Absolutely. It goes a long way in establishing credibility, which in turn is a relevant factor in deciding whether he's worth the bother to listen to. And, taking that chance, whether or not what he says is worth one's time to check out. I assume you did check out is claims, whatever they are.
That sounds like dismissal.
I'm talking about before you know who will do a better job at backing up what they're saying.
I can't make that decision until I start hearing them speak.
Care to cite them? Factors that would convince you that your time would be better spent listening to an unknown high school graduate speaking about X rather than an unknown PhD speaking in his field about X.
Honestly, if they're both unknown, then I probably wouldn't know the latter has a Ph.D. I don't see a situation where I know someone has a PhD and he's also unknown.
As I said above, I have to hear them speak a little bit.
There's Ph.Ds out there that spread pop-science rather than real science. There's people who lie about having PhDs (a possibility with your unknown PhD example). There's PhDs who are still succeptible to emotion based beliefs and will let that influence what they are saying (e.g. scientists who believe in creationism). The point I'm making is, it's better to just see what is back-up and what isn't. I'm not gonna blindly believe someone just because he has a PhD.
Really! Show me that people don't argue in other languages that apes aren't monkeys.
It doesn't matter. I'm gonna deviate from the discussion of naming conventions. The title of this thread is asking if Trump (and by extention, Humans) came from monkeys. It's a fact that humans have monkey ancestors (that is, tailed simians). Whether you choose to call humans monkeys or not, is more of a matter of preference and nothing more. Laymen and scientists alike often call apes monkeys.
Believe it or not, but my ability or inability to point out anything in the video has absolutely nothing to do with your ability to judge the soundness of his argument. Sheesh!
I guess, but you can't claim to know anything of my judgement towards his argument if you won't even listen to his argument.
The point isn't what a scientist will do after reading an article, but what will convince him to read it at all.
There's plenty of other things that can convince a scientist to read an article apart from a Ph.D.
Dawkins playing with his pen, yawning, and looking completely bored during AronRa's speech hardly signifies respect for him. Obviously you're afflicted with Idol Bias.
Naturally if you're sitting a long time, you're gonna zone out at times. I've seen him do this at press conferences with other scientists. Just because ones eyes aren't constantly locked on someone talking, doesn't mean you don't respect him. Several times, Dawkins had a look of enthusiasm when looking at AronRa.
Dawkins wouldn't be there at all if he didn't respect the intellect of those people at the press-conference.