Here’s a link for any moon conspiracy enthusiasts.
“This is a total cop-out argument. Yes, 1960s technology was far inferior to what we have today… even one of our cell phones contains vastly more computing power than what was aboard the Apollo spacecraft. But the Apollo spacecraft only had to know how to do one thing: get living, breathing astronauts to the Moon and back… As far as NASA having created all the footage of the landings in a studio, it actually
would have been easier at the time to just go to the Moon…
‘This, unfortunately, has more to do with the nature of politics and public interest than space technology, although the latter often becomes a casualty of the former. There’s a lot involved with the answer to this, but suffice to say after the Apollo program was closed down, the technology to send humans to the Moon was retired… As times changed, priorities (and thus budgets) changed, and NASA’s manned spaceflight program of the 60s and early 70s became a thing of the past, in some cases replaced by newer, better goals… but in some cases still not replaced at all.”
No, The Moon Landings Weren’t Faked. (And Here’s How You Can Tell.) | Lights in the Dark
GaryA, You said it was food for thought, but I’m just going to put what I had planned on writing:
We haven’t been back because the support is not there and people don’t care. In grade school, there is a fascination with this topic, and that comes naturally with being a curious child. As you start to hit junior high, and into high school, pressure from peers to be like the cool kids who carry backbacks that weight more themselves than what is actually in them, gets the best of many students. They relax their interest, or dispense it altogether.
I know I was one of them, though not because of pressure. I just had other worldlier, superficial pursuits. I didn’t start taking a serious interest in science again until years after I had to dropped out of college in 2005. Slowly through time, I began to open up to other doctrines, because I wanted to understand them. If I address what I don’t agree with, I want to understand it, unlike the several instances while visiting churches that I witness pastors willingly or not misrepresenting other doctrines. This was an issue of integrity to me. And you learn the other position not by reading WHAT THE OPPONENT says, but reading the text yourself.
And yes,
Kodiak, science is not a fixed discipline – neither is psychology or sociology, which also uses scientific methods of asking questions and collecting data. It is open to change, because the data we collect changes, as we learn more and advance in tools to aid in calculations. And again, linking evolution with atheism, using this slippery slope to scientists “disproving” God, is only going to aggravate the divide, imo.
Perhaps at some point they will pose that. But as a standard, the data is published in a journal, and you may examine it yourself – in this country, or at least as it’s supposed to be, you don’t have to accept other people’s opinions or ideas. That is the whole beauty of it. You can reject the idea that gravity exists, and no one is going to throw you in prison for it (if we keep going this way however, that might be a different story concerning freedom to reject).
And isn’t the whole presumption behind a Creationist mindset or model that God can’t be disproven? “You don’t care as long as they can prove it… and what if they come out with something ‘proving’ God is not real…” Why would that concern you? Write to your newspaper, start a blog, take some public speech classes – you can’t seriously expect other people to remain silent so that you don’t have to debunk or reject anything.
Now, should the idea of God enter into science, be a part of science? You understand that by inviting a spiritual or religious flavor into a discipline that is about asking questions, testing them, testing already established assumptions… that if you can write a paper about evidence for God, then THE VERY NATURE OF THIS DISCPLINE allows others to write what they feel is evidence for His inexistence. Unintended consequences, you see.
I’m not being mean or anything, but we are not being silenced – yet. Disciplinary actions or favoritism in secular institutions, I’ve noticed in your link (I’ll comment more later). But you know why? Science has become a political thing. Why has it become a political thing? Why is stating a thesis akin to aligning to a political party?
Because the Right has pursued this in courts, relentlessly trying to adjust laws ultimately in the name of God and Creation – thus dragging science into the political sphere. The “Monkey Trial” should have settled things – it didn’t. Conservative Christians rose up, the Right saw the advantage in appealing on their behalf (to get votes, you see) and here we are.
The Left is JUST AS BAD about propaganda, if not worse these days, and spreading lies and misinformation. But the suppression here is not because of the idea itself, the suppression is because it has become a political topic and thus has consequences for a university that doesn't align with a the more favored political platform.
And Right Christians, with their consistent push for religion-inspired laws, has had a great hand in how these skeptics of evolution are treated. AND THEY STILL haven’t learned, aka the Gay Rights movement. We may not be in the mess we are in concerning forcing pastors to marry, if they hadn't spent a few decades trying to keep it illegal. Religion inspired, and as more people realized this, the greater the push backwards. Well, that’s what I’ve gathered from reading.