Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Concerning an inconsistency in the repsonses to creationist claims: At "http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CE/CE260_1.html", one of the responses says "The Big Bang material was not originally rotating. (How could it be? What would it rotate relative to?)", yet at "http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CE/CE421.html" one of the responses says: "A cosmic axis is compatible with the Big Bang. Godel published a rotating solution to general relativity in 1949. While his solution is not "mainstream," it is not out of the question, either." It doesn't seem very consistent to ridicule the idea of a rotating cosmos at one location and then cite a rotating cosmos at the other location favorably. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thank you for catching that. I have revised CE260.1 to correct the inconsistency, and upgraded CE421 in the process. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I don't know why some people find evolution so threatening. I find it to be just the opposite. When I hear frantic warnings from scientists about the extinction of species, I wonder if they've even studied evolution. Don't they know that we have a natural process that replaces lost species with new species? Sure we lose species, but too many scientist act like that's the end of the story. It makes me wonder if they only accept evolution in the textbooks, not in the natural world. Amazing!!! |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: |
There is a human timescale and the
timescale that the earth and its life moves at. When
massive extinctions occur, it can take ten million years to
replenish the biodiversity to its previous levels. It does
happen, and of course would happen unless every
living thing were annihilated, but that is of no account to
us.
I suggest you read one or more of the following books, written by leading evolutionary biologists: Eldredge, Niles. 1995. Dominion. New York: H. Holt. ---. 1998. Life in the balance : humanity and the biodiversity crisis. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ---. 2002. Life on earth : an encyclopedia of biodiversity, ecology, and evolution. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. Reaka-Kudla, Marjorie L., Don E. Wilson, and Edward O. Wilson. 1997. Biodiversity II : understanding and protecting our biological resources. Washington, D.C.: Joseph Henry Press. Wilson, Edward O. 1999. The diversity of life. New ed, Questions of science. New York: W. W. Norton. ---. 2002. The future of life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. Wilson, Edward O., Frances M. Peter, National Academy of Sciences (U.S.), and Smithsonian Institution. 1988. Biodiversity. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | _AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUUUUGH!_ Where's the Feedback? Need...the witty...repartee! Need...the snappy comebacks...to lunatical...creationist...ravings! Have read...every single...other article...in Archive...Entertaining NWM/Lillith debate #2...over...so soon... Can't...go on... |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
As of February 5, it is now back for
November and December. Wesley Elsberry, who maintains this
section, was moving and did not have access to update it.
We have nailed Wes' feet to the floor and told him he can
never leave his computer again, so it won't happen again.
Your addictions shall be assuaged.
Have you thought of reading books? Terry Pratchett is enjoyed by many. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hey love the site. I am a 17 year old highschool student and I recently discovered that a teacher of mine was a bible literalist and a creationist. We consider ourselves armchair philosophers and enjoy a good debate. My friends and I soon discovered how frustrating it can be dealing with creationists. It was like looking at an animal in a zoo. We could see the ape in him as he fanatically rambled about the true nature of god and the countless "hoaxes" that are carbon dating, and the fossils of early homonids (which I had seen on a recent trip to Ethiopia). I became firmly rooted in the belief that religion is an evolutionary mechanism. It seems awfully convenient that the bible has been changed and altered and has also evolved in a sense to suit the needs of the clergy. Listening to him argue was like looking into the model of an extinct cousin of man in a natural history museum. Sadly, it is becoming increasingly difficult for biblical literalism to flourish in a society where science and rational thought have reached such levels. I say therefore, that we embrace our creationists, as a dying breed of humans. They should be caged and observed for scientific research. They are the "missing link" that they keep going on about, a lovely piece of human culture. I get as much enjoyment listening to Mr Johnston ramble on about creationism than I do seeing a movie, or reading about mythology. Religion is in our genes. We need to make god, our creator, human, to elevate ourselves above everything else. I'm not saying god doesn't exist. I'm just saying the world as we know it was not created in six earth-days. We should preserve the mythology of our species, because no one in their right mind can believe that sh...folklore. Keep up the good work fellas. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Travis |
Comment: |
I have briefly visited your site. It seems
to be organized quite well and full of a wealth of
information. I would also like to commend you on one note
stating that your information is not meant to be taken
blindly.
I am, however, a creationist. I would like to take more time in the future to look through in more detail at what you have to say. Like you seem to be saying, I think all things should be examined objectively. I'd also like to point out a quick specific: you had a section referring to a lot of arguments that creationists make that are false or dubious. I found one (off-site) list of them and was surprised. Some don't make much sense logically, and some have been disproven for a great many years. I found it difficult to believe that people would continue to use such arguments. My guess is that those people are primarily people who heard something years ago and haven't verified it with their own research. Or, I suppose there are always people willing to knowingly perpetuate a falsehood in order to promote what they hold to be true. I believe such behavior is unacceptable, whoever might be doing it. Anyway, keep up the work, and I'll try to get in here one day to really do some research. Maybe I'll even have some good arguments to make! ;-) Take care. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Hey, I think you should change your
approach to Punctuated Equilibrium to something more like
the following...
1. Evolution is a cheap attempt to escape from the power and authority GOD has over us. 2. Paleontology should be informed by neontology. 3. Most speciation is cladogenesis rather than anagenesis. 4. Most speciation occurs via peripatric speciation. 5. Large, widespread species usually change slowly, if at all, during their time of residence. 6. Creationists know this, and if we don't make up something about this they will really shoot us down! 7. Punctuated Equilibrium would be an excellent scapegoat so that we might be able to stall for a bit longer. 8. If we stall for a bit longer, then we might be able to brainwash the entire world into thinking that Evolution is true. Ergo, Punctuated Equilibrium is going to be our (Evolution's) most recent attempt to escape from the hand of GOD. Try that out for size! HaHa! Matt, Christian Pissed Off at Evolution's Scapegoat Attempts P.S. - One day, you will fail to provide a scapegoat, and you will be SHUT DOWN! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I wrote the
FAQ on Punctuated Equilibria,
and I'm certainly not attempting "to escape from the hand
of GOD". Try again.
Evolutionary biology does not require scapegoats, as it has evidence. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | one more question. How do vestigial structures help the evolutionists piont of veiw? Because, even scientists that have an evolutionist point of view they still think that vestigial structures are irrelivant to evolution. All organs have a function and no one can argue that so i'd be interested to hear how that supports evolution and it's theroy. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Vestigial structures are often indicators
of evolutionary relationships. A fine example is the
vestigial limbs of some snakes. These organs certainly have
no function (although that is not a requirement for being
considered vestigial) but their presence is strong evidence
that snakes evolved from reptiles that had legs- in other
words, lizards.
Likewise, some vampire bats have molar teeth. Now, not all vampires live exclusively on blood. Of the 3 species, 2 eat varying numbers of insects, and the third lives exclusively on blood- to the point of starvation in the presence of insects. The first two species have moderately developed molar teeth, while the third has distinctly vestigial molars. Of what use is a tooth suitable for grinding solid food to a bat that lives on milk as an infant, and blood as an adult? Not surprisingly, the molars are most degraded in the most sanguivorous of the 3 species. Just so we are clear, a vestigial organ is a remnant of a structure. It is a strawman argument to say no vestigial organs have functions. In fact, vestigial organs speed up evolutionary processes by providing structures that can be co-opted for other purposes. We see this in the human appendix. Once a structure specialized for digesting cellulose, it now has a accessory function (and one that is certainly non-vital) in the human immune system. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
First, let me congratulate you on the
outstanding work you have done in putting this website
together and maintaining it.
Until not too long ago I was a Creationist, but because of this website and others like it I have been able to grow past that. I want to let any Creationists who read this know that I was and still am a Christian. Evolution is not atheism in any way. On another note: I would almost be sad if Creationism were to die away. It is a never-ending source of amusement to me. For example the ICR has a radio show that I sometimes listen to just because it is so ridiculous! Keep up the good work! PS. Here’s verse all those who think that “lying for Jesus” is a good idea; Proverbs 12:22, The LORD detests lying lips, but he delights in men who are truthful. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | In the January 2004 Feedback, a reader wrote: Do you need to have a Phd in a scientific field to prove a theory? Wesley R. Elsberry replied: You have to have a scientific theory in order to test it. Whether you have a Ph.D. is irrelevant to the results of tests of theories. Should it not be pointed out that the whole notion of "proving a theory" is a bit simplistic? I thought that a theory, by definition, could only be disproved, and that certainly the layman's notion of a hierarchy in which 'theory' is an unproved fact should also be challenged. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
That's why I used "test" rather than
"prove".
Perhaps it was too subtle. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Dear all,
I've been a reader of the talkorigins website for a long time. Allthough I think the website is valuable because it proofs evolution and unmasking creationism through a scientif way, it will only win a battle, and not the war. The few creationists I talked to, started their worldview, which includes answers about the origin of live, not with a quest for answers to the questions propossed by the 'facts' of evolution (fossils etc), but with an revelation, the bible. They believe in their, religious, truth and try to fit their observations in this worldview. If the come across new facts whicj don't fit in this worldview, they will reject these facts, rather then abandon their religion. A phenomenon know in psychology as cognitive disconance. I even came across a dutch creationist who told me all scientists formed a satanic conspiracy against creationism! To make them accept evolutionism, it will have to be fit into the religious worldview of these christian fundamentalists. The people from the website have been avoiding this question, by stating that a lot of christian people believe in evolutionism, or revering to your 'God and Evolution' essay. The essay is nice, but I don't think it will convince creationists, because it does not adress the problems evolution raises for a lot of christians (to accept Jesus as your savior, you need to be sinfull, need an original sin, need the Adam en eve story etc). Would it be an idea to start a page which adresses these issues, and contains links to evangelical christians who rejected creationism, and maintained their faith? I know that a theological aproach like this would propable be outside the boundaries you've set for yourself (... to provide mainstream scientific responses to the many issues...), but t could be a helpfull guide for many (especially evangelical) christians who are looking for a way out of the ignorance of creationisme withouth having to give up their complete faith. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | A web site that you might find possibly helpful is by the American Science Affiliation. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Is there a concise section of the talk
origins faq that addresses the creationist arguments in
order of their frequency? For instance, most religious
tracts religiously re-quote the same tired old arguments,
over and over again. I would like to have list of rebuttals
of the most frequent re-quotes. Does anything like this
exist? Thanks.
Henry Barwood |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You should take a look at these: |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I was wondering if you could possibly tell me WHY there is certain arguements that shouldn't be used in debates and things like that? Is it beacuse the people that might be hearing it are not Christians or are very young Christians not yet ready to take the "meat" of the word? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | I suspect you are responding to the off-site Answers in Genesis list of arguments that should not be used. This list is good for those who are not creationists because it shows that the evidence is simply not there and the logic is simply too poor for the more excessive claims made by many creationists, even by creationist standards. However, the main reason why those arguments should not be used, for creationist or evolution-supporter alike, is that they are false. I commend AiG for at least recognising this for some claims, |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Where do evolutionist believe Time, Space, Matter and Energy came from? If you have none of the above, how did the universe evolve from nothing? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I am afraid you have confused evolution
with cosmology. That department is on the third floor, down
the hall to your left.
Please remember that evolution makes no comment about the beginning of the Universe, the beginning of life, or the beginning of pretty much anything. Evolution is concerned with the behavior of living populations, once they appear. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Tim Judge |
Comment: |
I came a cross this at the ICR website, I
doubt it is accurate but it raises some questions.
"Do they [thoatherium and it's "ancestors"] not thus provide another nice, logical evolutionary series? No, not at all, for they do not occur in this [from 3 toes to 1] sequence at all! Diadiaphorus, the three-toed ungulate with reduced lateral toes, and Thoatherium, the one-toed ungulate, were contemporaries in the Miocene epoch. Macrauchenia, with pes containing three full-sized toes, is not found until the Pliocene epoch, which followed the Miocene according to the geological column. In fact, it is said that the one-toed Thoatherium became extinct in the Miocene before the three-toed Macrauchenia made his appearance in the Pliocene. Thus, if evolutionists would permit the fossil evidence and their usual assumptions concerning geological time to be their guide, they should suppose that in South America a one-toed ungulate gave rise to a three-toed ungulate with reduced lateral toes, which then gave rise to an ungulate with three full-sized toes. This is precisely the opposite of the supposed sequence of events that occurred with North American horses. I don't know any evolutionist who suggests such an evolutionary sequence of events, but why not? Perhaps it is because the three-toed to one-toed sequence for North American horses became so popularized in evolutionary circles that no one dare suggest the reverse transition. Of course there is no more real evidence for transitional forms in South America than there is in North America." Do scientists believe that it was a transition from three toes to, and if so why, are the dates given for the finding of the fossils correct? I know that ancestor and child species may be contemporary, but then how do we know which direction the transition goes in? Also I doubt that Thoatherium was an ungulate, but then I don't know. Thank you for your time and keep up the amazing work! -Tim Judge www.thetheisticevolutionpage.org |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
This little bit of "horse" exhaust goes
back a ways. I found a similar use of the Litopterns in an
antievolutionist book from the nineteen thirties (Dewar
1938).
The source of this specific argument is an Impact article by Duane Gish, the ICR's paleontology "expert". He makes the same argument in a couple of his books on the fossil record (Gish 1985 & 1995). Whether or not Dewar inspired Gish on this subject I cannot say. As an aside, creationist Erich von Fange published a paper in the Creation Research Society Quarterly (von Fange 1988) in which he seems to imply some sort of evolutionist conspiracy regarding Litopterns. He basically argues that evolutionists reasons for classifying certain Litopterns (particularly the genus Thoatherium) in an Order of mammals separate from horses (Perissodactyla) were arbitrary and really done because the existence of such a very horse-like animal, before modern horses evolved, would somehow be problematic for evolutionary theory (von Fange includes a brief version of the same argument Gish uses above). To answer your questions:
Descent relationships between fossil species are inferences based upon what evidence is available (mostly the comparative anatomy of the hard parts like shells and skeletons) however even with lots of good fossil material it is always possible that instead of a parent/daughter relationship one can be looking at, to extend the family metaphor, an aunt/niece or older-sister/younger-sister relationship. So, while we can tell they are closely related we cannot be absolutely sure of the exact form of the relationship. As for discerning which direction a transition is going, one has to look at the overall pattern of the fossils involved, and understand generally how evolution works by modification of existing parts. Cladistic methodologies are helpful for sorting these things out. In the particular case that Gish talks about it would be pretty unlikely that a species that had gone even further that modern horses in reducing its number of toes would give rise to another species that had three strong toes (and a host of other differences). But no one is claiming that they did. Here are a couple links that might be helpful in understanding the interactions of systematics and paleontology. Gish names three genera (Diadiaphorus, Thoatherium, and Macrauchenia) belonging to what he correctly identifies as the Order Litopterna, and he places them in the correct chronological order that they are found in the fossil record. The problem is that he does not inform his readers that the three genera he names belong to two different Families within the Order. Diadiaphorus and Thoatherium, both early Miocene, belong to the Family Proterotheriidae and both are indeed horse-like in appearance. However the genus Macrauchenia, from the Pliocene/Pleistocene, belongs to the Family Macracheniidae and is not horse-like at all. Instead this Family of Litopterns is quite camel-like in appearance, another detail Gish fails to mention. He also doesn't mention (perhaps out of ignorance) that representatives of this Family can be found in the early Miocene as well, three toes and all. To put this relationship between horse-like Litopterns and the camel-like Litopterns in terms of more familiar animals, it is roughly the same as that between horses and rhinoceroses, each belonging to different Families (Equidae and Rhinocerotidae respectively) of the Order Perissodactyla. Thus we can see that Gish's argument comes down to basically this: if one Family of an Order shows a trend towards a reduction of toes (from three to one), then all Families of that Order must do likewise, or there is some problem with evolutionary theory. This is exactly like arguing that since horses reduced their toes from three to one, then rhinoceroses must do the same. This is nonsense. Nothing in evolutionary theory requires Families of the same Order to follow the same evolutionary trends in the way Gish implies, much less Families of a different Order. References: Dewar, Douglas (1938) More Difficulties of the Evolution Theory, pp.146-147 von Fange, Erich A. (1989) "The Litopterna - A Lesson in Taxonomy: The Strange Story of the South America 'False' Horses", Creation Research Society Quarterly, 25:184-190 Gish, Duane T. (1985) Evolution: The Challenge of the Fossil Record, pp.83-85 Gish, Duane T. (1995) Evolution: the fossils STILL say NO!, pp.191-193 |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Just wanted to say that the information you have published here is excellent and that I am gratefull for the work you are doing. I would just like to recomend that you consider adding an additional section to your website that reiterates your arguments in language that is more accesable to those lacking higher education. It would go along way in further disspelling the myths of creationism. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thanks. Mark Isaak has done just that in his An Index to Creationist Claims |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: |
Found a typo:
In the page: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html in section: 5.1.1.3 Trapopogonan the heading is "Trapopogonan" but in the text beneath it is spelled "Tragopogon" A quick google indicates that the correct spelling is in the text, ie "Tragopogon" (a Hybrid Goat's Beard plant); and the heading is presumably a typographical error. The reference is: Tragopogon Hope this is useful to you. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Sharp eyes. Thanks. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
I'm having a conversation with a former AIG
staff member who "claims" he might switch if "they found
paleosols between every sedimentary layer in the Grand
Canyon"
I'm sure that isn't possible, but is it possible there are areas somewhere in the world that someone has actually visited that does have this? I know this is a total waste of time, YEC's have the parasite, and the parasite doesn't want to let go, but....? Thank you, Andy |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | The Calaveras Skull Revisited |
Response: |
It sounds like you have been given an
impossible task. Because not every contact represents a
period of terrestrial nondeposition, a person isn't going
to find a buried fossil soil, called "paleosols" by
geologists, associated with every contact. Also, along some
unconformities, the formation of an erosional surface
called a "ravinement surface," during marine transgressions
has removed paleosols that once existed.
However, within the strata exposed in the Grand Canyon, there are paleosols at major unconformities that haven't been removed by subsequent marine transgressions and there are numerous paleosols found within the nonmarine strata. These paleosols (fossil soils), not to mention the presence of well-documented eolian sandstones within Grand Canyon strata, are sufficient to refute the claim that these sediments represent a continuous period of underwater deposition over less than geologic periods of time. Unfortunately, very little research has been conducted specifically on the paleosols found in strata exposed within the Grand Canyon. While on a raft trip down the Grand Canyon lead by a geologist friend, I was shown paleosols within sedimentary rocks of the Temple Butte Limestone, which are preserved within an incised valley. Examples of these incised valleys are discussed and illustrated in the article by Ward (1998, 2001) as listed below. The paleosols within the Temple Butte Limestone indicate that similar paleosols were present along the contact between the Redwall and Muav limestones but were remove by erosion during the marine transgression. Reference Cited: Abbott, Ward, 1998, Canyon offers grand seismic view. AAPG Explorer. vol. 19, no. 8, pp. 36-37. (August 1998) [AAPG = American Association of Petroleum Geologists] It can be found online as: Abbot, Ward, 2001, Revisiting the Grand Canyon - Through the Eyes of Seismic Sequence Stratigraphy. Search and Discovery Article # 40018. A few papers specifically describing paleosols found within strata exposed in the Grand Canyon have been published. They are: 1. Paleosols associated with upper contact of the Redwall Limestone: Kenny, R., 1989. Variation in carbon and oxygen geochemistry and petrography of the Mississippian Redwall Formation, north-central Arizona: implications for extricating the diagenetic history of paleokarst carbonates and evidence for the earliest Microcodium microfossils. Cave Research Foundation Annual Report 1989, pp. 16-18. Cave Books, St. Louis, Missouri Kenny, Ray, 1992, Silicified Mississippian Paleosol microstructures; evidence for ancient microbial-soil associations. Scanning Microscopy. vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 359-366 (June 1992) Kenny, Ray and Knauth, L. Paul, 1992, Continental paleoclimates from delta and delta (super 18) O of secondary silica in paleokarst chert lags. Geology Boulder. vol. 20, no. 3, pp. 219-222 (March 1992) 2. Paleosols within the Supi Group: Enos, Paul, Alissa, A. R., Buijs, G., Joyce, W., Fogarty, A. J., and Chaikin, D. H., 1998, Paleosols provide detailed local correlations within the upper Supai Group, Grand Canyon. Annual Meeting Expanded Abstracts - American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 1998, vol. 1998, American Association of Petroleum Geologists and Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists : Tulsa, Oklahoma Also, as noted by Glenn Morton in " Re: Morris, the Geologic Column, and Compromise," there occur other major unconformities, which contradict Young Earth creationist arguments, within the Grand Canyon strata in addition to the top of the Redwall Limestone, in which both paleosols and well developed karst has been documented. For example, the top of the Esplanade Sandstone of the Supi Group is a regional unconformity deeply cut by incised valleys that are as much as 90 m (300 ft) wide and 21 m (70 ft) deep. The top of the Esplanade Sandstone between the incised valleys itself is deeply eroded into buried hills with as much as 9 to 15 m (15 to 30 m) of relief on them as discussed in Abbott (2001), Beus and Morales (1990), and McKee (1982). References Cited Abbot, Ward, 2001, Revisiting the Grand Canyon - Through the Eyes of Seismic Sequence Stratigraphy. Search and Discovery Article # 40018. Beus, S. S., and Morales, M., 1990, Grand Canyon Geology. Oxford University Press, New York, McKee, E. D., 1982, Erosion surfaces, Chapter H, In E. D. McKee, pp. 155-176, The Supai Group of Grand Canyon. Professional Paper no. 1173. U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virgina. Some web pages that discuss the significance of paleosols found elsewhere in the world are:
Other web pages about the Grand Canyon, which should be of interest, are:
|
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I think your website makes a remarkable case for Lysenkoism, vernalization, and Michurinism (I.e. dialectical materialism = Marxism) rather than your ridiculous idealistic superstitions (The Talking Snake Theory)and also (aka self serving ideology/ lies of the plutocracy) who fund hired liars (euphemism for fascist goons) such as yourself. Your gibberish is in line with the ravings of the oligarchic installed nazis and their "science" of irrationality with intent of stupifying the slaves. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Wow. This feedback was so whacked that I just felt that it should be presented to the reading public. I could be wrong. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | David Warner |
Comment: | I have spent almost a year on this site, reading over the contents daily. I have found much more information and opinion here than I ever could at school. (I am currently attending UTA) I have held back giving a comment until I had seen the entire site, which thankfully I accomplished today. First off, I am NOT a christian. I thought I would get that out of the way before you blast me with the "fundie" label in your retort. I am just a simple student that is trying to find the one thing that all of you people seem to have forgotten about...THE TRUTH. What is the truth?? How did we get here? Is man just an animal? Or are we more than that? So far, I and many, many of the people I go to school with see only one thing when we see support of evolution..Bigotry,Hatred, and discrimination towards christians...NOT any other religion.. Just christianity. The Jews and the Muslims teach almost the same thing. But evolutionists don't hack on their religions. Why is that? And where do you constantly get off saying evolution is a fact? its no more a fact than santa claus. If anyone DARES to disagree with the evolutionists worldview the are immediatly attacked with name calling, reference to "lack of education","if you had all the facts", "if you did some research before you make a comment like that", and a host of other degrading comments intended to make the evolutionist appear more intelligent and reasonable than his opponent. Just as bad if not worse than any fundie I've ever had the displeasure of discussing the origins of man with. Well Ive got some new for you. My generation is sick of both sides of this argument. I don't beleive either of them. They are both equally as ridiculous. Since I was a child I have had evolution RAMMED DOWN MY THROAT by the public school system, while at the same time teaching me how to hate christians. Evolution is an OLD idea for OLD people. Just like the holy whatsit. I see absolutly NO attempt to discover truth on your site,(or all the Anti-christian links) at all, merely an attempt to discredit what you consider the opposition to your personal atheist world view. Or should I say anti-christian. If you were a TRUE atheist, you would be discrediting ALL the other religions too. Wheres the explanation as to why the Buddists version of our origins is incorrect? Or the native americans? Or the UFObies who think we were "seeded" by aliens? This site cries HARD of ramming personal world view, hatred for ONE paticular religion, and discrimination in my face as bad as my aunt the fundie does tellin me Im going to "burn" for not believing her way. Its the EXACT same thing..there is NO DIFFERENCE at all. Just one more of those "Im right and your wrong" if you don't look at it my way kind of sites. It really makes me SICK how anyone can be so smug in what they believe (most especially a person with a colledge degree) and use outright agenda based propaganda do try and back their spineless drivel. Example: I'll have you know sir that I am a DIRECT relative of Thomas Jefferson, and your link to the site that blatantly misquotes him is nothing short of being written by a blithering IDIOT that has either been seriously misinformed, is just an out and out LIAR. My family has in our possesion ALL of his personal journals and diaries that we have not given over time to the Smithsonian and other institutions, and the man was NO deist, and in fact attended church REGULARLY at a small church in what is now Falls Church,west virginia for MANY years. He in fact WAS a christian man,but like some of the founding fathers had become disenchanted with, you guessed it, the FUNDAMENTALISTS of the the church of england (the protestant church as a whole) of his time. Seeing wiccians and others burned at the stake and persecuted in other ways made the sick, and when he spoke out against christianity it was against these people that had perverted it, NOT the religion itself. Anyone that say anything else is a BALDFACED LIAR and I'll gladly provide the DOCUMENTED PROOF IN HIS OWN HANDWRITING to any FOOL that disputes this. Just to have a link on your site to this UTTER GARBAGE was enough to take any crediblity it has and flush it down the toilet. It also went FAR to show what your actual agenda is here, and has nothing at all to do with trying to prove evolution. Great mask to hide behind but easily seen through. I do want to thank you though for providing the content for a very heated and 3 week long debate here at UTA. The overwhelming concensus here in this class of 53 students is that you are no scientist, but a far left wing political activist running a site purely to further his political and social agenda. Kudos....Well done...We look forward to your retort of instant insults and reference to "not knowing the facts" or a request for proof of documentation you think I don't have that i can ram down YOUR throat. What a bigot moron.......lamer..... |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: |
Interesting. I've got a degree from the
University of Texas at Arlington.
I'll take a stab at various of the issues raised. I'm a Christian, a member of the United Methodist Church. Somehow I seem to have missed the "bigotry, hatred, and discrimination towards christians" that is asserted to be endemic to those supporting evolution. Other Christians seem to have experiences more in line with mine, as perusal of the National Center for Science Education's "Voices for Evolution" publication will attest. Why aren't evolutionists "hacking" on other religions? When will you please stop beating your wife? Proponents of good science education oppose the introduction of non-science into secondary school science classrooms. Because the most numerous and vociferous advocates of putting non-science into science classrooms in the USA are Christians (by self-report, though sometimes there seems to be little evidence for and much against the assertion), it seems to me that they interpret this opposition as "persecution" due to their religious commitment, rather than simple opposition to the proximal cause (their anti-science activities). Evolutionary processes happen. That is a fact. Evolutionary considerations have real-world consequences in agriculture, in epidemiology, in ecology, and in medicine. There certainly are departures from civility in discussions of evolution and creation. This isn't a one-sided thing. See this thread on invidious comparisons deployed by "intelligent design" advocates for examples. While name calling should be deprecated (on both sides), I would demur from labeling the pointing out of ignorance as "name calling". Ignorant people making pronouncements don't advance the argument and certainly don't show themselves to advantage. For example, Kent Hovind opined that scientists couldn't tell the difference between redwood trees and kidney beans because each has 22 chromosomes. I've pointed out the depths of ignorance of genetics that this implies, and I don't think that I've stepped out of line at all. I think the assertion that I must be an atheist is pretty risible. I'm a long way from being a "TRUE atheist", since, as I mentioned earlier, I'm a United Methodist. I would be interested in knowing which page we have here has a problem with referencing Jefferson, and getting the documentation to show that it is wrong would also be useful. A specific URL will help things along. We do correct errors in the materials here as they are shown to be erroneous. Since it's my name on the domain registration, I surmise that the speculations the reader lists are supposed to fit me. While my politics were likely to the left of the majority of my fellow students at UTA (or, for that matter, TAMU), that still leaves a wide margin between my stances and those of the far left. I'm a centrist in my politics. As for whether I'm a scientist or not, I'll point out my curriculum vitae. Perhaps the consensus of 53 students isn't the final word on the matter, and the evidence might have some bearing. Wesley |
From: | |
Response: |
You can find explicitly Hindu, Native
American, and Islamic creationist arguments addressed in
the Index to
Creationist Claims. In addition, several pages here
address the arguments of Jonathan Wells, and I think most
people would not consider the Unification Church to be
Christian. Finally, most creationists arguments which don't
overtly refer to the Bible are echoed by Harun Yahya, who
is Islamic.
Most important, our arguments are not against Christianity or any other religion; they are against the bad arguments used by others, regardless of their religion. If you want anti-Christian diatribes, read the creationist literature, for example the last 20% of Morris's Scientific Creationism. The biggest enemy of creationists are Christians who don't agree with their Biblical interpretation. Creationism is probably the greatest anti-Christian force in the United States today. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | You are playing for a losing team. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Tennessee v. Scopes - lost.
Segraves v. California - lost. Epperson v. Arkansas - won. Smith v. Mississippi - won. Hendren v. Campbell - won. Willoughby v. National Science Foundation - won. Crowley v. Smithsonian Institution - won. Steele v. Tennessee - won. Daniel v. Tennessee - won. McLean v. Arkansas - won. Edwards v. Aguillard - won. I'll invoke the Aggie rule - the one with the most points wins. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Abe |
Comment: | I will be praying for every one that has anything to do with this site, and I hope that maybe one day you will be saved. I do not see how you can look at yourself in a mirror and believe that your are a result from spantaneus generation. If this were so then what would be the point in living. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Many people use other metrics to judge the
worth of their lives. Some people, for instance, might
think about how well they have raised a family. Others
would consider contributions to the body of scientific
knowledge. I like to think I have had some lasting effect
as an educator.
But thank you for your prayers. Chris Thompson |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Hi,
this is my last ateempt to raise this, in my opnion, essential issue: Dear all, I've been a reader of the talkorigins website for a long time. Allthough I think the website is valuable because it proofs evolution and unmasking creationism through a scientif way, it will only win a battle, and not the war. The few creationists I talked to, started their worldview, which includes answers about the origin of live, not with a quest for answers to the questions propossed by the 'facts' of evolution (fossils etc), but with an revelation, the bible. They believe in their, religious, truth and try to fit their observations in this worldview. If the come across new facts whicj don't fit in this worldview, they will reject these facts, rather then abandon their religion. A phenomenon know in psychology as cognitive disconance. I even came across a dutch creationist who told me all scientists formed a satanic conspiracy against creationism! To make them accept evolutionism, it will have to be fit into the religious worldview of these christian fundamentalists. The people from the website have been avoiding this question, by stating that a lot of christian people believe in evolutionism, or revering to your 'God and Evolution' essay. The essay is nice, but I don't think it will convince creationists, because it does not adress the problems evolution raises for a lot of christians (to accept Jesus as your savior, you need to be sinfull, need an original sin, need the Adam en eve story etc). Would it be an idea to start a page which adresses these issues, and contains links to evangelical christians who rejected creationism, and maintained their faith? I know that a theological aproach like this would propable be outside the boundaries you've set for yourself (... to provide mainstream scientific responses to the many issues...), but t could be a helpfull guide for many (especially evangelical) christians who are looking for a way out of the ignorance of creationisme withouth having to give up their complete faith. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Unfortunately, there are people who will never accept evolutionary theory. This has nothing to do with the merits or flaws of the theory, and everything to do with the emotional investment (or financial investment in some cases) they have in denying it. Couching it in a theological framework has been attempted before with completely unsatisfactory results- with good reason: it just isn't true. And if the truth does not serve your cause, you should reexamine your cause, not the truth. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Can you give any example of a beneficial mutation that has an increase in information and any structural change ? What is the shear number of fossils in the cambrian and how does that compare to the rest of the fossils ? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Please first define "information".
"Information" has several highly specific meanings in
science, and to be honest, none of them really applies to
genetics in the way you want it to.
Then, describe what you mean by a "structural change". Do you mean a change in the anatomy of an organism? What about a change in physiology? Wouldn't that count just as well? Would a change in the structure of a protein be sufficient to answer your question? I am not trying to be flippant here, but I am trying to show readers that the questions you ask here either do not apply, or require impossible limits on the answer. With regards to Cambrian fossils, I doubt anyone knows exactly how many have been discovered. You could catalog them: I am sure it would be quite interesting. Chris PS: For a beneficial mutation in humans, you might look up Hemoglobin C. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Being a laymen, could someone please explain why it is that there are no monkeys out there somewhere that are presently evolving into humans? Has evolution stopped evolving? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
No monkey ever evolved into a human. Humans
are apes, not monkeys. We are, however, all Primates.
The answer to the spirit of your question, though, is simply that the evolutionary path monkeys (and other apes) took millions of years ago is different from the one taken by humans. They are evolving in a different way than we are. You mistake lies in the assumption that humans are some sort of pinnacle of evolutionary progress. That is not an assumption held by biologists (or other scientists). So the "goal" is not to become human. In fact, evolution is not a goal-oriented process at all. It simply happens. Chris |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
I enjoyed your pages. I appreciate that you
take creationist claims serious enough to react to them.
The creationists have indeed terribly much evidence in
their favor. It is appropriate that you point to some of
their blunders as they themselves do to the other side.
That is part of our scientific business.
After one has looked at enough studies that use pretty good thinking and much good will and imagination in suggesting concrete steps for the course of self-organisation and self-improvement of life on this planet, there comes the time for a bottom line: The likelihood for all this is that of a river flowing uphill. Few people can live with the notion of having no explanation for our existence. Sincerely, Johannes Barkowsky, PhD, PhD Germany |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Is this really Jason Gastrich? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Congratulations to all at TO who maintain
such a comprehensive, readable and important site. I am
particularly impressed that you have managed to stay calm
and detached in the face of endless creationist provocation
and misrepresentation.
Laurels notwithstanding I do have one minor niggle. In your index to creationist claims number CH110 you state very emphatically that predictive biblical prophecy simply does not exist: "There are no prophecies in the Bible that cannot easily fit into one or more of those categories." (Retrodiction, Vagueness, Inevitability and Denial). I have two quarrels with the above: 1) This comment is entirely unnecessary. One does not need to deny the possibility of biblical divine inspiration in general, and biblical predictive prophecy in particular, in order to refute the claims of creationists. Whether the bible is divinely inspired is irrelevant to a rebuttal of creationism, one merely needs to reject a literal scientific interpretation of the early chapters of genesis, something many bible believing christians are very happy to do. Why pick a bigger fight than you need to? Indeed one might say that you are falling into the very same trap which many sincere creationists do when they listen to an atheist like Richard Dawkins, and then feel they need to take on the whole theory of evolution in order to refute his personal opinions on the non-existence of God. 2) There is rather compelling evidence for predictive biblical prophecy, provided one maintains an open mind. An oft quoted example is the biblical prophecies concerning Tyre in Ezekial chapter 26. The chapter contains a number of rather precise predictions: 1) Nebuchadnezzar will destroy the mainland of Tyre (Ezekiel 26:8). 2) Many nations come against Tyre in waves (Ezekiel 26:3). 3) Tyre will be made a bare rock (Ezekiel 26:4). 4) Fishermen will spread their nets on the site (Ezekiel 26:5). 5) The remains of Tyre will be thrown into the sea (Ezekiel 26:12). 6) The great city of Tyre will disappear from history (Ezekiel 26:21). The majority of these are quite precise, and are not made against any other of the many cities singled out for condemnation, i.e. no Vagueness here. With the exception of the prediction of Nebuchadnezzar's attack all were fulfilled centuries after the widely held date for the writing of Ezekiel (592-570BC), i.e. no Retrodiction. Many, if not all of the predictions are far from Inevitable. In fact the throwing of the debris of mainland Tyre (destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar in 573BC) into the sea in order to besiege the offshore island of Tyre (by Alexander the great in 332BC)is decidedly unusual. The detailed description of the desolation of Tyre and the prediction that after many nations have come against it it will eventually be no more and not be rebuilt is highly unusual, particularly bearing in mind the excellent water resources and location of the site. A present day small city of Tyre is located down the coast from the original mainland site, and apparently fishermen do indeed dry nets on the ancient island site of Tyre, which is now a bare rock. Of course, if one wants to, one can choose to reject all the above (or indeed any evidence for anything) based on ones firmly held preconceptions, but if one does isn't one getting uncomfortably close to the position of the creationist, who rejects all the evidence for evolution because it doesn't fit with his immovable preconceptions? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I agree with your point that one need not
deny Biblical inspiration to refute creationism. And I do
not deny the possibility of predictive prophecy,
only that there is proof of it. (Admittedly, I could have
made that clearer, and I shall.) I include a rebuttal to
prophecy because some creationists use it in their Biblical
accuracy arguments for creationism.
I am not impressed that the destruction of Tyre is predictive. The Bible places it in the context of an attack by Nebuchadnezzar, which was retrodictive. (Tyre was under siege 585-573 BC.) Throwing debris into the sea and spreading nets are only to be expected of any coastal city; they can be said also of San Francisco. According to Encylopaedia Britannica, "most of the remains of the Phoenician period still lie beneath the present town." And although I have not been there, I expect the barrenness of the rock is subjective. Of coures, if one wants to, one can choose to accept your interpretation. However, there is not sufficient evidence to compel it. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Jim |
Comment: |
In a recent trip to Dinosaur National
Monument a part of the evolutionist's problem was revealed.
To explain the massive bone yard, they resorted to a local
flooding event. The Morrison formation has fossil dinosaurs
nearly everywhere in it. Some were found near the town of
Morrison, Colorado, obviously vastly removed from NW
Colorado. The Blanding sub-basin of the Paradox basin in SE
Utah SW Colorado has fragments of dinosaur bones almost
everywhere the Cretaceous Dakota formation is exposed. So
did local flooding cause all these dinosaur remains to be
deposited simultaneously all over the west?
To preserve any fossil, it has to be buried quickly. We see this more and more in the literature where there is acknowledgement that quick deposition is necessary for fossilization to occur. But this is falsifiable isn't it? Go to any lake or riverbed and dredge it and see if any bones are in the state of becoming a fossil. No, because dead things float, are scavenged for food, are disarticulated, and disappear from the scene long before any burial can take place. Streams do not bury an object deep enough and constant movement tears things apart. A second fact not disclosed at Dinosaur National Monument is that the bones are still mostly bones. Yes, that s right, they are only 40% per-mineralized. In Wyoming the bones are 100% bones. The theoretical shelf life of a bone is only 10,000 years in the absence of mineral replacement. They are called fossils no matter the mineral content. But that is why stabilizing the bones is necessary with such careful effort in removal and preparation for display. This argues for a short time since emplacement of these fossils. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | The South African Spheres |
Response: |
The arguments presented by Jim in the above
feedback are examples of some very common misconceptions
that all too many Young Earth creationists have about how
either strata are deposited and fossils are formed.
The first misconception is that individual stratigraphic units, i.e. the Morrison Formation, were deposited simultaneously. If a person reads through what has been published in the scientific literature, they find that the assumption made by Mr. Jim that the Morrison Formation was simultaneously deposited over all of it's outcrop is readily refuted by the presence of numerous regional and unconformities and innumerable fossil soils that have been found within the Morrison Formation. These fossils soils, called "paleosols", provide proof that stratigraphic units, like the Morrison Formation, consists of innumerable layers of sediments, each created by a separate period of sediment accumulation, separated by even longer periods of nondeposition of sediment while the contact associated with the fossil soil was part of the land surface. Regional unconformities found within the Morrison Formation provide conclusive evidence of major and lengthy periods of time during which nondeposition and erosion occurred between the deposition of the sediments that now comprise the Morrison Formation. The scientific literature published on the sedimentology and stratigraphy of Morrison Formation soundly refutes any claim about the Morrison Formation having been deposited simultaneously as Jim and other people falsely claim. Some web pages:
A few of many published papers that present evidence refuting the "simultaneous deposition" claims are: Demko, T. M., Currie, B. S., and Nicoll, K. A., 1996, Paleosols at sequence boundaries in the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation, Colorado Plateau and Rocky Mountain regions, USA. Geological Society of America Abstract with Programs. vol. 28, no. 7, p. 185. Demko, T. M., Currie, B. S., and Nicoll, K. A., in press, Regional paleoclimatic and stratigraphic implications of paleosols and fluvial-overbank architecture in the Morrison Formation (Upper Jurassic), Western Interior, U.S.A.: Sedimentary Geology. Houck, Karen J., 2001, Dinosaur Ridge; celebrating a decade of discovery. Mountain Geologist. vol. 38, no. 3, pp. 97-110. Peterson, F., and Turner, C. E., 1998, Stratigraphy of the Ralston Creek and Morrison Formations (Upper Jurassic) near Denver, Colorado: Modern Geology, vol. 22, no. 1-4, p. 3-38. The answer to the question, "So did local flooding cause all these dinosaur remains to be deposited simultaneously all over the west?" is in part "yes" in the form of floodbasin and crevasse deposits. However, the Morison Formation also contains thick lake deposits, minor eolian deposits, and fluvial deposits related to the back and forth meandering of river channels. However, there aren't any Noachian Flood deposits. The modern coastal plain of Texas and Louisiana is composed of alluvial and deltaic sediments deposited locally by the Rio Grande, Nueces, San Antonio, Guadalupe, Colorado, Brazos, Trinity, Neches, Sabine, Calcasieu, Red, Mississippi, Amite, Tickfaw, and many other rivers. The "local" accumulations of sediments adjacent to these rivers have merged together to create a broad apron of sediments and the coastal plain they underlie that extends hundred of kilometers along the northwest coast of the Gulf of Mexico. The Morrison Formation differs in that it contains a substantial proportion of fresh-water lake deposits and accumulated downstream of an active mountain range within a basin much like the vast amount of sediments, which still are accumulating, filling the Central Andean Foreland Basin within South America. In Paleogeography of the Southwestern US, go look at:
The second misconception expressed by Jim is that fossils aren't being formed today. In fact, geologists and paleontologists have taken Jim's advice and studied modern rivers and lakes to see if fossils are being formed in them. The fact of the matter is that the observations and data that they have collected in the field and published in the scientific literature refute Jim's arguments. This published research clearly demonstrate that a very small, but significant, percentage of modern bones and shells of animal and remains of plants are being buried in ways that they are preserved and, eventually many of them will become fossils. In fact, these studies demonstrate that in certain circumstances, hard parts, like bones and shells don't have to be buried as rapidly as Jim incorrectly claimed. Modern examples of observed fossilization, which refute the arguments about the lack of modern fossilization and the need for rapid burial being made by Jim be found at:
A few of many publications that falsify Jim's arguments on fossilization are: Allison, P. and Briggs, D. E. G., eds., Taphonomy: Releasing the Data Locked in the Fossil Record. New York, Plenum. Behrensmeyer, A. K., 1991, Vertebrate Paleoecology in a Recent East African Ecosystem. In J. Gray, A. J. Boucot, and W. B. N. Berry, eds., pp. 591-615. Communities of the Past, Stroudsburg, Hutchinson Ross Publishing Company. Behrensmeyer, A. K., 1988, Vertebrate Preservation in Fluvial Channels. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. vol. 63, no. 1-3, pp. 183-199. Dunn, K. A., McLean, R. J. C., Upchurch, G. R., Jr., and Folk, R. L., 1997, Enhancement of Leaf Fossilization Potential by Bacterial Biofilms. Geology. vol. 25, no. 12, pp. 119-1222. Wilby, P. R., Briggs, D. E. G., Bernier, P., and Gaillard, C., 1996, role of Microbial Mats in the Fossilization of Soft Tissues. Geology. vol. 24, no.9, pp. 787-790. A person can also look at " Basic Concepts on Dinosaur Taphonomy," a PDF file, which is a sample chapter from "Introduction to the Study of Dinosaurs" by Anthony J. Martin and Published by Blackwell Publishing Company. In the last paragraph, Jim repeats a number of common falsehoods about fossil bone. Such misinformation includes claims that bone has a "shelf-life," whatever it might mean as fossil bones are not normally sold as food, of about 10,000 years and the presence of dinosaur bones in Wyoming composed of 100 percent unaltered bone. Because the rate, at which bones will either recrystallize or are replaced by other minerals, varies so much according to specific environmental conditions, it is impossible to conclude how long bone can remain unaltered. There is no scientific justification for the 10,000-year limit. Thus, neither degree nor apparent lack of fossilization can be used to argue for "short time emplacement" of these fossils. Scientific studies of alleged unaltered dinosaur bone, like the alleged Wyoming bone, have shown that even the most pristine-looking dinosaur bone has suffered significant diagenetic alteration. For example, studies of dinosaur bones, like the "100%" Wyoming dinosaur bones, that appeared to be unaltered, have shown such appearances to be quite decieving. When such "100%" pristine-looking bones were examined in detail, they were found to have been significantly altered. Some documented examples are:
For example, Goodwin (2001) refuted the alleged unlatered ("fresh") nature of dinosaur bones found along the Colville River in Alaska. The abstract for this paper can be found in "Re: Colville River, North Slope Alaska, Dinosaur Fossils Questions." Thus, the claims about "100%" dinsoaur bones and the 10,000-year "shelf-life of bone demonstrating a "short time since emplacement" for these fossils is nothing more than junk science. Finally, the reason that the dinosaur bones at Dinosaur National Park need "stablization" is because the remaining "original" bone has been severely degraded and altered, i. e. Hubert et al. (1996) given above, to the point that it no longer retains its original structural integrity and strength. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I enjoyed your website and found some of the articles (specifically the polonium halo ones) very useful. I comend you all on having the patience to (attempt to) carry out rational discussions with people who genuinely belive that the earth is 6000 years old. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I just wanted to thank all the writers and researchers for their extensive hard work. I had heard of the principle of Intelligent Design but did not fully understand it. In searching the Internet for an answer I came across your incredible web site. Thank you so much for putting unbelievably complex explanations in layman's terms. I am scientifically inclined but mathmatically challenged (rotten combination) but your site explained so much in ways that I fully understood it. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I'd like to post a response. How do I do it? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I think you've answered your own
question.
Chris |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Thank you so much for trying to educate the
general public on this very important matter. There is so
much ignorance in the Creationist community. It can be
quite scary to observe at times. Keep up the good work at
talkorigins.org.
Sincerely, Brian Lewis |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I am a christian and i dont believe in evolution and i hope that people will come to their senses and stop believing this crap. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Just so you know, we don't "believe in"
evolution either. To believe in something is to accept it
on faith, without evidence.
No, scientists (and rational people in general) consider evolution to be the best explanation of the diversity of life on the planet. Second, there are many christians who disagree with you. Most christians, in fact, have no problem accepting evolution as a valid scientific theory. It's a small, loud, and mistaken subset of christians who think you must accept a literal reading of Genesis before you can be a good christian. Finally, as a christian, what do you believe in? A global flood? A world in which dinosaurs coexisted with humans? Seven-day creation? If you answered "yes" to all three questions, you perforce also believe in a god that would destroy or obscure evidence to mislead people on earth, and fabricate evidence to do the same. Because there would be no other way to explain the lack of evidence for a flood, and the mountains of evidence (like fossils) that support evolution. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Greetings, I am a Navy medical officer currently deployed in Africa. In my spare time, I do a lot of research on evolution and creation. Although I was a believer in evolution and an even stronger believer in an ancient earth throughout college, I eventually became a Creationist after doing years of studies and research on both sides. I just wanted to commend you on your 'Talk Origins' webpages. They contain very clear, sometimes accurate, and mostly objective data. There have been many fallicies from Creationists that you have brought to light, of which I am thankful. I certainly look for objectivity and facts in search for the truth, and it is healthy to reveal inaccuracies on both sides of the debate.I use your webpage regularly while doing my research. Keep up the good work. Thanks again. LT. Mark Roman Camp Lemonier Djibouti, Africa |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Thanks.
Please do share with us any place where we have been less than accurate. We do value accuracy here. Specific URLs and references would help tremendously. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hi, I have written before, but feel compelled to do so again. You have my utmost respect. How do you stand to continually offer rebutal to the creationist arguments? The creationists are like Phoenixes, you shoot them down in flames and they rise up with an even more meaningless argument only to be shot down again! I have put up with them since 1959 when I started teaching H.S. biology in Ohio. I have written articles to editors of newspapers, talked to church groups and written to the Ohio state school board as well as talked to many creationists. It seems to do no good. The Ohio school board has even now allowed creationism questions on the proficiency test. It was quite refreshing to read former president Jimmy Carter say that he was embarrased by the Georgia school board trying to take the term "evolution" out of text books used in his state. America seems bent upon a return to the middle ages in its school curriculum and in many other areas such as medicine and religion. It may be of help to you and to many of your readers to know that we Presbyterians and many main line churches are behind the efforts of groups like yours in the work of keeping science true to its objectives of seeking truth by natural methods. Keep up the good work. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
For years children have been taught that
one animal turned into another over vast periods of time,
but now another belief has surfaced which is called
"Punctuated Equilibria". Is "Puncuated Equilibria" an
excuse for the lack of Transitional forms in the fossil
records?
Science is supposed to be something that pursues truth, why then have so many transitional forms in the past been proven to be hoaxes perpetrated by evolutionists? and why are the same still taught in schools colleges and universities as if they were true? Why are children under 13 not allowed to submit their comments on this site? after all they are being evolutionised at school,don't they have a right to ask questions and air their views like the rest of society? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
|
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Toni |
Comment: |
I would like to ask you a question about
information.
A "word" "dfhdsf" doesn't mean anything unless someone gives it a meaning. For example, I could decide that the word "dfhdsf" means "dogs". I could also decide that "fghdfh" means "bark". Now I write "dfhdsf fghdfh" and use the "language" which I just invented. If you know (as you now do) the meaning of the words "dfhdsf" and "fghdfh" you know what my message "dfhdsf fghdfh" means. However, those words would represent no information to you if you didn't know the meaning of the words I used. So, words do not mean anything unless their meaning is known. Now I ask you the question: Could DNA represent any kind of information if the meaning of the "words" (codons) and "sentences" (genes) were not given to them (by an intelligent being)? Certain codons mean certain amino acids but why? From where has the meaning of codons ang genes come from? Is there some natural law responsible for their meaning or what? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: |
There are, in fact, a number of natural
laws that give "meaning" to DNA, but first, note that
"information" is not the same thing as "meaning". In
information theory, a sequence of symbols has information
to the extent that there is a low probability that the
exact sequence would be arrived at by chance, through
"noise". But if you are sending a sequence of nonsense
symbols through your communication system, the signal has
maximum information content, or minimum entropy, if the
sequence at the sender's end is identical to the sequence
at the receiver's end.
Another common sense of "information" in theoretical mathematics is that the information content of a message is the smallest compression of that message without loss - in the case of a computer file, if you can decompress it to the exact binary form it had before compression. Meaning , on the other hand is contextual. As you clearly noted, the meaning of "dfhdsf" depends entirely on the agreed conventions of the language speakers (the users of those words). Other words can depend for their meaning on the language used - Gift in English means a present. In German it means poison. Make sure, if you give a gift to your beloved, that you are speaking English! To say that DNA has a "meaning" is to use an analogy with language that doesn't quite work. The function of a DNA product - an enzyme or other protein - depends on the other aspects of the organism - its cells, cell structures, other genes that turn it on or off, or turn on or off other parts of the organism, and, crucially, the environment. Here is a favorite example of mine: spina bifida. The genes that cause the vertebral column to close over the spinal column properly depend critically on the presence of folic acid in the maternal diet. In some families, there are genetic tendencies to be more sensitive to lacks of that diet. Are these "genes for spina bifida" in those environments? Clearly not. But if genes have meanings, that is the meaning of those genes in that environment. The natural laws that govern the ways genes cause organisms to develop are just the laws of physics and chemistry, to which we can add the sorting effect of natural selection. Things that capture energy, food material and so on, enabling organisms to live long enough to reproduce are the things that have "meaning" in that respect. It's some that we can only identify in retrospect. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | How much time before Moon leaves Earth? Help me to understand this possiblity. What are your thoughts and theories? I have more to discuss. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System |
Response: |
The moon
won't leave Earth at
all. The moon now holds the same side towards Earth at all
times, except for a slight wobble called "libration".
The moon will continue to recede from Earth, and Earth will
continue to slow in spin, until eventually Earth has the
same side always towards the moon. That process will take
about 5x1010, or 50 billion, years (this result
is found in table 4.1 of
Solar System Dynamics by C.D. Murray & S.F.
Dermott, Cambridge University Press, 1999, 2001, but the
same conclusion was reached many years earlier by Harold
Jeffreys, in his book The Earth, Cambridge
University Press, 1924).
Once that has happened, solar tides would continue to slow the rotation of Earth, and it would then spin more slowly than the moon. When that happens, the moon would reverse its drift away from Earth, and come back towards Earth at an increasing rate. Eventually, the moon would be destroyed by Earth's gravity, once it comes inside Earth's Roche limit. This process is now at work for Phobos, the innermost moon of Mars (but Mars & Phobos are both much smaller than Earth & the moon, so it would probably take even more than 50 billion years for Phobos to meet its doom). However, our sun will begin its red giant phase in only about 5 or 6 billion years. It will swallow up Mercury & Venus, and maybe Earth as well. It is distinctly possible that this major change in the sun will destroy the Earth-moon system long before it gets a chance to play out its tidal adventure. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | while i was reading the FAQ's i came across this question: How do you know the earth is really old? Lots of evidence says it's young. When we went to the moon, we should have discovered 6-8 ft. of dust, if the moon was 4.5 billion yrs. old. They discovered 6-8 in. of dust. The moon is probably 6-8 thousand yrs. old/ Besides, dating methods are only accurate to 10,000 years. how do you come u come up with 4.5 billion years? is it just a guess? or just what you want to believ? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I would be interested to see your evidence
for a young earth. It would certainly make the news.
The moon-dust argument is so flawed, Answers in Genesis has repudiated it. Look at: Moon-dust argument no longer useful (Please disregard the self-serving notions they present there: the argument was settled long, long before they got around to admitting it). To which dating method are you referring, when you mention a useful span of 10,000 years? Carbon-14 is useful to about 40000 years, but potassium-argon systems are useful for hundreds of millions of years. There is no guesswork here; the figures have been repeated hundred of times. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Christians did not murder poeple, they gave them food, clothes and education. The crucades happend before the bible was in its form we know it today. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Love your site--exactly what I wanted (and I did not have to hunt for it either). Do not want to sound like a wet blanket, but it seems to me that those in the creationist camp, for want of a better term, will never accept the scientific arguments you all have put together. It's not necessary that they do,but somewhat of a shame. They are trapped in a box of voluntary ignorance and any attempt to logic them out of it only makes them feel better as they resist it. They see themselves as not giving in to corruption, I guess. If one accepts the principles that allow cars to go, planes to fly, antiobiotics to work, etc, how does that whole work suddenly become irrelevant when it is inconvenient? Because it clashes with their starting point, which is the LITERAL interpretation of the Bible. Reality then needs to be contorted horrendously to fit into that mold. In a similar vein, complaints about creationist using quote-mining, misrepresentation, and outright lies are easy to understand when you realise that IN THEIR MINDS,the ends (a Christian nation or world view) justify the means. I sort of see your work as similarly frustrating as mine when I try and get one of my patients to quit smoking. It's like banging my head against the wall. But you have to keep trying and I do appreciate what you are doing, as others obviously do as well. So, keep up the good work and hopefully you can shed some light into the dark corners out there. In the words of my alma mater "Fiat Lux". |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | John Atchley |
Comment: | I really dont understand how you people can still say that the Earth is flat after it was proven that is was a sphere. Also, how can you say that it is a pentagon when people traveling into sapce see a circle? If the Earth was flat then howcome there is day and night at the same time in different parts of the world? Can you answer that question? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I really don't understand how otherwise
reasonably bright people can somehow think that we advocate
a Flat Earth. How can they have missed the point of our
prominent disclaimer? Or that of the title that we
provided? Or even cooled down because there's no working
link to feedback from that page? Can the reader answer
those questions?
Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
RE: Claim CB941:
How does a coconut tree know there is an ocean nearby? The coconut tree "knows" that there is an ocean nearby because the same ocean once washed a coconut up onto the beach to germinate. It is the same as the solution to the "chicken and egg" riddle - just as every chicken came from an egg (but not every egg comes from a chicken), every coconut tree came from a coconut. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I recently found a piece of a femur fossil in a creekbank in Tennessee. I would like to be able to identify what species. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I would suggest that you contact the people
at the Gray Fossil Site, Tennessee. Their home page is Welcome to
the Gray Fossil Site web page and contact information
can be found in Contact
Information.
The best thing to do is mail them a letter with a hard copy picture of the femur fossils and some information about where in Tennessee it was found. Also, you can send them an email with a jpg of this fossil attached. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | PhD |
Comment: | Thank you for such an informative website. I can see how hard you have worked. This website has helped me immensively to have so many arguments at hand in my argument in favor of God creating all things. Just as God "created" the world to include laws of gravity and other laws of nature, God created "evolution" to allow changes in his creation according to his will. Your website has helped me. Thanks! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Have you considered the arguments for intelligent design by Dr. Elliot Sober? |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: |
I can't say that I've seen any of those.
I've seen several of his criticisms of "intelligent design"
arguments, which are quite good.
Wesley |
From: | |
Response: |
As background to Wesley's response, here
are some of Sober's papers, linked from his home page:
Sober is an important philosopher of evolutionary biology, and an incisive critic of the nonsense promulgated by the so-called intelligent design movement. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Hello,
I was wondering if anyone could do an overview of the claims on a highly regarded webpage, www.godandscience.com. This site uses mathematical and scientific prinicples to give unplausability to macroevolution, and provide loopholes in the idea that the big bang simply let everything fall into place. It provides numerous evidence to support that there was certain "fine tuning" of the universe at different times, that would normally require a breaking in the laws of physics. I was wondering if someone could provide greater insite into these veiws shown. Paul |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: |
Interesting. A "highly regarded webpage"
for which Alexa has no ranking data. And for which Google
has no knowledge of anyone even linking to it.
Ah, the anthropic principle. Please see the page on the anthropic principle as a creationist claim. It links to our Cosmology FAQ. Elsewhere, we have a proposed FAQ on the anthropic principle. It's not like we're hiding any of this. Wesley |
From: | |
Response: | It is likely that our responder mistyped the URL. Replace "com" with "org" to get an old earth creationist site, built up by someone raised in the "Reasons To Believe" tradition. Nothing remarkable. The self-serving "highly acclaimed" description appears to be a bluff. The site covers a lot of ground, and a lot of topics well beyond just god and science. The science on the site is trite and pretty bad at first sight. But I have submitted it for including in our list of links. Other people with links should send them there rather than to feedback. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | The web is full of information for Christian home schoolers on how to teach creation "science." Teaching programs specifically designed to teach kids an anti-evolutionary stance are abundant. I've now spent half an hour now looking for the converse: Materials that would be appropriate for a home schooler to use to teach evolution. Do y'all know where I could find such teaching aids? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution |
Response: | Try Understanding Evolution: An evolution website for teachers. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
Hello I am 14 year old girl frome
Canada,Sasktchewan. My friends and I were having a
conversation about the evolution. I decided to look it up?
I would like to know why it does not say anything about the
debates " Who Created The Earth" I would like to here what
you have to say. Is that possible?? Thank you for reading
this!!!
From: Keesha Bitternose |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
The reason you didn't find anything about
the creation of the earth on this website is easy:
evolutionary biology has nothing to say about that. It just
is not part of the subject matter. You should ask
geologists, astronomers, or cosmologists questions about
that.
Evolution only deals with living things. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | THE EARTH IS A SPHERE YOU RETARDED MOTHER-SUCKING FREAKS! I'm sure that if you had any inteligence at all, you would realise that it is not physically possible for the world to be flat. Go to a superstore and buy a new life. Retards! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | We are not responsible for the feedback. We don't make it up, either. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
This may sound silly, but I am struggling
with religion. I don't believe Creationism at this point. A
am not a scientist. I was just reading an article at http://www-acs.ucsd.edu/~idea/fossrec.htm
and found it compelling. IS there really a fossil record?
Or is there no real fossil record? What is the theory of
punctuated equuilibrium? IS this scientific. If you can
help, it would be appreciated.
Sincerely, T. Cook |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
First off, most scientists are religious
people. They are able to reconcile their faith with their
science. The people who think you must relinquish belief in
god to accept evolution are few in number, high in volume,
and wrong. They are most wrong about the requirement of
accepting a literal reading of Genesis in order to be a
christian. Genesis is NOT the literal truth, there ARE
fossils dating back hundreds of millions of years, there
was NEVER a global flood. Take a walk through any natural
history museum- or look online at their websites
(www.amnh.org, for example). There are millions of fossils,
and there are beautiful transitional series showing the
evolutionary history of many organisms.
Punctuated equilibrium is a hypothesis put forth by Niles Eldridge & Stephen J. Gould. It has been misrepresented and misinterpreted ever since it was published. The simple version is this: many species are in a sort of stasis for most of their evolutionary lifetimes. There are periods, though, of rapid evolution. Gould and Eldridge proposed this to explain patterns seen for many years in the fossil records. I would suggest you read the FAQ on this topic; it is excellent, well-written, and easy to understand: |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Ben |
Comment: | I am wondering why the moon's orbit and rotation speed are exactly the same, so that one side always faces the earth. Is there a natural phenomenon that would tend to make this happen, or is it just a coincidence, or did Someone make it happen that way? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
It's due to tidal forces acting to retard
the moon's rotation. The effect is small, but over long
periods of time it can result in this kind of motion. Most
moons in the solar system show the same effect.
You can find explanations in the Astronomy FAQ, and the Wikipedia article on tidal locking |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Gidday.I have a question prompted by a comment I read on a website.Is there evidence of meteor impacts in the sedimentary layers of our world?More specifically,can we see the remains of nickel and iron from the past {millions of years old}?I presume the person who issued this as a challenge is requiring proof that such evidence is recent [I suspect a YEC] and not just surface evidence such as craters.Anyway thanks for your attention AND for the pleasure your site has given me for some years.Oh,if you are able to reply please keep it simple.Thanks. |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: |
This question actually comes up now and
again. I have three immediate references, and I have seen
quite a few others that I neglected to note. I have assumed
from your request that the trace element anomalies, such as
at the K/T boundary won't count for some reason. I
personally observe "cosmic dust" occasionally during soil
analysis of archaeological sites, but these tiny (50 to 100
micron) glassy grains aren't very dramatic.
Byerly, Gary R, Donald R. Lowe, Joseph L. Wooden, Xiaogang Xie 2002 "An Archaen Impact Layer from the Pilbara and Kaapvaal Cratons" Science 297 (5585): 1325 Cohen, B. A., T. D. Swindle, and D. A. Kring 2000 “Support for the Lunar Cataclysm Hypothesis from Lunar Meteorite Impact Melt Ages” Science Dec 1 2000: 1754-1756. and also the Ames, Oklahoma, Meteorite Impact Structure The Ames site is interesting because it is a deeply buried impact crater. Of course, a young earth creationist can always deny that these impact events are ancient, or that there is any reason that they can't just be miracles. On behalf of the contributers, I am glad you like the site. |
From: | |
Author of: | The Calaveras Skull Revisited |
Response: |
Below are some additional web pages that
provide evidence of meteor impacts in the Earth's
sedimentary layers.
Impact Craters Fossil Meteorites, Buried Impact Craters, and Buried Impactite Beds
All of the above web pages provide documented examples that clearly refute the arguments made in "IT'S A YOUNG WORLD AFTER ALL" by Paul D. Ackerman. A few of many publications that provide extensive documented evidence of meteor impacts, including "fossil"meteorites, buried within the Earth's sedimentary layers are: Grieve, R. A. F., 1997, Extraterrestrial impact events: the record in the rocks and the stratigraphic record. Palaeogeography, Paleoclimatology, Paleoecology, vol. 132, no. 1-4, pp. 5-23. Montanari, A., and Koeberl, C., 2000, Impact Stratigraphy: The Italian Record. Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences, Springer-Verlag, 364 pp. Nystrom, J. O., Lindstrom, M., and Wickman, F. E., 1988, Discovery of a second Ordovician meteorite using chromite as a tracer. Nature. vol. 336, pp. 572-574. Schmitz, B., Lindstrom, M., Asaro, F., and Tassinari, M., 1996, Geochemistry of meteorite-rich marine limestone strata and fossil meteorites from the Lower Ordovician at Kinnekulle, Sweden. Earth and Planetary Science Letters. vol. 145, pp. 31-48. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
[Extracted from God and
Evolution]
How can one say they believe in God and then deny what God says. If God says he made the world in Seven days "and it was very very good", why would u say that he didnt. Your changing the words of God around to better influence ur argument. When in reality ur changing the whole meaning of Gods statement. Evolution may have happened or it may not but i know for a fact that if it did happen it def. could not have happened without the presence of God. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Your question about "denying what God says"
hides some significant presumptions which are not universal
amongst believers. Does denying that the first chapter of
Genesis is written as a historical account of events
exactly as they occurred correspond to disbelief in God? Of
course not; many faithful believers disagree on such
things; and most are sufficiently generous to recognize one
another as fellow believers in God even while they may
disagree on such things as appropriate interpretation of
the bible.
The reason why we say that the world was not made in seven days is because we see the plain evidence of much greater age. That is all there is too it. Many Christians recognize this same evidence as well, and believe that the bible and the natural world may both be taken as reflecting the same creator. There are different ways in which Christians have reconciled these revelations, and this archive does not have a single perspective on how this is best achieved. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
I received my PhD in 1999 at the University
of Washington studying fruit fly evolution and development.
I am now a part time teacher, and I teach all biology
classes in the context of evolution.
A friend once forwarded the following web site to me from pathlights.com entitled "Fruit Flies Speak Up." In it, the author uses fruit flies to explain why evolution by natural selection is a hoax. here is that URL: http://www.pathlights.com/ce_encyclopedia/10mut10.htm I wrote up a detailed response, and sent it to the email contact listed at the pathlights web site. I suggested that they publish my reply, and we could start a dialog. I never received a response. I posted my detailed response to the above website on my Biology 202 Seattle Central Community College class web page. Here is that URL: http://seattlecentral.org/faculty/jhodin/bio202/response.html If you want me to write up something and post all this informationon on talk.origins archives, I'd be most happy to do so. Or you can just put links to these sites if you wish. Still, that particular seattlecentral site will likely expire eventually... Sincerely Jason Hodin |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You present a lot of good information. I would suggest that you look over a few more papers in the archive to get a feel for "style" on whatever you might write. Then there are some straight forward submission guidelines at www.talkorigins.org/origins/faqs-submit.html |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | i know you wont publish this just becuase i am a christain who is writing to you but i want to set some things straight for you. let me just lay it down like this .. evolution has no legs in which to stand on. it is a theory which if you forgot is a THOUGHT or IDEA on how something is or was. you were not there in the begining and neither was darwin. you can only obsever and look at is in front of you. so stop trying to pass it as truth. and i know who was there before all things.. God. no dont think i am norrow minded or closed off becuase the bible has not one lie or does not contridict its self. evolution on the other hand must keep changing and redoing there "truth" becuase it has gone against its self. i am asking you nicely to take out the creation pages becuase they are not true. those men who wrote those "lies" youe as are human just like you and you mess up some time .. so do they. so dont be a happy hypecrit and dwell on their mess ups. signed your friend |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
We don't have a feedback discrimination
policy against letters from Christians. I don't know where
you got that idea.
It is a common antievolutionary argument that by observing what is, one must conclude creation by God. E.g., Devotions for Growing Christians cites the following scripture: Romans 1:20 - For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse. Either your argument that we cannot conclude any true thing from what we observe in the present is wrong, or you are setting aside the cited scripture. Take your pick. The content of evolutionary biology, like the content of the rest of science, does change. I'm afraid that I'll have to demur from your position that this is a bad thing. If you find something in the TalkOrigins Archive that is untrue, please write to the author of the article to point out specifically what is wrong and why you believe it to be wrong. If you can't contact the author, then send feedback here. Cite the URL of the page with the problem, and explain why there is a problem. It seems to me that for every actual problem with a page here on the Archive that someone sends us a message that is specific enough to be useful, we receive dozens of messages like the reader's that say that there are problems, but don't give us any guide other than the vague notion that some pages (among the hundreds we have here) caused dissatisfaction. I'm afraid that I will have to nicely decline the invitation to remove pages from the Archive until such time as specific pages are shown to be problematic. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This is a remarkable website that demonstrates the best of what the Internet can be. |