Thanks for the link Davis but it does not address the issue that is brought up in the original post. The examples given in your link were “retrodictions”. To quote the original post...
“Thanks to hindsight bias, it’s also not enough to check how well your theory “predicts” facts you already know. You’ve got to predict for tomorrow, not yesterday. It’s the only way a messy human mind can be guaranteed of sending a pure forward message.”
I’m not arguing that evolution is pseudoscience. I’m just saying that evolution as an explanation could makes us think we understand more than we really do. Again I am no creationist, the data clearly does not fit the creationist explanation.
Prediction doesn’t have to mean literally predicting future events; it can mean predicting what more we will discover about the past.
E by NS holds that there is one tree of life (at least for complex organisms), just like a family tree. That is a prediction. It means that we won’t find a human in the same fossil stratum and dating to the same time period as a fishlike creature that’s supposed to be our great-to-the-nth-power grammy. So that’s a prediction about our future discoveries, one that has been borne out. That’s one example from a non-expert.
Thanks for the link Davis but it does not address the issue that is brought up in the original post. The examples given in your link were “retrodictions”. To quote the original post...
“Thanks to hindsight bias, it’s also not enough to check how well your theory “predicts” facts you already know. You’ve got to predict for tomorrow, not yesterday. It’s the only way a messy human mind can be guaranteed of sending a pure forward message.”
I’m not arguing that evolution is pseudoscience. I’m just saying that evolution as an explanation could makes us think we understand more than we really do. Again I am no creationist, the data clearly does not fit the creationist explanation.
@C of A:
Prediction doesn’t have to mean literally predicting future events; it can mean predicting what more we will discover about the past.
E by NS holds that there is one tree of life (at least for complex organisms), just like a family tree. That is a prediction. It means that we won’t find a human in the same fossil stratum and dating to the same time period as a fishlike creature that’s supposed to be our great-to-the-nth-power grammy. So that’s a prediction about our future discoveries, one that has been borne out. That’s one example from a non-expert.