Love_In_Rio
Veteran
winstonsmith1978 said:I'm not going to lie, this game has got me really excited. I've wanted a game that focused on evolution for a long time. Although my dream evolution game would be a game that gave you control over everything except the actual lifeforms.
So, you would have control over the weather, the planet, the environment, the physics, the atmosphere, moons, sun, water, mountains, etc. Then you just sit back and watch how life evolves. This would take some amazing AI and simulation, but i would love to see a game that could be used as a teaching device and also be fun.
But Spore will be great for the time being.
Fruitfrenzy said:It didn't occur to me but my wife pointed out (while I was watching the video) that this game basically adheres to the intelligent design philosophy. I wonder if that was their intention.
Well, you could have homosexual relationships in the sims......Fruitfrenzy said:It didn't occur to me but my wife pointed out (while I was watching the video) that this game basically adheres to the intelligent design philosophy. I wonder if that was their intention.
If you listen to the video, Wright tells you what his influences are. Not intelligent design, it's sci-fi, TV shows, monkeys with guns, astronomy, etc. Of course you get to design your own creatures in the early part of the game - there wouldn't be much for the player to do if you didn't get to choose how to build stuff!Fruitfrenzy said:It didn't occur to me but my wife pointed out (while I was watching the video) that this game basically adheres to the intelligent design philosophy. I wonder if that was their intention.
Fruitfrenzy said:It didn't occur to me but my wife pointed out (while I was watching the video) that this game basically adheres to the intelligent design philosophy. I wonder if that was their intention.
That's a very strange assertion to make.Plus random mutations are invariably damaging or at least not-beneficial.
The thing is, you can't even treat ID as false in a scientific sense, as it is not falsifiable. So, while you are right in so far as evolution is "just" a theory (like, for example, the theory of electromagnetism), saying "ID or other theories" dangerously intermingles the colloquial and scientific definition of the word theory.Shifty Geezer said:It strikes me as very hypocritical of people to talk up natural evolution and criticise ID or other theories, when there are holes in the Genetic Darwinism theory bigger than that which sunk the Titanic! They're all theories at the moment. None is proven, and treating either or as false is acting on faith (belief in a theory, not religious faith) rather than science.[/rant]
This'll be my last post on the matter 'coz it's way off topic but it needs to be made to clear this point up before the mods chop this all out. I wasn't arguing for or against Evolutionary Theory, nor Creationlism, nor Intelligent Design, but the premature acceptance of theories as facts. Teaching Genetic Darwinism as fact, as it is done now, is no different to the teaching of many, many theories throughout history that have later been proven to be wrong, some of which I gave examples. It's also strange that the moment someone suggets Genetic Darwinsim isn't a sufficiently proven theory to be accepted as fact, they are assumed to be a Creationalist! Asking questions of something doesn't mean you believe the opposite. But I guess this is the same human nature that sees fans of one console assuming anyone questioning their points in favour of their console must be fans of the other brands.PeterT said:Anyway, I always find it baffling how otherwise reasonable people are easily fooled by creationist reasoning just because it appeals to their anti-authoritarian streak. I even met one person here in europe recently that parroted the "it's only a theory!" line. Strange times...
Then we actually agree. No theory should be taught as a fact, and scientific theories are only useful as long as they're not proven wrong. Evolution has not been, yet it is being derided in public. In contrast, classical mechanics are in fact wrong (in some cases) as some smart people discovered around the beginning of the last century. Yet they are still taught and there is no great public outrage - I wonder why?Shifty Geezer said:Teaching Genetic Darwinism as fact, as it is done now, is no different to the teaching of many, many theories throughout history that have later been proven to be wrong, some of which I gave examples.