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#1 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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Hypocrisy in Science
Or, How Yowies, Yetis, and Psychokenesis are Equivalent Phenomenon.
Earth actually has one supercontinent, and two island continents. The fact the single supercontinent is coverd in part by water has led us to view it as four separate continents: Africa, Eurasia, North America, and South America. The two island continents are Australia and Antarctica. Keep all this in mind, because it plays a part in the following essay. On Ape Men as Bete Noirs of Scientists and Cyrptozoologists. There is said to be an ape-man roaming the forests of Queensland in northern Australia. People have claimed to see it. Some claim to have found tracks. It is called the yowie. The putative presence of the yowie on Australia has a big problem, it’s a line named after a fellow by the name of Russel Wallace (no relation to the politician, comedian, or sasquatch hoaxter). West of that line the fauna is southeast Eurasian, east of it the fauna becomes Australian. How did the yowie get over that line when other large fauna did not? Such as, say, the orangutan? The lack of hair samples, photographs, or stool samples is telling, but the lack of a way to get to Australia from Eurasia is even more telling. Before you can move to a new location you have to have a way of getting there. When it comes to Australia Homo sapiens did. Homo erectus, as far as we know, didn’t. Nor, I suspect, did any “ape-man” contemporaneous with H. sapiens and erectus. This pretty much rules out the yowie as a real creature. If it does turn out to exist the next goal would be to learn how the species got to Australia. A problem that would lead to literally tons of scientific papers. With the yowie out of the way we now proceed to your favorite and mine, the sasquatch. Unlike the yowie there is a lot of circumstantial evidence pointing to the existance of a large bipedal ape in North America. Let me put it this way, if the sasquatch were a murder suspect, he’d’ve been executed years ago. But science insists on a smoking gun. In this case, a body or parts of a body. For my part I would have to agree. For no other reason, it would make a definitive identification a lot easier. According to the studies done on hair and stool samples, it cannot be placed in any known primate group. Which would appear to eliminate any connection to known hominids and the great apes. Including Giganthropithecus blacki. The connection to G. blacki was a wild guess. Based on what I’ve seen in the way of G. blacki reconstructions, and the only two sasquatch’s shown clearly in film and video footage (one each), I’d have to say that the two are only distantly related. About as distantly as Man and gorilla. So what might the sasquatch be descended from? And yetis and almas for that matter. -Australopithecus robustus-. Same body plan, same cranial crest… “Cranial crest?” I can hear some of you ask. The next time you get to see the Patterson film pay attention to the top of the head. Some sasquatch hunters have identified that as a knot of tangled hair. But it looks more to me like the skull crest you find on the gorilla. An anchor for a set of heavy jaw muscles. So here we have a bipedal ape with a cranial crest and a clumsy walk. What’s the last known higher primate that fit the description? A. Robustus. We now return you to your regular essay… So how the heck did it get to North America? It walked. When the sea level gets low enough Beringia becomes dry land, and animals can cross. It’s happened before, and it’ll happen again. At a time when the climate was more salubrious than now stray A. robustus wandered out of Africa into central Eurasia. At the time India had yet to collide with Eurasia, and so the mountains that resulted from that had yet to appear. Which meant that Central Eurasia was a land of rolling hills warm air from the Indian Ocean could penetrate up to the Arctic Ocean. A warmer, wetter, flatter land than now. So A. robustus moved in and thrived. “What a minute. Who do you know this happened? Nobody’s found anything like A. robustus in Eurasia.” Nobody’s looked for it. Here’s a dirty little secret of Science; we don’t know our own world as well as some think we do. New species are found all the time. Most are rather small, but every once in a while we find something large. The bottle-nosed whale is a recent find, and it seems everytime somebody shakes a tree in Brazil a dozen new species of insect pop up. Given the available resources, both for exploration and discovery, and for the recording of new discoveries, we can’t know the Earth as well as we’d like. So lots of stuff remains unknown. Including any A. robustus fossils that might be lying around in Eurasia, or the fossils of any possible descendents of A. robustus. Why haven’t we found those fossils? Bad luck for one thing. For another, nobody’s had any reason to go looking for such. A. robustus lived in East Africa, and there is no evidence the species ever moved out of the area. Much as there was no evidence that Australopithecus as a genus ever moved out of East Africa, until a skull was found in the Republic of Tchad. By accident. Now people are looking for more samples of the “Southern Ape of Tchad” plus any other species of Australopithecus that might have left remains. Now why do I postulate the presence of A. robustus or A. robustus descendents in Central Eurasia? The sasquatch, the alma, the orang pendak, and the yeti. In order for even one of them to exist its ancestors had to come from somewhere, and there is no evidence of a non-human bipedal ape in ancient times other than Australopithecus. Some claim the sasquatch is descended from a South American ape, but there is no evidence of such. Nor is there any evidence that the ancestor of the orangutan produced a line of bipedal apes. So following the principle of parsimony, I’m going with A. robustus as the sasquatch’s (and the yeti’s and the alma’s and the orang pendak’s) ancestor. I might be wrong, but that will have to wait for additional evidence. Which leads us to the matter of psychokinesis, the ability to move physical objects without touching them. Levitation can be considered a variation on this. It also leads us to two groups, one of scientists, the other of anti-scientists (if somebody coined the term before I did, they can have the credit for it) who place yowies, sasquatches, and psychokinesis in the same classification. For scientists it’s the “if the other side believes in it, it must be fake” classification. For anti-scientists it’s the “if the other side doesn’t believe in it, it must be real” classification. Which falls under the heading not of bad science, but of “science so atrocious the practitioner should be whacked upside the head and forced to write 10,000 times, ‘I will stop abusing my brain in such an outrageous manner.’” To be really cruel about it, it’s the same sort of reasoning you get from creationists and Holocaust deniers. “**** the facts, it contradicts my beliefs.” So you get anti-scientists proclaiming the reality of psychokinesis despite all the evidence against it, and scientists denying the existance of the sasquatch despite all the evidence for it. My point? The scientific method applies to all subjects. When somebody says that psychokinesis doesn’t exist he’s most likely right because the matter has been scientifically investigated. But when somebody says that the sasquatch doesn’t exist, he’s most likely wrong because the sasquatch has not been scientifically investigated. To put it another way, nobody’s gone and looked. Some have declared the footprints, hair, and feces faked,but I have yet to hear of any of that group actually testing the evidence themselves. The reasoning appears to be, “There aint no such thing as the sasquatch, therefor any evidence pointing to its existence must be faked.” A blatant example of false reasoning. Before you can declare something false with any degree of assurance, you must give it a thorough examination. Whether it be a claim of paranormal ability, or a claim of an unknown animal. The good news is, once the examination has been made you can be fairly sure of your conclusions. The bad news is, it takes time and money. It’s much easier, and cheaper, to state authoritatively, “it can’t be” than it is to go and actually find out. Unfortunately, such a course of action leaves one open to possible correction in the future. Whereas investigating the matter leads, at best, to conclusive evidence you were right in the first place or, at worst, to conclusive evidence you were wrong. I don’t know about you, but when it’s possible to settle a matter by the simple expedient of a hands-on investigation, I’d rather the matter get investigated. In other words, if you want to prove to me that the sasquatch does not exist, in spite of all the evidence gathered pointing to its existance, you need to go and look. Test the evidence gathered, and do so honestly. Make an honest assesment and give an honest report, even if it contradicts what you had thought before. That is good science. Stating that something must be or can’t be because it fits your personal world view is wrong. Plain and simple. Even when that something contradicts what you know to be true. When there is evidence pointing to the existence of an item, that evidence deserves an honest investigation. An explanation, and not an explaining away. Don’t tell us that those feces are bogus, tell us why they are bogus, and be prepared to defend your conclusion. Science is not only for those things we have acknowledged as true or false, but for those things we still have questions about. Doing it any other way gives a lie to science, and to the things we have learned through science. I have doubts about psychokinesis because it involves a phenomenon that has yet to be proven to exist. I have doubts about the yowie both because (as far as I know) no physical evidence other than possible tracks have been found, and there is no way that I can see of it reaching Australia in the first place. I have accepted the existence of the sasquatch because there is hair and fecal evidence along with the tracks, and there is a way by which the animal’s ancestors could have reached North America. And because no one, as yet, has done a damn thing to prove that the evidence points to something else, or that all the evidence is fake. To all those who claim the sasquatch is imaginary; James Randi and friends have set up ways by which claims of paranormal abilities can be tested. Can you do no less? Is the very possibility that a manlike ape might be living in North America so frightening you can’t bring yourselves to investigate? Would the existence of the sasquatch overthrow everything you’ve learned? Randi don’t appear to think so of paranormal abilities. If there are telepaths out there, then there are telepaths out there. You learn to deal with it. How could a new species of primate be any different? So you have your choice, you can either sit there and insist you can’t be wrong, or you can find out once and for all. No more cries of “It can’t exist!”, go out and prove it. How do you do that? You go and you look. The evidence points to the existence of a bipedal ape in North America, you claim it does not. It is up to you to prove that claim, any claim that contradicts the evidence. Provide evidence that you are right instead of empty rhetoric. Show me that the pro sasquatch evidence is faked or has led investigators to false conclusions. Show me the phony, instead of wasting my time with unsubstantiated claims of mis-identification or falsification. In other words, start acting like scientists, instead of nervous nellies afraid that reality will come unglued because you were wrong about a subject. The shame lies not in being wrong, but in insisting you must be right despite the evidence against you. |
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#2 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 392
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Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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Unas |
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#3 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: ohio
Posts: 2,083
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The burden of proof is on the “Bigfoot is out there” crowd.
This constant “if you can’t prove me wrong then if must be true” crap shows ignorance of basic science; and probably a disconnection form reality in general. |
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#4 |
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Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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Sorry - this statement is so so wrong. The continents are parts of tectonic plates. There are >20 plates which make up the outer part of the Earth, but only 7 really big ones. Of these, North America is part of one, separate from Eurasia, which is part of another, separate from South America, wihich is separate from Antarctica, which is separate from Australia (which is part of a really big plate which includes India, but not Eurasia proper). You can find this basic information in any Introduction to Geology textbook. Starting your story off with such a glaring error with the fundamental background facts is really not a good way to convince anyone you have the slightest clue as to what you're talking about. |
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#5 |
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oops, sorry - missed one. Africa is also on a separate tectonic plate, which is not part of the Eurasian plate, or any other plate with another continent on it.
There have been supercontinents in the Earth's history, but the last one broke up about 250-200 million years ago; There is not a supercontinent today; if anything you have it completely backwards, we are at a time of nearly maximum dispersal of the continental fragments (the maximum was probably about 60-70 million years ago, before India rammed into Eurasia to form the Himalayas) |
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#6 |
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Muse
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 756
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I predict this is a drive-by posting and we'll never hear back from "mythusmage" to defend his (obvious) mistakes.
The Americas and Eurasia are part of the same continent? Uh, please explain the mid-Atlantic ridge. Lots of other logical errors and burden-of-proof mistakes. Oh well, it's all because scientists are too closed minded. |
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- Gary |
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#7 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 93
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For a graphical representation...
<img src=http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/volc/fig37.gif> -Uther |
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"Oh dear," says God, "I hadn't thought of that," and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic. |
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#8 |
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Guest
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Good job Uther - guess I could have done that and saved 100 words or so !
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#9 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Decatur, Illinois, USA
Posts: 1,453
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I suppose it would be totally pointless to mention to Mythusmage the tiny little inconvenient fact that the guy who "discovered" Bigfoot made the whole thing up.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...ceobit05m.html
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#10 |
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Is there any reason why the continent shapes have a similar shape as the shapes of their plates?
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#11 |
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The only one that actually does is Africa...the rest are different.
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#12 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Jul 2002
Posts: 1,380
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http://www.randi.org/vbulletin/showt...threadid=12589 So he's not necessarily a hit and run poster. He apparently just decided to move the conversation to the science forum.
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"I'm the master of low expectations." - G. W. Bush |
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#13 |
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Seasonally Disaffected
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Chilly Undieville
Posts: 5,667
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Find one. Show me. Then I will accept it. (minimalist version of the scientific method)
This applies equally to Sasquatches, Unicorns, Dragons, Space Aliens, Ghosts, and Honest Politicians |
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When you believe in things you don't understand, then you suffer . . . " - Stevie Wonder "Stupidity - a callow indifference to facts or data" - Stuart Firestein -neuroscientist. I hate bigots. |
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#14 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,385
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Didn't the news report a few months ago about the guy who started the Bigfoot hoax?
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It will be a great day when the US Air Force has all the bombs it needs and the NEA has to hold a bake sale in order to pay its lobbyists. |
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#15 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,385
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Disregard my last.
I suppose I should read ALL of the posts before chiming in. |
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It will be a great day when the US Air Force has all the bombs it needs and the NEA has to hold a bake sale in order to pay its lobbyists. |
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#16 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 87
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Which continent are you talking about? |
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#17 |
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I think the African does, and the Eurasian and the Australian/Indian one does, towards the bottom of Australia.
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#18 |
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Seasonally Disaffected
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Chilly Undieville
Posts: 5,667
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In some cases, the edge of the continent is the edge of the plate. Otherwise, it is probably coincidence.
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When you believe in things you don't understand, then you suffer . . . " - Stevie Wonder "Stupidity - a callow indifference to facts or data" - Stuart Firestein -neuroscientist. I hate bigots. |
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#19 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 87
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A very reasonable guess IMHO is that these
are physically continous surfaces as such it's not terribly surprising that contour outlines are self similar, especially if they formed in a layered fashion . I still really don't see it though...
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#20 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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Re: Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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Now, the studies point to an unkown primate. "Sasquatch" is as good a name as any in my opinion. ![]()
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In case you haven't heard, one species was recently confirmed using only genetic material. We did have specimens to start with, but until some genetic testing was done there was some controversy over whether the forest elephant was a separate species from the savannah elephant or not. So what do we have that points to the sasquatch? Tracks (which could be faked or from another animal), hair (which could be from another animal), feces (which, again, could be from another animal), and calls (which could be produced by another animal). I think it's about damn time we went and found out.
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)BTW, I agree with you. The sasquatch doesn't have to exist. Much as nothing else has to exist in this universe. It either does or it doesn't. I want the question settled and that'll take a real investigation, not the "lets wander around a bit and show off the new toys we picked up at Radio Shack" crap you've got going on now. Let's apply some real science to the subject, and damn the extremists. |
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#21 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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)Evidence has been gathered, until that evidence has been shown conclusively to be fake or misinterpreted, I will continue to accept it. Ignoring or disregarding evidence that supports a subject you find uncomfortable or distatseful shows ignorance of basic science, and may indicate a disconnect from reality. |
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#22 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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Proposition: Ray Wallace faked every sasquatch footprint. Do you have any evidence to support this claim? Other than a newspaper that is. Can you show that all impressions identified as sasquatch tracks were faked, much less faked by Mr. Wallace? And what about the hair and the feces, identified as coming from an "unknown primate"? Or the recording of calls from an unknown animal? Or, for that matter, the flora disturbed much as flora is disturbed by gorillas in Africa. (Sorry folks, but my memory is fallible and I am prone to remember things in bits and pieces. BTW, that foliage could've been disturbed by bears, but we won't know until we look.) Child, your reliance on a news story to support your opinion regarding a subject tells me a lot about your critical reasoning skills, and none of it good. Reality does not exist to make you happy. |
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#23 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 274
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Re: Re: Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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I'm afraid this doesn't help; Unas is quite right that you can't prove non-existence. Science does not make an observation, make a statement about what it might be, and then try to prove it by showing that it isn't anything else. This simply doesn't work because it's impossible to know all of the possible things it could be (after all, if we already knew everything we wouldn't be here to begin with). Maybe the disconnected bits of evidence lumped under 'sasquatch' actually point to a dozen different unknown, unrelated phenomena. Just because it's unknown doesn't mean it's bigfoot.
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Still unaware of these results. Links or references?
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Now this I couldn't agree with more.
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Many an ancient lord's last words had been, "You can't kill me because I've got magic aaargh." --Terry Pratchett, Interesting Times |
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#24 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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Continents and Ray Wallace
Continents:
Let me get this straight, one tectonic plate per continent, right? Now I live in San Diego, CA. A spot west of the San Andreas Fault and thus on the Pacific Plate. Which means that San Diego is not in North America. Pity the poor children who keep misplacing San Diego in those geography tests. ![]() I now introduce something new (to you at least), the continental shelf. "The continental shelf Uncle Mythusmage?" The continental shelf. You see, good children, the continents are partially flooded. Off our shores is more continent (with a few exceptions). In most places the edge of a continent is under water, sometimes a lot of water. One place where you have flooded continent is under the Bering Strait. Some call this "Beringia". It connects Eurasia to North America. South America is connected to North America by dry land, while Africa was connected to Eurasia by dry land until the Suez Canal was dug (and when the Suez Canal fills in some day, will be again). See how this works? When you talk about continents you include the continental shelf. Ray Wallace: Ray Wallace created the Sasquatch hoax What a load of ****. You call yourselves skeptics? People, I haven't seen a more credulous bunch since I got a look at the studio audience for Crossing Over. If you're shining examples of the skeptical community, then I was Bonaparte in a past life. Ray Wallace created the sasquatch hoax. Prove it. Where is your evidence? Who made the tracks? All of them. Where is the hair from? The feces? Who or what made the calls? Who or what is in those photos, films, and videos? Do you have evidence to support that claim? SHOW ME THE PHONY! None of that, "well it seems to me." None of that, "It looks like." I want evidence. Good solid evidence. I'm willing to go look. I get a sponsor I will go look. You ready to join me? You ready to test your beliefs? Or would you rather live in your fantasy world where science and the scientific method don't apply to things that make you uncomfortable? (And for those who'd like more ammo against me (as if the following had any relevance to the subject at hand): (I'm on disablity thanks to clinical depression, anxiety disorder, and panic disorder. I read fantasy and science fiction. I write material for a fantasy roleplaying game. I am convinced that the scientific method can be applied to any subject. (Make of it what you will.) People, you want to convince me that the evidence gathered so far showing the existence of an ape-like creature in North America is fake, you're going to have to do better than a newspaper story about a hoaxter. |
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#25 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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Extremism in support of a cause is just as damaging to that cause as extremism against it. Off I go to look stuff up. Have you, good reader, any leads (pro or anti sasquatch) send me an email and I'll give them a look. Leads to print material would also be helpful. BTW, there is evidence of absence.
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#26 |
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Occasional Poster
Join Date: Sep 2001
Posts: 74
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Goshawk's contention is, I guess, not that Wallace faked every footprint ever found, but that the first footprints were faked by him and possibly copied by others afterwards. To refute this argument, you could simply provide evidence of such footprints found before Wallace's. If you do not, then I'd say the argument is sound. Liam |
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#27 |
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It seems as though the hair samples aren't such great proof after all. From here
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#28 |
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Hipster alien
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: not measurable
Posts: 16,827
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#29 |
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Muse
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 756
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My mistake, he's not a drive by poster, but is instead redirecting us to find his "proof." Yaawwnn.
Yes, it is true, too, that Siberia and Alaska were both above ground at one time and migration did occur. I think the existence of native Americans has that pretty well established. But if all he wants to do is come here and claim science is hypocritical because it won't conduct an all-out search for sasquach, well, that's just too bad. Go yell at someone else. |
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- Gary |
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#30 |
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Re: Continents and Ray Wallace
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Yes - San Diego etc. is on the Pacific Plate - that's "Plate" as in tectonic plate - get it ??? Has nothing to do with geographic names at all - you can be on the Pacific Plate and still part of this artifical geographic name we teach kidlets called North America. The North American Plate is a whole different entity versus the geographic North America - you're confusing the scientific plate tectonic name from mere geography. As to your bizarre Australopithicus Robustus crossing on the Siberia-Alaska land bridge - you really need to look at the timing of these events. The low sea level of the last glacial maximum which caused the land bridge occurred about 14-18,0000 years ago - that's years, not millions of years. However, I believe all known specimans of A. Robustus are in the 2.5 to 4 MILLION year age range - coincidiing with the earliest Homo Sapian. Thus you have a small problem in timing - but what's a few million years here or there??? By the way - let's just ignore the millions of years difference problem. You suggest no Yowie in Australia because no land bridge - also not true. Australia has a land bridge to New Guinea duing the last glacial maximum. From the west tip of New Guinea to Timor and then the rest of the Indonesian island and on to the Malay Peinsula are either walks or very short island-hops at the sea level minimum - the next island is in sight - just takes a log to float on and a dare from your friend Og who says (grunts) "betcha can't make it to that next island " and before you know it - you're drinking decent beer in some Kings Cross pub in Sydney and wondering why that gorgeous women coming on to you has a fairly prominant Adams Apple (ok, this happened to me - but this is another story). |
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#31 |
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Thinker
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 234
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Re: Re: Continents and Ray Wallace
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kidlet? What's a kidlet? Any relation to a cutlet? On a more serious note, just to reiterate most of what's been said here, the burden of proof is on those who say the phenomenon (creature) exists. Hair, stool, DNA samples all help with that, but, as someone who lived in the Great Northwest and who followed Bigfoot religiously, there is NO scientificly-tested evidence indicating bigfoot exists. None whatsoever. The cryptozoologists tested everything they found. What was tested in reputable labs was found to be bear and other known mammal-based. As much as I would love to have this unknown great ape roaming the woods of my home state, it simply doesn't exist. Proof? How about some simple biological logic? No remains of one has ever been found. That indicates a small population. A small population runs into trouble with inbreeding and its associated probelms. These genetic problems lead to species-extinction in short order. It's been shown that the 50/500 rule is very predictive on species longevity. A population of 500 is needed for long-term species survival. A population of 50 is needed for short-term survival. in both cases, the number is predicated on no human involvement. Draw your conclusions. |
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#32 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Decatur, Illinois, USA
Posts: 1,453
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You have shown us NO evidence for Sasquatch. You have shown us NO evidence for the existence of feces, hair, calls, whether or not any of it has ever been tested. All we have is YOUR word for it that "feces, hair, recordings of calls" exist. The fact that you say you saw it on the Discovery Channel does not count as "evidence". Give us links to websites that prove the existence of any hair, feces, recordings of calls. Then we'll talk. It's not enough for you to tell us, "Go look it up on the Discovery Channel website." My proof that Ray Wallace made it all up is the statements of his family members. Did you read the link? Are you going to maintain that it's all a sort of reverse hoax, that his family members are making up the story that their Uncle Ray made up Bigfoot? And the picture of his nephew holding the "actual alderwood foot used to make the prints", that's just a prop in their hoax? Why would they do that? What would be their motive? They certainly aren't cashing in on it--they'd stand to make more money and get more publicity by being the relatives of the man who really did discover Bigfoot, than by being the relatives of the man who "invented" Bigfoot. |
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#33 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Seventh circle of limbo
Posts: 2,575
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Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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__________________
"Man would have been too happy, if, limiting himself to the visible objects which interested him, he had employed, to perfect his real sciences, his laws, his morals, his education, one half-the efforts he has put into his researches on the Divinity" -Percy Bysshe Shelley, The Necessity of Atheism |
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#34 |
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Muse
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 538
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Re: Re: Re: Hypocrisy in Science
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#35 |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 26,985
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Heh heh, Yowies, sure! :-)
For what it's worth, folks, there are no real live Yowies in Australia. That's all a complete and utter aboriginal myth on the same level as, say, the "Boogieman!"
No strange creatures roaming the Queensland bush and jungle (well, there are, but we know they are just failed politicians on the run from the law... )I've posted on other threads here about Bigfoot, that the answer is not just to mount a posse and go scour the Washington/BC woods, but also to use satellite technology to assist. Sure, infrared satellite imaging will pick up every bear, moose and deer in the area, but it should also be able to put a small team in a helicopter within a few hundred yards of any potential bigfoot creature. And all the easier to pick them up if they group together! The USA has the technology, and these days we know it has the will to hunt down a single creature in a hostile environment! Really, this should be easy, mythusmage, because I have been told that there is "reliable evidence" that there have been 10,000+ confirmed sightings of Bigfoot. And before you get your hopes up, that's one sighting per day, every day, for the last 30 years...sorta silly when you think of it like that, isn't it! Mythusmage, the reality of the situation is simply that if you make a scientific claim then it is up to you to prove it so, not anybody else to disprove it. "Proof of a negative" is one of those things that logically cannot be done, and so carries no weight as an argument. Think about it for a bit and you will see this is so... Zep |
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#36 |
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Hipster alien
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: not measurable
Posts: 16,827
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Thread title: Hypocrisy in Science.
I would classify the thread title as being inaccurate. No matter how much mainstream science believes something, someone coming along with tangible, testable evidence trumps everyone. Almost all scientists dream of bringing forth some provable, revolutionary theory. Anyone who does so goes straight to the head of the class, and gets naming rights for the theory, object, phenomenon, or living specimin ("Homo Rockyroadus" or even "Homo Itoldyousous"). Fame, fortune, and prizes await those who provide tangible, testable evidence. No matter how closed-minded science might appear, if you have the real goods, you win. |
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#37 |
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Militant Elvisian Tacoist
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 9,856
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...it rings a bell in my head that just don't chime...--pillory There is no God but the Great Taco In The Sky and Elvis is his prophet. |
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#38 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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otherwise - nice post |
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#39 |
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Scholar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 60
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International Bigfoot Society
There's a link for you. Now you can take a look at the evidence they (and other sites) provide. We now introduce you to a magic word, it's called research. You've heard of research, it's how Darwin gathered the information he needed to prove his Theory of Evolution. It's how real scientists get their PHDs. (It's why my mom switched from rhino reproduction to a bacterium for her masters, her original subject was literally getting nowhere. )The evidence is out there, and there are people you can get in touch with about that evidence. The next task is to learn if that evidence is valid or not. That will take research. You know, gathering up that evidence, putting it under scrutiny, and separating the real (if any) from the fraudulent. It's what a scientist would do. ![]() Yes boys and girls, and college sophmores of all ages, it means making an effort. It means going to web sites other than the newest "web cam dorm" site. It means sending email to folks who believe in strange things and seeing if you can winkle out anything of scientific value from their replies. It means doing some work. And for those of you from an alternate reality, you can prove a negative. All it takes is some effort. I'll give you a simple proposition to start off with, "Man cannot levitate." Show your work. BTW, if you're wondering why I'm doing this. Since you've persuaded me that sweet reason won't work (gosh, you've proved a negative already, aint you smart? ), I've now made it my goal to get somebody so pissed off he'll go to the state of Washington in search of evidence that I'm wrong. Make sure you get funding, the research could take a few years.![]() "I just got my Bachelors, I know everything." "I just got my Masters, I don't know anything." "I got my PHD. Bad news, neither does anybody else." (Stay tuned for my big essay: On Science, Skepticism, and the Sasquatch) |
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Alan The fact a zoologist says an animal doesn't exist is no proof that it does. The fact a cryptozoologist says an animal exists is no proof that it doesn't. Mythusmage Opines |
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#40 |
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Muse
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 538
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LOL
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