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The Talk.Origins Archive: Exploring the Creation/Evolution Controversy

Feedback for June 1997

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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.

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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.
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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.
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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.

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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?
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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).

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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.

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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.

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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
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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.
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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.

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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.

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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.
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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.
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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. :-)
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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

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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.]
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.

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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.
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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response: Dave Knapp provided some references...

From: dk@imager (Dave Knapp)
Subject: SN1987A Distance
Date: 15 Jul 1993 23:23:00 GMT
Message-ID: <224osk$g44@lll-winken.llnl.gov>

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)
Crotts, Kunkel, and McCarthy, Ap. J. _347_, L61-L64 (1989)
Bond et al., Ap. J. _354_, L49-L52 (1990)
Jakobsen et al., Ap. J. _369_, L63-L66 (1991)

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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.

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