Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | How does the Law of Biogenisis fit into evolution? If you respond please try to keep it relatively short. I ask because in my high school biology class we could not come to a conclusion that did not involve some type of divine intervention. I also ask to seek your thoughts. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | There is no law of biogenesis. Life comes from life today because that is now by far the most efficient way to produce it. However, there is no law that says there is no other way life can form. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Charles |
Comment: | No evidence,
no belief. Know evidence, know belief.
I truely believe this statement that was made by your website. Truely evidence is needed to know where we have come from. I attend a secular university. My stats professor made a comment I truely believe in. He said, "evolution has gaps that a Mack Truck can drive through. I have been researching evolution for years. The lack of transitional forms between species is astounding. The evolutionist answer that transitional forms occur so fast that it is next to impossible to find one of these transitional forms. The famous transitional form is that of the bird/reptile that started with an "A." I saw a special on T.V. that said a bird was discovered that even older than this species. Also, my highschool taught me that we are linked to evolution because gill slits in our embryotic form and this is a connection to our ancestors the fish. I learned at my secular college once again while watching T.V. that this is not a gill slit or anything to do with a gill. I don't understand why over half of all highschool biology text books still print this lie. Also I was taught the lie of Java man as well. My teacher supported a debate that divided my class into two sections in an evolution/ creationist debate. I remember that it mentioned that many snakes have protrusion on the back side of their body that used to be legs. I thought that it was interesting the Bible said that as well. Though I used the Bible as a science I don't people should use it for science. It is not meant to be a science book it is a religious book. It is for people who wish to strenghten their faith and spiritual reflection, not for science. Though I will say this that as law's of nature and science I have never known the bible to be wrong. Long before the time of Columbus sailing the ocean blue Christians knew the earth was round because the bible does say "circle of the earth." I just know both sides do a lot of things they shouldn't do. Like the creationist sounding stupid when the mention the laws of thermo- dynamics to disprove evolution. From that I have researched I have reached this conclusion. No God, no peace. Know God, know peace. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | If you
attend a secular university, what is your statistics
professor doing lecturing outside his specialty and making
such thick-headed statements that you are using to promote
your religious beliefs?
And why do you think a professor of statistics would have a valid opinion of a biological issue, in the apparent absence of any significant knowledge of biology? |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I have a question, how come the scientist cannot agree on the date of the earth? Also how come there sre no "missing links" as creationist call them because as they say if evlution is true then there should be hundreds of fossils or "missing links" to prove the THEORY of evolution. |
Response | |
From: | Chris Stassen |
Author of: | The Age of the Earth |
Response: | Scientists
have agreed on the Age of the Earth.
This is not exactly recent news; the value first computed
in the mid-1950s
has stood for about half a century, and been confirmed many
times since.
As for your second question, see this archive's Transitional Vertebrate Fossils FAQ. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | First off, I would like to say that I have enjoyed spending the past almost 2 hours now reading and looking over all that this site has to offer, and I am sure I will promptly return. Also, due credit should be given to the many people writing and researching the questions concerning the debate between creationism and evolution. But, when talking about creationism people do seem to leave out a critical aspect of religion in general--that is FAITH. You see, I am a creationist, (though I enjoy learning what the other side must say so I am more eduacted), and I believe in a God who is unlike any of our thinking as human beings. Everything we see around us has a start to it--from the conception of a child in the womb to a chair built by its master. We are wholly incapable of comprehending something as always existing, which is a fundamental attribute of God. And so, I must say that though your arguments are good, without doubt, they come from a limited perspective, in my opinion. I BELIVE in something much higher than science and much farther beyond what we as humans can explain in any terminology or grasp in our limited view of the big picture. I certainly do not know everything, and probably do not seem credible in the eyes of evolutionists (which is expected), but I do know a personal God whose Spirit gives me truth and understanding of this world that we live in on a daily basis. I know this statement also doesn't hold much water with those who do not have the eyes to see it. As Jesus says in John 14:17 "He is the Holy Spirit, who leads into all truth. The world at large cannot receive him, because it isn't looking for him and doesn't recognize him." (NIV) So, I simply ask, are you the one not open-minded enough to recognize God? Are you the one not open-minded enough to perhaps accept faith and see things from the perspective from the one who sees and in the end will explain it all? Just wondering... |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | What is Creationism? |
Response: | See the God and Evolution FAQ for a
discussion of such matters. Lots and lots of people both
believe in God and accept evolution, so faith cannot be an
argument against evolution.
Faith means different things to different people, and different people have different concepts of God. When talking about faith on more than a personal level, one must be open-minded enough to accept all these different perspectives. The origins of life and of the universe are not determined by anyone's personal decision of what religion to follow. Science, including evolution, is based on objective evidence, evidence which is the same for everyone. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Biswajit Gohain |
Comment: | Now that the human genome has been found to have no more than ten thousand genes than the genome of a worm,and all but 300 of the genes in the human genome having a one to one correspondence in the genome of the mouse,I wonder what contortions Richard Dawkins and his followers will get into in order to still maintain that humans are nothing more than biological robots with all their thoughts,emotions,actions and reactions being determined by their genes. P.S. I am not a Christian. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I'm not sure that anyone wishing to argue for a view of organisms as "biological robots" would have to engage in any contortions at all in order to accommodate the findings of the Human Genome Project. Nor do I stipulate that this accurately reflects Dawkins' position. The fact of the matter is that certain behavioral traits or tendencies have been found to have contributing factors in heritable genes. There is controversy over how completely the genetics determine behavior, and also over how general such determination might be. The Human Genome Project findings do not set aside the body of research that tells us that genes have a role (whose extent we might argue about and research) in the determination of at least some of the behavioral traits of individuals. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Anthony Temple |
Comment: | I read a feedback a while ago which someone claimed that evolution completely debunks the idea of a God being present. But one of the evolutonists claimed that evolution does not disreguard the idea of God because the idea of God helping along the evolutionary process is still a possibility. But my question is, why would a God who exists solely to "just guide our evolutionary process along" not curve our thinking as well? why bother being aound if he's just going to let us possibly solve our own problems with no teaching as to how. Does that make sense to you? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Evolution
cannot disprove a god. How can it? It provides a method of
understanding our existence on this planet without
the god hypothesis, but it does not exclude the
possibility. That is a task for philosophy, not science.
Your question seems to go more toward god's motive for action, to which I have no possible answer. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hi. This
letter was originally sent to Chris Colby's email, but it
is no longer working. Please read and comment on my site if
possible. I do not expect this to be published. :)
Thanks, Ben -------------------original message follows----------- Hello. I enjoyed your article on evolution very much. I was raised as a Bible-believing Christian, complete with a creationist outlook. I have since come to see the error of these views, and have gone to yours and other web sites for information about evolution. I have a link to your site from my web page, as I hope my friends will visit it and be challenged. The reason I'm writing is that I've written a little article about creation and evolution on my web site, and I would love for someone like you to read it and give me any critique that I might need on my perception of evolution. I realize that I am still learning, and do not want to present any false information. Yet I feel that many of my friends may read it just because I have written it, and would not visit your web site. If you would be willing to read my article and comment, go to: If not, I understand. I know you may be very busy. Either way, thanks for taking the time to read this email. Thanks, Ben Travis |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | I for one
really enjoyed and appreciated your essay. I think it
should be read by all creationists.
Keep up the good work. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | EDITOR'S
CHOICE AWARD from the Awesome Library Congratulations! Your
site has been selected for an Editor's Choice Award from
the Awesome Library, a collection of the top 5% of sites in
the field of K-12 education. To find the links, go to
"http://www.awesomelibrary.org/" and search for the word:
foley
In order to be included in the Awesome Library, a site must meet the standards and criteria presented on our Ratings page. Because the Awesome Library only includes the very best sites, it has been rated as the top resource for "k-12 education" in many of the popular search engines, such as Google, Alta Vista, Direct Hit, Lycos, Ask Jeeves, MSN, Excite, Infoseek (Go Network), Inference, Northern Light, and GoTo.com. You may, if you wish, place an announcement of your
Editor's Choice Award on your site, such as: (Please transfer the graphic to your server.) I wish to thank you, on behalf of teachers, students, parents, and librarians everywhere, for making your carefully developed resource available. Regards, R. Jerry Adams, Ph.D. Executive Director awesomelibrary.org jadams@awesomelibrary.org |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have really enjoyed the last few days of reading your site, and I got a good laugh from the Faculty list. My doc is in anthropology, and I also have around 20 grad units in chem. Currently I'm the curator of a small natural history museum in Orange County, CA, and I'll try to get a link to your site on our web page. We get 1 or 2 young-earthers praying for us each week, if "You'er damned, and going to Hell" is a form of prayer. When I taught at the Medical College of Georgia, I was asked if I would teach a class on creation for the local 4 year college. I submitted an outline on a world wide creation myth survay, and the offer was declined. Oh well! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Harry |
Comment: | We can drop sugar, flour, baking powder, and an egg on the floor--but they won't turn into a cake by themselves. We have to mix and bake them according to a recipe. Throwing steel, rubber, glass and plastic together doesn't make a car. It takes SKILLFUL ENGINEERING. How much more, then would INTELLIGENCE be needed to design life? If brilliant scientists have failed to create it, how could BLIND STUPID CHANCE?????? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Biology is
NOT engineering. Not even close.
Flour, sugar etc. are not living organisms that are subject to natural selective pressures. They do not compete to pass on their genes to later generations. Congratulations-- you have just presented a false analogy. Evolution is not entirely governed by chance. You need to learn more before you make such uninformed, dismissive comments. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Intelligent design is a hypothesis that depends upon the improbability of life occurring by chance. I would like to know if anyone else besides me believes that probability is relative to the observer rather than absolute. In other words, I'm proposing there is no absolute probability for any event (with the possible exception of quantum events). The probability of coin coming up heads is different for a person who knows the coin is biased than for one who doesn't. Does anyone else share this belief? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Yes, I do.
There are two competing "philosophies" of statistics -
Bayesian and frequentist. Bayesians think that probability
is the ratio of the prior (subjective) chance that some
event would happen to the likelihood given new information.
All of this depends largely on what you already know, and
so it is a way of working out what to think in the light of
current knowledge. Frequentists believe that the real
likelihood of an event is the chance that in a very long
series of trials or example cases it will occur.
The Bayesian likelihood of life occurring depends entirely on what information you bring into the equation - if, for example, chemistry is such that in the right circumstances life will occur just out of the properties of molecules, then if you can show that the right conditions obtained, the probability is one (ie, is certain). But we just do not know enough to state clearly what the likelihoods (the "priors") are. We do not know the conditions under which life first arose on earth - the information is largely lost and what we do know is only indirect. This is a fact about us, not life itself. The frequentist version requires that to calculate the probability of life we need to know how many planets might have evolved life (ie, had closely similar conditions to Earth in its infancy) and how many did. Neither information is available. It might be that 96 out of every hundred possible sites of planetary life do result in independent life. We can't, as of now, know this. The objections by anti-evolutionists like Dembksi and Hoyle tend to be simplistic and subjective - simplistic in that the "calculation" is based on a simple step from one state (non-life) to some other (complex life as we now know it), which is unrealistic, and subjective in that the "odds" they use in their calculations are plucked from thin air, and are neither legitimate as Bayesian nor frequentist probabilities. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Jamie |
Comment: | Could you please provide me with a good source of information about Helacyton gartleri? I've been looking on the internet but have been having trouble finding any other information about it other than its mention at this site. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Searching for "HeLa", the name by which the cell culture is better known, gives thousands of hits. Here are a couple that look useful. For technical information, see JCRB9004 [HeLa]. For a brief history, see Henrietta's Dance. There is also a book: A Conspiracy of Cells by Michael Gold (State University of New York Press, 1986). The article which argued for HeLa being a separate species and introduced the name Helacyton gartleri is: Van Valen, Leigh M. & Maiorana, Virginia C., 1991. HeLa, a new microbial species. Evolutionary Theory 10: 71-74. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I hear there is a guy offering $250,000 to anyone who can prove the evolution theory. Why haven't you attempted to collect this prize? (or have you.) |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You would be
referring to "Dr" Kent Hovind and his $250,000 challenge to
anyone who can provide "empirical evidence (scientific
proof) of evolution. There is little point in mincing
words, so why not just be blunt. Hovind is a complete and
utter fraud and his challenge is nothing more than a
rhetorical device he uses to make his followers believe
that he is a creationist David who has done away with the
Goliath of evolution. You will find a detailed look at
Hovind's challenge at
Mr. Hovind's $10,000 "challenge" including an earlier
response I wrote to a similar letter. I will summarize what
I said earlier here.
Hovind's money is quite safe and he knows it. He has designed his challenge in such a way that it would be impossible for anyone to EVER meet his criteria. This is, of course, intellectual dishonesty of the highest rank, but coming from a man who has an unaccredited store bought degree that he uses to bill himself as "Dr" in order to make people think he has more credibility than he does, this is hardly a surprise. Here are the reasons why his challenge is (deliberately) impossible to meet: 1. He defines evolution to mean, basically, all of modern science. He demands that one prove that "matter created itself out of nothing" as a part of proving evolution to be true. This is impossible, of course, and he knows it. 2. He defines empirical as "based solely on expirement or observation". Since much of evolution deals with events in the past, it is not subject to being put into a lab. You cannot test the reptile-to-mammal transition in a lab. You can, however, look at the evidence from paleontology, molecular biology, anatomy and biogeography, design a theory and then test it by using it to make predictions about the nature of new evidence. This is how theories in science are tested, and the theory is very successful at such predictions. And you certainly can't put the sorts of demands he makes for proving the origin of the universe into a lab expirement. 3. Here's the most important reason why it is impossible to meet. He refuses to consider it proven until you can "prove, beyond any reasonable doubt, that the process of evolution is the only possible way the observed phenomena could have come into existence." He then states, "As in any fair court of law, the accuser must also rule out any other possible explanations." Perhaps Mr. Hovind has recently purchased a law degree that is as useless as his doctorate. It is simply not possible to "rule out" all possible explanations for anything. There are always hypothetical explanations that are within the realm of possibility - and of course he knows that. Additionally, Mr. Hovind also refuses to reveal the identities of the committee who will decide whether one has met the challenge, but of course they are picked by him. He will not entertain any idea of a neutral group to evaluate the evidence, and he reserves the right to refuse to even send your challenge to the committee at all if he so chooses. So again, Hovind's money is quite safe. A couple of years ago I made a similar challenge to which neither Hovind nor anyone else has ever replied. I will gladly offer $1 million to anyone who can prove ANY claim using such criteria. If one is forced to disprove any and all hypothetical alternative explanations, one cannot even prove their own existence. The challenge is a fraud and so is Hovind for making it and using it for dishonest purposes for his followers. Ed Brayton |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I am not necessarily a religious person. I do believe that the Bible is the inspired word of God and is the authority of the history of the Universe. I do not consider the Bible to be a book of religion regardless of the consensus of Evolutionists and others. I am convinced that the Universe originated just as described in Genesis. When we look around us we see male and female in most all organisms and each kind of organism only reproduces after it's kind. What few minute microbes that may be out there that do not have male and female counterparts still only reproduce their own kind. Now, if life began by some happen-chance development in a primordial soup or wherever, it would have had to have a simultaneous development of the opposite sex for continuation of itself. If that is not the case, then why is it necessary in the present and when did it change. In Matthew chapter 19 verse 4 it reads: And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read that he which made them at the beginning, made them male and female. Verse 5: And said, For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife and they two shall be one flesh? In all of recorded history there has never been an organism of any type that has come into being except from parents of some form. Life only comes from life. At Creation life came into being by design of the Omnipotent God, the source of all information. Also, Genesis 1, verse 27: So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them. Each human, animal and plant has its own identity. There aren't two of anything in the whole Universe that are exactly alike--not rocks stars, planets, snowflakes, people, on and on. But, each kind of organism still only reproduces after its kind and each one looks slightly different than its parents. Sea organisms that reproduce by externally giving off ova and milt that floats in the water will not intermix with any other types that may be floating around in the same water. So, the conclusion is, the Evolutionary theory or philosophy that is supposed to be fact is not even good logic and I believe that those who embrace Evolution--deep down in their heart and spirit do not really believe it. I think that all who embrace Evolution need to step back and re-evaluate the whole subject. There is so great a volume of evidence in support of Creation that it's too much to cover in such a missive as this. I pray that those who read this will diligently search for the truth. Thank you. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution |
Response: | May I remind
you that evolution says organisms reproduce after
their own kinds (although the kinds themselves can and will
gradually change), and creationism says organisms
sometimes appear suddenly out of nowhere. You seem to think
it is the other way around.
I pray that you yourself will diligently search for the truth. In particular, I hope you will learn enough microbiology to come to realize how utterly bizarre it is to refer to asexual microbes as "few." |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Is it true that there are only like 2 or so theories that believe there is no god and there are a lot of theories that believe in god that he started and used evolution to help. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | No.
No scientific theory makes any judgement on the question of whether there is or is not a god. Such questions are outside the scope of science. Those are questions for individuals to answer for themselves. Evolution is not an idea that excludes the possibility of a god. It's up to you to decide whether or not you are going to include a god into evolution. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Harry |
Comment: | Luther
Burbank the famed American plant breeder said: Quote: I
know from my experiences that I can develop a plum half an
inch long or one 21/2 inches long, with every possible
length in between, but I am willing to admit that it is
hopeless to try to get a plum the size of a small pea, or
as big as a grapefruit....I have roses that bloom pretty
steady for six months in the year, but I have none that
will bloom twelve, and I will not have. In short, THERE ARE
LIMITS to the development possible, and those limits follow
a law....plants and animals all tend to revert, in
successive generations, toward a given mean or average.
The more a species is pushed from the norm, the harder it gets. Evolutionist Ernst Mayr demonstrated this when he tried to modify fruit flies throughout breeding. The flies normally averaged 36 bristles on their bodies. When the insects were bred down to 25 bristles, they became sterile. Mayr also bred the flies upwards--until they reached 56 bristles, they again became sterile. If controlled conditions and intelligent planning cannot transform a species, how much less could natural selection, operating under chance conditions WITHOUT INTELLIGENCE? THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION IS BALONEY, IT MAKES NO SENSE AT ALL, AND IT CANNOT VERIFY IT'S ILLOGICAL, DREAMED UP FAIRY TALES!!!! |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Quotations
are tricky things. They can be taken many ways, when not
given within the context of the surrounding paragraphs. In
future, please give the publication and page numbers when
citing quotations. Here is an example.
|
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Larry Brown |
Comment: | I have been a minister for 7 years and have been a Christian all of my life. I have been well indoctrinated in Christian apologetics - including Creationism as taught at the Christian University where I earned my bachelors in Theology. After discovering your website, I have finally realized how much of a "fool" I have been for deliberately ignoring the blatant truth just so I could hold on to my doctrine. Your website is excellent in allowing people like me who do not have a background in science to understand the difficult concepts of evolution. I will say this ... I still believe in God as a Supreme Being and the Creator of all things based on the "First-Cause" argument, but I have come to the conclusion that He must have done His handiwork through the process of evolution. I may be a Christian - but I want to know the truth! If the theory of Evolution is the Truth, then I embrace it. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Marvelous! But don't just take our word for it. I highly encourage you to examine this topic in more detail through the primary literature referenced in our articles. You may just find, like some of this site's contributors have, that your faith is strengthened by knowing more about the wonder and majesty of the universe. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I would like to hear your group's ideas on the issues of the theory that there, quite possibly, were a number of hominid species living simultaneously in and around 74,000 years ago and due to super-volcanizm ie: the Toba eruption of B.C.72,000, a bottleneck was created in the gene pool due to mass extinction. What say? e-mail back if you can. Thanks |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This idea is perhaps feasible, but it has the whiff of an Overarching Hypothesis, which is what I call ideas that are supposed to explain everything from the origin of the kitchen sink to the stock market. The Toba eruption 75kya was certainly big - it was about three thousand times the size of the Mt St Helens eruption. The idea is due to Stanley Ambrose of the University of Illinois. A review of the main ideas is to be found at Phylogeny and Modern Human Origins. However, if it were true, then we ought to find similar genetic bottlenecks in similar species (ie, wide ranging temperate species. So far as I know, we don't. But it isn't impossible, and may even be true. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hi, I want to start by offering my compliments to the creators of this Website. You've done a nice job, and your commitment to allow every viewpoint to speak, even those that differ drastically from your collective opinions, is a noble one. I want to respond to something Ken Harding said on the December 2000 feedback. He said that the genesis account and the genesis flood are in direct conflict with mountains of physical evidence. I want to address this issue, because so many people reject the Christian faith because they think its ridiculous to believe what is contained in the genesis account, mainly because people think it contradicts scientific evidence. I'd like to point out that there is no contradiction between Nature and the Bible. The contradiction is between Science (people's interpretation of nature) and people's interpretation of the Bible. For instance Creationists interpretation of the Bible contradicts the physical evidence we have available to us. A lot of confusion exists in the first chapters of genesis, in the early 1600's, when the King James Version of the Bible was first translated, the English scholars chose to translate the ancient Hebrew word "yom" as day. When people today read the Bible, the see the English word day, and don't even consider for a second that it could mean anything else. But Ancient Hebrew only had about 3,000 words, in comparison with English, which has, about 450,000 still in use according to the Newest Oxford Dictionary. In Hebrew one word had to cover a lot of different meaning. The Hebrew word "Yom" can connote a literal 24-hour day, but it can also mean any long (but definite) period of time. In Fact if an ancient Hebrew writer wanted to speak of a long period of time, there was no other word available to them. So a literal reading of the 1st chapter of Genesis doesn't show a young earth. The first chapter is a very-very short summery of the 4.55 billion years or so the earth went through before humans appeared. In fact if you read it and just connect the text to the physical evidence, it gives a perfect step by step account of what happened to the earth. The Bible says that at the very beginning of the earth, it was totally covered by water, which is consistent with the scientific finding. Keeping in mind that Genesis 1 verse 2 "the spirit of God was hovering over the surface of the waters," places the perspective under the atmosphere, not up in the heavens somewhere looking downward. Understanding that the point of view is just above the surface of the water explains why light appears before the sun. At first the cloud cover was so thick that no light could penetrate, then as the atmosphere started to thin some light could come through, then as the atmosphere began to look much more like it does today, the sun became visible like it is today. There's a lot more in the text that could be confused, but I don't want to take up to much space. In regards to the flood, there is no reason why it would have to be a global flood, It was probably true that at this point in history, people were all more or less in the Fertile Crescent and perhaps the immediately surrounding areas. Thus only a local flood would be necessary; furthermore any flood that wiped out the entire population of the earth would be considered to cover the whole earth, especially by Moses who probably wrote the account. Also, some areas of the text almost imply that the flood didn't cover the entire planet, for example winds would have a huge effect bringing the water levels down, but would have absolutely no effect on water covering the entire world My problem with the theory of evolution is macro evolution. We see the effects of micro evolution every day and they can be easily documented. But why don't we see more cases of macro evelution. In the fossil record the speciation rate is about one per year, but in the last 300 or so years we've been scientifically looking for new speciation the rate has been at a virtual zero. And the few cases where you do find speciation is in plants where it's much more difficult to determine exactly where one species starts and another begins. This would make perfects sense if God created up until man, and then rested. But otherwise how can you explain the virtual zero rate of speciation? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Thank you
for your complimentary statements.
I do feel compelled to respond to your letter. What I wrote in December of 2000 is still true. The Genesis account of creation and the Flood ARE in direct conflict with mountains of physical evidence. It's all well and good to say that there is no conflict between the bible and nature, but the fact is that there is no physical evidence whatever that there was a Global Flood, and much evidence that there was not. There is also irrefutable evidence that the plants and animals did not appear on earth in the order that Genesis claims they did, and that the earth itself is far older than the bible specifies. This isn't the forum for biblical criticism. I'm not going to get into details about the problems of translations. If a translation is wrong, then the bible is wrong. But when Genesis says "and the evening and the morning were the second day", the evening and morning of WHAT, precisely? The evening and morning of a millenium? The Hebrews didn't have any other word besides YOHM (day) to describe a long period of time? Well, that is simply not true. How about SHANEH, or YEAR? The bible says that Methusela was 969 years old, not 353,685 days old. Genesis does not give a step-by-step account of the origin of the earth. It is mythology. It speaks of god dividing the light from the darkness. Before this, were they mingled? It says that the earth was totally covered with water at one point. Science does not agree-- we have no evidence of such a thing. Genesis also says that there was created a firmament in the midst of the waters... the waters being both above and below the sky. This is untrue, to say the least. The bible says that THE WHOLE WORLD was submerged in a flood. It's up to you to take it literally or figuratively-- but that's what it says. And it is wrong. Genesis says that plants existed before the sun. This is totally at odds with what science has to say. This is not to mention the fact that Genesis has two contradictory accounts of the creation. By the way, Moses did not write Genesis, nor any book of the bible. You will find answers to your questions regarding speciation by clicking on the SEARCH button, and typing in "speciation", and then by reading. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | In response
to my philosophical premise that all human beings operate
with presuppositions, Mr. Isaak wrote:
On the contrary, this statement serves to reinforce my point more than refute it. Would "phlogiston" also fit into your list of scientific theories? Quantum mechanics is also a highly speculative and theoretical field, and in fact, is a breeding ground for presuppositions! Not all theories have been sufficiently observed and tested in order to reach concrete conclusions which would qualify them as "facts" - quantum mechanics and neodarwinism are two of these. Moreover, naturalism fails miserably when ALL of reality is considered - morality, justice, meaning, ethics, metaphysics, etc. I have debated a few naturalists in my time and must say that their naturalisitic arguments in these areas do not stand up to logical and reasonable scrutiny. Thanks for your time and for posting my comment earlier! You have to love the Truth before you can find it. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Phlogiston
illustrates the flip side of what I said; scientific
theories have been rejected despite presuppositions being
almost universally in favor of them. Actually, I don't know
how popular phlogiston theory was in its day, but if it
doesn't illustrate this point, there are several other
theories which do, from heliocentrism to the psychosomatic
cause of ulcers. Scientists know that actual evidence
trumps all presuppositions. Flood geology and a young earth
are other theories which were rejected in late 1800's and
early 1900's despite presuppositions being overwhelmingly
in favor of them at the time. Today, a presupposition of
creationism is absolutely essential for believing those
theories at all.
I am at a loss to understand how you could regard quantum mechanics as highly speculative. It has withstood a century of extensive tests. It is the basis for such useful instruments as lasers and scanning tunneling microscopes. It has made predictions that have proved accurate to 11 decimal places. To the best of my knowledge, no other science has matched this precision. As with all good sciences, there are still areas to speculate about, but the basics of quantum mechanics are as factual as facts get. Explanation of morality is quite a large field which I will not go into here. I will simply note that nobody has found an objective reason why morality could not have natural causes, so using morality as an argument against naturalism is an argument from ignorance. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I would like to recommend "The Blind Watchmaker", by Richard Dawkins. Page 316 touches on evolution and divine creation. Please suggest some literature in return. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | With pleasure: see the talk.origins Book Recommendations FAQ and The BBC Darwin Bibliography |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | hello, did you know that the likeliness of evolution is like a print shop blowing up and a perfect dictionary in place of it. And it is very degrading to think that you're ancestors were apes. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Evolution is more like a careful typesetter placing letters at random and rejecting the combinations that do not "fit" the dictionary. Evolution is a proofreader. And what, exactly, is degrading about being descended from (or for that matter being) apes? Apes are clever, inquisitive, political and moral animals. In short, they differ from us only in the degree of all these faculties. And no non-human ape ever declared war on another because they were of a slightly different religious persuasion; although they have been known to declare war on other troops over territory. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I just came across The web site True Origin: Exposing the myth of evolution. In it, Timothy Wallace takes a broad and swipe at many of the pro-evolutionary arguments presented by Mark Isaak. The site was listed as being last updated on Feb. 25,2001; however, I assume the criticism of Mr. Isaak is not a recent one. So, I'm wondering if Mr. Isaak has addressed any of Mr. Wallace's remarks anywhere on Talk Origins, and if so, where |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution |
Response: | Wayne Duck has written A Critique of Wallace in response to Wallace's broadside. I have not felt it necessary to add to Wayne's critique. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have just read an article in "The Courier Mail" 24 February, by Phillip Whitfield which states "A giant comet or asteroid smashed into the earth 250million years ago and triggered the biggest mass extinction in history, scientists said yesterday." To deny that the earth was created by God 6000 years ago and was covered by a great flood about 4500 years ago, is to deny the validity of the Bible. To deny the validity of the Bible is to deny God and His Son Jesus Christ in whom the whole character of God was manifest. All of creation is subject to the authority of Jesus Christ for He made all things, including wisdom. So if you deny Jesus Christ, you deny the only source of wisdom. All of these theories some scientists come up with are only theories based on worldly wisdom which results in a lot of unproven speculation and wild goose chasing. Education institutions begin to accept theory as fact which is then passed onto the students. Apart from corrupting the minds of the students in world, these scientists are leading them away from God, a sin for which I pray God will have mercy on them. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Evolutionists do not, in general, deny the validity of the
Bible. They deny that a creationist's interpretation of the
Bible is applicable to them or to the universe as a whole.
Creationists, by the way, make the same denial regarding
other creationist interpretations. For example, some of
Henry Morris's harshest criticism is reserved for Day-Age
and Old Earth creationists.
Denying a young earth or global flood does not deny God or Christ. Most non-creationists have more faith than you give them credit for and are able to believe in a god that can still exist if they are wrong about any detail concerning Him. Would it be so bad if a theory leads people away from one interpretation of God towards another that they find more powerful and robust? Please remember that the religious path that you prefer is not right for everyone. For other people, the paths of spiritual growth lead through different interpretations and different religions. I don't believe either you or I have the wisdom to determine which paths are right for which people. I do know that trying to hold someone on a path that is not right for them can be very damaging. The loving thing to do is to encourage people along their own ways, not the ways that we decide for them. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I did a Yahoo search on "flat earth" and found your site. I was hoping to have found a flat earth society site, but I am glad to have found yours. I am doing some research on Compassionate Atheism and was looking for some flat earth stuff in order to make some comparisons between flat-earthers and theists. (the validity of blind faith etc.) Do you know the URL of the Flat Earth Society site? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Given the nature of the International Flat Earth Society, I highly doubt that it has a web site. Check out this link for more information on the Society. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | jyhuhrgfhfg |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | sdfktktjt. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | How do you explain good mutations. The only good mutation is Sickle-Cell Amnesia, and that makes you soooooooo sick you dont' get malaria. Not one I would like to inheriet. What other GOOD mutations are there? I am doing a report on this, and would like to know about this. Sincerely, An 8th grader |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution |
Response: | Perhaps the
best documented beneficial mutation in humans is the ApoA-I
mutation, which confers resistance to heart disease. The
first two references below are popular accounts:
Rayl, A.J.S., 2000 (2 Mar.). Mutant gene may curb vascular disease. [USA Today - editor] Long, P., 1994 (Jan/Feb.). A town with a golden gene. Health 8: 60ff. Weisgraber KH, Rall Jr SC, Bersot TP, Mahley RW, Franceschini G, Sirtori CR, 1983. Apolipoprotein A-I Milano. Detection of normal A-I in affected subjects and evidence for a cysteine for arginine substitution in the variant A-I [PDF file]. J Biol Chem 258: 2508-2513. [Since this was posted this Archive posted Apolipoprotein AI Mutations and Information which has more information on the ApoA-I mutation -- editor] A mutation also gives some resistance to AIDS: Dean, M. Carrington, M, et al., 1996. Genetic restriction of HIV-1 infection and progression to AIDS by a deletion allele of the CKR5 structural gene. Science 273: 1856-1862. See also: Cohen, J., 1996. Receptor mutations help slow disease progression. Science 273: 1797-1798. Mutations are also responsible for drug and pesticide resistance in diseases and pests. Although these are ongoing problems for people, such mutations are beneficial to the organisms they occur in. Since mutations ultimately are the only source of genetic variation, we have mutations to thank for all the benefits which come from having diversity in a population. Among other things, diversity means that diseases don't spread to everyone in the world at the same time. The Irish potato blight was so disasterous because there was very little genetic diversity among all the potatoes in Ireland at the time. For more information, see Are Mutations Harmful? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I greatly enjoy your site and I have regularly been reading your responses to feedback for more than a year. Based on the fact that almost every month some creationists will post the same old empty arguments which you so eloquently response to, I would conclude that much of the feedback you get is from creationists who just stumbled onto the site by accident. I feel it is highly unlikely that they will ever return to see your response and see that you are not afraid or intimidated by their arguments as their own arrogance sometimes suggest. They will probably never really know just how easy it was to dismantle their arguments. With this in mind, I wondered if you ever e-mailed your responses directly to them to make sure they get them. One of my own feedback posts was published and responded to a couple of months ago, but I received no e-mail with the response or indication that a response was being posted. I realize you are all volunteers and that this may take a little more time but I just hate the thought of those same creationists thinking they got away with the last word and then using that in their discussions with others about the topic. I can just hear them saying something like “I posted that question to talk-origins and they had no response.” When there is an e-mail link published with the post, I have been tempted to send that person e-mail with a copy of your response to make sure they get it. I have never done that and I was curious to know if you were aware of any of your others readers doing something like that. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | I almost always send the feederback (is that a word? feedbacker?) my response by email. Most of the time this results in attempts (when the backfeeder is anti-evolution) in attempts to proselytise me. That I do not respond to... |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Harry |
Comment: | There are insurmountable difficulties with the S0-called Geologic succession of strata. Let's take a look. FIRST: There is no place ON EARTH WHERE THE GEOLOGIC SUCCESSION OF STRATA CAN BE FOUND. Obviously the concept that the earth's sedimentary rocks being found in orderly form, from the most ancient to the most recent is impossible to begin with. Since there are virtually no fossils found in Metamorphic rock, and no fossils found in igneous rock scientists are limited to investigating the water-borne deposits, such as various kinds of marbles, sandstone, limestone and shale, to establish an age for the strata. One of the most ridiculous claims are that whenever the fossils are "out of order" there is something wrong with the ROCKS. Perhaps, they say in many cases, the rocks are UPSIDE DOWN! It is the evolutionists absurd theories abd bias that is upside down! The next theory may be that the rocks are right side up and the EARTH is upside down, all because they won't admit what their eyes tell them. When you walk into your bedroom and see the bed made, you probably suppose your wife spread the sheet on the bed prior to the cover, and the cover, prior to the bedspread. She would look a little silly putting on the bedspread first, and then burrowing beneath it, attempting to spread the sheet. If she had done so, out of caprice, there would probably be evidence pointing to the fact, for it would be virtually impossible to do a neat job, unless she once again straightened the bedspread. Evolutionists say this is what happened to the rocks. Because the rocks just wont co-operate with the theories of the evolutionist. What a problem for evolutionists! If they ADMIT what their eyes plainly tell them, they would be admitting their entire scheme of the "Geologic Succession of Strata" is WRONG; admitting that the younger fossils DID NOT EVOLVE from supposed older, simpler ones. BUT SUCH AN ADMISSION WOULD BE DISASTROUS TO EVOLUTIONISTS! |
Response | |
From: | Chris Stassen |
Author of: | Isochron Dating |
Response: | Your key
claim is easily demonstrated to be a falsehood. Formations
representative of every geological period, in the correct
order, are found in a large number of locations. For
example, check out one of the latest additions to this
archive, the Geologic Column and
its implications for the Flood FAQ by Glenn Morton.
(Glenn wrote the document some time ago, but kindly gave us
permission to host it here just recently.) This document
discusses in detail an
example from North Dakota, and also locates 25 major sedimentary basins
around the world (each of which contains a
properly-ordered sequence of all the geologic periods).
In fact, the original ordering of the geologic column refutes the claim, as well. It was done by geologists who simply noted the order in which formations overlaid each other across Europe. (Those geologists believed in fixity of species, incidentally, so the ordering could not possibly have been based on "evolutionary assumptions" as creationists often wrongly assert.) Your other (supporting) claims aren't much more accurate than the primary one. Examples: marble is metamorphic and not sedimentary; most ages come from igneous formations, not sedimentary ones, because in general they are the most suited to isotopic dating; age order matching vertical position is the usual sequence, but relative ages can be established in other ways, and phenomena such as overthrusting can change vertical ordering (though it is fairly uncommon and leaves obvious evidence of its occurrence). The geologic succession of strata is quite well-established, notwithstanding the wishful thinking (coupled with inexcusably poor scholarship) on the part of the young-Earth crowd. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | During the
last month I have surfed the internet to look for arguments
for and against evolution, and I must say that scientist
which are in favor of intelligent design are a lot more to
the point, a lot more detailed and they present a greater
deal of hard evidence to support their theories. And it
doesn't make things better, when a scientist as Richard
Miller discovers that what he has believed in and has been
taught indeed are so falsified, that he decides to write a
book about his discoveries.
One area where your articles lack detail is in the area of explaining the first appearence of life. As microbiology can tell us, the cell and indeed also the simplest of life forms, contains a complexity that compares to that of computer systems. You don't come up with a satisfactory explanation to how such complicated structures containing a vast amount of information could have arised by chance. I'm sorry, but to me, evolution is a myth at best, and at worst it's misleading and very unscientific. This is not a personal attack, so please don't regard it as such. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution |
Response: | Hard
evidence is meaningless unless it is evidence that can
distinguish one theory from another. Since all conceivable
evidence is compatible with intelligent design (as
creationists use the term), the evidence doesn't actually
say anything about it. As for design as the term is
normally used, there is much evidence against life
appearing designed. For example, designed things don't grow
and reproduce, while life does.
You are correct that the articles here about abiogenesis lack detail. Part of the reason is that many details are not known yet. Remember, however, that being unknown is not the same as being unsatisfactory. There is nothing in the field of abiogenesis to indicate that the first cells could not have formed spontaneously, and several indications that they could have. For example, we know that complex organic molecules will form spontaneously even in space; see "Raw materials for life may predate Earth's formation." And undersea hydrothermal vents supply all the conditions necessary to create peptides; see Wachtershauser, G., 2000, Life as we don't know it, Science 289: 1307-1308. Remember also that evolution is largely a separate subject from abiogenesis. If it were proved tomorrow that the first cells miraculously appeared fully formed, the evidence still would show that evolution happened, too. Finally, remember that creationists have much, much less detail about the appearance of the first life. NOBODY, not even evolutionists, believes that complicated structures arose purely by chance. You are right to reject that idea, but remember that it is not evolution you have rejected. See the Five Misconceptions FAQ regarding this and other things which evolution is not. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | It's regrettable that you have to support people with this old ideas. I think that I'm lucky because in my country we haven't this kind of people (or they don't make noise). I study biology and anybody says "creationism", only when we want to cry or comment the barbarians that still live in our world. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Mark Pundurs |
Comment: | In a Sep. 99 response to feedback, Wesley Elsberry wrote, "It seems to me that the impedance-matching transduction system of the mammalian middle ear fits the description of an irreducibly complex system, in that it has several well-matched interacting parts that perform a well-defined function, and the loss of any of the parts eliminates its impedance-matching properties. And yet the fossil record clearly shows the evolutionary origins of each of the middle-ear ossicles." The argument from irreducible complexity doesn't say intermediate states can't exist, but that they provide the organism no advantage in terms of natural selection. What advantage was provided by intermediate stages of the mammalian middle ear? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Punctuated Equilibria |
Response: |
We may not know what selective advantage, if any, the intermediate stages of the mammalian middle ear had over their precursor arrangements. What we do know is that these intermediate stages did exist and that the final state of the system has the property of irreducible complexity with respect to the function of impedance matching in the mammalian auditory system. While IC arguments may not in principle say that intermediate states cannot exist, in practice Dr. Behe and others invoking IC routinely imply that IC-ness is incompatible with accounts premised on natural selection and that genetic drift is insufficient to explain such systems. We don't know whether natural selection or genetic drift was operating exclusively or alternately in the production of the irreducibly complex impedance-matching system of the mammalian middle ear, but we do have evidence from the fossil record that it evolved over a period of some millions of years, and was not inserted at any one point by an "intelligent designer". If even genetic drift can be said to lead to IC structures (as rejection of selective pathways in this case would suggest), then the exclusionary logic of IC as evidence for an intervening intelligent designer is in even more trouble than if one simply assumed natural selection as an operative mechanism. That said, there certainly is a prospect that selective advantage of intermediate steps could be approached as a topic for research based upon models of hearing. The field of modeling functional morphology in audition has several publications in determining the probable hearing range of extant odontocetes. It may only be a matter of time before someone turns their attention to this interesting set of fossil data to determine the auditory properties of the various systems as recorded in the fossils of the transitional sequence. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Thank you for your website. Your reasoned and temperate articles helped me to realise the serious flaws in young earth creationism and accept evolution as the explanation that best fits the evidence. You managed to express the facts with out me feeling like my existing beliefs were being attacked. Thank you for the effort! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This sort of response makes the work put into the site worthwhile. We are not here to attack or belittle anyone's beliefs, but to present and defend the actual science of evolution against ignorant or dishonest attacks. That you are able to "get" this shows us that it is possible and worth doing. Thank you. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | the laws of thermodynamics say that the universe is going to disorder not order. For example think of a house left alone for 50 years and not taken care of in anyway. Would the house be in better condtion than when you left it or would it be in worse? Also what is the chance of evolution happening? There is a greater chance that a tornado flying through a junk yard would build a boeing 747 that evolution would happen. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field |
Response: | Indeed, the
laws of thermodynamics do say that the universe is going
from order to disorder, on average. However, they also say
that it will take something like 101076 years
for this to happen. Since the sun has only been around for
something less than 1010 years, I wouldn't look
for it to happen anytime soon.
But one must also remember that the admontion from the laws of thermodynamics applies only to the universe as a whole, and on average, but not necessarily to any particular part of the universe as any particular time. Once we get specific, then we need to examine the details of the specific time & place, in order to decide what the "order" and "disorder" are actually doing. So your admonition, about the admonition from the laws of thermodynamics, is sort of wrong. As for the 747, to paraphrase Pauli (or some famous scientist), "That's so bad it's not even wrong". The tornado is a source of entropy, and so it is quite natural that it adds entropy to its surroundings, making the spontaneous 747 pretty danged unlikely. However, the processes of evolution derive from processes that are not sources of entropy, and so evolution does not suffer from that weakness. In fact, entropy and thermodynamics, actually force evolution to happen, rather than the other way around. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Science is an abitrary measure based on human perception. How do you see it that what man decides is truth when all we know is subjective. If you believe that evolution is the only possible form of existence your logic is flawed, let alone your scientific understanding. In the same point, if you believe in creationism without an evolutionary stucture, then you're acting with religious arrogance, not spiritual wisdom. Unfortunately, some beleivers and non-beleivers have a problem with understanding that science and religion, along with everything that man spits out, is subject to change. Because once again it's all ARBITRARY. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | "Arbitrary"
means that any other choice or decision would do as well as
the one that has been taken. This is not the case for
evolutionary biology. Evidence constrains the sorts of
decisions about what has happened in the course of life on
earth, and evidence forces us to accept that creationism,
at least of the once-for-all variety, is literally false.
Science is not founded on some set of arbitrary assumptions about the world. It is founded on our experience that certain assumptions (such as, any event was caused by some other events) work, and work better than any others (such as, a text written by semi-nomadic herders 3000 years ago, and revised by a priesthood several centuries later, is a good source of knowledge about the natural world). That isn't arbitrary, except in the sense that not being schizophrenic in one's worldview is arbitrary. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | This site is hilarious. It has some of the worst logic and science I've ever read, taking positions to extremes mainstream scientists would scoff at just as much as they do at Biblical literalism. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | If you could
give examples, it would be helpful. We are able to correct
mistakes which are found in the archive.
However, I think you are blowing smoke. Many of the FAQs are written by mainstream scientists, and the archive is widely recommended as an excellent resource by mainstream scientists and universities. Here are some implicit testimonials. Harvard University Dept of Molecular and Cellular Biology puts this archive at the front of its list of links for General Evolution Resources. The Geological Society of America also puts us at the front of their list of recommended sites for evolution/creationism. We are the first link supplied by the National Center for Science Education. The University of California (Berkeley) Museum of Paleontology puts as at the front of their recommended list of links. In fact, if you look on the web for mainstream science presentations of evolution which provide a list of links for recommended further reading, this archive is, I am pretty sure, by far the most common first choice. Also, have a look at the feedback received by the fossil hominids FAQ collection, maintained by Jim Foley as a part of this archive, and see how main top class universities are using this material as a useful teaching resource. I think you should look again at whatever it is which you think is poor logic and bad science, and reconsider. Perhaps you are mistaken on this matter.... |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I think if one examines the scriptures, in the original languge that it becomes very clear that there is, nor has there ever been any contriversy, among the Biblically educated about the shape of the earth. Isaiah 40:22 in the Hebrew litterally means sphere though it is often translated circle. Four corners of the Earth would be more acuratly translated as hemispheres. There is no Biblical contriversy |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Circle of
the earth does NOT refer to a sphere. It means circle, even
more specifically a circle of people.
Circle in Isaiah 40:22 is Strong's Ref. # 5475 Romanized cowd Pronounced sode from HSN3245; a session, i.e. company of persons (in close deliberation); by implication, intimacy, consultation, a secret. NO bible translates that verse using the word "sphere". They meant circle. A flat, disc-shaped earth was the conception in those days. Such an understanding was probably learned by the Israelites during their captivity by the Babylonians, who held such a view. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Suzanne |
Comment: | how do you explain the 2nd Law of Therodynamics? HUH? It is a law. Evolution is a THEORY. Therefore, Evolution can not be ture. Did you know that the exact deminsions of the Ark were writting in Gensis?! Well they were, fool. (That is what God calls stupid people) And there was only 2 of each animal, including the Dinos and yes, they all fit into the Ark. They all fit very nicely. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | (1) The
second law of thermodynamics is a fundamental part of the
theory of thermodynamics. Evolution, however, is not in any
conflict with any part of thermodynamic theory. To think
there is a conflict is invariably due to lack of
understanding of thermodynamic theory.
See: Thermodynamics, Evolution and Creationism. Essentially, the easiest statements of the second law refer to the fact that net entropy will not decrease in isolated systems. There are more detailed statements of the law for open systems, in which entropy can decrease, depending on heat exchange at the system boundary. There is no mention of "intelligence" in the second law. If an intelligent person builds a house from a pile of bricks, they do not somehow violate the second law, or get a special exception because they are a designer. Intelligence is just as constrained as any other natural phenomenon. Also, the kind of order imposed on a pile of bricks to make it a house has little to do with entropy. The laws of thermodynamics are more concerned with the termperature of the bricks, the chemical reactions in motar, and whether the final height of the house is above or below the initial pile of bricks. Thermodynamics is about energy and temperature and entropy; it simply does not even refer to order in the sense of design or complexity. It rather deals with how much work was required to build the house. You grew to an adult from a tiny embryo. This certainly involved an enormous increase in complexity and order. And yet, at no time in this process was there the slightest violation of any thermodynamic laws. Similarly, whatever other problems you may have with evolution, it is simply not the case that the development of complex systems as part of the natural working of the universe is in violation of any thermodynamic laws. As for theory: I refer you to "The theory of thermodynamics" by J.R. Waldram, (Cambridge University Press, 1985) as an example of how the word theory is used in science. (2) Yes, I know about the dimensions of the ark. (3) Actually, according to the bible there were seven of some kinds of animals (the clean animals) on the ark. This was important, as Noah needed some of these for a sacrifice afterwards. The bible does not, however, say anything about whether or not there were dinosaurs on the ark. That is something you have chosen to add to the story, for some reason. I do not consider the story of Noah to be a plain account of actual history, but I am certainly well aware of the details, and have read them many times, over many years. (4) Your feedback will be on record here in the archive now, probably for many years. Many people have observed how incredibly rude creationists tend to be; and use feedback like yours as an example. You would have been wiser, I suggest, to be a bit more friendly and temperate in your phrasing. It may feel good to call me a fool, but when you do so in a public forum like this, you will find it does your credibility and position considerable damage. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Eric |
Comment: | My next door neighbor is a nice guy, reserved, smart and non-judgemental, who happens to be a young earth creationist. After he discovered that I have an advanced degree in molecular biology, he could not resist engaging in a debate by giving me a copy of a book published by some lawyer who's name escapes me at the moment - a former supreme court law clerk I believe. I was hesitant to engage at first b/c I really had no interest in attempting to change his or his family's world view, but he persisted and we had several interesting discussions. I submit this just to share my observations - knowing this guy has perhaps given me some personal insight on how an otherwise intelligent guy can really believe ideas that, to the rest of us, run counter to basic common sense. This is his family's way of making sense out of it all - following the bible literally is their code - passed down through the generations. It dominates their life and shapes their way of seeing the universe - everything must be filtered to fit this world view - from how they raise their children to how they select their friends. Since my neighbor is curious, however, and hears and reads the criticisms, he seeks out "evidence" to put his mind at ease. This is where the pseudoscientific teachings of the creationist leaders come in. Since my friend has not formal scientific training, he of course knows no better or at least is convinced enough by such books as the one he gave me to "hold-on." It is easy to just assume that young earthers have a screw loose or have some fatal flaw in their cognitive ability. In reality, however, knowing this guy has demonstrated that, for him at least, it runs much deeper than that. Taking the bible literally is almost the core of his being, which makes this whole debating business a much more complicated endeavor. I also found something about myself - when faced with arguments such as "the universe is only 8-10 thousand years old and God just made it to look like the stars are millions of light years away as a test of faith" and "human and dinosaurs co-existed," it is very hard not to express absolute incredulity, paternalism, and, at worst, sarcasm and ridicule -all emotional responses which of course burn bridges and perhaps limit one's effectiveness. In any event, we have ended our debates and have managed to stay friends enough to still play tennis. My final parting blow was to simply refer him to your website. I have no idea if he visits it and I must admit that I'm not sure that I even want him to. His family seems to do fine in their current arrangement no matter how much it seems to be based on faulty premises to me. (Although I must admit that, if I were to one day hear that my neighbor was trying to get young earth creationism taught in schools, I would have a much more militant attitude toward him ! :-)) Eric |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Eric,
Thanks so much for your account. I think your assessment is accurate-- that this represents a typical biblical literalist. It sounds like you handled it well. P.S. The lawyer was probably Philip Johnson. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I am a freshman at a very prestigious Christian University. I am doing research for my paper on why evolution should not be taught in the classroom. I unfortunately stumbled upon this website and was completely appalled at everything that I read. One of the questions I found somewhere on here was why do we claim the earth is so young if everything "looks" so old. How old did Adam "look" when God created him from the dust? God created him to "look" like a fully grown man, but 5 minutes after he was created, he was only 5 minutes old! How old were the trees, elephants, or the sun? I don't know exactly why you people hold this position, but I firmly believe that the Bible the Inspired Word of God. I guarentee that when the end of the world comes that there will not be a single atheist in Hell because by the time God gets through with you, you will most surely believe. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | What is Creationism? |
Response: | The idea that God created things looking old is called the Omphalos argument, after an 1857 book by Philip Henry Gosse expounding that argument. The main objections to it are two: First, it is useless. If the universe is in every way indistinguishable from one with an ancient history, why not just call it old? Second, it makes God into a deceiver. We would not be able to trust God's primary work, so we could not trust God. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | How would one know if fossils that have been assigned to Homo erectus (or Homo ergaster) remains belong to two different types of human species? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This is a
hard question to answer. The standard definition of
"species" in biology (at least in animal biology) is all
organisms that can interbreed on a regular basis. This is
not intended to apply to evolving species, so there is
another definition - any lineage of interbreeding
populations that does not split into two more more
lineages. So, since we have good prima facie reason to
think that H sapiens did split from H
erectus/ergaster (there's dispute whether they were two
species or regional variants) and is not just a modified
descendent of the entire species, sapiens is held to be a
distinct species.
However, one alternative theory - the Multiregional Hypothesis argues that erectus and sapiens are the same species because they interbred in place until sapiens characters had spread through the world. Although I am not personally an adherent of this view (the rival is the Out of Africa hypothesis which seems better supported by the evidence), this is not to say that erectus and sapiens need have been infertile. Some good species are able to, but usually do not, interbreed with each other. See the Observed Instances of Speciation FAQ for a discussion of what species are. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Harry |
Comment: | IF I WERE AN
EVOLUTIONIST
1)I would convince people that order came from disorder and chaos. 2) I would convince people that intelligence came from non-intelligence. 3) I would persuade minds to believe that living things can spring from dead matter.(The opposite of the law of biogenesis) 4) I would dupe people into believing that their most distant relatives were lovesick amoeba. 5) I would tell man that if the sun was only one degree closer, we would all burn up, and if the sun was only one degree farther away, we would all freeze to death. Then I would convince man that the accident called evolution caused the sun to be placed in the only position it could be in for man to exist on the earth. 6) I would convince man that the intricate design of the universe had no designer, it was all an accident. 7) I would convince man that dolphins at one time had legs and climbed trees and then evolved into men. 8) I would convince man that the very first thing that ever came into existence, came into existence out of nothing. 9) I would convince man that the laws of nature( gravity, biogenesis, aerodynamics etc.) did not need a law giver. These laws came into being accidently from non-intelligence. 10) I would tell man that if the moon was not in the exact place it is in, the earth would be covered by water, and that the moon is where it is by accidental happenstance and good fortune. LAST OF ALL IF I WERE AN EVOLUTIONIST, I WOULD PERSUADE PEOPLE THAT GRIMM'S FAIRY TALES ARE ALL TRUE |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You are
optimistic! I think you underestimate how resistent some
folks are to learning anything.
But here goes. (1) Order comes from disorder all the time. This is in fact fundamental to Christian belief. The universe began with chaos and order was imposed on it by God. Whether one chooses to attribute this to God or not, it continues today. Watch crystals forming for a simple example. No violation of natural laws required: it is a part of how our universe works that order arises spontaneously in many ways. This is not, by the way, in any conflict with the natural law called the second law of thermodynamics. (2) Intelligence is remarkably bad at producing intelligence. Artificial intelligence isn't nearly as intelligent as what arises quite naturally by natural processes. We observe a baby grow from an embryo to an infant to a child to an adult. She starts out without intelligence, ends up with heaps; and all in the natural way of things to grow. You can attribute this to God, or not, as you choose. But if God is involved, He is using natural everyday processes, not in any violation of His own natural laws, for this wonderful transformation from unintelligent cells to an intelligent adult. This is how our universe works. (3) Living things do not spring fully formed from dead matter. The whole foundation of evolution is that living things are the result of cummulative changes to other living things. How life first began is not known, but it seems likely that the boundary from living to non-living is grey, and that the natural processes of change and development were involved throughout. We don't know exactly how life first began; but an evolutionist would generally NOT think life was suddenly formed from dead matter. That is more like the creationist position. (4) The amoeba is a very complex and sophisticated organism, as much the end result of a long process of evolution as we are. There is no reason to think it is any like our distant one-celled ancestors. That we are related, by some remote common ancestor, is evidenced by commonalities in the genetic code used by humans, ameoba, and other life; but it is a very distant distant relationship all the same. (5) Not an accident -- but adaptation. Evolutionary processes lead to life forms which are well adapted to their environment, and hence not adapted to different environments. If you were an evolutionist, you would actually have a rather different perspective on this matter of the Sun's distance. (6) Speaking of an intricate design of the universe is begging the question. The processes by which the universe unfolds are studied by science, and are rather different to the deliberate but flaky constructions made by human design. There may, of course, be a grand design behind the laws which modulate the development of the universe, but that is not a question accessible to science; nor is the answer given by evolution. (7) No you wouldn't say that about dolphins. If you were an evolutionist, you'd have a rather better understanding of the fossil record of dolphins, and primates, and would not confuse them in that way. (8) This has nothing to do with evolution. Evolution is only concerned with how things form from other things. The word itself means "change". (9) This is a metaphysical question, having nothing to do with evolution. Laws of nature are our way of describing the regularities we observe in the way nature behaves. The notion that a law "comes into being accidently" seems a bit incoherent. (10) Huh?? This has nothing to do with evolution, and it is incorrect anyway. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Just ran
across this website after reading THE TRIUMPH OF EVOLUTION
AND THE FAILURE OF CREATIONISM by Niles Eldredge. I'm also
part way through DAWN OF MAN: THE STORY OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
by Robin McKie.
I come from a Seventh-day Adventist background and have an M.Div. in systematic theology from the SDA theological seminary at Andrews University, Berrien Springs, Michigan. I am intensely interested in the creation-evolution debate. I believe that: 1. Scripture (Bible or any other) can give us powerful information about the WHO, WHAT and WHY of creation (universe, living things, humans), but never the WHEN, WHERE or HOW. And, conversely, that: 2. Science can give us equally powerful information about the WHEN, WHERE and HOW, but never the WHO, WHAT of WHY. I also believe I may have some unique contributions to make, since I have progressed from a George McCready Price view to one that very closely resembles that of Niles Eldrige. I especially like his statement (TRIUMPH OF EVOLUTION, p.68): "The tired old creationism debate -- mired as it is so thoroughly in the nineteenth century -- simply has not prepared us for the kind of positive interaction between science and religion that I see as eminently possible as we enter the new Millennium and grapple with tough environmental issues." Cordially, Max |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | To Henry M. Morris, (Author of "Scientific Creationism" and other novels.) Your book is irritating. Thank you, Jennifer Smith |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | The best smile I had all day! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Why is it asumed that "day" in Genesis has a different meaning--the time between dark and light were one day, 24 hours--than the meaning of "day" is interpreted in any other part of The Holy Bible?! |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Because
people are exhibiting a degree of intellectual integrity.
They have accepted the truth of what science has revealed--
that the earth and universe are billions of years old-- and
have attempted to reconcile this truth to their continuing
desire to accept that the bible is a book of truth. They
are trying to remain honest.
That's why. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I highly
recommend checking out the mpeg of "evolved virtual
creatures" available at:
Downloads for Evolutionary Design by Computers Basically this project involved evolving virtual critters in a simulated environment...the creatures each have a "genome" which determines their body plan (they're made out of blocks connected by joints) and nervous system (which determines how they move their bodies). Starting from a random genome--a few connected cubes twitching randomly, according to the tv program where I first saw them--they were tested for ability to move through their environment, and the most successful would seed the next generation with slightly mutated offspring. After about a hundred generations they had evolved some amazingly animal-like forms and methods of movement...it's pretty incredible, see for yourself. And remember, no human design in these things...they're all 100% evolved! For more details about the project, see Karl Sims' homepage. Also you can go to: Karl Sims Retrospective which at the bottom has a RealVideo interview with Sims and more footage of the "creatures." I think this stuff is very relevant to the evolution/creation debate. Creationists make two different types of arguments: first, they argue that there's no strong evidence that evolution occurred; and second, they argue that natural selection wouldn't work anyway, that "random chance" can't produce new complex structures, only winnow away structures that already exist (so microevolution can increase the population of black moths over white ones, but can't build a moth wing in the first place.) Evolutionary simulations like this one cast serious doubt on the second point, though. It's true that these virtual creatures are quite simple compared to real animals, but they at least show in a very intuitive way that evolution can be genuinely "creative" (look at all the different locomotion strategies these creatures evolved!) and can cause organisms to increase in complexity over many generations (whereas many creationists argue that natural selection can't 'add information' to the genome). Indeed, the results of this experiment are about as good as could be hoped for given current computer technology--and as computers get more advanced, there's no reason to think that we won't be able to build even more complicated evolutionary simulations where the increase in complexity and organization over many (simulated) generations is even more pronounced. Links to this movie (or other a-life experiments) could be a useful strategy in evolution/creation debates--maybe even incorporate it into one of the FAQ's? I dunno, maybe my enthusiasm is getting the best of me here...but damn are these things cool! Jesse |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I wonder why evolutionists are so persisent in their belief. I would find evolution ideas much less biased if scientific contradictions were also commonly published by these same scientists. A few contradictions being, Spontaneous Generation (which was disproven simply by three jars of meat) and the Cell Theory (all cells are formed by other cells, so where did the first one come from?). It is easy to pick on faith since you cannot measure it, test it, and replicate it, which is kind of funny since you cannot do the same with evolution. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | Why are we
so persistent? It's that doggone evidence! It just won't go
away. It keeps mounting up.
Cell theory does not contradict evolution in any way. Spontaneous Generation has nothing to do with evolution. You need to stop reading the creationist tracts, and start reading some true information. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | God said that you are a monkey :P and that he who denies God will be denied by God. So you will go to hell and know the Truth if you do not believe in Him. Jesus loves you. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Missing Supernova Remnants as Evidence of a Young Universe? A Case of Fabrication |
Response: | And this has what to do with science? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Harry |
Comment: | Radio Carbon
Dating Radiocarbon dating is not based on fact, but on
three assumptions: 1) that an accurate half-life for
carbon-14 is precisely measurable; 2) that cosmic radiation
has been constant for many thousands of years; and 3) that
the nitrogen supply available to be acted upon by this
radiation has been constant. THESE THREE FACTORS ARE PURE
ASSUMPTION. Even Dr. Libby, the originator of dating by the
carbon-14 method was not sure of its reliability. He
admitted several noteworthy weaknesses. Dr. Libby admits on
page 42 of his authoritative work that his theory is not
proven and that he is not even sure that the half-life of
carbon-14 is between 5000 and 6000 years. (Radiocarbon
Dating, p. 36).
WILFUL SELF-deception SCIENTISTS HAVE GIVEN NO PROOF FOR ANY OF THE ASSUMPTIONS UPON WHICH THEY BASED RADIOCARBON DATING. THEY EVEN ADMIT MANY OBVIOUS WEAKNESSES IN THE THEORY--LEST THEY APPEAR NOTICEABLY IGNORANT. THE THEORY ORIGINATES FRON SCIENCE'S DESIRE TO DATE MAN OLDER THAN GOD'S DATE FOR THE CREATION OF THE FIRST MAN ON EARTH. IN THE NAME OF SCIENCE--IN ORDER TO CALL GOD A LIAR--MEN HAVE DELIBERATELY IGNORED THE OBVIOUS SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE BEFORE THEM. THEY HAVE CALCULATED CAREFULLY IN ORDER TO WILFULLY COME TO THIS WRONG CONCLUSION. WITH RECKLESS ABANDON, SCIENCE HAS PERVERTED THE RECORD PREHISTORIC MAN LEFT BEHIND! RADIOCARBON DATING STANDS PROVED AS A GROSS ERROR! I could in this forum tear apart the radiocarbon dating assumptiom if I wasn't always so rudely cut off. It would take a good amount of typing, but when I write long answers I am always cut off. I wonder why the truth really hurts evolutionists so much. I could easily destroy the foolish assumption about radiocarbon dating, being accurate. It is grossly inaccurate. |
Response | |
From: | Chris Stassen |
Author of: | Isochron Dating |
Response: | The
14C decay rate may not
have been accurately known in 1952 when Libby published
originally,1 but it has been known
since the early 1960s -- to better than 1% accuracy (5,730
± 40 years), from direct counting
experiments.2 The use of the Libby
reference would appear to be a deliberate attempt to
deceive; you are using a 50-year-old source from the
infancy of the field to avoid acknowledging data that has
been openly available for 40 years. It would be wise to
reference the sources which you are actually using --
otherwise you are accepting personal responsibility for
originating that deception.3
As for the other two claimed
"assumptions," both claims are incorrect. The carbon dating
method doesn't "assume" (or require) that the
14N balance or cosmic ray activity
have been constant. Carbon dating is calibrated to other
scales.4 That calibration corrects
for changes in the 14C
ratio of the atmosphere -- which is the only relevant way
that the other two alleged "assumptions" could (indirectly)
impact carbon ages.
Finally... with a useful range of less than 100,000 years and limited geological applicability, carbon dating is the least of your worries. Check out our Isochron Dating FAQ for dating methods and results that are a lot more "inconvenient" to the young-Earth position, and a lot harder to dismiss. As for your other complaint, well... The feedback forum is for feedback (gasp!), not for lengthy debates. If you want a debate, try the talk.origins newsgroup. In any event, I'd recommend you worry more about quality of arguments, than about quantity.5 So far, your feedback submissions have been easily demonstrated to be full of elementary errors of fact. That sort of low-quality material won't fly online.6 Footnotes:
|
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I was poking
around your web site and found an article by Robert P.J.
Day, entitled "The Decay of c-decay". I suggest that Day
avoid disappointment and reconsider his doctorate in
computer science. The only reason I read this to the end
was to see how deep this poor sap would bury himself. What
an ego!
A couple of rules to follow when digging someone's grave: 1. Know how to use a shovel. Day's approach in criticizing work that is largely over his head is painfully transparent. The words 'a little knowledge is a dangerous thing' ring true here. 2. Make sure the guy is dead. The information Day so cheaply ridiculed was old enough to have rust. (Of course it's subject to revision! That's why they call it a hypothesis!) Between its date of publication and the date of Day's article -- 14 years! -- only a half-dozen or so new papers have been written by Setterfield, and another dozen-plus by others in support of cDK. Someone as smart as Day pretends to be should have bothered checking. And one rule in general: 1. Whenever you feel like bashing someone who forgets more than you'll ever know, have someone slam your head in a door until you're unconscious. For what it's worth, after exhaustive analysis of Setterfield's methods, statistician Alan Montgomery has twice presented his full support, once in a conference to peers and once in a peer journal. To date, nobody in the physics or mathematics communities has been able to refute his findings. (Perhaps they lack Day's keen insight.) If it's any consolation, Robert, look at it this way: when Setterfield is given credit for rewriting Einstein's best work -- and he will, make no mistake about it -- you can tell all your friends you publicly accused him of 'gross incompetence and mathematical illiteracy'. I'm sure that will impress them. By the way, what was it you said about 'words coming back to haunt'? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | I can't help
but notice that you have failed to address a single
specific point in Day's critique. That is a real shame. I,
for one, would be extremely interested in your explanation
of how an intellect greater than Einstein's could make the
elementary mistakes Day exposed:
These are rather damning flaws. I personally can't see how you can argue around them -- they suggest a rather serious failure to understand simple concepts in statistics. If, as you claim, Setterfield has revised his work to adequately dismiss these problems, you might have been better off calmly presenting a point by point rebuttal, rather than egotistically (and ironically!) posting a rambling, empty diatribe. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Harry |
Comment: | GENETICS
All mutations reduce genetic information and not increase it. Why is this a problem for evolution? Because if Darwin's thesis is correct, and all life began as a single organism, then chance mutations must have produced nearly every feature of life on Earth, from the remarkable sonar system of the dolphin to the ingenious pacemaker and valves of the human heart. [. . .] |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | What is Creationism? |
Response: | I have
edited out most of your feedback because it is apparently
plagiarized from
James Perloff, and it would not be right to reproduce
it at length without his permission.
Perloff is simply wrong. All mutations increase information. This is because a mutation doesn't affect all organisms in a population at the same time. When a mutation occurs, you get an individual with the mutation, plus you still have all the others with the original gene -- an increase in information. Nor do all mutations decrease information in a single genome. This is easily seen from the fact that anything a mutation can do, a muation can undo. If the mutation from A to B decreases information, then surely the mutation from B to A increases it. In fact, mutations that add information to a genome are quite common. It is common for entire stretches of DNA to become duplicated. When an additional mutation occurs in the duplicated stretch, you then have the original DNA plus a new section of DNA, which is an increase in information by any reasonable definition. For more information, see The Evolution of Improved Fitness and Are Mutations Harmful? Perloff is seriously wrong in another way as well. Evolution doesn't claim that chance mutations produced "nearly every feature of life." Evolution says that the combination of mutations and natural selection produced most of these features. Considering one without the other is not considering the theory of evolution. |