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

Feedback for March 2003

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I've heard that it takes all kinds...

It gives me a special warm fuzziness to be a part of getting the reader in touch with his feelings.

Wesley

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Response: The site is Jesus, Dinosaurs and More!, and the fish page is "See why Fish could not have Evolved into Amphibians". This site is already on our enormous list of links to creationist sites.

In the talkorigins archive, the Sept 2002 POTM addresses fish fossils and the Coelacanth; and the Transitional Fossils FAQ has a section on Transition from primitive bony fish to amphibians.

The page you list contains two serious and related errors. Specifically, it states that the Coelacanth did not evolve, and it assumes that evolution should have the same effect on different species.

Modern coelacanths are quite distinct from their ancient ancestors. They belong to a lineage which had once been thought to have gone extinct about 65 million years ago (around the time of the great dinosaur mass extinction), and in the popular press this is frequently and erroneously presented as meaning that they are the same as ancient forms.

The first amphibians date from over 300 million years ago. That is, we already knew that coelacanths represent a distinct branch of the great evolutionary tree, evolving alongside the amphibians.

The rhipidistians are indeed considered a likely ancestor to the amphibians. They most likely had lungs; as did the coelacanth ancestors 300 million years ago. The coelacanth lineage evolved to fit a deep water niche (and they no longer have lungs), whereas the lineage leading to amphibians evolved for a terrestrial niche. Modern coelacanths are quite similar to fossils from 75 million years ago (though not identical), but overall their lineage shows considerable evolutionary change.

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Response: The following files in the archive are probably the most relevant to your question:
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Response: The following articles might also be of interest:
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Response: If you liked The Economist you might like Pravda -- Evolution Theory: Who Is Lying? even better!

In The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex Darwin spent 3/4 of the book presenting many hypotheses on sexual selection. Just among birds he pointed out several cases where larger female size and brighter plumage may have been selected for (the males being dull-plumaged incubators).

In my reading of Darwin I did not get the impression that he claimed sexual selection was of universal application. Ever since Darwin the relative importance of this form of selection has been debated within science.

The news stories came out of the AAAS meeting. This is the original press release: Sex and gender scientists explore a revolution in evolution. Unfortunately, I cannot find online any posters or abstracts of all the papers.

One of the attendees commented: "This may be better viewed as a refinement of Darwinian theory, rather than a revolution."

On the other hand, one of the presenters has a book coming out soon, and a little controversy is not always a bad thing.

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Response: This statement, "life cannot arise from nonliving matter," is an oversimplification of the theory of spontaneous generation, which was finally laid to rest in the mid-1800s by Louis Pasteur. Spontaneous generation supposed that given the right conditions of rotting organic matter, and warmth, new species or individuals of an existing species would arise from nothing. The most commonly expected spontaneous generators were worms, maggots and mice. Pasteur showed that, for instance, maggots came not from the meat itself, but from the eggs of flies laid in the meat. See A Visit to the Institute for Creation Research--Part 7 for more history on spontaneous generation.

Spontaneous generation is not the same as the study of abiogenesis, which investigates how the chemical precursors to life organized themselves into replicating molecules, primitive organisms, and eventually cells. See our articles on abiogenesis.

It appears that this question was answered in the February 1998, June 1999, July 1999, September 1999, November 1999, January 2000, and January 2002 feedbacks. I would advise all our readers to first use the search facility, conveniently found at the top and bottom of this page, to see if a question has already been answered on this site.

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Response: I am afraid that I cannot respond in much detail to your comments, since I cannot decipher the article to which you are specifically referring. I searched the site for the phrase "mean-spirited," and was only able to find three references, none of which were referring to any works by creationists. I should also point out that there is no "writer of this site," as this archive is based on the contributions of many authors.

I must admit I am quite confused by your statement that this site is judgmental and opinionated instead of being purely factual. For one, it seems to me that this site provides many facts, and more importantly, references to the primary literature where you can read about the facts for yourself. For another, I am not sure it is inappropriate to be judgmental and opinionated, when--and this is the catch--those judgments and opinions are based upon facts. That seems to me to be much of the point of science, to reach conclusions based upon the systematic examination of evidence. Science, in my opinion, really does have right answers and wrong answers, and no amount of sugar-coating or wishful thinking can turn one into the other.

Thank you for visiting this site, and I hope that you will return to explore further.

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Response: Articles on this archive should avoid being mean spirited or rude. New submissions with such defects are likely to be rejected or revised.

I am sorry you had a less than satisfactory experience. If anyone has complaints about articles in the archive, please indicate in feedback what file you mean. Critical feedback is appreciated, but without specifics we can't do much about it.

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Response: (1) Your post will not be censored. Others may learn from it.

(2) The existance of God is not an issue. Some of your claims might be.

(3) You asked " if both the poles melted do you think there would be any land unsubmerged ??"

The poles will not melt. However, if all the ice on earth were to melt (near the poles, Greenland ice cap, other glaciers) the total rise in sea level would be approximately 130 meters (less than 450 feet). The vast majority of land would remain above sea level, even though inundation would be devastating to many islands and low-lying areas. This has happened in the past, and no doubt will happen again in the future.

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Response: Everything you might want to know (and likely much more) regarding Hovind can probably be found through our Kent Hovind FAQs page.
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Response: So, Rubystars is queen for a month. Did you notice the following?

"Each month the Talk.Origins Archive selects an article posted to the Usenet newsgroup talk.origins that comes closest to capturing what the newsgroup is all about. Whether that article is written by an evolutionist or a creationist, the Talk.Origins Archive Post of the Month should give you a taste of what it's like to participate in talk.origins. You can nominate a talk.origins post by replying to it with the phrase "POTM nomination" somewhere in the subject line."

I suspect that many people vote with their heart and, of course, they may also relate to the personal testimony of others. Knowing Wendy (Rubystars) from having spent many hours talking to her in a chatroom, I think her January post reflects the facts of her personal journey.

Having given numerous anti-evolutionists a link to her website, as an example of how a theistic evolutionist manages to handle faith AND science, I can tell you that it does help the cause. That is, if "the cause" is to help others to deal with the facts.

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Response: Thanks for your interest in the archive!

Copyright for articles remains with the individual authors, and they should really be contacted individually for permission to reproduce. There is no formal organization for the archive as a single group, and there is no scope, as I understand the matter, for a blanket permission to be granted.

However, I am not sure what you are proposing. The archive is already on the web, and many of the important files are already available in pdf, in particular most of the Must Read FAQs. The indexing and site map could stand some improvement to give easier access to the pdf files.

There is also a problem in that files in the archive do get modified from time to time, to correct errors, to keep up with progress in the field, or to link to other relevant information which has become available. The pdf files sometimes lag behind the html versions, and this problem would be exacerbated if the files are archived elsewhere.

Many FAQs already grant permission for non-comercial and education use; see the headers of the files to check. Actually placing the files on the web again in a new location, however, seems a bit beside the point and of little benefit.

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Response: Velikovsky is peripheral to the main topic of this group; however in the early days of the archive there was a certain amount of interest in his ideas and so there is a fairly large section of the archive on Catastrophism; including a very old FAQ specifically addressing the many problems in Velikovsky's book Worlds in Collision.

Also, Earth in Upheaval is listed in the Book Recommendations.

Basically, almost nothing Velikovsky actually predicted for Venus has been confirmed. For an indirect consideration, see Is Venus Young. It was written mainly in respond to Ted Holden, whose enthusiastic and often hilarious defense of Velikovsky was the main spur to development of this part of the archive.

A Google search of the talk.origins group will turn up a lot of discussion of Velikovsky's alleged predictions back around 1994 or so. Some of my favourites include his predictions that Venus would be populated with vermin, that Venus would be rich in petroleum gases, that Venus will be noticeably cooling, and that Venus' brightness is due in part to incandescence.

Velikovsky was remarkably ignorant about Venus when he first published. Attempts to resuscitate his ideas in less ludicrous forms have remained ludicrous.

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: It has been on the list of RFF (Request for FAQs) for a very long time, but, as you note, a specialist is needed to write it. Consider this: apart from the Protestant views of Genesis, one need to cover also the Catholic, patristic, Talmudic, and Muslim interpretations. And each of these have several variant forms, as well as over time. It's a big task. A theology student might be able to do a part of this, but overall, it's a lot of work.

And Genesis is not really the issue here. Evolution is a scientific topic; the problem Genesis poses for science is non-existent. What relevance Genesis has is gained via those who think that it is a source of scientific knowledge, for whatever reason. Science and religion mostly have an agreement - science won't try to deliver morality or theology, and religion won't try to deliver science or facts about the natural world. In the end, opposition to evolution comes directly from those who will not respect that division of labor; and it doesn't much matter if it is on the basis of Genesis, the Q'uran or the Upanishads.

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Response: I am not surprised by the sneering tone of one who appears to have as his professor someone like Harun Yahya. If this is your path to education in science you ought to become aware of the following:

Harun Yahya (or his acolytes at that website) frequently rush onto one of their webpages diatribes against science. It appears that they do so based on popular media reports and without troubling themselves to read the underlying scientific publications.

In the case you have cited they provide a total of five references. The first two are to news sources (one at CNN is now unavailable, the other at New Scientist is). Had they bothered to follow up on the link provided by New Scientist thay might at least have seen and cited the abstract of the paper by Roy J. Britten in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences:

PNAS -- Abstracts: Britten 99 (21): 13633

"Five chimpanzee bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) sequences (described in GenBank) have been compared with the best matching regions of the human genome sequence to assay the amount and kind of DNA divergence. The conclusion is the old saw that we share 98.5% of our DNA sequence with chimpanzee is probably in error. For this sample, a better estimate would be that 95% of the base pairs are exactly shared between chimpanzee and human DNA. In this sample of 779 kb, the divergence due to base substitution is 1.4%, and there is an additional 3.4% difference due to the presence of indels. The gaps in alignment are present in about equal amounts in the chimp and human sequences. They occur equally in repeated and nonrepeated sequences, as detected by Repeatmasker."

Britten analyzed less than one million base pairs of DNA sequence out of ~3.2 billion base pairs, or less than 1 in 3,200 of total DNA. It is an interesting study that confirms the ~1.4% difference between humans and chimps found in several other studies. However, Britten also discusses the differences in Indels (inserts and deletions) and "junk" DNA which is yet another kind of comparison. Doing so is controversial, as will be noted below.

To date, among mammals, only the Human and Mouse genomes have been decoded, and the actual work with both of these is far from complete. It will be at least several years before chimp and human genomes are "finished" so that a full comparison of all actual genes may be made. In numerous studies to-date, based on the analysis of varying amounts and types of DNA, including the study by Britten, roughly comparable results have been obtained. When full genomes of many species are available for detailed study, it will hardly matter what the percentage of differences are IF the geneological relationships are determined to be what we now think they are.

Carl Zimmer addresses this issue as well as the controversy over including Indel and junk DNA in such calculations. See his essay Searching for Your Inner Chimp which appeared in Natural History for December 2002 - January 2003.

Please also consider the fact that "news reports" often strive to make news, and not simply to report it. Compare the following two statements:

CNN: "Humans, chimps more different than thought" (According to Harun Yahya).

Britten: "We're not any more different than we were," says Britten. "But we see a bit more divergence than before because insertions and deletions are taken into account. It almost triples the difference."

Finally, the expression "more unique" requires no comment. But I couldn't resist.

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Response: Your assertion that you cannot have life from non-life is unsubstantiated.

Once you accept that the bible is not strict literal history (which you can see at once in the matter of Earth's great age) you may see that the biblical creation stories speak of life from non-life; of living creatures from the earth, and of mankind from dust. I am presuming that you are a Christian, even though this is not mentioned in your feedback. Sorry if I assume too much. Note that science does not know exactly how life originated; though there is some useful progress on plausible models.

As for humans and apes, our Fossil Hominids FAQ lists 19 hominid species, and gives a quick sample of the important fossils involved in their identification. What you choose to call human is a rather subjective choice, but there are at least two obviously ancient human species, which are not modern at all, and the others are at varying degrees of difference from modern humans and earlier non-human ancestors.

The archive also has a wonderful FAQ on contrasting views of six prominent creationists on six fossils from Homo erectus and Homo habilis. All agree that the fossils are either clearly ape, or clearly human. None agree on which is which; although as a general rule, you can make a good transitional series by sorting the fossils in order of the number of creationists who classify them as human.

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Response: Welcome to the archive, Andrew. You will find a lot of information here, but it can all be rather overwhelming, and some is quite technical. This website does already back up the debate and its views with considerable detail and copious references to primary scientific literature. A starting point is our list of Must Read files.

Your request is very general; and I am trying to think what is most likely to be useful or of interest for your school classes. One great website with lots of images and good information is the Museum of Paleontology at the University of Berkeley. There are beautiful and well organized virtual exhibits of all kinds of ancient life forms.

There is also their Evolution Wing, which I commend to your attention.

And, just for interest, this talkorigins archive is listed as one of their favourite places to look for further information!

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Response: We could indeed put this in our FAQs. And we have. Long ago.

Since you were (correctly) sure that we had heard of Kent Hovind, before sending feedback like this, you might try using our search facility to see if we had already answered your question. That goes for everyone, by the way.

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Response: Many readers of this website are not Americans, and even many Americans are not familiar with "doing the dozens" or other insulting forms of sport.

Besides, it probably is not the best way to win friends or influence people.

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Take a look in a kaleidoscope sometime. All you need is a line of symmetry and a little random noise to generate quite elaborate patterns -- no Designer or even a designer needed.

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Response: The computer genius, in fact the guy who came up with the idea of computers well before the technology was available to make them, Alan Turing proposed an idea he called "morphogenesis" in which gradients of biological chemicals diffusing through the developing embryo over time could generate patterns easily. These rely, we know now, on genetic signals which can vary slightly and, under the influence of natural selection or sexual selection, end up generating the amazing array of patterns we see on the wings of butterflies and so forth. Here is an example from an excellent online text on developmental biology - the figure comes from section 3.3.

Turing was once asked if he could generate the patterns on a zebra this way. "Yes," he reportedly replied, "but the whole horse is harder." Of interest is that the inventor of the idea of a computer never chose to characterize genes as computer programs. He also explained phyllotaxis (the spirals that develop on plants, particularly in some flowers) this way

Patterns are, as Paul noted, easy to generate; they are the outcome of a symmetry of some kind and the usual noise of the physical world. We find it easy to see patterns in things because we are pattern recognizers; we have entire parts of the brain devoted to facial recognition and so forth. What is surprising about patterns in the world is not that they are there, but that after you eliminate what we humans tend to over-recognize, that any remain at all. Turing's solution is one explanation for this and recent work in developmental biology backs him up entirely.

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Response: Please remember the hypothetical nature of this discussion. Generally speaking, your hypothesis sounds reasonable to me. However, your initial premise, based on a single gene mutation, does not. The evolution of a prehensile tail would appear to me to be the kind of novelty that would be called macroevolution. We would almost surely look upon such a change as a significant generic character, and the animal would be placed in a new genus.

Nature has already accomplished this in Prehensile Tailed Monkeys of the Genus Ateles. These New World monkeys differ significantly from their closest primate relatives in musculature, having a roughened hairless pad at the tip of the tail, and in other characters.

I'm just guessing, but I'd bet a number of genes, perhaps many, differ both within the genus and between Ateles and their genetic neighbors. A Google search turned up these two .pdf files which provide information on Platyrrhine Systematics and an analysis of genetic distances (based on accumulated mutations) in a study of Alouatta mtDNA combined data, using Ateles and Brachyteles as outgroups.

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Response: Thanks for your feedback on this point. Legibility is always an issue, since if the documents cannot be read, they cannot be understood.

We have been undertaking a campaign (slowly but surely) to make the archive pages as accessible as possible, through the use of standards such as stylesheets and XML. One of the primary contributors to this Archive, Tero Sand, was a quadraplegic who used a mouth control to access the Internet, so accessibility is and should continue to be a goal of this archive.

That said, I would like to point out that most modern Web browsers give users the ability to change the fonts and colors on the Web pages viewed. For instance, I am currently using Internet Explorer 5.5 on Windows 2000; under the "Tools" menu, one can select "Internet Options," which has buttons for "Fonts" and "Colors" that allow a user to change these options, and an "Accesibility" button that lets a user override the choices made by a Web site. If you have a different browser, try looking through that browser's "Options" or "Preferences" selections, or look the topic up in the browser's online help. Your mileage may vary.

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Response: The stories of Darwin having doubts about evolution near the end of his life are entirely false. The stories are apparently a fantasy deliberately invented by a Christian evangelist, Lady Hope.

We most certainly would not say that as a non believer in creation, there can't be any other answer than evolution. That gives entirely the incorrect impression, in two important ways. First, many evolutionsts do believe in creation; they just do not believe Genesis is a literal account of events in history. Second, evolution stands on its own, as the clear implication of all evidence; not as a kind of default alternative. There were several other competing models proposed by scientists back in the early days, and Darwin's model was the one which became accepted, because it was the one which was supported by the evidence.

The evidence for evolution is extensive and unambiguous; have a look in the archive. Some other feedback this month lists a few especially relevant files on evidence.

There have been drastic changes over six million years, if you accept the origins of humanity as a drastic change. Yes we are perfectly obviously still very similar in form to the great apes. Even the word "ape" means "imitate"; they were called apes because they were so much like humans.

In short, you are intimately related to all of life, and your rejection of your relatives is ill founded.

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Response: Wow! A scientist said "they should have left it in the ground." Well, some scientists have a sense of humor after all!

Professor Burnham suggests: "This statement underscores the fact that Darwinism is a vigorously maintained firewall against scientific objectivity," and "I have seen too many examples of "cover up the truth."

Did the professor read the paper published in Science on 5 July 2002 or the many "publication for laymen" cited at the bottom of this FAQ Fossil Hominids: Skull D2700.

Science follows the evidence wherever it leads, even when new facts require that old hypotheses be re-examined. Tongue-in-cheek humor over the possible implications of a new discovery is an indication of humility, not a coverup. The folks who found the fossil bought a lot of champaigne to celebrate their discovery. Then they analyzed and reported the facts so that other scientists could argue over their interpretations of those facts.

This is cause for yet more celebration. Care to join the party?

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Response: What would you expect at a website that makes the claim that: "Macroevolution would be seen when the number of chromosomes changed within a genetic continuum. This has NEVER been observed in nature."

This is utter nonsense. Polyploidy is well known in plants and in tree frogs. Variations of it (giving a variety of new chromosome counts) is known in Appalachian salamanders and many other species/genera. A Google search on Jefferson Salamander will yield interesting information. This FAQ provides more information on polyploidy and other forms of Speciation.

I suspect that the author of that website well knows that very few of the readers inclined to believe him will do any research.

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1) Frogs with legs sticking out of their heads (although, strictly speaking, I haven't seen that specific error) aren't the result of mutations. They are typically a consequence of developmental errors, often due to teratogens in their environment.

2) Ever watched a cat lick itself clean? How about visiting a farm and taking a look at the backside of a few cows and sheep?

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Response: I think you mean frogs with extra legs sticking out of their backside. This is probably not due to a mutation.

However, the common phenomenon of cats with extra toes is due to mutation.

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Response: Answers in Genesis are correct. Archaeoraptor was a deliberate hoax, and the two fossils were not pushed together by nature.

Archaeoraptor burst into the public eye with a front page coverage in the November 1999 issue of National Geographic, before normal scientific review had been conducted. It was publically queried as a fake within days, and officially recognized as a fake by all concerned within a few months. National Geographic, rightly, is horribly embarrassed by the fiasco.

The story of events leading up to publication is told in "Archaeoraptor Fossil Trail" by Lewis M. Simons, in the National Geographic October 2000 issue. Simons was given the task by the magazine editors of finding out just how and why National Geographic went so horribly wrong. His report makes amazing reading. Simons describes it thus:

It's a tale of misguided secrecy and misplaced confidence, of rampant egos clashing, self-aggrandizement, wishful thinking, naive assumptions, human error, stubbornness, manipulation, backbiting, lying, corruption, and, most of all, abysmal communication.

Basically, the fossil was not found by scientists, but was found as two fossils and combined into one by farmers and/or fossil dealers in China. It was sold at a bazaar-style gem and mineral show in the USA to the owner of a small dinosaur museum in Utah; who then contacted a paleontologist friend for help in writing a scientific paper, who in turn contacted National Geographic.

But when the paleontologist first saw the fossil in March, he immediately suspected it was not quite right. Somehow, however, his concerns failed to get through to the magazine. Papers on the find were sent to both Nature and Science, which are major peer reviewed journals; and they were rejected. Concerns being felt by those involved failed to be adequately shared. National Geographic, which had been acting on the assumption that the fossil would have been reported in the scientific literature before their own release, was left out on a limb; a limb which came crashing down almost as soon as the magazine hit the newstands.

It would be churlish to blame the Chinese finders and dealers for this hoax. They generally receive only a fraction of what fossils are really worth. The aim of the original constructor of the composite was quite likely not simply to deceive, but to present material with the best possible appearance for market.

Creationists, of course, have had a field day with this hoax. The Answers in Genesis article, for example, concludes with a broad hint that other fossils like Sinosauropteryx are hoaxes as well.

The two cases are not remotely comparable. There have been four fossils of Sinosauropteryx found. We know who found them, and where they were found. They are subject to intense scrutiny. There is no comparable fragmentation of the slab holding the best specimens.

The truth is that there have been a series of spectacular fossils found in China, which have clearly established a linkage between dinosaurs and birds. Even "Archaeoraptor" is legitimately a part of this. The two parts are an ancient bird, and a tiny non-avian dinosaur; the smallest non-avian dinosaur known and of major interest in its own right.

Almost all scientists now recognize birds as direct descendents of theropod dinosaurs. There is really only one notable hold out remaining -- Alan Feduccia, who opts for a less direct relationship by an older common ancestor amongst the thecodonts; but as the evidence mounts Feduccia's model is becoming more and more idiosycractic.

A final caution; note that Archaeoraptor is not the same as Archaeopteryx.

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Response: Readers might be interesting in the latest identification of the parts of "Archaeoraptor."

Nature Science Update carried this news story: Fossil Forgery's Front Half Revealed.

The reseach paper by Zhou, Z., Clarke, J. A. & Zhang, F., was published in Nature 420:285 (2002). Here is the abstract: Archaeoraptor's Better Half.

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Response: That's some good company you've honored on your website. Thanks for taking the time to write.
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The Gold Web Site award is now noted on the TalkOrigins Archive Awards page.

Wesley

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Response: Thank you for your feedback. Unfortunately, you do not ask any questions.

We give considerable thought to creationism, and try to provide useful articles which answer many of the questions raised; and we keep adding new ones. In this feedback column (which really ought to be for feedback on the website) we spend a fair bit of time answering questions from anyone with a question to ask. If you have a genuine question to which you would like an answer, first of all see if it is already addressed in the web site (use the search facility). If it is not addressed, feel free to ask.

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Response: I know of no book dealing with the subject of vestigial or rudimentary organs, nor of any website dealing comprehensively with them. Perhaps someone else does know of such a text and will respond. Darwin of course mentioned them. In Darwin's Ghost by Steve Jones (Almost Like a Whale in the UK) a number of them are mentioned, spread over 8 pages.

Several FAQs here mention them and may collectively present a larger list:

Jury-Rigged Design

The Origin of Whales and the Power of Independent Evidice Vestigial hips.

29 Evidences for Macroevolution: Part 2 Morphological vestages.

Creationism and the Platypus Vestigial teeth.

Horse Evolution Vestigial toe or nubbin.

Plagiarized Errors and Molecular Genetics Vestigial genes.

Carl Zimmer's essay The Rise and Fall of the Nasal Empire was published in Natural History for June 2002. In it he tells about most of our olfactory genes being "broken" or vestigial.

I hope this helps.

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Author of: Is the Planet Venus Young?
Response: Venus

"Only if the subsurface rocks were cold and hard could these weak mountains defy gravity and stay erect." All wrong. To begin with, the mountains are not "weak", nor is there any real reason to think they should be. The creationist simply assumes without merit that the surface rocks "quite understandably" should be "weak & tar like" at such temperatures. "Understandable" perhaps to someone who is unfamiliar with the thermal & mechanical properties of rock. But in reality, 900°F is quite a low temperature for rock, and one would not in fact expect them to behave in any other way than rock. The surface rocks of Venus would not become "weak & tar like", even if they were subjected to such temperatures for billions of years, which they certainly have not been. Furthermore, rock behaves quite differently under pressure than it does on the surface. The subsurface rocks will remain quite viscous, and easily have the strength to hold up the mountains of Venus, even at much higher temperatures than 900°F. There is simply nothing physically correct about the creationist's claim.

"Venus was never molten. had it been, it's hot atmosphere would have prevented it's subsurface rocks from cooling enough to support it's mountains." Not at all. In fact, heat escapes through the atmosphere of Venus, such that it's surface has cooled from a molten state, to it's current temperature, in about 500,000,000 years, which is the "evolutionary" age for the exposed surface of Venus. There is no way an atmosphere as cold as 900°F could keep the surface of Venus hot.

"if Venus were billions of years old, its atmospheric heat would have "soaked" deeply enough into the planet to weaken its subsurface rocks." Heat does not "soak". It moves, as our creationist has already told us, from hot to cold. And the speed with which it moves depends very much on the physical properties of the material it's trying to move through. Heat moves very slow through rock, and would not move far anyway, since the subsurface rocks are already much hotter than is the atmosphere (but as I said before, they don't get "soft" under pressure at such low temperatures). Since the surface is already at the same temperature as the atmosphere, and since heat can't "soak" into a hotter subsurface, the heat remains in the atmosphere, where it eventually radiates away.

In all three cases, the creationist argument is in direct contradiction to what we know about the physics of rocks, and the thermal properties of Venus. For a comprehensive study of Venus see the books Venus (1983) and Venus II (1997), both in the Space Science series from the University of Arizona press. Everything you could possibly want to know about Venus (alomst) is in at least one of these books.

The universe

"If the universe were infinitely old everything should have the same temperature." Well, evolution does not necessarily claim an infinitely old universe. But that should not prevent us from pointing out that the creationist is already treading on thin ice. This assertion might be true, and it might not. It isn't enough to say that the universe is infinitely old, but one must also say something about its internal physics. Consider for instance, a universe such as our own, evolved to the point of having black holes in thermal equilibrium with their own Hawking radiation. Everything is not at the same temperature, and it will remain so forever.

"Therefore, the universe had a beginning. (a beginning suggests a Creator)" Indeed, a beginning might suggest a creator (though it certainly does not require a creator). But there is no aspect of evolution, cosmological or biological, which in any way interfere's with the notion of a creator, so I fail to see the relevance of the point.

"Billions of years should be long enough for the temperatures to even out because of the natural property of heat flowing to colder spots to eventually even out temperature." Why? The creationist has decided that it "should" be so, but it is fair to ask why it should be so. In fact, it should not be so. billions of years is not even close to the time it takes for heat to move from hot to cold. Our current best estimate for the age of the universe is about 13,500,000,000 years. But a low mass, M-dwarf, main sequence star, will sit around happily fusing hydrogen into helium, for about 100,000,000,000,000 years. Notice that this number has 5 more zeros tacked onto it, beyond the current age of the universe. So we have to wait, until the universe is about 10,000 times older than it is now, before we even lose the current generation of red dwarf main sequence stars. And since there will be more of those stars born in the future, it will surely be much longer than that before we have to worry about the universe falling into "heat death" (the cosmologist's phrase for the condition brought up by the creationist.

"the planets would have over a billion years time (which is unimaginably long) had enough time to distribute all the heat energy equally." Not much of an imagination, I'm afraid. We already pointed out that the universe is about 1.3x1010 years old, and small red stars hang out for about 1014 years. But we can expect heat generating processes to go on for as long as, hold on to your hats, an astounding 101076 years! That's a number so large I can only write it in exponential notation; in a universe which could only hold about 10123 protons, how would I write so many 0's? The creationist's intuition & imagination fall far short of the standard set by common reality.

See Time without end: Physics and biology in an open universe, Freeman J. Dyson, Reviews of Modern Physics 51(3): 447-460, July 1979; The Five Ages of the Universe: Inside the Physics of Eternity, Fred Adams and Greg Laughlin, Touchstone Press, 2000.

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Response: Could it be that "Anonymous" simply couldn't understand the entire presentation made by Eugenie Scott in Debates and the Globetrotters?

She not only mentioned avoiding debates in some cases, but also how and what to debate in order to be most effective. As a frequent debater herself, Ms. Scott is eminently qualified to advise others.

Look at what you will find in a search of Ms. Scott's website at the National Center for Science Education

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Response: The FAQ is correct. (But please don't be put off letting us know of problems! Your feedback is still appreciated and very welcome.)

The age of the Earth is 4.55 billion years old, and this is known with a precision of about half a percent. There has been no credible alternative age presented, and over the last three of four decades the only real change has been increasing precision. See our FAQ Changing Views of the History of the Earth.

I guess you may be referring to new measurements of the age of the Universe which came out just last month (in February 2003). NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) released results used to obtain a new estimate of 13.7 billion years +/- 0.2. The age of the Universe is a more difficult problem than the age of the Earth, and this result is not as secure as the many times confirmed measurements relating to the Earth. But it is a major advance, it is consistent with previous results, and the new precision is unprecedented.

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Yes, there is more data (fossils) available for horses than for hominids. I'm not sure how temporally fine-grained the horse fossil record is, but Niles Eldredge considers the horse fossil record to be every creationist's worst nightmare.

As far as trends are concerned, there is a difference between a trend which may apply to one or more lineages within the mammals and a trend which can be said to apply to mammals in general (that's the "consistent" constraint). One of the trends suggested by the reader, that of "increasing specialization in dentition and limbs", is counter to what is observed in delphinid evolution, which now have conical teeth in all positions and have reduced limbs to fins in the fore and no limbs in the rear. The delphinids might be invoked as an example of a lineage where "increasing brain size and complexity" applies, but as Lori Marino's work on encephalization quotients shows, EQ in delphinid lineages studied has been static for about the last 15 million years, IIRC.

Wesley

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Response: Well, I am impressed. I am sure there is something psychological going on with the creationists' denial, but I don't understand it. However, the dating methods make some impression on at least some of them, because they have created arguments against some of these (e.g. massive radiation during Noah's flood somehow mucked up radiometric methods). I have never seen them deal with the consistency of different methods.

Another method for your list, albeit not applicable to earth, is cratering density.

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Response: It's difficult to know why your friends remain unimpressed. Perhaps when you tell them that some of the methods you list are "experimental," or that "some are better than others," they sense a problem or see a loophole in your argument. Do you offer them web references for each of these methods or only the list that you presented here? There are a number of Dating Methods FAQs and Articles available in the archives here.

Having encountered the same problem many times, I prepared a webpage covering 20 Dating Methods. In some cases it has helped to convince others as to the reasonableness of dating methodologies, relative or absolute. In other cases the amount of material overwhelms persons who are looking for simple answers that require little or no reading.

In my experience the best single reference to offer Young Earth Creationists is Radiometric Dating: A Christian Perspective by Dr. Roger C. Wiens. While this is a lengthy discussion of the subject (and should be read in full), the material beginning at page 19 demolishes most of the YEC claims frequently encountered on creationist websites. I have seen marvelous results when I have been able to convince someone to actually read Dr. Wiens' page. Wiens helps reasonable people to modify their worldview without attempting to attack or destroy their faith.

In some cases at least several of the dating methods on your list are combined within one on my list. I would be happy to receive a collection of links discovered through your research if you have time to share them.

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Response: This feedback implies that our ideas on the age of the Earth or the nature of relationships between different species is a central matter upon which personal salvation depends. Most Christians (including young earth creationists) consider that personal damnation or salvation turn upon other matters.

The threat of Hell in this instance is plainly aimed at people who are already believers, to make them fearful of examining their beliefs. For people who do not believe in God, or who do not believe God behaves as our respondent suggests, this is merely a repellent false theology.

The good news is that you will not be damned for having a mistaken view of the history of life and of the Earth. You are free to consider the evidence honestly and without fear. If you can cast fear aside, you have a far better chance of seeing clearly.

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Please note, however, that listing your site does not constitute an endorsement. There are some truly dreadful sites in that list; we find that the words of creationists are often their very own best rebuttal.

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Response: That site, however, is an open discussion forum on biblical exegesis, and there are both literalist young earth creationists and more critical interpreters who have no problem with the science. While the site admin may be a young earther, some of the interlocutors show more knowledge.
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Response: Regarding irreduceable complexity, this archive has a number of articles on this topic under the heading, "Irreduceable Complexity and Michael Behe." One of the best responses to Mr. Behe's arguments on irreduceable complexity is H. Allen Orr's review of Darwin's Black Box that ran in Boston Review. From that review:

To Behe, an extraordinary conclusion follows on the heels of irreducible complexity: Darwinism cannot explain such systems. The reason, he says, is simple: An irreducibly complex system "cannot be produced directly . . . by slight, successive modifications of a precursor system, because any precursor to an irreducibly complex system that is missing a part is by definition nonfunctional." You cannot, in other words, gradually improve a mousetrap by adding one part and then the next. A trap having half its parts doesn't function half as well as a real trap; it doesn't function at all. So Darwinism's problem is obvious: it requires that each step in the evolution of a system be functional and adaptive.

After discussing some possible solutions to this dilemna, Orr makes clear one actual evolutionary answer:

Behe's colossal mistake is that, in rejecting these possibilities, he concludes that no Darwinian solution remains. But one does. It is this: An irreducibly complex system can be built gradually by adding parts that, while initially just advantageous, become-because of later changes-essential. The logic is very simple. Some part (A) initially does some job (and not very well, perhaps). Another part (B) later gets added because it helps A. This new part isn't essential, it merely improves things. But later on, A (or something else) may change in such a way that B now becomes indispensable. This process continues as further parts get folded into the system. And at the end of the day, many parts may all be required.

The point is there's no guarantee that improvements will remain mere improvements. Indeed because later changes build on previous ones, there's every reason to think that earlier refinements might become necessary. The transformation of air bladders into lungs that allowed animals to breathe atmospheric oxygen was initially just advantageous: such beasts could explore open niches-like dry land-that were unavailable to their lung-less peers. But as evolution built on this adaptation (modifying limbs for walking, for instance), we grew thoroughly terrestrial and lungs, consequently, are no longer luxuries-they are essential. The punch-line is, I think, obvious: although this process is thoroughly Darwinian, we are often left with a system that is irreducibly complex. I'm afraid there's no room for compromise here: Behe's key claim that all the components of an irreducibly complex system "have to be there from the beginning" is dead wrong.

Another review by Don Lindsay discusses three ways in which irreduceable complexity can evolve: 1) Improvements become necessities, 2) loss of scaffolding, and 3) duplication and divergence.

Regarding flagella specifically, scroll down to the "Flagella and Cilium" section of Publish or Perish: Some Published Works on Biochemical Evolution.

I'm not sure what is meant by "getting information from matter." Matter has information associated with it, not the least of which is its mass, position, and momentum. We get this information by measurements. I suspect, though, that the reader is asking about the creationist assertion that "evolution cannot create new information." This is simply nonsense, and results from a fundamental misunderstanding of information theory. For instance, there is an obvious increase in information that occurs when a gene duplicates and the two copies undergo independent mutations leading to two genes with different functions.

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Response: I agree with the reader on this point, and have been concerned for some time about how this archive can best address those with little or no exposure to evolution or the evolution/creationism controversy. I think that this archive would be well-served by an "Evolution for Dummies" section with corresponding illustrations, something that proceeds even more step-by-step than our Introduction to Evolutionary Biology article. I have actually been considering creating just such a thing in the next few months, though I may not be the most qualified for the job.

A difficult task for this archive, as well as for those writing about science or other technical or complicated topics, is determining how best to strike the balance between simplification and accuracy. My tendency is to think that sacrificing accuracy for the sake of simplification can be useful to illustrate basic principles, so long as one also makes clear that there's more to the story. My view may be the minority view of this archive's contributors, however.

In any case, I think that what you propose is a good suggestion, although one that may be difficult to implement, given the volunteer nature of this archive. Any science writers reading this are more than welcome to contribute, and if any readers are aware of grant money to bring this off, please let us know.

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Author of: Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field
Response: There are quite a few things which cause the rate of carbon-14 production in the atmosphere to vary with time; this is why uncalibrated dates are always referred to as "C14 years" or "uncalibrated" years, so as to distinguish them from real "calendar" years. But not to worry. There are well devoped methods for taking the natural variability into account, and transforming C14 years into calendar years. See, for instance, the Calibration and Corrections pages, from the Radiocarbon Web, sponsored by the radiocarbon laboratories at Waikato university in New Zealand, and Oxford Univeristy in England.
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"Turning into humans" is not a predetermined or even necessarily desirable end result for evolution. Every lineage evolves in its own way, shaped by accident and constrained by its own history and adaptation to local conditions.

Other apes are evolving just fine, as are we. We're just all going in our own, different directions.

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Response: Support for or opposition to the teaching of evolution differs from school district to school district. Indeed, within a school district the emphasis can be different from school to school or within classrooms of the same school.

You will find much information and support for the sound teaching of science at:

National Center for Science Education

National Science Teachers Association

National Association of Biology Teachers

The last two organizations have chapters in Illinois from whom you can probably glean much local information.

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Response: Chris does not read the Feedback - in fact some suggest he is a mythical figure like Paul Bunyan or Bill Gates - but I can address the great chain issue.

The book you are referring to is

Lovejoy, A. O. (1964 (1936)). The great chain chain of being: a study of the history of an idea. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press.

Arthur Lovejoy was a brilliant historian of ideas (a discipline that fell into disfavour for various reasons until recently), and he contributed also a lot to the following useful book:

Glass, B., O. Temkin, et al., Eds. (1959). Forerunners of Darwin, 1745-1859. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press.

A text that covers more recent research on the Great Chain is

Kuntz, M. L. and P. G. Kuntz, Eds. (1988). Jacob's ladder and the tree of life: concepts of hierarchy and the Great Chain of Being. American university studies. Series V, Philosophy. New York, P. Lang.

The Great Chain arose out of the views of Aristotle as amended by the late Neo-Platonists such as Porphyry. In essence, it was the view that there is an ascending scale (the scala naturae) from simple Being (Esse) through Motion, Growth, Sensibility, and Reason, through to the heavens and Incorruptibility. The classical statement of it is to be found in the works of Raymond Lull, or Lullius, just before the Reformation, about 1515.

It was adopted by Descartes, Leibniz, Bonnet and Buffon, and most famously by Lamarck, who made the ladder itself into a temporal sequence, predetermined in its course, more or less, from simple creatures through to complex humans. Humans were always at the top of the biological version, of course.

If you are interested in how the notion of race developed, I suggest a volume

Voegelin, E. (1998). The history of the race idea: from Ray to Carus. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press.

which covers the biological period from the 17th century to the late nineteenth.

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Response: I'm just guessing, but I suspect no one else responded to this for much the same reason that I did not the first time around (much the same post was made in the April Feedback prior to the March file being made available).

There are two problems. First, it is impossible to keep track of who is saying what. Let me suggest that if you post such a "discussion," that you use separate paragraphs for each person and label them:

Creationinst: ................

followed by

Evolutionist: ................

Secondly, this might not be the best place for such an exchange, with criticism by third parties. Why not take this to a discussion board where others are permitted to join the discussion?

[During file maintainance during September 2003 it was discovered why, besides poor formating choices, Terry's feedback was so unreadable. He used < and > symbols to indicate what the creationist quoted. This resulted in much of what his feedback being intepretted by browser software as unknown HTML markup tags and thus was not displayed. - Mike Hopkins]

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Response: What, and miss on the pleasure of answering such educated responses?
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Response: Thank you for bringing up two of my favorite subjects.

If you will use the search function here you will find many FAQs on the subjects you touch upon: abiogenesis, origin of life, complex organs, eyes and so forth.

The origin of life is outside the scope of evolution, which could begin only after replicating life arose (by whatever means). To grasp the basics of evolution you might wish to read What Evolution Is by Ernst Mayr. It is a fine introduction to evolution.

Science cannot investigate the supernatural or address questions of supernatural creation. It can investigate the possibility that life may have arisen by natural processes. A review of Origins of Life Research is available here. The book The Spark of Life provides an overview of the field.

You then jump forward a few billion years to the era of multicellular life and the origin of complex organs. Confusing the issue by bring in machines, chance and "random disruptions" does nothing to divert from the real issue, that of argument from incredulity. Because one does not understand how a process might work does not invalidate the observed process.

As for evolution of eyes and what Charles Darwin really had to say on the subject, you will find the quote you provided in context at Darwin on Eyes. The full text is provided from both the 1st and 6th editions of Origin of Species including the evidence he presented to support his hypothesis. Many links are also provided which substantiate and further expand upon Darwin's views.

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: I, and I suspect many others here, have no objection to this view - if there is a God who can act the way classical theists believe He can act, then he can do pretty much whatever he wants to do.

But science is the process - all to human, to be sure - of using evidence to draw conclusions. Evolution is how the living world looks to have been created, whether or not God created it in situ. He wanted us to draw some conclusions scientifically. This is not a rejection of God as such; it is the task of science to explain phenomena according to the evidence. To do otherwise is not to do science.

If you or anyone else wishes to teach your children that God created the world is some way that is contrary to the scientific explanation, that is your right. But do not call it science, as the "creation science" proponents do. They not only want to teach special creation, they want to do so by twisting and warping the evidence. The evidence is clear - life evolved. At least teach your children the facts when you teach them the theology. Your theology will be the stronger for it, and they will not be inclined to reject it later when they find out that the facts are what they are.

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Response: Both good questions, and asked of Darwin and his followers right after the Origin was published.

Suppose that the variation makes it less likely to succumb to disease or famine than its colleagues; it follows, as a matter of arithmetic, that organisms with that variation will be more likely to leave descendants over periods that include those stresses, than those that lack it.

It isn't about survival as such. Survival is all very well, but only, from an evolutionary perspective, if it leads to more progeny relative to the other members of the population. If a variant allowed the individual to survive indefinitely at the expense of sterility, then only one member of that species would have that variation. If a variant had a shorter life but had more progeny live to reproduce themselves, then many members would end up having it.

All advantage from mutations and variations is relative.

Now, how does the environment "select"? It suggests that the environment is an agent, doesn't it? In fact, Alfred Wallace objected to the phrase "natural selection" for just that reason. But this is the selection of a filter, like a sieve. A sieve "selects" out the larger particles and allows fluids and smaller particles to go through. Natural selection is that kind of process. No agency, just the actual processes making it more or less likely that variations will make it through the filter to the next generation.

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