Interested in philosophy, science (and the history of both), pizza, music, children, and world peace -- not necessarily in that order.
I have contributed to, edited, or possibly vandalized (grin) the following pages, among others:
I have been trying to correct instances of what I saw ambiguity or "bias" in the Wikipedia articles on controversies dear to me, but I concede freesy that what I see as "bias" in others may merely be ideas I disagree with. I do hope that I can overcome my own biases well enough to make a positive contribution here.
Feel free to set me straight at any time. I respond to reason, praise, and pizza!!
Welcome to Wikipedia!
Another way to ask questions is to put them right on this page, then put a summary in the Summary field. Within minutes usually someone will respond.
You can add a Talk page if you have a question on an article, and ask your question there. Someone will answer. You can ask on your own page (this one) if it's not related to a specific article. You can also add a /Talk page to your own personal page when conversations here get too long or annoying, or if you just don't like others adding stuff like this statement for instance. :-) --Dmerrill
It's been good working with you today, Ed. While we apparently disagree on a lot, we both want to see accurate and npov representations of all beliefs, not just our own. So we actually clashed rather little, and wound up educating each other instead of arguing. That's in the best of the Wikipedia spirit!
However, I still think you do not understand natural selection. It means exactly what it says -- it attempts to explain the process of selection of survivors in nature. That's all. It has nothing to do with what causes the variations in organisms.
It does accept as a premise that those variations happen, but only as a premise upon which the theory is built. The cause of the variations is not a part of the theory. You are reading into it things that are not part of it, but part of a separate phenomenon usually called individuation. What ID proposes is a different cause, and a different characterization, of individuation.
Natural selection does not explain the appearance of new forms, only the mechanism by which one survives and another does not.
The two, taken together (individuation + natural selection) are called evolution. By interpreting "natural selection" to mean "individuation + selection", you are making "natural selection" == "evolution" which is wrong.
I believe this is only a misunderstanding. It is quite common to not really understand views with which you do not agree, as part of not taking them seriously. I do that myself. But if you're going to write an encyclopedia article it is important that you reflect other people's views accurately, and I don't think you're doing that. --Dmerrill
By the way, I'm waiting to see what you write about Pizza. :-)
I'd like to thank Ed for making what I believe is a sincere attempt to remain npov. If these articles on controversial topics have any chance of a truly sympathetic portrayal, while remaining npov, we need people like Ed who can explain their belief without attempting to state it as fact. It's possible I missed something Ed did, but all my interactions with him on Friday were as smooth as you could expect when two diametrically opposing worldviews are working together. We had a few clashes, but worked them out. I certainly don't feel my time was wasted. --Dmerrill