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This has been discussed before but these types of questions keep coming.

Should we add questions about creationism/mythical stories/intelligent design as one of the permanently listed off topic criteria (such as basic chemistry and no-effort-homeworks)?

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  • $\begingroup$ There are only three spots for custom close reasons, so we would have to disable one of the existing ones for this. $\endgroup$ Oct 28, 2014 at 12:53
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    $\begingroup$ @MadScientist General Chemistry can be disabled in my opinion. I guess very few questions really qualify as one. Chemistry ones can be flagged for migration. $\endgroup$
    – WYSIWYG
    Oct 28, 2014 at 13:00
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    $\begingroup$ How many questions are moved between the different stackexchange sites? I think there are not so much, so this could be moved to the open spot. Alternatively, is it possible to change the "This question belongs on another site in the Stack Exchange network " so that it shows a text box in which the relevant site can be entered instead of pointing to our meta-site? $\endgroup$
    – Chris Mod
    Oct 28, 2014 at 13:46
  • $\begingroup$ Somewhat related: meta.biology.stackexchange.com/questions/437/… $\endgroup$ Oct 28, 2014 at 13:48
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    $\begingroup$ @Chris. It is a limitation with beta sites - cant migrate to other SE. See this discussion. $\endgroup$
    – WYSIWYG
    Oct 29, 2014 at 4:38
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    $\begingroup$ @Chris: To be precise, AFAIK there's no technical reason why the SE folks couldn't enable community migration for a beta site, they just have an established policy of not doing so (and they tend to be stingy with it even for graduated sites). Actually, IME community migration in general tends to work kind of poorly, except for very specific cases where two sites have a clear-cut separation in topic but a substantial overlap in users (such as between the main site and the meta site here), so I can understand the reluctance of SE to enable the feature where it's not obviously needed. $\endgroup$ Oct 31, 2014 at 18:45
  • $\begingroup$ No, because arbitrary censorship (when the ruling party line has yet to be hard-proven) is unscientific and unamerican. Shutting down legitimate discussion because it might prove the establishment wrong is the domain of totalitarian regimes. Despite what the mainstream would have people believe, science hasn't come even close to disproving intelligent design. (and no, a "consensus of experts" doesn't constitute objective fact) $\endgroup$ Apr 22, 2019 at 18:23

3 Answers 3

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No. As I have already said here, in my opinion, such questions should be welcome here as long as they are good questions by the standards of SE. In my experience, such questions fall into two broad categories:

  1. Questions where the OP is honestly confused, has had the misfortune of being raised in a place where creationism or ID are taught in school and offered as valid alternatives to evolution. The OP has an honest question and is truly interested in the answer.

    In such cases, it is important that we, as the experts, help them understand. We tend to forget that the general public is not as aware of the details of what the theory of evolution posits as we are. As experts, it is our responsibility to enlighten them and help them understand.

  2. Questions where the OP is trying to poke holes in the theory of evolution. These are more annoying but I still feel they should be welcome. All creationist/ID arguments I've ever come across are based on a fundamental misunderstanding or pure ignorance of what evolution is about and how it works. They are trvial to debunk and answer. We should do so.

    Now, if the OP wants to start an argument and doesn't want to listen, we can either ignore them or close the question as too broad (since it is very likely to be so)

In short, most such questions are usually bad (too broad, primarily opinion based etc). Those we can close without needing any special close reasons. The few that remain that are good questions should be answered. If the OP makes the effort of formulating a clear, well written question about ID, we should take the time to answer them and set them straight. After all, we actually have valid arguments to support our position. Why would we choose to run from a question instead of answering it? Ours is the rational, verifiable position. Theirs is the irrational, non-verifiable one that is based on fairy tales. We don't accept the validity of evolutionary theory because it says so in our holy text books. We have actual evidence. If we just close these questions with extreme prejudice, we give the message that science is just as dogmatic as religion.

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Creationism/intelligent design is wrong a matter of opinion.

Somewhat related is the recent PloS ONE retraction "Biomechanical Characteristics of Hand Coordination in Grasping Activities of Daily Living". Intelligent design cannot be shown with scientific rationale. If we consider this site to be scientific, we must accept that any such similar fundamentally unscientific ideas cannot be on topic.

Most of these questions will naturally be opinion based since in it is ones opinion that the original premise is either true or false (it remains untestable). By extension questions based on that already are a matter of opinion.

Evolution rhetoric can be edited out.

A side note here is that many times it is a simple semantic mistake implying that evolution is aiming at something. This is nothing more than a genuine misunderstanding and can often be easily edited out unless there is something else wrong with the question or OP is stubborn.

Myth and religion.

I must say I haven't come across too many of these. Most probably one could close for an individual custom reason like

Dragons don't exist, so it's tricky to answer a question about Dragon biochemistry.

or

Whilst nativity is a lovely story, there is no biological reason nor evidence this could have happened in humans.

Broadly speaking I agree with @Terdon. The close reasons in place are good enough when things break down. Custom reasons are good enough since the occurrences are so rare.

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The link provided in the question has many good and convincing arguments as to why questions related to Creationism and Intelligent Design should be categorically viewed as off topic. They are asked to advance a position that is in no way related to scientific discourse. I also think that considering the size of the community and the activity on meta, that there were more than enough votes to adopt a no tolerance policy for Creationist and ID based questions.

What you have right now as the rule is that only the truly horrendous questions get booted. The reverse should be true. The rule should be to categorically reject, except in the exceptional case that the community feels that there is a greater worth to the answer being provided. It should be no different to the handling of subjective questions. There are the rare few that are tolerated, and only when they lead to truly outstanding answers, such as this question related to evolution (though an actual science question and not an ID couched question) should they be allowed to stand.

I would add to that that as SE is positioned as an Educational Site that we take a lead from Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, where the decision was that ID and Creationism had no place in a scientific educational setting and that even the forced acknowledgement of controversy was out of bounds as the controversy was only a way of advancing a religious ideology as a result of the fact that no scientific controversy actually existed.

To address Terdon's points

1) If someone is actually interested in clarifying misconceptions that they were indoctrinated in, there are ways of asking the questions that seek out that clarity without bringing those misconceptions into play in the question. I think sometimes we think that the Poor IDers are uneducated, so they do not even know how to construct a question without falling back on bankrupt ideology and rhetoric. The ability to ask an appropriate question (site appropriate question) has nothing to do with ones beliefs. If the poster cannot formulate an appropriate question that asks for facts without bring ID into the question, then it should be closed, as policy.

2) As with 1, there are ways to ask a question and ways to not ask a question, and if they cannot come up with a question that leaves out ID or Creationism, then those are bad questions. Remember that it isn't only that a single question could have a good answer provided, it is that the questions are chaff and the more chaff that builds up on the site over the years, the more difficult it will become to find the insightful questions, as they will get buried under salacious questions that get caught up in ideological voting wars. Take this question. While it is closed, the question itself prompted 30 upvotes with an overall positive vote of 25. The top rated answer received 87 upvotes with a total score of 78, even though it is primarily opinion based and the references that were added after it was pointed out that there were none are, at best, week. So for arguments sake, if the question had been allowed to stand, it would have been one of the top rated Evolution questions on the site, and that becomes the face that we would be putting forward for the world to see.

The fact that there is a mechanism that allows for questions that are too broad to be removed doesn't mitigate the need to have a no tolerance policy for all but the truly exceptional questions. As such, there should be a specific mechanism to address ID/Creationist questions for removal.

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