Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I can tell you're an atheist by the way that you put your supposedly unbiased views of God in such a horrible manner, such as pointing out with God all of the 'impossible' things that He's done AND in a manner that oozes with the belief that the biblical God doesn't exist. It's also so easily seen through by your saying how people please God and while good people are rewarded with eternal life with him the bad people go to hell. That is an ignorant and uninformed statement, only mentioned in that way because that's generally what you hear other nonchristians say when trying to put down Christianity and make it sound bad (which is what you're doing) Am I incorrect? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Your
feedback is marked as being in response the the general
talkorigins archive FAQ.
This FAQ has no one author. It has been put together with input from a variety of folks, at least some of whom are Christians and not atheists. There is certainly nothing in the FAQ intended to put down Christians. I see nothing in the FAQ which speaks of heaven and hell, or of God doing impossible things. You do seem to be quite incorrect, on all counts. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Have you heard of Dr. Kent Hovind? He has a book out about Brainwashing in our schools (more accurarate than the one you talked about). He has soundly made evolution look as silly as it is. Microevolution is a fact--true to all. But that doesn't mean I came from dirt. Give me proof that any other form of evolution is true. Thank you. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Meteorite Dust and the Age of the Earth |
Response: | Surely you
jest. "Dr." Kent Hovind is widely known, and one of the
best jokes going in the world of creationism. He's a laugh
a minute. Bereft of any real education, boasting a fake
degree from a fake school, Hovind markets himself across
the country better than a plaid-coated used car salesman.
He makes creationism look siller than any evolutionist
could dream of doing. With guys like Hovind on your side,
all I can say is "good luck, fella", 'cause your going to
need all you can get.
|
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | If abiogenesis occured 3 1/2 billion y.a. (I dont remember if that is right or not) and it occured in conditions that are not unlike what we find today in hydrothermal vents or whatever, is there any possibility that those first simple replicating molecular structures might still exist in nature somewhere. Why would it have only occured back then. Maybe abiogenesis still happens from time to time in those environments. If not, why not? Why would it have only occured back then? Has anything similar to this idea ever come up before. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Actually,
somone made this suggestion in the April feedback. It
might be that life is always spontaneously arising in some
circumstances. But the chances are that the life that's
been around for 3.5 billion years or so (I think it's as
far back as 3.85 billion years) has become so efficient
that new protolife would end up becoming source molecules
for old life.
There are many different hypotheses about where life began, and it may be that it actually occurred over tens of thousands of years in many locations: in subterranean chambers fed by the products of vulcanism, in hydrothermal srpings, in the sea, and so forth. If it did involve these many early locations, then the chances that life would arise yet again is correspondingly reduced, since those niches are now occupied with hungry bugs. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | A few
things:
The word "days" was one of those words that couldn't be translated from ancient Hebrew. This is because in Ancient Hebrew they didn't have any vowels. So the next logical step was to take the seven step and name them. So they chose "days." Don’t be literal. Russue(sp?) "If there isn’t a God, there would be a reason to make one." Darwin was a Christian. A lot of people turn there head at that one. The conservation of matter law(first Law of Thermodynamics) says nothing can be created or destroyed. This law runs circles around it self, because it assumes that something or nothing is there. "To every thing there is a "season", and a time to every purpose under heaven" Eccl 3:1 Adam was physically changed by his own sin. Shit. It sounds like the Bible is actually supporting evolution. Your defense is too touchy feely, or lack there of. Your goal is to make people to react in some kind of raging emotion. Which by the way is the same cheep tactic that Gore pulls. Yet in you’re opening you contradict yourself by saying you want less pain. Thus less feeling. Your paper just doesn’t have a lot of marrow to it. All I see in this paper is a lot of childish name calling and a few suggestive quotes. It’s the equivalent of a cheep porn. No plot and a lot of screaming. You didn’t improve your status by generalizing Christians. In fact you made yourself look dumb. Keep trying. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The article
to which you are providing feedback is Cretinism or Evilution?: Ed
Babinski's "Cretinism or Evilution" Speech. Actually, I
personally agree with you that this is not great
scholarship, and frankly think the archive would be better
without it.
So perhaps we agree on the big picture. On the little picture, however, there are some problems. Your own comments at the start of the feedback include a few misconceptions. It is true that ancient Hebrew was written without vowels, but this does not prevent translation. It just makes it more difficult to tell how a word is pronounced. (However, the actual situation is not that simple. See Consonants and Vowels in the Hebrew language, off-site). The word used in Genesis is "yom", and this is written Yud-Waw-Mem. This is definitely the very word chosen by the biblical writer, and there is no difficulty in translating it. The claim that the association with "day" was chosen arbitrarily at the time of translation is false. The verses speak of morning and evening in each day, and they directly link the creation week to divine institution of the seventh day, the Sabbath, as a day of rest. As for being literal: that surely is the problem with young Earth creationists. The talkorigins archive advocates no particular method for interpretng Genesis. It does point out that a literal interpretation of Genesis 1 as history is in confict with some elementary facts; but since you are apparently not a fan of this style of reading, we are possibly in agreement on this. Your quoted quip looks to me like a famous statement by Voltaire: Si Dieu n'existait pas, il faudrait l'inventer (If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him). An examination of the phrase in context is available on-line, not that I think it particularly relevant. Darwin was a Christian in his youth, but not throughout his life. The loss of his Christian faith is well documented, and it is generally thought that the final straw for Darwin was the death of his daughter. His scientific insights remain valid in any case, and I do not know anyone who chooses their religious beliefs by attempting to follow Darwin's beliefs. The first law of thermodynamics actually says that energy is conserved. If you consider the fundamental laws of physics to be in some way inconsistent or invalid, I will not attempt to disuade you. Bear in mind that potential energy is negative for the purposes of this law, and the total energy of the universe could even be zero. But frankly, we don't know. Biological evolution is not any old change. The word refers exclusively to change in heritable characteristics of populations, and it most definitely does not refer to changes that take place during an individual person's lifetime. Apart from these points of detail, our emotional reactions to the article you are criticising are probably fairly similar. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | It has never
been proven that the earth is billions of years old. If
someone has any proof, please step forward. The earth is
only about 6000 years old. The proof? Well, given millions
or Billions of years, the moon would have had hundreds of
feet of space dust, but it only had a couple of inches.
Duh!!! Why does this get ignored? I don't know.
Also, the earth's spinning is slowing down. Which means it went faster at one time. At the given rate of descent in speed, a million years ago, there would have been no way for life to exist on this planet for the 200 MPH winds. Besides Genesis does not support the Gap theory either. God created the world in Six days. The sun was not created until a day after plants were created. How would plants have survived for millions of years if the days really represented millions of years. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Meteorite Dust and the Age of the Earth |
Response: | Well, I
wrote a whole article on the moon dust myth, "Meteorite Dust and the Age of
the Earth". You only think it has been "ignored"
because you didn't even bother to look in the archive for
"feed" before offering "feedback".
As for the spindown rate of the Earth, it is currently about 0.0015 sec per day per century. If we just extrapolate that number straight back over 10,000 centuries (your million years), it adds up to 15 seconds. That means that a million years ago the day would have been 15 seconds shorter. I don't think that would make much of a wind. Of course, that "uniformitarian" assumption is not exactly a good one, as we would expect the spin down rate to be larger as we go back in time. But a million years is not very far in time, and the approximation of constancy is not bad. But the ultimate cause of that spin down is the tidal interaction between the Earth and moon. As you will see in "The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System", that is in reality not a problem either, even when we include the full variability of the spin down rate. No proof? By appropriately re-defining the meaning of "proof", you can easily insist that there is "no proof" by your own private standards. However, by all of the commonly accepted standards of "proof" in the empirical sciences, an age for the Earth of around 4.5 billion years stands as an incontestable fact, as thoroughly proven as any empirical science is capable of "proof". On the other hand, the "scientific" contentions of young-Earth creationists are shot through with errors large and small, usually making them unrecognizable as science. Not only does this archive sport a whole section entitled "The Age of the Earth FAQs", offering a great deal of support for the evolutionary old age, but also see the book "The Age of the Earth" by G. Brent Dalrymple (Stanford university Press, 1991), wherein the author spends several hundred pages detailing the foundations of our scientific understanding of, and "proof" for, the Earth's old age. And finally, you can also visit my own webpage " A Radiometric Dating Resource List", which is perhaps the most complete sinlge point of reference on the web regarding the use of radioactive isotopes to date rocks, and aid in the determination of the most probable age of the Earth. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Can anybody
tell me why . . .
If I have 2 parents, 4 grandparents, 8 great-grandparents, etc.; a geometric progression: 2,4,8 . . . After only 20 generations back in time, impossibly huge numbers of direct ancestors manifest themselves. Just where and HOW does this relentless progression of numbers stop? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The hidden assumption here is that every node on the family tree is unique. This assumption may be true for your recent ancestors — your maternal grandfather is probably not also your paternal grandfather — but it is not true for your more distant ancestors. The same leaves are found on more than one branch. If you are a descendant of, say, Genghis Khan, you are most likely descended from him along multiple lineages rather than just one. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Those who believe in evolution only do so in order to escape any moral boundaries that might stand in front of their philandering ways. |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: | Philandering? While we appreciate the complement on our seduction skills, I'm sure there are some contributors to this Archive — besides me — who couldn't philander even if they wanted to. But I won't name any names. |
From: | |
Response: | I haven't had a good philander in ages. Anyone able to give me some pointers? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Can science explain why it seems that evolution has advanced the human species further than all of the other species that have ever existed? It seems strange to me that with all of the evidence supporting evolution, that we have not found proof of another species (extinct or otherwise) that was more technologically advanced than humans. Why aren't we co-existing with other species that have evolved to have equal or greater intelligence than us? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field |
Response: | The most
likely, and perhaps most embarrassing answer, is that
intelligence is not favored by natural selection. Here is
the answer to your question, as given by one of the great
evolutionary biologists, Ernst Mayr, in his
debate over SETI with Carl Sagan, hosted on the web by
the Planetary
Society.
|
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Daniel |
Comment: | Just a short
question,
Why is it that some Russian evolutionary scientists are becoming creationists after reading creationists literature? These scientists have learned a lot about evolution and yet they are persuaded by creationists' evidences. Does this show us that evolution is wrong but because of your own evolutionary worlview, you refuse to admit it and ridicule it whereas someone who is less skeptical and more open about the topic on origins like the Russian scientists will see the truth and believe it? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field |
Response: | But many more Russian scientists than that, upon exposure to creationism, do not change their minds and remain "evolutionists". Maybe that "proves" that creationists are wrong, and can only convince a few misfits to join their misguided cause. And since you think that Russian scientists are, as a group, "less skeptical", then surely you agree that this must be true? How else do you explain all those not-skeptical Russians rejecting creation? |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | The
following is part of an email converstaion0 that I have
been having with Dr. Carl Baugh (he is listed on your
Creationist Credentials page). I have informed him of the
scientific impossibilities of his claims based upon the
pleochloric halos in granite (my second vocation is a
student of nuclear sciences at Texas A&M University in
College Station). I thought you might be interested.
As for the information on the pleochloric halos and the decay chains of thorium and uranium (which is the only way to make polonium of any sort), I will provide such upon request I will say that as a man of faith, I am rather bound by my beliefs. This does not, however, mean that I will condone the use of inaccurate or incomplete science to bolster and validate my views, as it would seem that Dr. Baugh and company are doing. the Rev. Dr. Jason H. Bennett {this is an email I received from him on 9th August, 2000} Thank you for your interest in Dr. Baugh's work and for your inquiry. In response to your question, we offer the following facts: Carl Edward Baugh Born: October 21, 1936 Founder and Director of Creation Evidence Museum, Glen Rose, Texas. Scientific Research Director of world's first Hyperbaric Biosphere. Discoverer and Excavation Director of two major dinosaurs: Acrocanthosaurus in Texas and Stegosaurus stenops in Colorado. International Lecturer in Scientific Creation at over 11 major universities. Appearances on CBS Network specials Appearances on NBC Network Specials. Interviews on ABC and CBS Network Radio. Over 500 news interviews on Glen Rose excavations Degrees: Doctor of Philosphy in Education (1989, Pacific College of Graduate Studies*) Master of Arts in Archaeology (1984, Pacific College of Graduate Studies**) Bachelor of Arts (1961, Burton College) Graduate of Theology (1959, Baptist Bible College, Valedictorian) High School Diploma (1955, Abilene High School, Honor Graduate) * Reference to a letter from the Department of Education, Melbourne, Australia on Dec. 17, 1993 to the principal of Pacific College of Graduate Studies states that the Pacific College of Graduate Studies is a university under the Tertiary Education Act 1993 passed by the Victorian Parliament; and that the following courses of study were accredited while Dr. Baugh was a student under Section 11(e)(i) of that act: Master of Arts Doctor of Ministry Doctor of Philosphy Doctor of Theology (& others.) ** Reference to a letter from Pacific International University (associated with PCGS) on Dec. 1, 1995 to Dr. Carl E. Baugh certifies that the degree of Master of Arts in Archaeology was awarded by Pacific College of Graduate Studies as representing the Luther Rice Seminary is fully accredited in the United States. For your information Dr. Baugh's dissertation may be found in its entirety on our website, along with the above referenced letters. Dr. Baugh's degrees are fully accredited. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Jack |
Comment: | When I looked this site up, the description said you'd show both sides of the story, but all I'm seeing is your shooting down creationism and exalting evolution at every term. Why don't you have a well-educated Creationist and yourself both control this site, each pointing out your own side's points and each answering each FAQ? Then, and only then, will this site fit its description as unbiased. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Which
description would that be? The only one I am aware of is
the one found on our welcome page:
We do not present the viewpoints of scientific creationists directly — there are several different ones, by the way — but instead provide numerous links to such sites to allow them to speak their own minds. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I STUMBLED ACROSS YOUR WEBSITE WHILE SEARCHING FOR FACTS THAT DISPUTE THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION. IT OCCURS TO ME YOU ARE A WELL EDUCATED GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS AND I COMMEND YOU ON YOUR KNOWLEDGE. WHILE MY WIFE ALWAYS TELLS ME I THINK I KNOW EVERYTHING, I REALIZE I AM NOT EVEN NEAR THE SAME LEAGUE YOU ARE IN. THAT SAID, IT SADDENS ME TO SEE YOU DENY THE EXISTENCE OF A SUPREME BEING WHEN ALL OF YOUR FACTS AND THEORIES CLEARLY SEEM TO POINT TO A WELL THOUGHT OUT PLAN FOR THE CO-EXISTENCE OF MAN AND OUR ENVIORMENT. THE BALANCE OF OXYGEN AND CARBON DIOXIDE IN THE ATMOSPHERE TO ENABLE US TO BREATHE, THE CORRECT RATIO OF GRAVITY FOR THE TIDES NOT TO COVER THE CONTINENTS EACH DAY, THE DISTANCE THE SUN IS FROM THE EARTH TO ENSURE WE ARE NOT FROZEN OR BURNT UP, ANY OF WHICH IF CHANGED EVEN SLIGHTLY ONE WAY OR THE OTHER, WOULD WIPE US FROM EXISTENCE. THE LIST SEEMS ENDLESS OF EVIDENCE THAT THERE HAD TO BE A "MASTER PLAN" FOR THESE THINGS ALL TO COME TOGHETHER, WOULDN'T YOU AGREE?. DO YOU REALLY THINK THESE ALL HAPPENED BY CHANCE? WHAT ARE THE MATHEMATICAL POSSIBILITIES FOR IT ALL TO COME TOGHETHER BY CHANCE? IT SEEMS MORE A LEAP OF FAITH TO BELIEVE IT JUST HAPPENED, THAN TO BELIEVE IT IS THE WORK OF GOD. I DON'T CLAIM TO UNDERSTAND ALL OF GOD'S PLAN FOR OUR LIVES, (APART FROM SALVATION) BUT I KNOW THAT IF GOD CAN DO ALL OF THIS, HE MUST BE A LITTLE SMARTER THAN ALL OF US WOULDN'T YOU AGREE? IF YOU REALLY HAVE READ THE ENTIRE BIBLE, HE POINTS OUT TO US THAT "FOR MY THOUGHTS ARE NOT YOUR THOUGHTS, NEITHER ARE YOUR WAYS MY WAYS, SAITH THE LORD" (ISIAH 55:8) SOMETIMES YOU JUST HAVE TO TAKE HIM AT HIS WORD, JUST LIKE I'M SURE YOU'VE TAKEN MANY PEOPLE IN YOUR LIFE AT THEIR WORD HAVEN'T YOU? THANK YOU FOR LISTENING, I WON'T GET MY HOPES UP FOR A RESPONSE! SINCERELY JERRY SCHOPPEN |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System |
Response: | "We" do not
"deny the existence of a supreme being", and neither does
the scientific theory of biological evolution. "We" are a
group of individuals who, as a group, probably all agree on
only one thing: The theory of biological evolution is
scientifically sound and valid. Beyond that, we are as
different as any other bunch of folks; some religious, some
not, some academic, some not, some athletic, some not, and
so forth.
Personally, I am one of those non-religious types, and I don't believe in a supreme being. So maybe your remarks are more directed towards me and my ilk than the others. I do not believe that "it all came together by chance", and I suspect that very few people who have actually studied cosmology would believe such a thing either. This is a major misunderstanding typical of creationists, namely their belief that all "evolutionists" must (a) be atheists, and (b) believe that everything happens by chance. But both are very wrong. "Evolutionism" and "atheism" are equivalent only in the misguided jargon of creationists. See, for instance, the "God and Evolution" file in our archive. Lots of people believe in God and evolution, and find no problem for themselves therein. There is no justification for the presumption that one must be atheist to be an "evolutionist". The universe is a giant mechanism that operates, we assume, in accordance with rules that are consistent throughout the universe. As scientists, we try to figure out what those rules are. Theoretical physics and cosmology is the area of scientific study where we try to discover the most fundamental of those rules, the most basic rules of nature, from which many other rules are derived. Those rules are not random, and therefore nothing which happens as a consequence of those rules can be totally random either. We all know that those rules could have been designed by a supreme being, and I think perhaps all of us would agree that to deny the possibility altogether would be rather short sighted. However, it is no less short sighted to demand that they must have been designed by a supreme being. That said, I will tell you what I believe, just for myself. The universe, is the way it is, and we are the way we are, because the unaltering laws of the universe make it so. I neither know, nor much care, whether a "supreme being" is responsible for all this or not. The idea that it would be a supreme being who personally cares about me & mine strikes mas as ludicrous, but that is only my own opinion, not necessarily shared by the rest of the archives authors. I do not doubt at all that the universe, and all life within it, have evolved from some more primitive form, but I cannot say for sure (nor can anyone else), what that primitive form may have been. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Evolution is
wrong!
Take the Canine species. You have everything from a Chiwawa to a St. Bernard existing simultaneously. These two extremes result from a morphological process, from a common center which is the wolf. Noah only needed two take a male and a female wolf on the Ark, not all the dogs, as those wolves contained the genetic potential (built in variety) to produce these two extremes and everything in between. The wolves settled in Ararat and their descendants went in all directions over the earth and underwent a morphological change depending on their environmental conditions. Reply: Donbell@netcom.ca |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Re : the
definition of evolution.
Evelution is defined,in short simple from, as changes happening within a population of the same species that can be passed from one generation to the next. i do not see a problem with that theory. In fact it should not even be considered a theory with that definition because it happens through natural selection. However, the problems come in when evelution changes a species from one to another. All the fossils of the horse's ancestors are still horses. All the types of dogs out there are still dogs and can all breed with each other. However you cannot breed one species and get a different species. That is the problem that I have with evolution. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Evolution is
defined as change in living organisms over time. It is not
restricted either to the results of natural selection (as
genetic drift and
other processes also play a role), or to speciation, but to
any changes.
"Horses" is not a species name, and we have excellent evidence that horse species evolved from other species, and that the earliest species was very unlike anything we would call a horse today. We have experimentally observed speciation where the progeny of ancestors cannot interbreed with other descendents of those ancestors. In the case of plants, this can often be repeated in the lab and the field. The point about speciation (the splitting of one species into two) is that it happens to populations, not individuals, and the populations can evolve in ways that make them mutually infertile. The argument rests on your assertion that "you cannot breed one species and get a different species". Since it is already shown to be false (species of fruit flies were speciated in the 1930s, if I remember aright), the whole argument falls down. The usual creationist reply is that "they were still fruit flies", but this is not the point. "Fruit flies" is not a species name, but a generic term for a group of organisms that we happen to think are similar. But if each species is slightly different from its closest relatives, then with extinction such groups can evolve from an ancestor that is intermediate between two such "distinct" groups. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Excellent site - I have been browsing it for several years now. I started because I moved down south to Alabama, and found a number of my co-workers, including degreed engineers, claiming that the earth is only 6,000 yers old, and there is a gigantic conspiracy of astronomers, cosmologists, biologists, geneticists, paleontologists, geologists, and all the other -ists, to defraud the true believers. The problem I have found in talking with these people, most of whom are personal friends, is that they appear unable to hear anything which counters the dogma they have been indoctrinated with. If I point out some undeniable facts that are in direct conflict with their beliefs, they get very upset and start shouting "That's not true!" Since they are friends, I try to avoid upsetting them, especially since it has no discernible effect. Do you have any suggestions about how to gently present the facts to the zealous believers? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | It depends
more on the psychology of the individuals than on the
doctrines they accept. If they are basically honest people,
then take then slowly through one topic that is in
contradiction to their preferred misinterpretation. Tackle
something you know, and don't be afraid to say "I don't
know - let me see what I can find out".
Whatever you do, don't get into the tactic of attacking all their views on the basis of a single problem (eg, biblical historical literalism) they may have (apart from anything else, it invites the same response). Always stress that your aim is to correct misunderstandings, not attack their religion as a whole. Their beliefs will be stronger for knowing the truth of the matter. A second variety of creationist is not intellectually honest with themselves. No amount of evidence or argument will impinge upon their "terrible certainty" that they are right and you are wrong. Typically, these people either wish to be deluded or are incapable of making a rational argument when their core beliefs are under threat, and you will find that after giving them the information, they will merely repeat their initial claims. If you want to keep these people as friends, don't argue about it. Talk about baseball or football instead. Unless, that is, they start to impose these beliefs on you and your children in the public arena. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Matt.P |
Comment: | I read on AiG that a lion mated with a tiger and produced an offspring, can explain this if they are both of a different species? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Sure. The explanation is that the boundaries between closely related species are sometimes a bit fuzzy, rather than sharp distinctions which would be expected in a creationist model. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Bob Graf |
Comment: | This is a request for information, not a brief comment. Dear Dr. Meritt, I came across your "Anti-Creationism FAQ" page while searching for the derivation of the decay-rate formula for radioactive isotopes. The exact address was http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-meritt/age.html I am a retired geophysicist, having spent thirty years in the oil-exploration industry. My formal training is in mathematics. I was always a creationist, but I never knew how God created the universe. I thought Genesis told about 'who' did it, but not 'how'. Then, about nine years ago, I became a "young-earth" creationist, which is the particular constituency you oppose on your web-page. I'm pleased that you have taken the time to put some poor science to rest. I am currently teaching a class on Genesis, and I warn my students not to use poor or out-dated 'science' to argue against evolution. I have some questions about some of your answers, but I would like to leave those questions for another time. Right now, I'm hoping you will take some time again, and answer my specific question: What is the physical model? I do not know how the differential equation for radioactive decay-rate is derived. I understand how to translate the expression "The rate of decay is proportional to the number of atoms remaining" into the differential equation. I have a question about the initial expression itself. How do we know that the rate of decay is proportional to the number of atoms remaining? What is the firing mechanism for a particular atom? Why do some atoms remain stable through two 'half-lives' and then fire, or through several half-lives, and then decay? What is the physical model? What happens if I'm holding an atom of C14 in each hand - will I have to wait 5730 years for one of them to irradiate me? Which one, the left one or the right one? Can you help? Regards, Bob Graf bobgraf@airmail.net |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System |
Response: | I don't know
if Meritt is still around, but I suspect that I can answer
the question at least as well as he could. The law of
radioactive decay, expressed mathematicaly as -dn/dt = Cn
where "C" is the decay constant, and "n" the total number
of atoms remaining at any time, is not based on any
theoretical model. It is an entirely empirical law, derived
directly from measurement, and first published in 1902
["The radioactivity of thorium compounds II: The cause
and nature of radioactivity"; E. Rutherford & F.
Soddy; Journal of the Chemical Society of London,
81: 837-860]. In short, we know for a fact that the rate of
decay is proportional to the number of atoms remaining,
because it is observed to be so.
A radioactive nucleus can be triggered to decay by outside events, such as the induced chain reaction fission of 235U in nuclear reactors. But alpha and beta decay, the most common decay modes for radiometric dating, are not affected by environmental concerns. There are models from which you can derive computed half lives for radioactive decay, but that's not where the equation you ask about comes from. However, the half life calculations based on standard models in nuclear physics, do reproduce rather nicely the observed decay half lives. There is a recent, and extensive, mathematical & physical review of the theory, "Microscopic Theory of Cluster Radioactivity"; R.G. Lovas et al., Physics Reports, 295(5): 265-362, February 1998. I suggest you consult this excellent resource for a thorough updating on the microscopic theory. You can also find a nice rendition of an explicit half life calculation for alpha decay of a deformed or spherical nucleus in "Alpha decay and nuclear deformation: the case for favoured alpha transitions in even-even emitters"; F. Garcia et al., Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physics 26(6): 755-769, June 2000 On the experimental side, perhaps you should consult an appropriate text book on the subject. I like Gunther Faure's book Isotope Geology, but another good one is Alan Dickin's Radiogenic Isotope Geology. Both share links to Amazon.com on my Radiometric Dating Resource List page. A good online source would be the Geoscience 656 Lecture Notes from Cornell University, which can be downloaded in PDF format, and also cover basic radioactivity. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Your site is
disappointing. I was expecting to find scholarly debate on
key creation/evolution points like transitional species,
statistical probablity, entropy, etc. Instead everything I
surveyed was clearly directed at discrediting any
creationist agrument as ludicrous.
Real science is testable, verifiable and strives for objectivity. Evolutionary theory assumes that natural processes and random chance had to be the cause of the natural world we experience. It also assumes there is no creator and must work from that premise. That's the same sort of 'blind' faith you find so objectionable in the adovcates of a scientifically testible world created by God. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Meteorite Dust and the Age of the Earth |
Response: | Evolutionary theory does not assume that there is no creator. That has never been a part of scientific evolution. See, for instance, the God and Evolution article. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have been visiting your website, on and off, for over a year now and although I have read a variety of information I find the feedback material particularly informative and of course entertaining. Suddenly this evening I felt compelled to put in my 2 cents worth. I have personally been an atheist for as long as I can remember although I take your point that acceptance of evolution does not preclude belief in the existence of a God. Until very recently I was smug in my assumption that christian fundamentalism was almost exclusively an USA problem with New Zealand (the country from where I am writing to you) being free of "extreme" religious influences. I was very shocked to read recently in a popular magazine article that fundamentalism is estimated to have increased by 20 fold in NZ over the last 10 years. Be afraid, be very afraid! On a lighter note I would like to thank you for your site's contribution to my own intellectual development as your info on evolution is very well written for the layperson. I have suffered all my life from an inability to express myself well verbally and would leave discussions/arguments with anti-evolutionists knowing I was right but with a sense of having been defeated in the heat of the debate. But as I have read many leading fundamentalists are good speakers/debaters and can be very convincing, especially to the ignorant and unweary who have no idea if the "evidence they are hearing is true or trash. I now 'occasionally' debate with people, when I can be bothered, and feel armed with information to cover all the common fallacies regarding evolution which crop up continually in discussion as they do in the feedback on your site. The use of a 'strawman' image of evolution, in attempting to disprove it, is particularly common I find. Keep up the battle and of course keep reminding people that evolution is not a question of atheism against religion but of truth versus ignorance. I have many good christian friends, both protestant and catholic, all of whom accept evolution and all of whom are constantly perplexed by what all the anti-evolution fuss is all about. Their acceptance of evolution is completely compatible with their belief in God. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Sometimes
for kicks I visit AiG, usually to see where Creationists
stand on many issues...but after being at a site like that
for so long, the humor of it all tends to turn to
frustration with their obvious factual ignorance, or just
their refusal to open their minds to anything that even
remotely goes against "what is written." So they say that
evolution defies a basic law of physics (the 2nd law of
thermodynamics.) Hmm...but let's see...how many basic
physical laws does Creation defy? They fail to see the
irony, I guess.
So I thank you a million times for your refreshing website. I am glad that there are many out there who are smart enough to talk about evolution with an open mind. I just wish Creationists could take the same path when it comes to defending their side. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | I often wish someone would write a book that describes the world we'd have to see in order for creation science to be correct. Such things as a flat world with corners, a canopy of water vapor and mechanisms of heredity that are affected by mating near striped poles would only be the start. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I would appreciate a glossary of terms. Also noticed that the definition of macroevolution here is in the minority in the online science dictionaries. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Macroevolution FAQ |
Response: | If you would
like to email me with a list of words that need a glossary,
then I will commence one. Overall, biology seems to
neologise more than any single other science. I estimate at
least half of learning biology is learning the words
used...
Yes, a large number of biological texts do use "macroevolution" to mean things other than evolution at or above the species level. They are either wrong or too restricted, for that is how the term was developed, and what it logically refers to. However, many biological terms evolve. A nice story is the fellow who, wanting a non-level specific term to refer to any lowest level taxon without the connotations of "species", invented the word "deme" (from the Greek for a people, hence population). Sewall Wright promptly started using it for a breeding population, and the original sense was lost. Dictionaries typically give the most widely used sense, but this is often the wrong sense. This is true in the common definitions of macroevolution because most studies of macroevolution have, due to the sampling rate of paleontology, been restricted to very long-term and large-scale evolution. But conceptually, it is what the FAQ says it is. See also my comments in the March 2000 and October 1999 Feedbacks |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Has anyone written up any articles on the 1981 Arkansas trial yet? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | No one has yet written an article for this Archive on the trial, but we do have a copy of the decision: |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I saw your
request for FAQ on day-age interpretations in genesis. You
might appreciate the following document of the Presbyterian
Church in America, which is an exhaustive treatment of the
subject:
Administrative Committee: Presbyterian Church in America: Report of the Creation Study Committee The PCA is a conservative evangelical denomination. The ones I have attended tend to attract a number of highly educated professionals, including scientists of all types. The denomination essentially voted to take a neutral stand on many varying interpretations of Genesis 1. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Stephen Craig |
Comment: | First, let
me compliment all of you for a great site. I teach history
at a community college here in central Ohio, and after
discussing Darwin for the first time in my class last year
I was stunned that most of my students told me that did not
accept evolution, or even knew that much about it. As I too
didn't know as much about it as I thought I did, your FAQs
and other articles have helped me to better field questions
on the subject, as well as hash out my own ideas.
Second, I have a question of my own. What difference, if any, is there between a "theistic evolutionist" and an "old-earth creationist"? I ask because you've all gone to great pains to emphasize that religious beliefs and evolution do not have to conflict; but I'm curious as to why scientists who are open to the possibility of a "God" generally oppose the idea of "intelligent design." Is it because "intelligent design" is the latest ploy by creationists to give their ideas credibility? Or are scientists simply employing Occam's Razor --that natural selection thoroughly explains how life evolves and therefore there's no need for any superfluous causes? It just seems like theological hair-splitting to me, but if you can clarify any of this I'd be appreciative. Thanks again. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | A theistic
evolutionist (TE) accepts all of current evolutionary
thinking and biology, but adds to it the rider that there
is a providential element in the variation that is offered
to selection, and generally TEs tend to be progressivist
about the evolutionary history of life (though not all).
An Old Earth Creationist (OEC) thinks that the earth is old, and that there were forms of life once existing that no longer exist, but denies that species evolve (transmute) from one into another and that the reason for the relationships of features between species such as humans and apes has anything to do with common ancestry. They are not progressionists, but providentialists pure and simple - everything that happens in biology is the direct result of the will of God. For the different kinds of creationism, see Mark Isaak's What is Creationism? FAQ and the more detailed treatment in Robert Pennock's Tower of Babel. For the significance of the distinction between progressionism and providentialism in biology, see Ruse, Michael. 1996. Monad to man: the concept of progress in evolutionary biology. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. The problem with intelligent design creationism (ID) is that for a scientist qua scientist it leads to no research or inferences. ID is basically a failure of investigation and this is directly contrary to science. So far, no ID proponents has been able to show how an ID hypothesis adds to any research at all. |