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Taner Edis

Taner Edis
Taner Edis at TAM13 7-17-15.JPG
At The Amaz!ng Meeting - July 2015
Born (1967-08-20) August 20, 1967 (age 49)
Nationality Turkish
Fields Theoretical physics, Condensed matter physics
Institutions
Alma mater
Known for Author
Website
edis.sites.truman.edu

Taner Edis (born August 20, 1967) is a Turkish American physicist and skeptic. He is a professor of physics at Truman State University. He received his B.S. from Bogaziçi University in Turkey and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University. Edis is the author of several books on creationism, religion and science. He is a Scientific and Technical Consultant for the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry.

Born and raised in Istanbul, Turkey to Turkish and American parents, he traveled to America many times in his childhood.

Fascinated by the plethora of supernatural and fringe science beliefs around him, and concerned about the rise of Islamist politics back in Turkey, Edis first got involved with skeptical inquiry into religious and paranormal claims during his graduate studies. "Science is difficult," states Edis to Point of Inquiry interviewer D.J. Grothe in answer to a question about why science has not replaced religion. Edis explains to his students that they will have difficulty understanding this "because the human brain is not wired to understand something like quantum mechanics correctly, its a struggle."

Edis has given several lectures about Islamic creationism, one of his premises is that creationism in the United States is quite mild compared to Islamic countries. In Turkey for example, despite being known as a secular country, it has high levels of belief in a young Earth. This is because the textbooks and curriculum in the schools do not offer both evolution and creationism, but only creationism. Teaching evolution is not part of the syllabus as all. Grothe asked Taner in 2007 if he thought that Islam could be compatible with western science, his answer was that it just depends on the type of Islamism, like Christianity there are liberal and conservative Muslims, the more liberal the views the more compatible they are to science.

Concerning crop circles Edis wrote that we know how these are created, we know the techniques. "So we do not need to find the perpetrator of every crop circle to figure out that probably they all are human made. Many true believers remain who continue to think there is something paranormal — perhaps alien — about crop circles. But the circles we know all fall within the range of the sort of thing done in hoaxes. Nothing stands out as extraordinary."


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