User talk:Aunt Entropy/Archive 1
Welcome to WikipediaWelcome! Hello, Aunt Entropy, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful:
I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your messages on discussion pages using four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically insert your username and the date. If you need help, check out Wikipedia:Questions, ask me on my talk page, or ask your question and then place Creationist misrepresentation of Schweitzer's workSince there is dispute on the following contribution, I thought I would post a draft here and see if we can reach consensus on the appropriate language. Another piece of evidence cited by YEC advocates that points to at least an inconsistency in the dating of dinosaur of fossils is the discovery of soft tissue in Tyrannosaurus Rex fossil bones.[1] "[2] Does the qualifier "cited by YEC advocates" address your NPOV concern?--Nowa (talk) 03:27, 18 February 2008 (UTC) The tissue was not flexible until rehydrated. There is no evidence that the tissue was unfossilized, and soft tissue has been known to fossilize. Stokstad, Erik. 2005. Tyrannosaurus rex soft tissue raises tantalizing prospects. Science 307: 1852. Aunt Entropy (talk) 03:39, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
"One the one hand, the site where the bones have been found has been dated to 65 million years ago. On the other hand, there is no known mechanism for preserving soft tissue for this length of time." This is a non-sequitur. Not knowing the mechanism for preservation of soft tissue doesn't change the fact that fossilized flexible tissue has been found in specimens dating to 300,000 years, which is by a couple of orders of magnitude too old for any YEC justification. It's weaselish and makes an implication that doesn't hold up.Aunt Entropy (talk) 04:33, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
Dave, Great links. I agree that "Wikipedia isn't aiming to duplicate An Index to Creationist Claims". I would imagine, however, that some articulation of creationists claims is necessary for the YEC article to be meaningful. Which ones should be included and how should they be presented? What is the overall goal of the article?--Nowa (talk) 12:23, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
It appears to me that the issue of surpisingly well preserved tissues in mineralized bones is important to YECs. It came to my attention while watching a recent program on Discover about the possibility of "recreating" dinosaurs. I was curious to see how YECs viewed this but didn't see anything in the article about it. This seemed like an omission considering how much coverage Dr. Schweitzer's discoveries have received. Hence I did a bit of my own investigation and hoped to make a minor addition to the article. Apparently something in my wording has created a POV problem and I was hoping to understand what it was. Let me phrase my question differently. The following excerpt from the current article appears acceptable.
Do you see any difficulties with the following proposed addition to immediately follow?
--Nowa (talk) 15:29, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
thanksHello - thanks for fixing the vandalism on my user page. The vandal battle was intense today! Thanks again - cheers Geologyguy (talk) 04:01, 6 March 2008 (UTC) Not a problem. :) Aunt Entropy (talk) 05:33, 6 March 2008 (UTC) Info about an important Big Bang feature removed by Aunt EntropyThe great achievement of Big Bang cosmology has been to show that matter can be created continuously out of nothing or destroyed into nothing. It has been shown that the principle of conservation of energy can't be valid in an expanding uiverse. Something that is now taught to all general relativity students around the world. If the principle of conservation of energy were valid then the universe couldn't be expanding and yet most astronomers maintain that it does. So why are you trying to fix texts without understanding what they are about? Are you trying to promote your personal opinion about the physics? Jim (talk) 13:40, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
CreationDid you read what I wrote on the discussion page. Once you do you should realize that you are vandalizing this site. How can you possibly prove to me that creation is not a scientific theory any more than I can scientifically prove to you that evolution (or just the big bang)is. The world began at one point and nobody (no human) saw it happen, so therefore any account of the world and universe's origin is a theory. And how in the world can you tell me it is not a theory when a theory is like this website says (as I stated on the creation discussion page) an analysis of facts. Creation is certain people's analysis, and evolution is other's people analysis. You are vandalizing this site by being biased against creation. And if you agree with your own advice then you should be banned from editing. If you have not read what I wrote on the discussion page of Creation, please go read it. As a result of the fact that Creation is an analysis, not scientifically provable, yet an analysis, I will change the page back. MusicFoot822 (talk) 22:54, 1 April 2008 (UTC) Musicfoot, Adding information that is untrue, after being told it is untrue repeatedly, is vandalism. And I repeat myself by saying that "Creation" is in no way a scientific theory. A theory is not an idea, or guess, or conjecture. From the Wiki page:
... According to the National Academy of Sciences,
Now, if you can explain how "Creation", a widely-emcompassing term, is a scientific theory using reliable sources as outlined here WP:SOURCE, capable of being tested and verified, please add your findings to the Talk page. But I must tell you, "Creation" is not considered a scientific theory by the community of scientists, and according to WP:NPOV, WP:FRINGE and WP:UNDUE the definition of what constitutes science will be determined by the mainstream science community, not by fringe POV-pushers. Aunt Entropy (talk) 05:04, 2 April 2008 (UTC) YEC needs to be corrected or deletedIf you look at my other edits, you will see that I have WP's best interests at heart. YEC either needs to be self-corrected by us or deleted before there are problems. It is best to expose the problems ourselves and to fix it. Otherwise, it appears to involve malice with no mechanism for self-correction. That is how other publications have gotten in trouble. As a person that has been in litigation for a decade, believe me, we don't want to go there. It would be a shame to see WP going down over people who are basically trying to say: "Creationists are stupid" and misusing published information from icr.org and its principals, who rasie millions of dollars per year as a 501(c)3. I don't like what icr.org does either, but this is an encyclopedia. If xyz wants to say "Creationists are stupid" and our editors are not playing dual roles, that's fine to enter as an encyclopedia. However, our editors have no conflict-avoidance statement in place. Please note, I am fully disclosed as being doug@youvan.com, my actual name. WP Anonymity is transparent in a court of law of competent jurisdiction. Please also note that I am a biophysicist, yet a Calvinist, and not a lawyer.50MWdoug (talk) 06:08, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
Creation EditAunt Entropy, if you think you are right then explain to me WHY my edits are disruptive. I can clearly see that your edits that undid my edit are disruptive, and I told you why, so I request you to tell me why. Your edit denies a conclusion which cannot be disproved the right to be called a possible answer to ours and the earth's origins. Therefore you are being unequivocally biased, and therefore disruptive, vandalizing, and disobedient to the policy that you tell me I am disobeying (when I am in fact not). Your edits to the one sentence I put on the "Creation (theology)" are not neutral, and therefore not allowed to take place on this website. As I said I would like you to explain to me why my edit is wrong. If you do not I explain, I will take it that you don't have an answer. Without an answer, all you have is bias and not neutrality. MusicFoot822 (talk) 22:28, 3 April 2008 (UTC) You should consider WP:AGF regarding your attacks on me. Undoing nonfactual edits is not disruption or vandalism. Neither would undoing say, an edit to the Jesus article that added "Jesus was married and had four children." Some people may believe that is true, but it is not considered true by the relevant experts. The experts of what constitutes a scientific theory are scientists, and the scientific community does not accept "Creation" as a scientific theory. It may be something with which you don't agree, but it doesn't change reality. I've been trying to tell you this from the beginning, even showing you the theory page. You did read it, right? It clearly explains how a concept or idea becomes a theory: through the gathering of large amounts of evidence and vigorous experiment. I don't think I've left you in the dark here. Aunt Entropy (talk) 22:54, 3 April 2008 (UTC) MusicFoot822: Aunt Entropy is correct, and so is the other editor (John D. Croft on the "Creation" discussion page) who has responded to your concerns. In undoing your edits, Aunt Entropy is not being disruptive, biased, vandalizing, non-neutral, or disobedient to the policy. She is simply reverting an unsupported/unsupportable claim, and maintaining the accuracy of Wikipedia articles is a primary goal of editors. If she hadn't been around to revert it, I would have, and for the same reasons. There are several things wrong with claiming that "Creation" is a "scientific theory". Aunt Entropy and John D. Croft have already given reasons why, and directed you to links which further clarify the point, but since there still seems to be some confusion, I'd like to clarify a few key issues:
Finally, in order to be a "scientific theory", among other things an explanation needs to be specific and detailed. When you attempt to edit the introduction to the "Creation" article in order to declare "Creation", type unspecified, a "scientific theory", it doesn't even make much sense. WHICH "Creation" scenario, exactly? It's at least possible in principle for *some* specific "creation" scenario to meet all the requirements of a "scientific theory", even while the thousands of other Creation scenarios (e.g. Hindu, Greek, dozens of Native American, etc.) don't. It makes no sense to say that "Creation", period, is a "scientific theory", because there are so *many* Creation scenarios across different cultures and historical eras. In order to have any meaning at all -- in order to meet the specificity and testability requirements of being a "scientific theory" (to just name a few), it would be necessary to identify *which* Creation scenario, in detail, is being declared "scientific" among all the possibilities. Scientists would never be so sloppy as to say that "gravity" is a scientific theory, they would instead refer (albeit perhaps by implication) to a *specific* gravitational model. "Creation", as a concept, cannot possibly be a scientific theory -- it's way too broad, it covers too many contradictory viewpoints, it's far too nonspecific. --Ichneumon (talk) 03:46, 4 April 2008 (UTC) Hi. I noticed that you recently made edits concerning this category. You may wish to participate in the CfD on it on Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 April 10. HrafnTalkStalk 11:19, 10 April 2008 (UTC) You may wish to be cautious about removing this category from articles while the CfD is under consideration -- WP:CFD states: "Unless the change is non-controversial (such as vandalism or a duplicate), please do not remove the category from pages before the community has made a decision." It's a pain I know, but strict adherence to rules can often ensure that these processes go smoothly. HrafnTalkStalk 17:05, 10 April 2008 (UTC)
Sock noticeHi AE, this is just to let you know I removed the sock template from NCdave's user page per the comments, and as someone who has been following the situation. Ultimately the IP's actions are much more consistent with the user who originally put the template on NCdave's page, not with NCdave. If there are any issues feel free to let me know; Raul would have more information, but otherwise I imagine you'll see there wasn't anything to this. Thanks, Mackan79 (talk) 14:11, 14 April 2008 (UTC) 3RR and talk pagesI'd say yes, but I'd probably want to bring it up on ANI first. Shoemaker's Holiday (talk) 22:44, 24 April 2008 (UTC)
You, dear. Is all clear now, or do I need to explain? Sorry for being confusing, I did not intend to be. Its a gift, some days. KillerChihuahua?!? 22:31, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
ExpelledThe article is in Category:Documentary films. If it's in this category, we call it a documentary film. The fact that it is a disgusting, propaganda polemic does not mean that it is not a documentary. We also avoid making value judgements in the first sentence. FCYTravis (talk) 20:11, 27 April 2008 (UTC) Apologies for false inclusion in sock puppet listMy sincere apologies, Aunt Entropy, for my misguided inclusion of your username in my sock puppet list on Talk:Theistic Evolution. I misunderstood your edit of 05:45, 27 April 2008. I've removed your name from the list. I shall check more carefully in future. -- Jmc (talk) 08:18, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
Da Costa's syndromePlease do not randomly reinsert erroneous information, as you did on Da Costa's syndrome. If you have something to say, use the talk page. Guido den Broeder (talk) 13:18, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
Thanks!Hi Aunt Entropy, have we met? I think I recognize you from evo/creationism pages, but I was surprised to see a vote of confidence from someone who I can't really peg a memory to. Usually I'll get that rosy glow of affection or deep red penumbra of rage if I know a user, but I don't believe we've ever interacted directly. Anyway, I would like to say thank you for your vote of confidence - I've long been curious about a RFA for all the wrong reasons; I want to see what the gossip would be. That someone I don't 'know', knows me enough to venture a positive opinion on my talk page goes far beyond flattering. I'm touched, and heartened that someone thinks I'm doing a good job. Thanks thanks thanks, and thanks! I'd trade in all my barnstars, even my socratic barnstar, for an opinion out of nowhere that I'm doing a good job. And that's what I got! So thank! Do you like pie? I've the best recipe for pie crust EVAR, and 'tis the only way I can say thank you in the information age! WLU (talk) 18:59, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
Gods and memesI have been reading Mr. Dawkins book he specifically points out "I am only talking about supernatural gods." Page 20. I think this selectivity should be pointed out in this entry. Also things he selectively (consciously or unconsciously) skipped in his book dealing with questions of the [past history (morality)] chemistry and physics. What do you expect barbaric, unobjective, primitives to envison and express thousands of years ago accurate science and critical history? Mythology and brutality is the language of the area and time. Give me a break. Memes is the answer. Yeah sure. Let's see a meme in a microscope. Kazuba (talk) 06:19, 2 June 2008 (UTC)
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