Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 Ok, I usually try to stay REAL FAR away from creation vs. science. However, I have always wondered, if we came from Adam & Eve, then why do we have people of color, and isn't the whole Adam & Eve theory kind of a big incestuous " thing? " Conversely, science says we came to be through evolution. The last time I checked, to evolve is to begin as one thing and then over time evolve into a bigger & better thing (if you will in plain English) so, if we evolved from primates, why do we still have primates?? Maybe I'm just really stupid about the whole understanding of things, but these are things that no one has really been able to answer for me over the years. PLEASE don't flame me, I'm in no way suggesting one theory is right and the other wrong. I'm just more curious to see if anyone else has ever had the same thought as I, or something similar.. Cristi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 Group: This is an honest question. First, a preface. I recently authored a chapter for an upcoming book (which will remain nameless) that detailed the chemical basis of life and subsequently disease. I opened the chapter with the standard discussion of the Big Bang Theory followed by Hubble’s confirmation of universe expansion and discussed Penzias and 's discovery of radiation in space which further proves Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory. I followed this with the standard college biology discussion of chemical evolution followed by biological evolution. In two reviews I was blasted for wanting to teach paramedics the scientific theories of the origin of life instead of the religious creation model. While I do not want to get into a Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in modern health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing science theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs an important role in society by setting standards for acceptable behavior. But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS education programs present the science ad simply leave the creationism to the churches. This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled E. Bledsoe, DO, FACEP Midlothian, Texas " Is it ignorance or apathy? I don't know and I don't care! " -Jimmy Buffett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 Why can't both theories be right. Evolution is a process. The chemical and biological aspects of how we are is scientific fact. Many things that we do in the medical profession can be explained by science, but there are things that cannot. How do we explain the look of those patients who are going to die, and they know it. How do we explain changes in patients that we have done everything we can think of. Everything tells us this is not going to be a good outcome, but the patients live. We teach the science but must understand the other aspects of what our care delivery must encompass. It is hard to teach the science without teaching the humanity of what our job is. My personal opinion. " Bledsoe, DO " wrote: Group: This is an honest question. First, a preface. I recently authored a chapter for an upcoming book (which will remain nameless) that detailed the chemical basis of life and subsequently disease. I opened the chapter with the standard discussion of the Big Bang Theory followed by Hubble’s confirmation of universe expansion and discussed Penzias and 's discovery of radiation in space which further proves Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory. I followed this with the standard college biology discussion of chemical evolution followed by biological evolution. In two reviews I was blasted for wanting to teach paramedics the scientific theories of the origin of life instead of the religious creation model. While I do not want to get into a Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in modern health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing science theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs an important role in society by setting standards for acceptable behavior. But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS education programs present the science ad simply leave the creationism to the churches. This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled E. Bledsoe, DO, FACEP Midlothian, Texas " Is it ignorance or apathy? I don't know and I don't care! " -Jimmy Buffett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 bbledsoe@... wrote: > I was blasted for wanting to teach > paramedics the scientific theories > of the origin of life instead of the > religious creation model. Hey Dr. Bledsoe, You should point your reviewers to Dover, PA and a 2004 law suit. It can be expensive to try to teach religion in the guise of science. http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/news/13928874.htm -- __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 A better question would be: " Why even go that deep for paramedic education? " It would appear that it just opens a can of worms that do nothing but distract from the process of educating paramedics. Henry " Bledsoe, DO " wrote: > Group: > > This is an honest question. First, a preface. I recently authored a > chapter > for an upcoming book (which will remain nameless) that detailed the > chemical > basis of life and subsequently disease. I opened the chapter with the > standard discussion of the Big Bang Theory followed by Hubble’s > confirmation > of universe expansion and discussed Penzias and 's discovery of > radiation in space which further proves Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory. I > followed this with the standard college biology discussion of chemical > > evolution followed by biological evolution. In two reviews I was > blasted for > wanting to teach paramedics the scientific theories of the origin of > life > instead of the religious creation model. While I do not want to get > into a > Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in > modern > health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing > science > theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs > an > important role in society by setting standards for acceptable > behavior. > But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS > education > programs present the science ad simply leave the creationism to the > churches. > > This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled > > E. Bledsoe, DO, FACEP > Midlothian, Texas > > " Is it ignorance or apathy? I don't know and I don't care! " > -Jimmy Buffett > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 My guess is the good doctor is making a good faith attempt at teaching EMT/paramedic students the " why " portion of pre-hospital emergency education, as opposed to old and tired " technical Chimp " approach. One good aspect of education is it's applicable to life in general, not just to our trade. Alfonso R. Ochoa > > A better question would be: " Why even go that deep for paramedic > education? " It would appear that it just opens a can of worms that do > nothing but distract from the process of educating paramedics. > > Henry > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 > > We teach the science but must understand the other aspects of what our care delivery must encompass. > > It is hard to teach the science without teaching the humanity of what our job is. > > My personal opinion. > Agreed. This might be a shot in the dark, but this is perhaps why medicine is considered both a science and an art. Alfonso R. Ochoa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 > While I do not want to get into a > Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in modern > health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing science > theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs an > important role in society by setting standards for acceptable behavior. It all depends on the institution. For example, Loma University School of Medicine in California teaches the creation model. However, this is to be expected since they are affiliated with the Seventh-Day Adventist Church. I would say the safest bet is to introduce the scientific model with a notation that the following prose is based on the currently accepted theory. That way, you are giving yourself an out in the unlikely event that the entire theoretical base is scraped tomorrow and not alienating those with religious faith of any sort. Alfonso R. Ochoa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 We are looking to the future. For parity with the other allied health professions and nursing, we have to produce EMS providers better versed in the sciences. This was an attempt to provide material that is very basic for those attending nursing or medical school. First, I appreciate the feedback. Sometimes, when writing, it is easy to get out on a tangent. I never meant to get into a theological discussion. The last thing we need in EMS is people practicing on faith. As Mark Twain wrote in his book 'Following the Equator', " Faith is believing what you know ain't so. " Religion and science can peacefully co-exist as long as both sides are tolerant. When somebody is critically-ill or -injured, they need the best scientific-treatment. There is nothing wrong with their religious representatives or mystics helping with their emotional health. Also, the publishers go to great lengths to avoid religion. In fact, in the section of text that was reviewed we use the term " B.C.E. " (before the common era) instead of " BC " which has an overtly Christian bias. While Christianity prevails in the western world, I have to remember that these texts are translated into other languages so I have to remain religion-neutral. Thanks to all. I will continue with the current direction and keep those initial paragraphs in. Nobody argues the chemistry or biochemistry. BEB Re: Loaded Question A better question would be: " Why even go that deep for paramedic education? " It would appear that it just opens a can of worms that do nothing but distract from the process of educating paramedics. Henry " Bledsoe, DO " wrote: > Group: > > This is an honest question. First, a preface. I recently authored a > chapter > for an upcoming book (which will remain nameless) that detailed the > chemical > basis of life and subsequently disease. I opened the chapter with the > standard discussion of the Big Bang Theory followed by Hubble’s > confirmation > of universe expansion and discussed Penzias and 's discovery of > radiation in space which further proves Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory. I > followed this with the standard college biology discussion of chemical > > evolution followed by biological evolution. In two reviews I was > blasted for > wanting to teach paramedics the scientific theories of the origin of > life > instead of the religious creation model. While I do not want to get > into a > Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in > modern > health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing > science > theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs > an > important role in society by setting standards for acceptable > behavior. > But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS > education > programs present the science ad simply leave the creationism to the > churches. > > This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled > > E. Bledsoe, DO, FACEP > Midlothian, Texas > > " Is it ignorance or apathy? I don't know and I don't care! " > -Jimmy Buffett > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 An interesting point here...if creationism is proven, the big question still is, where did the original hydrogen come from? Playing the Devil's Advocate for a moment, excuse the pun, how is it that Penzias and 's discovery of radiation in space proves Big Bang? Perhaps an omnipotent one wants to keep us guessing and arguing like some parlor game, over whether or not He/She/Etc. exists. Just because I think the argument is unprovable, where did the original atoms and hydrogen gas come from? I guess I like God as Burns in Oh God! The movie... " I'm not gas. I find it very offensive. " While intelligent design seems to have its issues in the courts, the human machine seems to be both amazingly fragile and strong....considering only the trauma of birth and what we overcome or might not during that period of our life. Perhaps this would have been a consideration to insert... On the other question, I have never ever seen creationism taught in an EMS course, nor do I think it should be. It just seems standard that creationism and evolution would be discussed down the hall in theology class or philosophy, at least that is where I would put them. If you are truly a believer, than you know your faith makes you an elect people -- whether Christian, Jewish, or Muslim. This election by a deity has different meanings to those who worship but ultimately your eternity will be decided by your belief system, not by what Bledsoe puts in some books, unless there is another new church down in Midlothian I haven't heard about. I mean egad, last time I looked at one of the Bledsoe textbooks, he had semi-positive mentions of those crazy ideas of helicopter EMS AND CISM. What is coming to this world!?!?! Re: Loaded Question Why can't both theories be right. Evolution is a process. The chemical and biological aspects of how we are is scientific fact. Many things that we do in the medical profession can be explained by science, but there are things that cannot. How do we explain the look of those patients who are going to die, and they know it. How do we explain changes in patients that we have done everything we can think of. Everything tells us this is not going to be a good outcome, but the patients live. We teach the science but must understand the other aspects of what our care delivery must encompass. It is hard to teach the science without teaching the humanity of what our job is. My personal opinion. " Bledsoe, DO " wrote: Group: This is an honest question. First, a preface. I recently authored a chapter for an upcoming book (which will remain nameless) that detailed the chemical basis of life and subsequently disease. I opened the chapter with the standard discussion of the Big Bang Theory followed by Hubble’s confirmation of universe expansion and discussed Penzias and 's discovery of radiation in space which further proves Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory. I followed this with the standard college biology discussion of chemical evolution followed by biological evolution. In two reviews I was blasted for wanting to teach paramedics the scientific theories of the origin of life instead of the religious creation model. While I do not want to get into a Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in modern health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing science theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs an important role in society by setting standards for acceptable behavior. But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS education programs present the science ad simply leave the creationism to the churches. This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled E. Bledsoe, DO, FACEP Midlothian, Texas " Is it ignorance or apathy? I don't know and I don't care! " -Jimmy Buffett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 Interesting points to consider: ---------------------------------- From: Scientific American, September 1999 " Scientists and Religion in America " " Whereas 90% of the general population has a distinct belief in a personal god and a life after death, only 40% of scientists on the B.S. level favor this belief in religion and merely 10 % of those who are considered 'eminent' scientists believe in a personal god or in an afterlife. " ---------------------------------- From: Nature, 394(6691):313, 23 July 1998 " Leading Scientists Still Reject God " A recent survey of members of the National Academy of Sciences showed that 72% are outright atheists, 21% are agnostic and only 7% admit to belief in a personal God. ---------------------------------- From: Skeptic, vol.6 #2 1998 " Do You Believe in God? " In multiple studies, there is a negative correlation between theism and morality. By Franzblau's 1934 study, there's a negative correlation between religiosity and honesty. Ross 1950 shows atheists and agnostics are more likely to express their willingness to help the poor than the deeply religious. 1969 Hirschi and Stark found no correlation in lawbreaking by churchgoing children and non-churchgoing children. This same Skeptic published the results of another study that compared professions and likelihood of believing in God. The general public was just over 90% likely to believe in God. Scientists in general were just under 40% likely. Mathematicians were just over 40% likely, biologists just under 30%, and physicists were barely over 20% likely to believe in God. Re: Loaded Question Dr. Bledsoe, I think the focus of basic science education should include discussion on scientific inquiry and how science functions to develop a scientific theory through reproducibly investigating a question. It is important that students understand why most of the religious statements can not be assessed by scientific inquiry, not a weakness of science or religion, but there is no way to reproducibly challenge biblical statements. The greatest service would be to provide a scientific education with enough detail to understand why science and religion are not juxtaposed, but can address different issues in life. Finally, this is really important for the scientific community as a blurred understanding of scientific inquiry only stands to devalue science, and we(people) have gained so much from science! ~ Bates Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 <<snip>> Religion performs an important role in society by setting standards for acceptable behavior. But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS education programs present the science a(n)d simply leave the creationism to the churches(?) This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled <<snip>> _____________________________ Maybe it's because of all the excrement being agitated in neighboring Kansss, or maybe it's a result of that rocket science you Texans infoicted upon the White House, but this sort of unnecsary conflation is increasingly commonplace. I recall being asked a bunch of questions in an interview at a Jesuit medical school in the mid 1970s about my views on abortion, and respoinding then that I didn't think men had much of a standing to venture prescriptive opinions in these matters--they didn't much take to that response, but were even less enamored when I told them, after additional pressure for a definitive statement, that I thought it should be legal until the fetus achieved the age of majority and hence of legal standing in the courts. Ths was only recently a matter that bred much consternation on a decidely scientific list of research types, stimulated by some intersting comments from the Dalie Lama about religion needing to be more maleable to ewmpirical discovery. I said in that context (among other things, that " Theology and religious doctrine are not, in philosophical terms, synonyms. Theology is an element of metaphysical discourse dealing with the relationship of humans and human life with concepts of the divine; religious doctrine involves the catechism and practices of one or another specific sects. Theologic views are weakest when they are advanced as if epistemologic apologetics--that was the Dali Lama's point and it is one readily accepted by most theological scholars. QED. " Science, on the other hand, can become weak to the point of irrelevance when advanced in areas *other* than epistemology--this is equally well understood and accepted by most folks schooled in both science and philosophy. There is also a noteworthy set of philosophic critiques of scientism, the view you would appear to be advancing if it were organized sufficiently to afford it systematic status. There are various views and apologetics regarding scientism, too, and they parallel in many respects the partitionings of deterministic stances (e.g., " hard " determinism, " soft " determinism; et cetera) that are so crucial to evaluating such immensely troubling matters as the applicability of scientific approaches productive in the physical sciences to realms in which matters such as volition and choice may be argued to play causal roles. It becomes a very complex, dynamic, and interacting set of arguments and issues, all variations on themes that have kept the philosophical mind engaged for at least the last few millennia. It is doubtful that they'll be reconciled by e-mail this week. " In other words, good fences make good neighbors . . . a very intelligent student type later wrote me backchannel, noting that he knew from other writings that I was a practicing Catholic (we practice 'cause Catholics can never get it right--that's part of the fundamental belief system, you know). . . he asked, quite sincerely, how I could reconcile those things. My answer, excerpted below, was basically that I can't, but then, I no longer try: " I promise to give you a more detailed answer when time avails itself, but the short one is this: One doesn't reconcile faith and skepticism, any more than the checks and balances designed into our constitutional form of government were meant to be " reconciled " one to the others. Bush doesn't get that with regard to domestic surveillance and most folks locked into hard core scientism don't get that with respect to faith. The tension between these frames drives the educated man in his wrestling with that little portion of the universe accessible to our senses--we demand precision and confirmation for that which we can observe and manipulate, yet we must have some faith that those things we cannot apprehend are also somehow subject to some sort of order. " Science is a very powerful epistemic frame respecting those elements of our perceived universe where causation remains subject to forces conditioned in physical ways . . . even the emergence of life and its ongoing propagation fall into this realm, a fact that fundamentalists find difficult to swallow. But many affairs, especially those sorts of affairs that form the essential human condition, become increasingly complicated by the nasty, nasty problems of volition and choice. I sometimes demonstrate this to undergrads by standing atop a table dropping chalkboard erasers repeatedly to the floor, explaining as I do that each will fall reliably along a plumb line to the earth's center of gravity, accelerating at 32 feet per second for each second it falls, and will strike the linoleum with a force equal to the product of its mass and its velocity at impact--this we can know because such behavior is uniform and forms a Galilean conditional genetic relationship wherein any deviations are the function of outside forces acting directly upon it. Pretty cool to figure all that out, but it doesn't really help us to understand us. " You see, the one thing that the eraser will never do is *decide* to slow down, turn left, hesitate, or stop--it can't. We can. How we make decisions can be *somewhat* revealed by the scientist's epistemic frame, but since we make them so often on the basis of things like faith and belief and perception, what those decisions will be, why they take the forms that they do, and perhaps most importantly, what those decisions *should* be and how to get them to take the form that they *should* are subjects of entirely different epistemic frames--frames less precise, less manipulable, less comforting to those whose egos are sufficiently fragile to demand control. Many take refuge in a defiant atheism, reassuring themselves that relegating all such things to chance and/or the " not yet known " is an act of courage rather than an act of cowardice . . . of course, even that distinction falls into the ethereal realm of value judgements and ascriptions that science can't explain for us. Frustrating, isn't it? " Faith, to me, is accepting that I do not know and cannot know a great number of things--for those, I must make a choice of how I will elect to act. I am a member of the Catholic community, not because I believe dogmatically that all those glorious stories are the truth of our genesis and our fate--quite to the contrary, I confess at least twice annually that I can't buy the story as if it were fact and don't think I should. I support stem cell research, strongly advocate the right to choice in reproductive matters, and think the Church has no place in politics. But I have not missed mass on a day of Holy Obligation in more than a decade, either, no matter where on the planet I might be. I tell my sons, as my father told me, that this is the faith that has sustained our people for two thousand years, a belief that there is a benevolence well beyond our instincts and impulses that we cannot comprehend but must acknowledge and seek to embody if we are to achieve decency and worth . . . faith in its principles is something different than belief in the stories as if fact. " Theology unravels when it argues itself as if history, epistemology, or cosmogony; science fails when it argues itself as if philosophy, ethics, or moral reasoning. Good fences, and all that. " Sorry for the extra long post, but it wasn't exactly a simple question . . . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 A better question would be: " Why even go that deep for paramedic education? " It would appear that it just opens a can of worms that do nothing but distract from the process of educating paramedics. ________________________ Maybe it's too deep for the *training* of paramedics, but is paramount in their *education*. Think I'm splitting hairs? COnsider this conundrum: Your 16 year old daughter comes home from registration for her junior year in high school. She has a question for you about course selection. " Hey, Dad, " she asks, " do you think I oughta' enroll for Sex Education or Sex Training? " Still think I'm splitting hairs? Educating a medic means preparing them to deal with the contexts and implications of the actions theyy will be trained to execute. I think this stuff is pretty crucial to that domain . . . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 What a lovely story and should I ever have daughters I will have to remember it, BUT there is a distinction here. Ultimately religion and creationism will only be proven, on a case by case basis, and not until the end of our individual life. It is then when we either become food for worms, enter some manner of eternity, even if it is only to return to earth. Given the difficulty most practicing medics have with med math, that's right practicing medics, not students, it seems that trying to overcome issues of culture, heritage, and faith to teach creationism or big bang in the paramedic classroom is just a way to open the door to political, religious, and other problems and lose valuable time. We already have to cram things into 640 some hours because the national standard of 1000+ is 'acceptable'. Do we need to lose one hour discussing this topic? I have no issue with anyone opening a can of worms, just as long as they can get the worms back in the can. This entire discussion is just a little absurd and seems like it is pot stirring for the sake of stirring. As Teddy Roosevelt said muckrakers are very useful, as long as they know when to stop raking ... Re: Loaded Question A better question would be: " Why even go that deep for paramedic education? " It would appear that it just opens a can of worms that do nothing but distract from the process of educating paramedics. ________________________ Maybe it's too deep for the *training* of paramedics, but is paramount in their *education*. Think I'm splitting hairs? COnsider this conundrum: Your 16 year old daughter comes home from registration for her junior year in high school. She has a question for you about course selection. " Hey, Dad, " she asks, " do you think I oughta' enroll for Sex Education or Sex Training? " Still think I'm splitting hairs? Educating a medic means preparing them to deal with the contexts and implications of the actions theyy will be trained to execute. I think this stuff is pretty crucial to that domain . . . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 Those of you that know me know that I'm NOT religious, by any means. I don't know what happened to create us, other organisms, or the universe. Like Cristi, I have questions about all of them. Dr. B, I applaud you for including so many different theories in your book. You are opening minds to new possibilities. If the students do not have a specific belief, they may after reading your words, whether it be religious or scientific. If not, may it serve to make them more familiar with a patient's beliefs so they can be stronger patient advocates - that's ALWAYS a good thing. Cheers, Lala EMT-B --------------------------------- Yahoo! Mail Bring photos to life! New PhotoMail makes sharing a breeze. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 I can tell you which one I would pick if it is someones daughter other than mine. Not splitting hair of course. hjb docgist wrote: > > A better question would be: " Why even go that deep for paramedic > education? " It would appear that it just opens a can of worms that do > nothing but distract from the process of educating paramedics. > ________________________ > > Maybe it's too deep for the *training* of paramedics, but is paramount > > in their *education*. Think I'm splitting hairs? COnsider this > conundrum: > > Your 16 year old daughter comes home from registration for her junior > year in high school. She has a question for you about course > selection. " Hey, Dad, " she asks, " do you think I oughta' enroll for > Sex Education or Sex Training? " Still think I'm splitting hairs? > > Educating a medic means preparing them to deal with the contexts and > implications of the actions theyy will be trained to execute. I think > > this stuff is pretty crucial to that domain . . . > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 I will have to side with Danny in the way of response. I am now a Christian and this is what I choose for many reasons which involve family, friends and work. I have not always walked this path, but at age 42 it is the path I was led to. I have used Dr. Bledsoe's text as a student and as an educator and have respect for his comments and ideas. The information he has referred to will not change my mind in regard to the quality of the text and I will continue to use them, but I will also continue to be a Christian with the beliefs that come with that. Re: Loaded Question Why can't both theories be right. Evolution is a process. The chemical and biological aspects of how we are is scientific fact. Many things that we do in the medical profession can be explained by science, but there are things that cannot. How do we explain the look of those patients who are going to die, and they know it. How do we explain changes in patients that we have done everything we can think of. Everything tells us this is not going to be a good outcome, but the patients live. We teach the science but must understand the other aspects of what our care delivery must encompass. It is hard to teach the science without teaching the humanity of what our job is. My personal opinion. " Bledsoe, DO " wrote: Group: This is an honest question. First, a preface. I recently authored a chapter for an upcoming book (which will remain nameless) that detailed the chemical basis of life and subsequently disease. I opened the chapter with the standard discussion of the Big Bang Theory followed by Hubble’s confirmation of universe expansion and discussed Penzias and 's discovery of radiation in space which further proves Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory. I followed this with the standard college biology discussion of chemical evolution followed by biological evolution. In two reviews I was blasted for wanting to teach paramedics the scientific theories of the origin of life instead of the religious creation model. While I do not want to get into a Bible/Torah/Koran throwing match, I must seriously ask whether in modern health care education creationism is taught over the prevailing science theories I am not making this a religious argument. Religion performs an important role in society by setting standards for acceptable behavior. But, am I being naïve to believe that the vast majority of EMS education programs present the science ad simply leave the creationism to the churches. This is a serious inquiry and I am truly puzzled E. Bledsoe, DO, FACEP Midlothian, Texas " Is it ignorance or apathy? I don't know and I don't care! " -Jimmy Buffett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 Would it not be a better world if Jew and Muslim could live side-by-side in harmony? Can Christians not peacefully co-exist with Pagans? Why must Shiites kill Sunnis and vice-versa? The Roman Catholic Church of my youth was responsible for thousands of deaths during the Crusades. Hitler killed millions of Jews because he did not like their religion. Why is it that some humans feel they must share their religion with others? Is it because they are searching for reassurance that their beliefs are real? How many of you get excited when you see two Mormon kids, on their requisite mission, wearing a white shirt and tie pushing their bicycles up the driveway? Do you invite them in for tea and crumpets (or beer and barbecue) or don't answer the door and pretend you are away? I have never had two Jews come down my driveway and invite me to temple or offer a discount circumcision. One of the beauties of true science fiction literature is that people peacefully co-exist together. No religions, no poverty, no discrimination. Perhaps I am too much of a geek. But, being the simple-minded fellow I am, I have determined that the solution to any philosophical or epistemological can be found in the writings of either Mark Twain or Jimmy Buffett. " Where's the church, who took the steeple? Religion's in the hands of some crazy-ass people, Television preachers with bad hair and dimples, The God's honest truth is it's not that simple. It's the Buddhist in you, it's the Pagan in me It's the Muslim in him, she's Catholic ain't she? It's that born again look, it's the WASP and the Jew Tell me what's goin on, I ain't got a clue. " Jimmy Buffett " I cannot see how a man of any large degree of humorous perception can ever be religious--except he purposely shut the eyes of his mind and keep them shut by force. " Mark Twain " If Christ were here now, there is one thing he would not be--A Christian. " Mark Twain " Mosques and churches are plenty, graveyards are plenty, but morals and whisky are scarce. The Koran does not permit Mohammedans to drink. Their natural instincts do not permit them to be moral. " Mark Twain " When I asked him [Tom Sawyer] what a Muslim was, he said it was a person who was not a Presbyterian. So there is plenty of them in Missouri, though I didn't know it before. " Mark Twain Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 I can tell you which one I would pick if it is someones daughter other than mine. Not splitting hair of course. __________________________ .. . . which makes amply clear the fact that you understand the distinction. BTW, I stopped splitting hairs after I had to pay a transplant guy megabuscks to reseed my receding hairline. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 What a lovely story and should I ever have daughters I will have to remember it, BUT there is a distinction here. <<snip>> ____________________________________ Here's the point, and it is an important one . . . as a medic we teach you deal with coronaries and fractures and other injuries and illness; when you go out to work, though, you're dealing with people- -full of fears and hopes and superstsitions and beliefs--who are experiencing those coronaries and fractures and injuries and illness in the context of being people. Your technical skills provide an important foundation and decide whether you are a competent medic, but your capacity to apprehend, understand, respond to, and *appreciate* the human context surrounding each encounter whether you are an exceptional medic. At the end of the day, your technical skills aren't what the citizen you serve evaluates--in most cases, you'll have to screw it all up pretty miserably for them to think you incompetent. But what they will latch onto like those target locking systems in an F-14 is how you relate to them and their situation. People who respond with compassion built on a breadth of understanding and comprehension change lives, even as life slips away. *That's* what all those educational things are about--context and character. Training builds skills; education builds comprehension. Training brings competence; education builds compassion. Training makes you adequate; education can make you awesome. The downside is that training is straightforward while education is complex and convoluted. Training is about learning answers; education is about posing questions. A good education is about considering fleeting answers to enduring questions--you can end up more confused than when you started. You'll just be confused in a much more systematic way about much more important things at much more complex levels. The most important lesson of a good education distills to a simple maxim: Don't believe everything you think. Most importantly, learn to separate what you truly believe from what you believe to be true. Both are important, but both are distinct. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 In a message dated 16-Mar-06 10:44:14 Central Standard Time, csuprun@... writes: An interesting point here...if creationism is proven, the big question still is, where did the original hydrogen come from? Playing the Devil's Advocate for a moment, excuse the pun, how is it that Penzias and 's discovery of radiation in space proves Big Bang? Perhaps an omnipotent one wants to keep us guessing and arguing like some parlor game, over whether or not He/She/Etc. exists. Just because I think the argument is unprovable, where did the original atoms and hydrogen gas come from? One of the more interesting ideas that I got from a very devout Christian who was also a very good biologist: " Let There Be Light " would be the easiest way to explain the 'big bang' theory to a bunch of semi nomadic shepherds in the midst of one of the driest deserts of the world... He also pointed out that, despite the Bishop of Ussher, God's Time (no matter which god you are talking about) is never man's time... I suspect that my old professor would be aghast at some of the efforts of the Creationists, pointing out that they are requiring their God to be both perfectionist and compulsive....when a much simpler way would be for God/Nature/whatever was the creationist to simply set the matter in motion...and let evolution take it's course....S/HE is omniscient and omnipotent, therefore setting up the initial conditions needed to provide for the eventual Human race... Oh, and somewhere back there, Humans and Chimpanzees most likely shared a common ancestor...we are both primates with around a 99% DNA congruence...it is well accepted among biologists that we did not 'descend from apes', as many of the scoffers/creationists would phrase it... ck S. Krin, DO FAAFP Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 17, 2006 Report Share Posted March 17, 2006 This thread, which has a zillion posts, is yet more proof of my basic premise: EMS FOLKS HAVE TOO MUCH TIME WITH NOTHING TO DO. =Steve , LP= krin135@... wrote: > >In a message dated 16-Mar-06 10:44:14 Central Standard Time, >csuprun@... writes: > >An interesting point here...if creationism is proven, the big question >still is, where did the original hydrogen come from? Playing the >Devil's Advocate for a moment, excuse the pun, how is it that Penzias >and 's discovery of radiation in space proves Big Bang? Perhaps >an omnipotent one wants to keep us guessing and arguing like some parlor >game, over whether or not He/She/Etc. exists. Just because I think the >argument is unprovable, where did the original atoms and hydrogen gas >come from? > > > >One of the more interesting ideas that I got from a very devout Christian >who was also a very good biologist: > > " Let There Be Light " would be the easiest way to explain the 'big bang' >theory to a bunch of semi nomadic shepherds in the midst of one of the driest >deserts of the world... > >He also pointed out that, despite the Bishop of Ussher, God's Time (no >matter which god you are talking about) is never man's time... > >I suspect that my old professor would be aghast at some of the efforts of >the Creationists, pointing out that they are requiring their God to be both >perfectionist and compulsive....when a much simpler way would be for >God/Nature/whatever was the creationist to simply set the matter in motion...and let >evolution take it's course....S/HE is omniscient and omnipotent, therefore >setting up the initial conditions needed to provide for the eventual Human race... > >Oh, and somewhere back there, Humans and Chimpanzees most likely shared a >common ancestor...we are both primates with around a 99% DNA congruence...it is >well accepted among biologists that we did not 'descend from apes', as many >of the scoffers/creationists would phrase it... > >ck > > S. Krin, DO FAAFP > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2006 Report Share Posted March 20, 2006 Jesus wasn't a Christian, but he would have made a good Buddhist... -Ray Wylie Hubbard >>> bbledsoe@... 3/16/2006 1:23 pm >>> Would it not be a better world if Jew and Muslim could live side-by-side in harmony? Can Christians not peacefully co-exist with Pagans? Why must Shiites kill Sunnis and vice-versa? The Roman Catholic Church of my youth was responsible for thousands of deaths during the Crusades. Hitler killed millions of Jews because he did not like their religion. Why is it that some humans feel they must share their religion with others? Is it because they are searching for reassurance that their beliefs are real? How many of you get excited when you see two Mormon kids, on their requisite mission, wearing a white shirt and tie pushing their bicycles up the driveway? Do you invite them in for tea and crumpets (or beer and barbecue) or don't answer the door and pretend you are away? I have never had two Jews come down my driveway and invite me to temple or offer a discount circumcision. One of the beauties of true science fiction literature is that people peacefully co-exist together. No religions, no poverty, no discrimination. Perhaps I am too much of a geek. But, being the simple-minded fellow I am, I have determined that the solution to any philosophical or epistemological can be found in the writings of either Mark Twain or Jimmy Buffett. " Where's the church, who took the steeple? Religion's in the hands of some crazy-ass people, Television preachers with bad hair and dimples, The God's honest truth is it's not that simple. It's the Buddhist in you, it's the Pagan in me It's the Muslim in him, she's Catholic ain't she? It's that born again look, it's the WASP and the Jew Tell me what's goin on, I ain't got a clue. " Jimmy Buffett " I cannot see how a man of any large degree of humorous perception can ever be religious--except he purposely shut the eyes of his mind and keep them shut by force. " Mark Twain " If Christ were here now, there is one thing he would not be--A Christian. " Mark Twain " Mosques and churches are plenty, graveyards are plenty, but morals and whisky are scarce. The Koran does not permit Mohammedans to drink. Their natural instincts do not permit them to be moral. " Mark Twain " When I asked him [Tom Sawyer] what a Muslim was, he said it was a person who was not a Presbyterian. So there is plenty of them in Missouri, though I didn't know it before. " Mark Twain Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2006 Report Share Posted March 20, 2006 Dr. Bledsoe, if you are sincere about knowing the answer, email me personally at shah_emt@.... I have been told before that this forum is not the place to discuss religion. F.Y.I. Muslims and Jews were living peacfully till you know who decided to kick Muslims out of Jerusalem to accomodate europe's unwanted. There was no single Sunni-Shia riot in Iraq till you know who arrived at the scene. Under Muslim rulers of India, Hindus were a protected sister community for 200 yrs till the British arrived and found it profitable to make Muslims and Hindus hate each other. Anyone else who has more questions is invited on March 25, 2:00 p.m. to an open house at 8830 Old Galveston Road (Hwy 3), 77034, ph: . OR An Interfaith Education Forum on Freedom of speech vs. religion in cooperation with the Interfaith Ministries, the Boniuk Center for the Study and Advancement of Religious Tolerance, and the Houston Rabbinic Association,a panel discussion in Rice University's Herring Hall, Room 100 on Tues March 21 @ 0700 p.m. Now I have opened a can of worms for sure. Shahla Wahid EMT > > Would it not be a better world if Jew and Muslim could live side-by-side in > harmony? Can Christians not peacefully co-exist with Pagans? Why must > Shiites kill Sunnis and vice-versa? The Roman Catholic Church of my youth > was responsible for thousands of deaths during the Crusades. Hitler killed > millions of Jews because he did not like their religion. > > Why is it that some humans feel they must share their religion with others? > Is it because they are searching for reassurance that their beliefs are > real? How many of you get excited when you see two Mormon kids, on their > requisite mission, wearing a white shirt and tie pushing their bicycles up > the driveway? Do you invite them in for tea and crumpets (or beer and > barbecue) or don't answer the door and pretend you are away? I have never > had two Jews come down my driveway and invite me to temple or offer a > discount circumcision. > > One of the beauties of true science fiction literature is that people > peacefully co-exist together. No religions, no poverty, no discrimination. > Perhaps I am too much of a geek. > > But, being the simple-minded fellow I am, I have determined that the > solution to any philosophical or epistemological can be found in the > writings of either Mark Twain or Jimmy Buffett. > > " Where's the church, who took the steeple? > Religion's in the hands of some crazy-ass people, > Television preachers with bad hair and dimples, > The God's honest truth is it's not that simple. > > It's the Buddhist in you, it's the Pagan in me > It's the Muslim in him, she's Catholic ain't she? > It's that born again look, it's the WASP and the Jew > Tell me what's goin on, I ain't got a clue. " > > Jimmy Buffett > > " I cannot see how a man of any large degree of humorous perception can ever > be religious--except he purposely shut the eyes of his mind and keep them > shut by force. " > Mark Twain > > " If Christ were here now, there is one thing he would not be--A Christian. " > Mark Twain > > " Mosques and churches are plenty, graveyards are plenty, but morals and > whisky are scarce. The Koran does not permit Mohammedans to drink. Their > natural instincts do not permit them to be moral. " > Mark Twain > > " When I asked him [Tom Sawyer] what a Muslim was, he said it was a person > who was not a Presbyterian. So there is plenty of them in Missouri, though I > didn't know it before. " > Mark Twain > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2006 Report Share Posted March 20, 2006 And yet bad Budhists are killing minorities in Burma. > > Jesus wasn't a Christian, but he would have made a good Buddhist... > > -Ray Wylie Hubbard > > >>> bbledsoe@... 3/16/2006 1:23 pm >>> > Would it not be a better world if Jew and Muslim could live > side-by-side in > harmony? Can Christians not peacefully co-exist with Pagans? Why > must > Shiites kill Sunnis and vice-versa? The Roman Catholic Church of my > youth > was responsible for thousands of deaths during the Crusades. Hitler > killed > millions of Jews because he did not like their religion. > > Why is it that some humans feel they must share their religion with > others? > Is it because they are searching for reassurance that their beliefs > are > real? How many of you get excited when you see two Mormon kids, on > their > requisite mission, wearing a white shirt and tie pushing their bicycles > up > the driveway? Do you invite them in for tea and crumpets (or beer and > barbecue) or don't answer the door and pretend you are away? I have > never > had two Jews come down my driveway and invite me to temple or offer a > discount circumcision. > > One of the beauties of true science fiction literature is that people > peacefully co-exist together. No religions, no poverty, no > discrimination. > Perhaps I am too much of a geek. > > But, being the simple-minded fellow I am, I have determined that the > solution to any philosophical or epistemological can be found in the > writings of either Mark Twain or Jimmy Buffett. > > " Where's the church, who took the steeple? > Religion's in the hands of some crazy-ass people, > Television preachers with bad hair and dimples, > The God's honest truth is it's not that simple. > > It's the Buddhist in you, it's the Pagan in me > It's the Muslim in him, she's Catholic ain't she? > It's that born again look, it's the WASP and the Jew > Tell me what's goin on, I ain't got a clue. " > > Jimmy Buffett > > " I cannot see how a man of any large degree of humorous perception can > ever > be religious--except he purposely shut the eyes of his mind and keep > them > shut by force. " > Mark Twain > > " If Christ were here now, there is one thing he would not be--A > Christian. " > Mark Twain > > " Mosques and churches are plenty, graveyards are plenty, but morals > and > whisky are scarce. The Koran does not permit Mohammedans to drink. > Their > natural instincts do not permit them to be moral. " > Mark Twain > > " When I asked him [Tom Sawyer] what a Muslim was, he said it was a > person > who was not a Presbyterian. So there is plenty of them in Missouri, > though I > didn't know it before. " > Mark Twain > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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