| Hub You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > News and Society > Religion > Preserving The Sanctity Of Science |
|
Hub You - Preserving The Sanctity Of Science
Wake County - NC: A Very Desirable County to Live In as optional or by urging teachers to describe it as just one of several theories. There is also a movement to insert ID into public schools by way of speakers, clubs, and/or textbook disclaimers. Curiously, such ID groups seem to focus more on how they can tactically and legally introduce the topic into science classes than they do on producing verifiable scientific research.Wake County has been voted one of the best places to live and work in North Carolina. This is largely because of all the things there are to do in and around Wake County. Wake County is even home to Raleigh, the capital of North Carolina. This is a very large city and can be considered the center of activity for North Carolina.Raleigh has proved to be a very desirable city to live in. The government has taken steps to bring in business and help keep the city in good condition. They even passed a large recycling bill to help keep things clean.The nicest thing about Raleigh and Wake County in general is the abundance of wildlife. The area hasn’t been urbanized like a lot of counties across the U.S. While there are still a lot of houses, streets, and city blocks there are trees and parks all around. You can still find beautiful neighborhoods where you can sit on the porch and listen to the birds sing.The reason for all this wildlife is because of urban forestry. This is a fancy way of saying the government helps plant trees and takes care of wildlife in general. It helps to keep the area looking good and healthy.Wake County also offers an abundance of recreation to people seeking a little fun. Battle lines are being drawn across the country over the teaching of ID........which, to be more specific, is a concept similar to but not identical to creation science. ID relies upon a lack of knowledge for its conclusion. In the absence of such an explanation, intelligent causes are assumed. ID also includes a curious and telling component, one that focuses on ideological and religious goa Email Marketing - How to Get Higher Open Rates In one of the most important legal clashes between faith and evolution since the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial, a federal judge recently barred a Pennsylvania public school district from teaching “intelligent design” (hereafter referred to as ID) in biology class, saying the concept is creationism in disguise. Creationism holds that there is scientific evidence to support the Genesis account of the creation of the earth and of life. However, legal doctrine holds that the public school classroom must be religiously neutral and that schools must not advocate religious views. In 1987, in Edwards v. Aguillard, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that teaching creationism in public schools results in the unconstitutional establishment of religion. Evolution, on the other hand, is intrinsically anti-religious and the teaching of same presents no such issues.Email marketing has become a much more competitive market in the last few years, and it is something that has evolved into something that only the savvy, creative, crafty, and intelligent can get good at. You see, if someone is getting 100 emails a day, you have to do more than just have the catchiest headline to get read. You cannot have the best headline everyday, and yet you want to be read everyday. So you have to get good at some other things.Here is a list of what I believe works best for getting higher email open rates:1) You must think along the lines of developing a relationship with your email subscribers. Just think about this, if you get 20 emails today in your inbox, and two of them are from friends, which ones are going to get read for sure? The ones from friends are going to get read first, and only a few of the rest might get read. You have to become their friend. Send them useful information. Send them only the best. Find out what they need, and get it to them. Answer questions from your readers. Personally. Never have an autoresponder email answered by another autoresponder. Find a way to answer every email personally. You see, it is the people who are interactive that are going to b In Missouri, a legislative approach was tried but it now appears to be dead according to the April 2, 2006 edition of the Kansas City Star. HB 1266, the so-called Missouri Science Education Act, would have provided, "If a theory or hypothesis of biological origins is taught, a critical analysis of such theory or hypothesis shall be taught in a substantive amount." The bill was opposed by a wide range of teacher groups and school organizations, and even several faith-based groups. The Star quoted the chief lobbyist for the Missouri affiliate of the National Education Association as expressing concern about the possible economic consequences of HB 1266 as follows: "We need to be doing our utmost to increase science literacy so our kids can compete." But the Kansas State Board of Education, reinforcing that state's increasingly wacky reputation, took an aggressive, if not dubious, policy step. At the risk of re-igniting the same nationwide squabble it sparked several years ago, the Kansas board approved new public school science standards that cast doubt on the theory of evolution. The 6-4 vote was a win for ID advocates who interestingly helped draft the standards. (ID holds that the universe is so complex it must have been created by a higher power.) Critics of the language charged that it was an attempt to inject God and creationism into public schools in violation of the separation of church and state. "This is a sad day. We're becoming a laughingstock of not only the nation, but of the world, and I hate that," said board member Janet Waugh, a Kansas City Democrat. And rightly so, for the vote marked the third time in six years that the Kansas board has rewritten standards with evolution as the central issue. In 1999, the board eliminated most references to evolution, a move Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould said was akin to teaching "American history without Lincoln." Two years later, after voters replaced three members, the board reverted to evolution-friendly standards. Elections in 2002 and 2004 changed the board's composition again, making it more conservative. And now this. Other states could follow suit; a few have learned to get around the Supreme Court ruling by platforming the teaching of evolution as optional or by urging teachers to describe it as just one of several theories. There is also a movement to insert ID into public schools by way of speakers, clubs, and/or textbook disclaimers. Curiously, such ID groups seem to focus more on how they can tactically and legally introduce the topic into science classes than they do on producing verifiable scientific research. Battle lines are being drawn across the country over the teaching of ID........which, to be more specific, is a concept similar to but not identical to creation science. ID relies upon a lack of knowledge for its conclusion. In the absence of such an explanation, intelligent causes are assumed. ID also includes a curious and telling component, one that focuses on ideological and religious goal Projects Cost More As Interest Rate Rises ically anti-religious and the teaching of same presents no such issues.The last time Inflation was above 4% interest rates were 11%, Terry Waite had just been released and it was the 17th of November 1991. In business terms many lifetimes ago. Whether the Bank of England will raise interest rates to 11% to achieve Gordon Brown’s mandate I will leave to the Money markets to speculate. It is unlikely that interest rates and hence the cost of capital will return the “lowest rates in 30 years” within the next two years.Within the context of Business’ implementing projects how should they respond to the changing environment? Those industries with capital intensive projects; Construction, Supply Chain related (warehousing, logistics, stock management) and IT Systems (ERP never cost less than a ?1.0m to implement) will be impacted most and what can we learn from their processes? Below is a five step process which will aid management teams to focus their attention on the key tasks.Stage One, demands a review of the projects applying the benefits ratio matrix below. This enables the management team to classify projects in order that they can be compared not in absolute terms (Amount the project is spending) but relative to the Capital Expenditure Budget and the benefits ratios the project wil In Missouri, a legislative approach was tried but it now appears to be dead according to the April 2, 2006 edition of the Kansas City Star. HB 1266, the so-called Missouri Science Education Act, would have provided, "If a theory or hypothesis of biological origins is taught, a critical analysis of such theory or hypothesis shall be taught in a substantive amount." The bill was opposed by a wide range of teacher groups and school organizations, and even several faith-based groups. The Star quoted the chief lobbyist for the Missouri affiliate of the National Education Association as expressing concern about the possible economic consequences of HB 1266 as follows: "We need to be doing our utmost to increase science literacy so our kids can compete." But the Kansas State Board of Education, reinforcing that state's increasingly wacky reputation, took an aggressive, if not dubious, policy step. At the risk of re-igniting the same nationwide squabble it sparked several years ago, the Kansas board approved new public school science standards that cast doubt on the theory of evolution. The 6-4 vote was a win for ID advocates who interestingly helped draft the standards. (ID holds that the universe is so complex it must have been created by a higher power.) Critics of the language charged that it was an attempt to inject God and creationism into public schools in violation of the separation of church and state. "This is a sad day. We're becoming a laughingstock of not only the nation, but of the world, and I hate that," said board member Janet Waugh, a Kansas City Democrat. And rightly so, for the vote marked the third time in six years that the Kansas board has rewritten standards with evolution as the central issue. In 1999, the board eliminated most references to evolution, a move Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould said was akin to teaching "American history without Lincoln." Two years later, after voters replaced three members, the board reverted to evolution-friendly standards. Elections in 2002 and 2004 changed the board's composition again, making it more conservative. And now this. Other states could follow suit; a few have learned to get around the Supreme Court ruling by platforming the teaching of evolution as optional or by urging teachers to describe it as just one of several theories. There is also a movement to insert ID into public schools by way of speakers, clubs, and/or textbook disclaimers. Curiously, such ID groups seem to focus more on how they can tactically and legally introduce the topic into science classes than they do on producing verifiable scientific research. Battle lines are being drawn across the country over the teaching of ID........which, to be more specific, is a concept similar to but not identical to creation science. ID relies upon a lack of knowledge for its conclusion. In the absence of such an explanation, intelligent causes are assumed. ID also includes a curious and telling component, one that focuses on ideological and religious goa Direct Mail Strategies: How To Get a 50% D.M. Response Rate With A Stroke Of The Pen o increase science literacy so our kids can compete."Did you know that your clients and customers are getting hit with approximately 3,000 advertising messages a day! This barrage of advertising noise is making it increasingly difficult for prospective customers to hear what your business has to offer.So, what can a business do to break through this noise and actually have their messages heard by their targeted customers? Many businesses have just simply started to advertise more and louder…which simply compounds the overall problem. Some have tried gimmicks and sales. Still others have simply accepted a stagnant business growth model.However, a few have begun to see huge success with a 2,000 year old tool that has none of the sexiness of a celebrity endorsement or the award winning graphics of a Madison Avenue Advertising firm. That tool is a simple handwritten note.• A Midwestern restaurant owner sent out a series of handwritten notes to his customers and had a 20% response rate.• A financial planner in the Northeast sent out just 80 handwritten notes to touch base with prospects and had 6 people call him and 2 set appointments.• A non-profit was able to get 51 donations by simply sending a handwritten note to warm list of 100 peo But the Kansas State Board of Education, reinforcing that state's increasingly wacky reputation, took an aggressive, if not dubious, policy step. At the risk of re-igniting the same nationwide squabble it sparked several years ago, the Kansas board approved new public school science standards that cast doubt on the theory of evolution. The 6-4 vote was a win for ID advocates who interestingly helped draft the standards. (ID holds that the universe is so complex it must have been created by a higher power.) Critics of the language charged that it was an attempt to inject God and creationism into public schools in violation of the separation of church and state. "This is a sad day. We're becoming a laughingstock of not only the nation, but of the world, and I hate that," said board member Janet Waugh, a Kansas City Democrat. And rightly so, for the vote marked the third time in six years that the Kansas board has rewritten standards with evolution as the central issue. In 1999, the board eliminated most references to evolution, a move Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould said was akin to teaching "American history without Lincoln." Two years later, after voters replaced three members, the board reverted to evolution-friendly standards. Elections in 2002 and 2004 changed the board's composition again, making it more conservative. And now this. Other states could follow suit; a few have learned to get around the Supreme Court ruling by platforming the teaching of evolution as optional or by urging teachers to describe it as just one of several theories. There is also a movement to insert ID into public schools by way of speakers, clubs, and/or textbook disclaimers. Curiously, such ID groups seem to focus more on how they can tactically and legally introduce the topic into science classes than they do on producing verifiable scientific research. Battle lines are being drawn across the country over the teaching of ID........which, to be more specific, is a concept similar to but not identical to creation science. ID relies upon a lack of knowledge for its conclusion. In the absence of such an explanation, intelligent causes are assumed. ID also includes a curious and telling component, one that focuses on ideological and religious goa Verizon Voicewing - Is It the Answer to All Your Prayers? f not only the nation, but of the world, and I hate that," said board member Janet Waugh, a Kansas City Democrat. And rightly so, for the vote marked the third time in six years that the Kansas board has rewritten standards with evolution as the central issue. In 1999, the board eliminated most references to evolution, a move Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould said was akin to teaching "American history without Lincoln." Two years later, after voters replaced three members, the board reverted to evolution-friendly standards. Elections in 2002 and 2004 changed the board's composition again, making it more conservative. And now this.VoiceWing from Verizon is phone service that use Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) that uses your high-speed Internet connection to process the calls. You can use your traditional telephone with this service but will also need a router and adapter to take full advantage of this service. Some of the features of Verizon VoiceWing include the ability to make local, long distance, and International calls at substantially lower rates than traditional phone service providers and has features that you are already accustomed to using everyday along with a soft phone on your computer screen, and the ability to have your voice mail go directly to your email.The way VoiceWing works is by converting the analog signature of your traditional phone into a digital signature, which travels in packets over the Internet. In order to do this you will need to have a router that changes the analog signal to a digital signal. One of the great features of VoiceWing is the ability to make and receive calls using the broadband connection while still being able to access the Internet. Verizon VoiceWing has several VoIP plans:* VoiceWing 500* VoiceWing Unlimited for Verizon Online DSL and FiOS* VoiceWing UnlimitedWith V Other states could follow suit; a few have learned to get around the Supreme Court ruling by platforming the teaching of evolution as optional or by urging teachers to describe it as just one of several theories. There is also a movement to insert ID into public schools by way of speakers, clubs, and/or textbook disclaimers. Curiously, such ID groups seem to focus more on how they can tactically and legally introduce the topic into science classes than they do on producing verifiable scientific research. Battle lines are being drawn across the country over the teaching of ID........which, to be more specific, is a concept similar to but not identical to creation science. ID relies upon a lack of knowledge for its conclusion. In the absence of such an explanation, intelligent causes are assumed. ID also includes a curious and telling component, one that focuses on ideological and religious goa NASDAQ 800? as optional or by urging teachers to describe it as just one of several theories. There is also a movement to insert ID into public schools by way of speakers, clubs, and/or textbook disclaimers. Curiously, such ID groups seem to focus more on how they can tactically and legally introduce the topic into science classes than they do on producing verifiable scientific research.In November of 2000 when the NASDAQ was trading at 3000 I wrote in this column that the NASDAQ Index would fall to 1500 and I got lots of heat for saying it. Microsoft had fallen from $129 to $60 per share. You know where they are today.The talking heads on CNBC-TV and many of the radio stock experts are convinced we are headed back up as soon as this small “correction” is over – and they could be right, but I seem to remember their former predictions just before the major stock indexes went over the edge of Financial Niagara Falls. Can it happen again since the market has fallen so far?For a year the DOW has been creeping higher. The NASDAQ has gained back about 40%, but please remember the NASDAQ Index is not composed of the same stocks as it was 3 years ago and neither is the DOW. Many companies went bankrupt and others have been delisted because they do not meet the criteria to remain on the board.Too many investors have not done their homework. Most of them only know the great bull market of 1982 to 2000. The same goes for brokers. Almost none have ever seen a bear market. I call the mutual fund managers ‘children’ because most of them were in diapers during the last bear of l972-74 and they discount th Battle lines are being drawn across the country over the teaching of ID........which, to be more specific, is a concept similar to but not identical to creation science. ID relies upon a lack of knowledge for its conclusion. In the absence of such an explanation, intelligent causes are assumed. ID also includes a curious and telling component, one that focuses on ideological and religious goals rather than scholarly ones. Proponents argue that a neutral-sounding "intelligence" is responsible for design. Their premise seems to be that as long as they don't explicitly name the "designer," this somehow insulates their viewpoint from the charge of being inherently religious in character. Their arguments are carefully crafted to appear scientific and non-religious, though they have no data supporting their claims. At one time, they promoted creationism as a religious imperative. Now they package their beliefs as “better science.” But more to the point, the real question is: does ID have a legitimate place in a high school science curriculum? Does it have a place in Kennett High right here in Conway, New Hampshire? In deciding whether to consider including ID in the curriculum, the sectarian orientation and nature of the movement should be taken into account. The Discovery Institute's Center for Renewal of Science and Culture in Seattle serves as an home for virtually all of the major advocates of ID. The goals of the CRSC, as stated by the Institute's director Bruce Chapman, are explicitly religious: namely, to promote Christian theism and to defeat philosophical materialism. Thus, for constitutional reasons, if for no other, the religious orientation of ID clearly makes it unsuitable. Moreover, school board members here and elsewhere should be aware that introducing this topic into the curriculum likely would lead to strong--even legal--opposition from, parents, teachers, clergy, and scientists and others who want to see the sanctity of science preserved. Now then, the reason for all this seems pretty obvious. Put simply, the aim of ID advocates is to get around the constitutional ban on religion in public schools with their real agenda being the promotion of faith-based teachings in the classroom. Unlike the metaphysical chop suey in which ID frequently gets entangled, science seeks natural explanations for natural phenomena. It does so by logical inferences from observable facts, experimentation, and verification and relies on reason and evidence. In reason, as Keith Lockitch (a Ph.D. In physics) asserts, one accepts only conclusions that can be proven to be true--conclusions based on sensory evidence and logical inference from such evidence. Faith, on the other hand, is belief that is not supported by facts or logic. It embraces ideas and concepts despite an absence of evidence or proof. But, it would seem, the only ideas that are reasonable are those you know to be true by means of reason, that is, through observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena. Most scientists maintain that scientific investigation must adhere to the scientific method, a process for evaluating empirical knowledge under the working assumption of methodological materialism , which explains observable events in nature as a result of natural causes, rejecting supernatural notions. ( from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia) Clearly, science and religion are mutually exclusive. Each has an im
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Show Me the Money on the Internet - Part 1 List Building: Organizing to Take Care of Your List
|