Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | The very fact that
the purpose of your site is to discredit "anti-evolutionists"
makes me suspect that you're unreasonably biased against
Christians who believe that the origin of life is God. Your
calling creationists "anti-evolutionists" says that you are
seeking to bring about a desired mindset, which is akin to the
pro-abortionists calling the pro-lifers "anti-choice."
Creationists, as far as I can tell, are pro-God and are
anti-evolution as a matter of course just as pro-lifers (those
who believe human life begins at conception and, as such, should
not be destroyed) are anti-abortion as a matter of course.
In short, your zeal for evolution and demeaning of creationists give me the impression that you are in a panic to make sure people believe what you want them to believe. I find that both creationists and evolutionists blur, bend, and distort facts to suit their own purposes. Why should you care what people believe about the origin of life? I hear over and over that it is because the U.S. is behind other countries in science education. Is that deficit because of a lack of belief in evolution concerning origins? I think not. I'm a teacher in the public school system, and I can assure you the problem is not that kids don't believe evolution. The problem is that public school is just another entitlement in our country -- parents see it as free daycare. By middle school, the majority of parents do not participate in or support their children's education, and they place no importance on excellence. The state, districts, and teachers are left to raise and educate students who have no parental motivation to learn. Those students who are motivated to learn are unable to do so adequately because the children of parents who don't care get a disproportionate amount of teachers' attention and time. Excellence in education isn't the reason for your zeal -- I know of no teacher or education professional who thinks excellence in education is in any way linked to belief in evolution. The argument that a lack of belief in evolution is the problem is invalid because too many other factors influence students' performance. So, what is it? Why does your site and others like it seek so zealously to snuff out belief in creation, knowing that such belief neither benefits nor harms education? Teresa Beck |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | This covered a lot
of topics.
This covered so many topics that I have resorted to quoting sections and then responding. This is known as "fisking." The TalkOrigins site is the product of many people, with many motivations. Our purpose is stated in the TalkOrigins Home Page This is not a bias against Christians. Sadly, there are Hindu, Muslim, Jewish, and even "New Age" Pagan creationists. They are all equally opposed to rational evaluation of scientific evidence. "Anti-evolutionists" are self selected by a political choice- not scriptural, just as are "anti-choicists." The opponents of stem cell research contribute to the deaths of thousands daily because they subscribe to a doctrine not supported biblically or scientifically. This is not "pro-life." I feel actually quite calm. Maybe it is late in the day? The destortion of facts by creationists is well documented. For example, there is the well documented phoney degrees they award themselves. Then there are their phoney claims about science; Dr. Dino comes to mind. The late Ron Wyatt found enough "Noah's Arks" to build two or three. More have been reported since then. I can't begain to list the creationist frauds. The Pardoner's Tale by Geoffrey Chaucer was a 14th century satire on pious frauds. We at TalkOrigins are in good company, exposing over seven centuries of known religious frauds. Obviously you do not teach science. In fact, if you can't teach- quit. It will help other teachers when the public knows that it is not "daycare," and they don't have to carry your slack. If you only fill space and draw pay, you have no justification to continue driving to your school. I first taught science at an "inner city" ie. not all white/anglo, 7-8th grade school in 1972. I have since taught at primary, high school, college, graduate, and post-graduate institutions, public and private. I can definitely assert that religious fundamentalism/creationionism is an impediment to education, and a threat to our (USA) national security. When I was Director of Education for a natural history museum, I encountered problems with religious fanatics nearly daily (that was some years ago and it has only gotten worse). |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | This is displaying
terrible computer illiteracy on my part, but how do you use the
Usenet newsgroup?
Using the Internet for browsing, I am ignorant of how newsgroups work. Do you think you could include an explanation of how to get started for those poor souls like me? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | There are two
ways. The first requires that you have an Internet Service
Provider (ISP) which supports newsgroups. If you do not, go to
option two. If you do, you will then need a news reader, such as
Agent, FreeAgent, or Thunderbird (you can download some of these
for free). The news reader will need some configuration
information, the most crucial of which is the name of your ISP's
news server, which typically looks something like
"news.isp-name.com", and identification and password information
such as you use to set up email. The first time you connect to
the news server, the news reader will download the names of
thousands and thousands of newsgroups. Select talk.origins and
perhaps a few others. Then download the messages.
The second option is to go to http://groups.google.com and enter talk.origins (which takes you here) and start reading. Note that talk.origins gets hundreds of messages per day. It words best to look for individual threads that interest you and ignore the rest. The first option above may sound like more of a hassle, but it allows one to better manage which threads (and authors) to read and which to ignore, which makes reading easier. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Creationists often delight in suggesting that if 'macroevolution' were true, we would see certain types of animal (undefined 'kinds') give birth to radically different animals, e.g. a dog giving birth to a cat. Has it ever occurred to any of these creationists that such an incident would not be evidence for evolution, but evidence for a god or gods able to perform naturally impossible feats? Or is their understanding of evolution so warped they believe that scientists actually expect to see one animal give birth to a completely incomparable creature? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | joris |
Comment: | Wow, impressive - I can't believe I haven't found this site before. I never believed in creationism or intelligent design, but it can be hard at times to refute them as a non-scientist. The list of claims & arguments is what I needed. This one definitely goes into my favorites. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Mark Issak's Claim
CI001.4 is rebutted by
Casey Luskin http://www.evolutionnews.org/2006/08/post_17.html#more
One key point is that where Issak says Stephen Meyer's paper "subverted the peer review process", Luskin's quote shows three substantial and high-level reviews which all found the paper "meritorious" and that "it warranted publication". Secondly, Isaak says Denton explicitly refers to natural law as if to show that he does not support intelligent design, yet there is nothing about intelligent design which requires it to be outside the realm of natural law. Just because there is intelligence somewhere does not make that intelligence supernatural, wouldn't you agree? - Glenn Shrom |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Luskin tries to
rebut CI001.4, but the weakness of his response only reinforces
it. A rebuttal would consist of citations of several papers
published in quality peer-reviewed journals which describe
research which collects and analyzes data in the investigation of
specific hypotheses concerning intelligent design. Plainly, there
are none.
The quote about Meyer's paper and the peer-review process loses credibility when one realizes that the quote comes from the person who subverted the peer-review process, according to the Statement from the Council of the Biological Society of Washington. I have no doubt that Sternberg, who served on the editorial board of a creationist study group, could find other creationists to submit Meyer's paper to, and that he might even consider those creationists "qualified." However, the quality of the paper, or lack of it, speaks for itself. See here and here for just some of the problems with it. Dembski, in his works, specifically rules out the effects of natural law from being evidence for intelligent design. So yes, Denton referring to natural law does exclude his work from being support for ID. Furthermore, Luskin misses two more important points. First, the point was not merely about peer-reviewed articles, but about peer-reviewed articles supporting ID. The best he can claim is articles arguing against evolution; there is nothing supporting ID. Second, this lack of evidence for ID was brought up in the context of a legal trial. The ID supporters had every opportunity to enter evidence for ID into evidence in the trial, and they did not. The only reason that makes sense why they did not enter evidence for ID is that they have no evidence for ID. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | how sad for you and anyone that reads this. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Evolution ha it's a shame that people beleive in such nonesence.how does every living thing have a purpose and come from a glob of slime? you people can't prove this millions of years thing no way possible,you people always seem to be talking in whispers.as in telling the real lie.Yes life came from nothing,life was CREATED beleive it or not is YOUR problem.if you live long enough you'll beleive, but in the meantime keep digging up thoes bones |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | When I first read
this my immediate thought was that this had been written by
someone who pretended to be a creationist just to make them seem
illiterate.
Naw, its a creationist. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I was reading
through feedback from May 2006 when I stumbled upon a comment by
Jeffrey J. Smith which stated: "A simple search through
mathematical theory would blow so many holes in this paper it
would be nothing more than swisscheese". As a mathematician, I
can find no way in which mathematical theory can, as Jeffrey
claimed, suchly discredit the article Evolution is a Fact and a Theory.
At least, not when used correctly. Perhaps the purpose was to
choose some open argument about a supposedly complicated topic so
that the chances of someone knowledged in the field are minimal
at best. It would be the equivalent of saying that Creationism is
impossible by using "basic 17-dimensional harmonic analysis".
This may be true (not likely), but the point is that using some
arbitrary specialty to "prove" your point is a true testament of
ignorance.
I thought the article was very well compiled and organized, by the way. Great job on the site. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I'm an
anthropology major and am working towards a career in
archaeology, so you can probably guess I'm very pro-evolution.
Usually when reading most creationist claims, especially about
human evolution, off the top of my head I can usually counter
their claims from memory.
However, the claim "Just like you cannot have a painting without a painter, or a building without a builder, you cannot have a creation without a creator" sometimes kinda stumps me. I like to say "Who then created the creator? And who created the creator's creator, and so on..." but personally I don't find this rebuttal sufficient enough. Is there a better answer to this argument? Is it even a legitimate argument at all? Also I would also like to express my disdain for "Dr." Kent Hovind. I have seen his videos on Google Video and they are just agonizing. There's one where he debates a Biology professor and just refuses all his claims saying "They're all wrong. There is no evidence for evolution" and then proceeds to quote random Bible passages and present easily dismissable "evidence" for Creationism. Anyway, thanks for an awesome site. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Try the "building without a builder" argument with some other words. Can you have a river without a riverer, or lightning without a lightninger? Perhaps one may anthropomorphize the forces that cause rivers and lightning enough to give meaning to those labels, but clearly it is anthropomorphization. Putting the label "creator" on the forces which cause rivers, lightning, life, and so on does not magically turn those forces into an intelligent supernatural being. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Bob |
Comment: | PLEASE HELP ME FIND THE CAP LOCK KEY!!!! IF I USE ALL CAPTIAL LETTERS AND FORGETT TO SHECK MY SPELING I CAN NOT POSSIBLY BE WRONG. THEY PUT HUMAN FEET ON A MONKEY!!! I CAN"T BELIEVE YOU PEOPLE WHO HAVE STUDIED THIS FIELD FOR YEARS AND HAVE SHOWN A WORKING KNOWLEDGE OF THE FIELD, STILL CAN SEE WHAT A TWELVE YEAR OLD CAN SEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Heheh,
Thanks BOB! It has been a long day. Gary |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Just wanted to
stop by and say that this is one of my favorite websites on the
internet. I've gained a lot of knowledge from you guys, and I
reference this site quite a bit. I also must congratulate you on
your tolerance with the thousands of messages you receive from
people who have absolutely no understanding of what science is.
Sites like this, and bright minds like you guys, are what keep my hope alive for the future. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This is not a
comment. I just want to clarify if:
Do you believe that human or people evolved from apes or chimpanzee based on your belief in evolution theory? Thank you. Will appreciate your reply. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | No, we don't think
humans evolved from chimpanzees. Humans and chimps split off from
each other before either lineage evolved their present forms.
Humans evolved from a group of apes, yes, and we are still apes, taxonomically speaking (Linnaeus, a creationist as everyone was in the 18th century, classified humans and apes together even then). The apes we evolved from, though, had evolved bipedal walking long before they were recognisably human. Finally, we don't "believe in" evolution theory. We accept that it is the best theory that science has offered to explain biological diversity, and this is because it is both based on evidence and and makes the best predictions about what we will find. Evolution is not a belief system, any more than the principles of hydrodynamics or gravity are. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I have read many comments and articles on your website and others. I still havent heard or read of any examples of macroevolution. Evolutionist David Kitts, paleontologist and Evolutionist states: "Evolution requires intermediate forms between species and paleontology does not provide them." What is the best example of macroevolution? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You can find a
list of examples, documented and explained, in the 29+Evidences for Macroevolution FAQ.
What Kitts was referring to is the process of changing from one species to another, not from one large class of organisms to another - there's plenty of examples of that provided by paleontology. But since speciation typically happens relatively rapidly in small populations and mostly in conditions that do not fossilise well, the likelihood of capturing that event in the fossil record is pretty slim. We have some examples, though. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I'm either really
bad at searching or it simply isnt there and I dont know if
really has a place in the archive, but a lot of sites dealing
with creationists attacking evolutionists idea seem to focus on
school books that are published throughout the world or focus on
old articles that have since then been renewed.
Shouldnt there be perhaps a small intro or text covering this problem, seeing that I'm sure many questions come in that originate exactly from such sources. School books are rarely the result of scientists really putting effort into creating them, usually they are a publishers attempt at making money (selling school books is a business after all) and can therefor contain outdated or even missinformation on the facts/theories of evolution (you need to fill the book somehow). I just noticed many reactions from creationists on such books (over many forums) For the rest, I really like the site and archive and eventhough I surely dont understand everything posted, I'm trying and enjoying it so far, good work en keep it up. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The Quote Mine Project will offer you many examples of this. However, we don't have a school book directed article as such, largely because (as you said) that isn't where the science is actually published. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hi, talkorigin
folks: Thanks again for your wonderful site. I wanted to bring to
your attention a bad link. On the page:
http://www.simonyi.ox.ac.uk/dawkins/WorldOfDawkins-archive/Catalano/box/behe.shtml
Near the bottom in the section labeled Michael Denton and Phillip Johnson influence Behe to doubt evolution The entry that begins "another revealing review of...Evolution: a Theory in Crisis" has an odd url that takes you to http://internet.california.com/ , what looks like a general CA info page. The following link to Page of Honest Intellectual Inquiry takes you there too. Just thought you'd like to know! I'll continue to check if I can't find another way to link to these sites. Thanks! |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I appreciate the effort that goes into talk.origins, and think that it is a generally useful site for people who are not professional biologists. My beef with talk.origins is that it is primarily an anti-creationist site, rather than a site about evolutionary biology per se. I can always tell when a chatter gets his or her information primarily from talk.origins, rather from a university education in biology. Certain characteristic biases & oversimplifications have been picked up by those who oppose creationists in chatrooms, from talk.origins.com. This site has become a surrogate for a rigorous biological education, for hundreds, if not thousands, of laypeople whose hobby is fighting with creationists in internet chatrooms. In my opinion, talk.origins would be much better if it didn't mention creationism at all, and focused on actual evolutionary biology & population genetics. It behooves people to acquire a thorough biological education, rather than merely memorizing a smattering of facts with which to oppose creationists. The point should be knowing biology first. Then the individual can oppose supernaturalism if they care to, much more effectively than can someone possessing a mere superficial understanding picked up from talk.origins. Thanks. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You are right that
this is no substitute for a biological education. But it is
better than allowing the lies and misrepresentations of
antievolutionists. Not everybody has the time or opportunity to
get a biological education.
This site was set up to deal with creationism. There are numerous evolution sites, listed in the links page. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Firstly I'd like
to congratulate all contributors to talk.origins for such a
useful and comprehensive archive - when it comes to the mountains
of Creationist literature on the web, it's nice to see someone
taking the time to refute it.
My question relates to Creationism itself: nowadays, Creation "scientists" accept that "variation within kind" caused by "genetic loss" is possible, but "macro-evolution" between "kinds" is not possible. As far as I understand, evolutionary science makes no distinction between micro- and macro-evolution, as they are driven by the same processes (mutations, natural selection etc.) But has this Creationist disparity always existed, or was there a time when the majority of Creationists did not accept that variation - whether "within" or "between" kind - could happen at all? If the Creationists did at one point believe that variation did not happen at all, and then had to change their perception somewhere along the line, does this mean that their story wasn't completely right in the first place? And if so, does that mean that one day they will bow under the crippling weight of evidence for macro-evolution, and accept that as well? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Science does make a distinction between microevolution, which occurs at the level of populations, and macroevolution, which occurs at and above the level of species. But you are right that creationists have changed over the years from denying that species can evolve at all to saying that arbitrarily large groups can evolve but no further. However, I doubt this is ever going to lead them to accepting common descent, as they are unlikely to ever accept evidence for its own sake. Their motivation is based on doctrinal solidarity, and so until they cease to be creationists, they have to assert that kinds, whatever they might be, cannot change. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | This is quite a remarkable site. Many thanks for doing it. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Interesting site. I met a young man who did not realize that Jesus had said To keep the spirit of the law, but not the letter of the law. He was speaking of the pharasees, but what law were they keeping the letter of? The only law they would think of was Mosaic law, but when they say the law or Torah, they are speaking not only of the ritural laws, but the first 5 books of what Christians call the old testiment, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. Si what Jesus was saying that they were not to take these books literally. I really confussed and threw off a YECer with that observation and he has not returned to discuss creationism as a viable alternative to evolution since. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have been using
this site since long before it was a site, back when I had to
just ftp a bunch of files. Now, there are several great evolution
sites on the web, but this is the best. There are at least four
problems that an evolutionist encounters in discussions with
"Intelligent Design" advocates and other creationists:
1) What science is and how it works. Often creationists have only a comic-book understanding of it. This is dealt with very clearly in the first few chapters of Popper's "Objective Knowledge", but one can piece together some of that on this site, as well as by reading works by Gould, Dawkins, etc. 2) What evolution actually is. The most lucid and concise explanation I've found is Mayr's "What Evolution Is". It addresses the evidence and refutations of creationism briefly, but its value is that it lives up to the title. 3) What the evidence for evolution is. There is some of that on this site, as well as in the books by Mayr, Darwin, etc. 4) Refutations of specific ID and creationist claims. This site is the mother load. Really, there just is no other place to find this stuff so conviently. It was minimally acceptable when I grepped the files I downloaded into a directory - but this site is much more convenient most of the time. Of necessity, talkorigins touches on the other three items in some detail. I must visit once or twice a month at least and sometimes several times a week. I'm grateful for some of the other sites - such as nsceweb, Panda's Thumb, etc. But this talk origins remains my main reference. The primary reason people reject evolution is that what they "know" about evolution amounts to barbershop gossip. Most of what the creationist "intelligentsia" (such as it is) promulgates and disseminates easily determined to be false by someone who does their homework. But they are masters of manipulation and have several techniques they apply which includes finding some area of arcane science where they think few people would have facts handy and making absolute assertions about how that branch of science precludes evolution. They have done this with 2nd law of thermo, with string theory, with NFL theorems, with woodpecker necks, and bombadier beetles. They thrive in the corners of science where there is poor illumination for the general public. No matter how many times one refutes a specific crazy argument, it just keeps coming back. (Creationist leadership relies on the intellectual laziness of their followers.) On the good side, this site provides a ready reference of well-considered, well-worded refutations of the vast majority of specific claims. It is the snopes of the creation / evolution controversy although I suspect you precede snopes by some years. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Just a heads up,
on Introduction to
Evolution FAQ, Fate of Mutant Alleles, Neutral Alleles, the
second sentence reads the following "The average time (in
generations) until loss of a neutral allele is 2(Ne/N) ln(2N)
where N is the effective population size (the number of
individuals contributing to the next generation's gene pool) and
N is the total population size."
I believe Ne should be the effective population size. That's all. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | We know, but the author of that FAQ, Chris Colby, has gone AWOL. We believe he has been spirited off by the black helicopters for a Special Assignment, but we aren't cleared for that, and so we can't modify the FAQ until someone who Really Knows Their Stuff decides to revise it. But technical papers do often use N as the symbol for effective population. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | If I was to say that I was a scientist with amazing true data then I would be published unless......... I supported the FACT that God created the earth. You evolutionary people think that since some fossil looks old you can say that it is somewhere between 3.3 and 3.8 BILLION YEARS OLD. WHAT are you doing saying that this is true. No way do you know that this is true at all and you should be ashamed to try and make these statments. I for one am very offended by your lack of intelligence and wasted efforts in trying to support something that you have no evidence for. Please reconsider your efforts into something more worth while. Also, if you say that something is close to 3.3 billion to 3.8 billion years old (or so) that is proposterous. No way on earth is this a scientific statement. Think about how massive this statement is. It is just plain not good science. If we say trust in God because he is close this to this good and almost right and we don't quite have the evidence then you would laugh at me. At the very least do not state your things as fact. Say this is our theory and this is another theory. Never should you say that any of your stuff is fact unless you have 100% proof like we have in the BIBLE. Sorry but you SCIENTISTS make me laugh so much it is embarrassing. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have been reading this site, and I cannot seem to find the answer (or the debate of) a problem: the emergence of new species which produce sexually. I understand the model in Evolution is that mutation can create new features; mutation can be rare but millions of interactions plus billions of years of time allow them to happen - Logically it's plausible. However, since Evolution defines species as organisms that only reproduce with each other (since I see many cite this fact as a proof of discovering a new species), isn't it going to be rare, for 2 mutations in the same direction to happen at roughly the same time in roughly the same area and of different sex, so that such mutation can be preserved to create more offsprings? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Evolution does not require that the same mutation happen twice because speciation need not happen all in one step. If two populations of the same species for some reason rarely breed with each other for whatever reason (geographic isolation, having different ecological niches, differences in mating behavior, etc.) then over time differences can eventually add up so that cross-mating will not happen at all. (Some taxa can very quickly form new species by an observed mechanism called polyploidy that is fairly common in plants.) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Frank |
Comment: | A bit of
hair-splitting, but the little errors are the ones that burn us.
On http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/section2.html,
is the statement "...the eminent French anatomist Geoffroy St.
Hilaire (1772-1844) discussed his observations of the vestigial
wings of the cassowary and ostrich during his travels with
Napoleon to Egypt:"
Since the Cassowary is native to Australia and New Guinea, it could hardly have been been observed on a trip to Egypt. Perhaps there's some semantic distinction I'm missing - was the discussion (as opposed to the observation) on his trip to Egypt? I presume he was using data on cassowaries gathered by previous French explorers to Oceania (D'Entrecasteaux etc). Just thought I'd point it out. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The discussion was
during his "exile" in Egypt. Geoffroy tried very hard to maintain
his standing in French science while he was there, for 9 years,
but when he returned he found that Cuvier had basically sidelined
him, and he never regained the standing he had beforehand.
Geoffroy paid particular attention to what came to be known as homologies, and tried to draw relationships between different organisms' organs and traits because he believed that form was what gave organisms their abilities. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Eric Hyland |
Comment: | If evolution started so many million years ago what made it stop? Why isn't there any hairless monkeys running around? Why isn't man and animals still evolving to a higher level of intellegence. Also if the world was covered with a flood that covered the whole earth (about 29,000 feet of water) wouldn't that make the earth appear older than it really is? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | 1) Nothing made it stop anymore than airplanes made gravity stop. 2) We are running around, at least for the moment. 3) Smart is not good, smart is bad; consider the Bush family. 4) No, the global flood myth would not make the Earth appear older, unless there were lots more added to the story. The mere billions of tons of appearing and disappearing water would not make the Earth appear "older" It would have cooked everything living, and caused geological features that do not exist, but it could not have altered the basic geophysics we use to determine the age of the Earth. For a number of well researched articles on the imposibility of a global flood as insisted on by some biblical lieralists, I recommend the TalkOrigins.org Search Function, and Glenn Morton's "Noah's Flood". |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | evvvvvvvvvv maaaan |
Comment: | This site is awsome... you gotta get these feedback's responded to quicker tho i cant wait any longer AHHH!!!! |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | Thanks. A cold shower might help (never did it for me, but you never know). |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | The Tim Wallace creationist rebuttal links now have .asp extentions rather than .htm. At least the one referenced here is now .asp. I think all of them are. ;) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Looking for a response to Dembski's "Biology in the Subjunctive Mood: A Response to Nicholas Matzke". Has Matzke responded? If so, I would like to see it. Thanks. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Matzke hasn't responded in public, no. Yet. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I had read Scott
Huses' book "Collapse of Evolution" and found your website in
response to a search for more information about the bombadier
beetle.
I lean towards creationism myself, but appreciate hearing both sides of the story, and was interested in your proposed method of the evolution of the beetle's defense. Towards the end of the article at http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/bombardier.html, you say the following:
My thought is that it is equally arrogant to make the assumption that the bombadier beetle *evolved* its defenses, rather than being created with them. Obviously we don't know. You also tend to assume that a given creationist or creationist school of thought represents all of creationism, thus if you disprove that school of thought, you've disproven the creation hypothesis. This is buying in to a false dichotomy. What we seem to lack in discussions of origins is the admission that we just don't know for sure. Evolution advocates are committed to pushing their point of view, creationists to theirs, both, usually, because of their theological assumptions. Not too many people are neutral in their theological assumptions, and these assumptions often drive their scientific biases. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Bombardier Beetles and the Argument of Design |
Response: | When we see a dog
walking along the street, are we justified in claiming that the
dog has a heart? We cannot see the heart of that particular dog,
so obviously we don't know.
Most people, I trust, would find that conclusion absurd. We know plenty about other dogs, and about vertebrates in general, to know that hearts occur in all we know of, and we have absolutely no reason to think that that particular dog is exceptional. So, knowing nothing more about the dog than that it is a living dog, we can say it is a fact that the dog has a heart. For the same reason, we can say that it is a fact -- not an assumption -- that bombardier beetles evolved. There are multiple lines of evidence that all life, and animals in particular, evolved from a common ancestor. So knowing only that bombardier beetles are animals, we can say they evolved. As it happens, there has been much comparative anatomy (one of the lines of evidence) done on carabid beetles (which includes bombardier beetles), so we have direct evidence of the fact as well. Do we know for sure? No more than we know for sure that all dogs have hearts. You are correct that people, as individuals, are rarely neutral in their theological assumptions. But groups of people can be. Evolutionary biology is done by people of all religious views, including Hindu, Buddhist, Moslem, Jewish, atheist, and innumerable denominations of Christian. The fact that people from all these backgrounds agree that evolution is fact shows that their theological assumptions are not an important factor. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | like every other evolutionist you are a dreamer afraid of God and what his laws mean for you but mostly afraid of the TRUTH ! that if it gets out that evolution is a fraud you will lose you funding and your academic credit... |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution is a Fact and a Theory |
Response: | Dear "no it all,"
If you help keep the secret we'll share some of the grant money with you and give you a university degree. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I'm reading an
online document,
AN EVOLUTIONARY MANIFESTO: A NEW HYPOTHESIS FOR ORGANIC
CHANGE by a Dr. John Davison. In it, he quotes several
scientists as saying that evolution appears to be "winding down."
They base this observation on the fact(?) that no new Orders have
appeared among mammals in tens of millions of years, no new
Families of plants have appeared in 30 million years, etc. A
zoologist named Pierre Grasse is quoted as saying, "Facts are
facts; no new broad organizational plan has appeared for several
hundred million years, and for an equally long time numerous
species, animal as well as plant, have ceased evolving."
Is this accurate? I note that many of the quotes are quite old - from the 1930s and 40s - but some, like Grasse's, are more recent (1977). Has the fossil record challenged this view in more recent years, or was it ever valid? What explanation would you offer for evolution "winding down" if that is what we observe? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | There is no evidence of which I am aware that evolution has been slowing down. There is, however, the "pull of the Recent", which is to say we have a lot finer grained detailed information about events in our own geological period (the Recent) than we do of older periods. This foreshortening led some to suppose that evolution was slower today, but it is an artifact of our access to information of organisms in the modern period. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I just wanted to congratulate you on your wonderful site! I have been perusing the section on whales and I have so far learned of two new ancestor species! Keep up the wonderful work. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | My biggest problem with your writings is that your simplistic "either-or" thinking kills any intelligent discussion of evolution. You think that if a person is "anti-ev", he must believe in Noah, Adam and Eve, and a 6,000 yr. earth. Creationists, as ridiculous as their ideas are, attack evolution so successfully because there are so many major holes and impossibilities in the theory. Try doing a mind experiment and see if you can come up with heart evolution. Draw the steps on a sheet of paper. In actuality , there are no possible intermediate evolutionary steps to a heart system; or eyes, or birds and eggs. A half heart would yield a dead (no) animal and no ev. ID does not require a religion and isn't biblical. That the universe has a purely scientific intelligence somewhere is probable, and I think necessary for development of species. So, quit trying to make it look like everyone that thinks ev is a crock look like fools. There may just be more possibilities than eve and creat. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution is a Fact and a Theory |
Response: | Dear Dr. Blume,
We don't need to make it look like everyone who attacks evolution is a fool. They do a good job all by themselves. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have been a
Christian since I was a child, and a scientist (at heart, anyway)
just as long. Your statements about Creationism are correct, and
there are plenty of fundamentalist Christian denominations that
continue to teach that the Genesis story was meant to be taken
literally. From what I have read, the historic Christian (and
Jewish) religions viewed this more symbolically, and the literal
view is a fairly recent phenomenon among Christian groups. I'm
not convinced that abiogenesis occurred without the help or
design of God, but the fact that evolution clearly did occur
cannot be denied by anyone with a brain, an open mind, and the
willingness to learn a bit about biology.
A point that I haven't seen addressed here is that if evolution did not occur, why does all the evidence point toward it as the mechanism of creation? I have heard other Christians say that God left the fossil record, isotope traces, current microevolution, and the rest of the overwhelming evidence as a test of our faith. That particular test would involve deception on God's part - making the world look much older than creationists believe. The God that I believe in doesn't deceive His own people, and the Bible itself says that God is incapable of lying. It's also unfortunate that so many Christians have bought into the conspiracy theory that there is a huge cover-up in the scientific community, and that science actually supports their narrow interpretation of the Bible. I can't say I'm surprised, since two of the main creationist apologists are "Dr." Kent Hovind and "Dr." Carl Baugh, neither of whom has any degrees from a legitimate university. In fact, Carl Baugh is president of the "university" he received his "degree" from. It saddens me that my own brothers and sisters in Christ are willing to support these folks, who make their living deceiving Christians. I occasionally catch Carl Baugh's program on TBN, and most of what he says about science is just wrong. He is constantly attempting to link evolutionary theory to Nazism, Communism, slavery, genocide, and any other negative thing he and his guests can think up. Hovind still repeats the lie that Darwin's reference to "favored races" refers to racism, when in fact Darwin was using the term to describe different types and species' of animals. As long as Christians are willing to support these charlatans, they will continue to remain in the dark about scientific matters. Finally, I'd like to point out that a Christian is defined by his beliefs about Jesus Christ, not his beliefs about how mankind came to be the most intelligent species on the planet. Too many Christians think that to deny the doctrine of creationisn is somehow denying God's existence. That simply isn't true. Thanks for the excellent site. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | TalkOrigins is perhaps one of the best resources available to the general public and those of us that are amateur scientists (I have a BA in Biology) that are interested in this controversy. A few months ago, I discovered a group (www.whoisyourcreator.com) that is located close to my hometown and is trying to raise money to erect billboards declaring the "myth" of evolution. They also have a lot of quotations from scientists that are taken out of context or blatantly miss-quoted. I've emailed them on several occasions, offering the correct quotes and a paraphrase of the quote (many of which I found on TalkOrigins) and have kindly asked them to either remove the quotes or add additional information about them. Of course, I haven't heard anything from the group. Isn't this a legal case of slander? Has anyone at TalkOrigins any experience on the legalities of misrepresentation of scientific work? I don't want to appear as over-reacting, but it greatly disturbs me that this group will soon be decorating our hometown with their billboards leading to their inaccurate website. Thanks for all your work. |