So the hypothesis stage of the scientific process is optional?
No, but a hypothesis isn't "an opinion", nor is it considered as such. A hypothesis is based on factual observation, and evidenced or disproven based on further observation.
If is wasn't for fresh new thinking science would be chasing its own tail in a rut and unable to advance. Pursuing the establishment of new facts sometimes comes easiest to people who are not saturated with loads of other facts. Rigid thinking such as you advocate saps away the creative side of things.
Are you seriously suggesting that those who will lead the way forward in science are those who know the least about it?
Seems you presuppose you know the facts. Wrong!
What are you talking about? I did no such thing, I just stated that the point of science is not merely to "find facts" but to explain them. Facts are what we observe, but science is the process of taking those facts, studying them, testing them and comparing them with other facts in order to formulate a testable framework for how that fact came to be.
Case in point: objects fall when dropped: fact. This is caused by gravitational forces acting upon that object: science.
No. It came up when we studied Sir Isaac Newton's life. If my children want to go into it I would let them explore it.
So, if you leave it up to your children to choose for themselves when they should learn about the occult or about alchemy, why not use the same logic for creationism? If students want to learn about creationism, let them ask their science teachers in-between lessons, not have the teacher waste valuable education time.
To someone who is narrow-minded that statement would make sense.
Again, you're being immature. Please explain to me exactly how Sir Isaac Newton's beliefs with regards to alchemy in any way impact the scientific progress he made in the field of gravity.
You think you think, but what you are thinking is what you were told to think. You don't see the cave you are in. You are demonstrating right here and now the very problem that the education system you were ecucated in produces.
You are in no position whatsoever to judge any problems that may or may not exist in the education system. Your children fall under the exact same issue with home schooling - it's not as if home schooling your children suddenly means they're going to be more open-minded. It just means that you get to force your children to think how you want them to think, rather than how the schools do. For my money, I trust schools to educate their children better than parents, partly because schools have access to knowledge and learning resources from a much wider area. In my experience, and my mother's experience as a social care worker, much of home schooling is just another form of childhood indoctrination.
Any drone mentality could. But are you actually a scientist? It doesn't seem so to me. You are a science benefactor and cheerleader.
Stop being so immature. I am not a drone, nor am I a scientist, but I make it my business to understand science and it's function in society because I feel the subject is extremely important. Are you a scientist?
You don't get it! I have only ever said those things have value because they help demonstrate the need for being scientifically minded.
And you don't get my point: They don't. "Scientifically minded" is a nonsense phrase that doesn't seem to have any meaning. If you were to ask me, "scientifically minded" should mean that they have an understanding of how facts are used in science and of the scientific method. To you, it appears to mean "have an opinion". I honestly don't see what you hope to gain by any mention of creationism in the classroom.
The reason we went for centuries thinking the world was flat was because of people with your mentality. But, I suspect you don't see yourself objectively enough to get it.
Honestly, this immaturity has to stop. For God's sake man, act your age!
That guy was an imbicile. Those poor children. He was not at all being objective. Also, there is nothing wrong if children have an intuitive sense that there is an underlying intelligence and purpose to our being here. The ToE is mute as far as that goes.
Where did I indicate that there was? Truth is, what you have suggested is really no different to what this man is doing, and it opens doors to teachers like him to enter the system and thrust non-scientific discussion into a science classroom.
They follow the Saxon Math program and mostly do it all on their own. Math is very simple, cut and dry in the early stages. When they get into calculus is when I'll be more involved.
Then you teach your children that 1+1=2? How is this any different to teaching children facts in science?
Not once did I say Creationism should be given validity.
Nor did I accuse you of. But the fact is that by even mentioning creationism in the context of the science classroom, you
do give it validity. By asserting that children should decide for themselves whether to believe evolution or creationism, you are setting up the false dichotomy that creationism and evolution are equal scientific concepts.
You think you can just tell them how the scientific process works only and they are going to "get it"? Some might, but not all children learn that way.
And not all that many children learn how to read well by teaching them. What's your point?
Most learn from actually applying the skills. However, you cry foul if they are given the opportunity to be exposed to unsubstantiated beliefs to sort through.
Of course I would, because that's not what they're supposed to do in science classrooms. It would be as pointless as getting a maths class to bake cakes instead of learning the times tables.
I'm saying give them the opportunity to be scientists.
In what sense? In my science classes I was given the opportunity to conduct many simple experiments and see for myself what their results were.
What I'm saying is the scientific process works from start (opinions/hypothesis) to finish (theories/facts) and if it is allowed to flow naturally the children will taste that success for themselves. Thus, they will be educated with skills they most definitely will use the rest of their lives.
And how is any mention of creationism in any way conductive to this process?
You don't get it.
If the scientific method is properly taught and the children are given opportunities to get their hands dirty then they will acquire the capacity to clear up all matters of confusion for the rest of their lives. They will be scientists.
Now you're changing the subject. You've gone from "present creationism and let them decide for themselves will make them more scientifically minded" to "given children the opportunity to get their hands dirty". These are no the same thing, nor should you equate them to be. This is a very dishonest tactic.
If the students are not allowed the opportunity to get their hands dirty and they are just taught facts of science by wrote because some other smart guys already did their thinking for them, they will go the rest of their lives entrained with a mindset that other smart guys should keep telling them what to think and do. They will be drones at best.
Again, this is a childish exaggeration. I was raised in such an environment and I am not a "drone" by any standard. I am a fully developed, intelligent, mature human being capable of making my own decisions in the world. I have a good grasp of science and scientific principles, and understand the scientific method. Teaching children that facts exist and that science is only concerned with those facts is no more brainwashing than teaching them 1+1=2.
A person who can think for himself and in so doing can distill the truth out of any circumstances he finds himself in. A person who can step outside of any box in order to have fresh thinking to advance the sphere of our knowledge and understanding. He is a fearless explorer of uncharted territory. He is someone who looks under the stones everyone else just walked by.
Well, let me know when your children make any new discoveries in the scientific field, then.