Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I have read many of your articles and supposed "evidence" for evolution. Yet I find it lacking in the highest degree. Talk.origins speaks as if evolution is a proven fact, which it is not. I would appreciate a more honest and less biased presentation. I believe, although I may be mistaken, that this site is to present evidence, and not to present it in a biased way. I am neither a creationist or evolutionist. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This site
attempts to present mainstream science and to address
common confusions on the theory of evolution. The available
data has been sufficient to persuade mainstream science
that evolution does occur, and is the means by which life
diversifies. Evolution is confirmed as much as any theory
can be in science; there is no longer any credible
alternative, and when put to the test evolution has been
confirmed countless times.
There are strong pressures against evolution in wider society, but they have little to do with evidence, and much to do with certain religious views. If you have any concrete examples of dishonesty or unwarranted bias in the archive we would welcome pointers. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | The brief commentary on the scientific definition of evolution seemed to have been written from an evolutionist's perspective. If you want someone to try and understand your position, not necessarily agree with it, insulting their inteligence is one way NOT to get that to occur. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Punctuated Equilibria |
Response: | Larry Moran's final sentence, "Reading a textbook would help," is not an insult. I read through Moran's FAQ again just now, and he is explicit in stating that both scientists and laymen have contributed to the generally extant confusion over just what the term "evolution" means. He did not claim that the confusion was due to low intelligence on anyone's part, nor did he imply that. Reading a textbook often would help clear up confusion. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Dear Talk Origins Archive, Would it be possible to get the e-mail address of E.T. Babinski; editor of Cretinism or Evilution? Or is this information confidential? Best regards, //Roger_Miller@mc.xerox.com |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Most FAQ authors have their email address available as a link in the header of the FAQ. For example, here with his full blessing is a link for mail to E.T. Babinski. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I only read the article you wrote on the ICR Museum. From that article, I cannot surmise wether or not you believe in creation or are you simply reporting the facts of the museum as you found them. I would appreciate knowing which one it is. I am a christian and have been to an ICR seminar in Dallas. I found Dr. Gish and the Drs. Morris to be very insightful and I think it's great to know that there are christian scientits out there proving Biblical Creation and Gods word! My kids love their books on the Ice Age and Dinosaurs. I really appreciate the good, Christian material they put out so at least we parents have the option to teach our children Creationism in a scientific format. Thankyou for taking my comment. Feel free to e-mail me back. youngrc |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The
talk.origins FAQ archive aims to provide mainstream
scientific responses to questions and assertions that
appear in the talk.origins newsgroup. The article on a visit to the ICR
museum is simply reporting the facts of the museum as
the author found them. The author is not a creationist.
The proofs of creationism offered by Dr. Gish and Dr. Morris are flawed and do not stand serious examination; nor do they attempt to submit these supposed proofs to scientific journals or conferences for peer review. The following articles in the archive address some of the attempted proofs:
You can find more articles on Dr. Gish and Dr. Morris by using the archive search facility. The archive also provides a list of pro-creationist pages; feel free to browse and compare the information available in the talk.origins archive and these other pages. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I thought that your websight was very interesting, unfourtunately I found it also to be very biased. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thank you for your opinion. Care to supply any reasons why you have come to the conclusion that the web site is biased? Is it because it conflicts with your religious beliefs, or do you have scientific evidence? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Dear
Francisco Toro & Talk/Origins Friends: [...] In
the FIRST place, I do not think my kind of creationism is
fighting any "doomed fight" against biological science. You
see, despite what some scientists (and now even the
Catholic Pope) believe or claim, evolution DOES NOT
"happen". How did life arise? Did molecules RANDOMLY come
together and become proteins? And did proteins randomly
unite and become living cells, complete with the
extraordinarily complex genetic code? In a similar way,
evolution from lower to higher species require massive,
systematic, and simultaneous changes in the genetic code.
Do you seriously believe that something as complex as the
genetic code can be generated or can change AT RANDOM so
that higher species can develop from lower species, as
neo-Darwinists claim? If you toss up in the air or mix in a
big cauldron the words that make up a book, could the book
be obtained anew, or even worse, can a better book be
obtained this way? You do not really think that is
possible, do you? In the SECOND place, neither the "big
bang" theory nor (Swedish scientist) Hannes Alfven's theory
about a mass of "plasma" which exploded provide an adequate
explanation of the origin of the Universe. Either way you
would be assuming that galaxies, our solar system, and our
Earth, are the product of a simple explosion, and that they
are the product of random. To me, such science-fiction-like
tale is not much different from saying that a living cell
can be obtained by mixing its basic components (atoms,
molecules, proteins, genetic code, etc.) in a
well-ventilated cauldron. And to me, neither tale makes a
bit of sense. No matter how you shake it, Francisco, we end
up with only one possible solution: the Universe, the
Earth, life, and us humans, were created by a Superior
Intelligence. [removed discussion of this intelligence:
Ed] Yours truly, Roberto N Mendez / Panama City, Panama. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The
relationship between evolution and chance is often
misunderstood; evolution is nothing like a random mix of
words happening to become organized by chance. It is
certainly not possible for new complex life forms to arise
from nothing more than random changes to genetic codes.
Natural selection is the most important non-random aspect
of evolution leading to adaptive change. This is addressed
in the Evolution and
Chance FAQ.
Also, the big bang was not a simple explosion. It is better thought of as saying that the early universe was very very hot and dense, and that it has been expanding and cooling ever since. The talk.origins archive does not address cosmology in detail, but you may like to explore Introduction to Cosmology Web Site and Ned Wright's Cosmology Tutorial (both offsite). |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Joshua Perlin |
Comment: | This comment is to Eugenie Scott 1)The statement that "creation is the new kid on the block" is, I'm sure you will agree, incorrect. Creationism has been around for thousands of years. 2)Please refrain, if you so desire, from consistently calling creationism "rubbish", "garbage", etc. We are here to discuss, not call names. Obviously both sides disagree with the other. 3)Your statements about how a decent refute to a trite comment takes time can be seen from both sides. You did not consider that the same thing can be said from either view. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
The actual statement made by Eugenie Scott in her FAQ is Creation "science" is the new kid on the block., which is quite true. Belief in the literal truth of the creation stories in Genesis has been a default position for a long time; but it is only a very recent phenomenon to regard the literal meaning as being highly significant, or to attempt a "scientific" justification of their literal truth. The words garbage and rubbish do not appear in Eugenie's FAQ. She does speak of nonsense and error; and in doing do she is not calling anyone names. She is describing the content. You are correct that a refutation from any side may require more time than the comment being refuted; Eugenie Scott's suggestions would go a long way to alleviate this problem for all debaters. However, creationist debaters seem to prefer to avoid such a format. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | As I understand it the speed of light is relative, time is relative to light, is the speed of light constant through out the universe or do you suppose there are other actions that influence this speed, perhaps some we are aquainted with and others we know nothing about? If this is a possibilty then it would most likely change a good deal of the facts and speculations known today. We are just begining our exploration of the universe, how small we might turn out be is truly fascinating. |
Responses | |
From: | |
Author of: | Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field |
Response: |
Creationist arguments in favor of a young earth, based on the alleged time variability of the speed of light, are critiqued in the c-decay FAQ file, and there are numerous other files criticizing various other pro-young-earth arguments. The speed of light in a vacuum is, according to the physics of special relativity, a universal constant. In other words, every observer everywhere, regardless of their state of motion with respect to any other observer, must measure the same absolute speed for light, with the restriction that the motions involved are all inertial, which in turn means at rest or in a straight line at constant speed. To the best of our collective ability to measure this, it has always been verified by observation. The theory which supports this universal speed limit continues to be verified by observation after observation, over the 92 years since it was introduced by Albert Einstein in 1905. There are no reasons that we know of now to doubt the validity of this theory, or the restriction on the speed of light. Prognosticating what new discoveries may lie ahead, including the possiblity that this is wrong, or that there may be a way around the limitation, remains a purely speculative activity. Keep in mind also that the restriction applies only to the speed of light in a vacuum; we know that light slows down when it moves through a medium, such as glass, but this change in velocity [it always slows down, it never speeds up, relative to the speed of light in a vacuum] is not a violation of Einstein's cosmic speed limit. It was because the very successful electromagnetic theory of James Clerk Maxwell implied the constancy of the speed of light, that Einstein adopted it as a postulate, and this required him to introduce the concept that time was relative as well as space. So the relativity of time comes to us as a consequence of the observation of the constancy of the speed of light, and not the other way around.
|
From: | |
Response: | The fact remains that the speed of light has been determined many times, and there is no indication that it is not constant. Your statment has its origins in a creationist argument that assumes a gross change in the speed of light in relatively recent times in order to justify their claim that the universe is only a few thousand years old. There is no evidence to support this patently absurd claim. For details, see Is the Speed of Light Slowing Down? and The Decay of c-decay |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Show me some real proof!!!!!!! if the earth is really millions of years old.. how big would the sun be? you know it shrinks every day... just play it bacwards and that would be one big sun now wouldnt it? just a thought |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Actually, the size of the sun apparently oscillates. The shrinking sun argument is a classic example of misuse of data and a failure to correct mistakes. The archive provides a more detailed response to the shrinking sun argument, and also provides the real proof you request on the age of the Earth. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Maybe you've all forgotten that life arises only from other life. This alone defeats any possibility of biological macro evolution. I think scientists such as Behe just make you angry because they hit so close to your religiously held beliefs. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Evolution
(macro and micro) explains how life develops and
diversifies from other life; it is the creationist
hypothesis that new species are created without biological
precedents which is in conflict with life arising from
other life.
Behe accepts the basic evolutionary principle of common descent. He believes there is an additional mechanism at work which augments accepted evolutionary processes; but the scientific consensus is that he has failed to make his case. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I read your comments on the "worldwide flood" FAQ, and there are some statements that show a basic lack of understanding of the Biblical record. Now, I don't presume to be a scientist, but I am familiar with what the Bible says about the flood account, and you don't have it right, especially concerning how the waters could have covered Mt. Everest, and how could animals have gone from the ends of the earth to go to the ark. A new book has just come out called "Noah's Ark: A Feasability Study" which covers all your big "problems" with the ark. The guy who wrote it IS a scientist, and it answers most, if not all, of your questions on the subject. You can obtain a copy at the "Answers In Genesis" homepage. Of course, if you're not interested in hearing evidence that might not support your position, don't contact them. If you're interested in examining the truth, ring 'em up. (P.S.- How can evolution be a "fact", when it is not observable, repeatable, or testable?) |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The writer
to whom you refer is John Woodmorappe. Actually, this is a
a pseudonym; the author prefers to remain anonymous, which
makes checking his scientific credentials difficult. He
does have masters degree in geology. The "Answers in
Genesis" web page can be found from our links
collection. You can also find the following relevant
reviews in this archive:
Those interested are welcome to read and compare the views expressed. Finally, evolution is observable and observed; the observations are repeatable and repeated; and it has been passing tests with flying colours now for over a century. This is addressed in the Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution FAQ, and also in many other files available in the archive. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Mr. T |
Comment: | To Whom It May Concern, I found your site very interesting, and the "flat earth" comments amusing. I realize the problems inheirant in science & advancement of any kind. But it beats ignorance any day. The so-called "proof" offered by these people is a sad attempt to cling to an era, which, for better or worse, is gone forever.Thanks for making an engaging website! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | The articles posted in the FAQ page seem to presuppose the fact of evolution. The problem with this is that the evidences do not prove evolution any more than they prove creationism. Take the fossil record and archeology findings that have pointed to a global flood and substantiated biblical "stories". The other problem is that if Adam did not commit the original sin, then it follows that the remainder of the bible is for not. The Old Testament is a foreshadowing and prophetic announcement of the coming of the mesiah, Jesus Christ. And the New Testament is that fulfillment. Jesus and the desciples often referred to Old Testament people and places in factual context. Deists seem to want to serve God, but not fully accept His word. Some important scriptures to consider: "All scripture is God breathed and usefull for teaching, rebuking, and correcting." 2 Tim 3:16 "Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear." Heb 11:3 Great page and God Bless. James |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The archive provides a wealth of information and evidence supporting the fact of evolution. It is certainly not a simple presupposition. The fossil record conclusively disproves a global flood. Most Christian denominations recognize that the story of the original sin (with a tree of life, a tree of knowledge, a talking serpent, and a God walking in the garden while man and woman hide) is not a historical account but a symbolic story. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | The name of your site is a misnomer since there is no more controversy about the origins of man. The extremely small minority of "religious" zealots do not a controversy make. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | To be pedantic, there is plenty of healthy controversy concerning the origins of humanity going on within mainstream science; but I take your point that the creationists have nothing to offer in this area. Be that as it may, there is plenty of controversy outside mainstream science, and many sincere and confused people who are getting conflicting messages from different sources. This archive seeks to provide information that directly addresses the common misconceptions in a form that can be checked and verified. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Re: "Age of the Earth" I would recommend deleting "the" from Earth. Referring to "the Earth" harks back to biblical myth, as in "the heavens and the earth." Using just a capitalized "Earth" fits our planet in with the others: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, etc. In the same vein, I recommend the use of "humanity" instead of "mankind" or "humankind," again because of biblical allusions. And, yes, you may use my name if you elect to publish this comment. |
Response | |
From: | Chris Stassen |
Author of: | The Age of the Earth |
Response: | Thanks for the suggestion. Actually, the two main reasons why I used the "the" are: (1) it's the common usage in the existing literature, both creationist and not (e.g., Brent Dalrymple's excellent book, The Age of the Earth, which is referenced in that FAQ); and (2) it seems to help folks differentiate between soil ("Earth," as it would be capitalized in a title) and the whole planet ("the Earth"). I wouldn't want anyone to think that the FAQ was about the age of dirt. :-) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have one question that I don`t seem to be able to find in your arcive. I have been asked to explane the sudden burst of life in early cambrien rocks. What does the thoery of evolution say to have happened? Or is this just anouther creationist lie? Could you reply and point me in the right direction as where I could find an answer in your arcive. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Archaeopteryx FAQs |
Response: | What most
people think of as the "Cambrian Explosion" is, in actual
fact, not a sudden burst of life, but a rapid increase in
the number of fossils found in the fossil record. This is
because around this time organisms started to mineralize
their exoskeletons using the abundant calcium and carbonate
from the surrounding seawater. Previously to this,
organisms had entirely organic exoskeletons similar to many
insects today. This type of exoskeleton is not easily
preserved and usually decays too rapidly to survive as a
fossil. The much tougher mineralized exoskeletons preserved
far better, resulting in a large increase in the number of
fossils.
The second claim usually made about the "Cambrian Explosion" is that most if not all of the major animal groups came into existance at this time. This claim is not correct. It is almost certain that such major groups as annelids (worms), cnidarian (corals and jellyfish), gastropods (snails) and probably arthropods have a pre-Cambrian history. It should be pointed out that almost all pre-Cambrian fossils have no hard parts such as mineralized exoskeletons, and as such they are very unlikely to be preserved. While there was a rapid (over a 5-10 million year period) diversification of animal life during the "Cambrian Explosion", this was a diversification from an already existing stem stock of organisms, which were soft bodied and thus underrepresented in the fossil record. What we see in the fossil record are representatives of all the major groups which possess mineralized body parts. This record funnels back to the Early Cambrian where most of the groups apparently disappear. This disappearance does not represent the origin of the group, as some would suggest, but the origin of mineralized hard parts. The groups continue to exist below their occurrence in the fossil record, but they appear to be absent because they have no hard parts and are not fossilised. The "Cambrian Explosion" represents what we call a taphanomic boundary, that is, it represents a large increase in the chances of organisms to be fossilised (by having hard parts) and hence appear in the fossil record. It does not represent the origin of those groups. Chris |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | It is no longer possible to post to this group via deja.news. This is because the talk.origins is now moderated and deja.news does not post to moderated groups. Is it possible to post via some other means? Thanks in advance. Edmundo |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field |
Response: | I have asked the folks at DejaNews if there were not some way around this, but they show little interest in modifying the policy, and seem to think that their programmers can't handle the task of exceptions in the filter that blocks moderated groups. You can post to talk.origins through the service Reference.Com [now defunct]. They do not block moderated groups, but their online database is not as complete as that of DejaNews. [Tim's response, while true in 1997, is now dated. One can now indeed post to talk.origins via Google Groups which what the DejaNews now called.] |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Apropos of your little investigative piece on "creationists of questionable credentials," it seems noteworthy that few discrepancies were unearthed. I see on the ICR Home Page that most of their faculty and adjunct faculty hold advanced degrees from major state universities including my alma mater, I.U., where I earned my B.A. in geology. ICR also stipulates that their faculty will consist of men who maintain standards of high moral character. This is certainly refreshing to learn after considering the lives of Dr. Sagan and Dr. Louis B. who both had a penchant for shedding wives and taking on new ones without any hint of remorse. Such lifestyles give one pause when asked to accept, unreservedly, their expertise and judgment on such fundamentally important issues as evolution and creation. |
Response | |
From: | the editor |
Response: | The point of the Suspicious Creationist Credentials article was not to claim that no creationists have valid degrees from reputable institutions (for indeed many do!). Rather, the point was to show that several prominent creationists, who hold themselves up as scientific authorities, do not possess the kinds of credentials they claim for themselves. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | The introduction to evolution could be too recondite. I think it jumps too quickly into the details of genes. I think you need a simplier transition from bones to genes for beginners. If you could please explain that evolution has gone beyond similarities in bones to similarities in genes. People need to understand that as we decode DNA we will actually be able to see an evolutionary tree using genes. The introduction spoke of homology and mutations but I don't know if a non scientist will be able to make the leap in understanding: that an evolutionary tree will be visable when we compare species genetic makeup. We need to make clear, there exists an overlap of common genes and within these shared genes, alleles exist demonstrating that slight variations occur helping to pin point a distinct order.....an evolutionary order. Too many people hear the word mutation and genetic change and believe that it is simply an attempt to reinforce the monkey-human connection. I think too many people miss the point that evolution can be seen through genetic inheritance alone, no bones needed. (Don't miss interrupt me, the article is good just a little cranial for beginners) Sincerely, Angela Biggs |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I would like to make a comment on the way you address creationist. I feel that even though what you say is true you do happen to be fairly harsh. Yes I know that in many cases they warrant this kind of treatment but I feel that by doing so we are sinking down to their level. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | People have different views on this; but in general I agree with you. What is puzzling, however, is that your feedback is flagged from the Stumper Questions for Creationists file, which is deliberately expressed in mild and unabrasive terms. If you have more specific criticisms on the tone of this or any other FAQ, please do let us know. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Your article on Scientific Creationism and Error does a commendable job of pointing up the human foibles that are found even in the fraternity of those dedicate to things scientific. There is a verse in the Bible which says that "iron sharpeneth iron," and another which cautions that a man's fellow will come and "search him out" or pick and probe, dissect and analyze, and bring to light any error in his ideas or methodologies. This, of course, is the legitimate exercise of the scientific method. (And, again, note that the Bible itself acknowledges this.) In all fairness, though, creationists aren't the only ones who have made extravagant claims, or who ended up with egg on their faces. Your article could be fleshed out a thousand times over with instances of bodacious and ridiculous assertions made by evolutionists, and just ordinary every-day scientists. We all admittedly have our biases (I think yours are fairly well manifested on these pages!) and we are dealing with the analysis and interpretation of artifacts and complex biological systems which are still matters of great mystery to us all. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Indeed it is true that scientists make mistakes. However, good scientists always acknowledge their errors when they have been clearly demonstrated. Duane Gish, on the other hand, when met with proof that his claims were the opposite of factual, prefers instead to evade and dissemble. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I've come across an excellent article by Baghwan Sri Bazooka (a non de plume if ever I've heard one), which superbly confronts creation "science" fundamentalists with a logical apparaisal of Genesis. It's at Creation for Beginners. Check it out: it's priceless! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thank you! There is a new link to this site from our extensive links collection. We are always interested in good links, from any perspective; there is a simple form on this links page which you can use to send us more references. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Another argument against the flood is mitochondiral DNA. This genetic tool can be used to "look" back in time and tell the relative age and numbers of a founding population of a species. If the flood theory is true every species studied would indicate an extremly small founding population (2) which existed relatively recently in evolutionary time. This is not the case. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Yes, this is good suggestion. It is addressed briefly in the Problems with a Global Flood FAQ in more general terms as How do you explain the genetic variation in all populations today?. As a minor point, note that mitochondrial DNA is passed almost (not quite) exclusively through the female line, and so it could not be used to identify a pair of ancestors; and that the flood story allows for seven pairs of ritually clean animals. This does not affect the main point, which is that a global population bottle neck implied by the flood story would require an impossibly large amount of evolution to give rise to the diversity observable today. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Fantastic web site! Just a query regarding dating. I can understand the carbon-dating story which is used for relatively recent dates, and where isotopes of carbon are only incorporated during the life of the organism, and thereafter decay at roughly determinable rates. I have, however, two questions with regard to isotope dating of rocks. Firstly, how are the original (i.e. exhisting when the rocks formed) relative quantities of the isotopes determined? Secondly, what about 'rocks' that predated the formation of the planet (and didn't go through an igneous phase) - are there any around, and if so, is it possible to date them? |
Response | |
From: | Chris Stassen |
Author of: | The Age of the Earth |
Response: | There is a
lot of discussion of initial isotopic composition in the Isochron
Dating FAQ.
Nobody has ever found a terrestrial rock that "predated" the Earth -- the oldest Earth rocks ever found are more than 500 million years younger than the planet itself. The evidence suggests that the entire surface of the Earth was once molten, and therefore we wouldn't expect any such rocks to have survived. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I've just finished reading the Ross/Gish debate with much amusement. I was hoping to find an interesting discourse between two intelligent individuals about the origins of the universe; but what I found, was beyond the absurd. Mr. Gish's complete rejection of the scientific model of the universe is ludicrous and deserves no further comment. Equally amusing is Ross' unflattering attempt to interject a supernatural explanation for the origins of the universe via the Big Bang. Ross wants to have his proverbial cake and eat it too. That is, as an astronomer by profession, Mr. Ross makes use of the scientific method to explain the principles of the universe yet he clings to a primitive myth as to the origins of life. His rejection of evolution proves that he employs the scientific method only when its convenient for him to do so. How can one believe in the natural progression (evolution as Gish, correctly, pointed out) of the universe and totally dismiss the same principle as it applies to life? The scientific model of the universe gives us the only rational explanation of reality-- with each archeological discovery, the theory of evolution comes closer to fact just as the discoveries of astrophysics continue to support the Big Bang. There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever supporting a divine or supernatural influence in the natural world. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thank you for your feedback. You may also like to read a transcript of the Gish/Saladin debate (offsite); at least there you may find one intelligent individual. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I am trying to track down a reference I saw on the talk.origins newsgroup a couple of years ago. The observations discussed were of the expanding fever of brightness surrounding a nova as radiation from the stellar explosion caused a gas cloud to luminesce. The basic idea of the discussion was that the expanding sphere of brightness was timed as it expanded, enabling a rather direct measurement of the diameter of the sphere. Since the speed of light is constant the absolute diameter of the sphere could be easily calculated. By measuring the apparent size of the sphere, that is, the angle, simple trigonometry permitted easy calculation of the distance to the remote nova and hence, the exact distance to the nova, yielding in turn, the age of the nova. I would like to be able to cite a specific reference to this observation, but cannot. Do you remember the discussion? Thanks in advance, |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Punctuated Equilibria |
Response: | Dave Knapp
provided some references... From: dk@imager (Dave Knapp) Since the distance to SN1987A has recently come up, and since I am the one who (as far as I know) first introduced it into the creation/evolution debate, I decided it was time to actually go out and get some decent references. The reference I originally had was: "Ring Around SN1987A Supernova Provides a New Yardstick," Physics Today, Feb. 1991 p. 20. This work has now appeared in a peer-reviewed journal: "Properties of the SN1987A Circumstellar Ring and the Distance to the Large Magellanic Cloud," by N. Panagia et al., Astrophysical Journal _380_, L23-L26 (1991). Using a ring of material surrounding the supernova remnant, the distance was geometrically determined to be 51.2 +/- 3.1 kpc, or about 167,000 ly with an error of about 6%. Unfortunately for young-Earth creationists, the error makes it essentially impossible to support a decaying-speed-of-light argument. There are a few other related articles for the obsessively interested: Fransson et al., Ap. J. _336_, 429-441 (1989) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | In response to this: Lord Kelvin deduced in 1862 that the absolute age of the earth was no more than 400 million years old - too little time for evolution to have generated all of the life we see on earth today. Lord Kelvin attempted to figure out the age of the earth by using Fourier's theory of heat conduction. In order to use the theory, however, he had to make four assumptions: "first, the [earth] must be a solid...; second, it must have constant thermal conductivity and heat capacity throughout; third, it must have been initially all at the same high temperature, surrounded by an infinite space at a lower temperature; fourth, no heat is generated or destroyed anywhere in the system"(Brush, 1983, 56). As it turns out, all four assumptions were mistaken - the earth has a liquid core, the thermal conductivity and heat capacity of the earth's interior are different than that of the crust, it is possible that the earth was formed by the aggregation of cold particles, and radioactive elements in the earth produc e substantial heat (Brush, 1983, 58-59). Thus, Kelvin's results were entirely false, and one must look to more reliable tests - such as radioisotope dating - to determine the age of the earth. To this I say, you have taken Kelvin's estimates completely out of context. What you have failed to mention in your statement is that Kelvin was pressured by the Christian church to keep his findings in line. The world was not prepared to accept astronomically large figures. In fact, as the people became more open to his discoveries, he expanded that number of 400 million years first to 20 billion years and then to 100 billion years. He knew that the common, Christian man would not understand the truth, and would be biased by a preset creationist notion. In order to gain long term followers, he estimated with an extremely small number (given his findings) and then slowly proceeded to enlarge that number as society became less close-minded. If you choose to use his centuries-old and very primitive (in comparison to today) estimates, at least have the good taste to tell the whole story: of how those estimates were enlarged, and of the fact that the very reason those estimates were small is because of people and organizations like this one. For reference, please examine either Carl Sagan's book "Broca's Brain" or James Trefil's book "Reading the Mind of God: In Search of the Principle of Universality." |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | I am afraid
you are mistaken about Lord Kelvin. In is initial estimate,
done in 1862, Kelvin (then Thompson) states:
". . but I think we may with much probability say that the consolidation cannot have taken place less than 20,000,000 years ago, or we should have more underground heat than we actually have, nor more than 400,000,000 years ago, or we should not have so much as the least observable underground increment of temperature." (Thompson 1862, p. 159) In his last comment on this issue, in 1897, Lord Kelvin states: ". . to form a closer estimate of the time which has passed since the consolidation of the earth, and we have now good reason for judging that it was more than 20,000 000 and less than 40,000,000 years ago, and probably much nearer 20 than 40. (Kelvin 1897, p. 345) Thus, Kelvin actually DECREASED his estimates with time, not increased them! Chris Thompson, W. (1862) On the secular coolin of the Earth. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 23: 157-159. Kelvin, Lord (1897) The age of the Earth as an abode fitted for life. Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1897: 337-357. |