orbital mechanics is much, much easier if you pick the sun as your "fixed" reference point.
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Truth Seeker Matthew Fry • a month ago
It DOES matter if you are trying to compare magnitudes of motion, velocity and acceleration.
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General Specific Truth Seeker • a month ago
No, it doesn't since all of those are based on your frame of reference and are all relative. There is no absolute motion or velocity or acceleration.
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Truth Seeker General Specific • a month ago
You are pretty ignorant of how science works and the history of science, right? Where would Kepler have come in???
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General Specific Truth Seeker • a month ago
In reality Kepler was wrong. He was close but still wrong. Einstein may be wrong as well but it is current understanding.
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Truth Seeker General Specific • a month ago
Are we talking about the same Kepler - that mathematically described the elliptical motion of the planets ???
Compared to being completely and consistently wrong - I'd say being "close" is pretty good! And, you and others that think like you (if you can call it that) sure aren't going to be the ones to prove Einstein wrong, especially since he will ALWAYS be considered to have been AT LEAST "close", very close. You should only wish to be close when it comes to anything.
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General Specific Truth Seeker • a month ago
But still wrong.
And all motion is relative according to current understanding.